The cabinet meeting was over. The last of the ministers who'd actually chosen to attend in person had made their way through the multiple protective doorway seals and left the flood-proof, nanoplague-proof cabinet offices deep below Whitehall, while all of those who'd appeared as holographic avatars had simply blinked out. Leonard Mortimer turned to his artificial intelligence aide and sighed.
"You got all that, I take it?" he asked.
"Of course, Prime Minister," the machine replied smoothly. "And may I say that you managed it extremely well."
"As well as anyone could, I suppose." The Prime Minister shook his head. "This business is like herding cats, if you'll pardon the clichΓ©. Don't record that," he added quickly. "Anyway, I suppose that there's no getting out of the next thing on the schedule."
"No, Prime Minister," the AI replied. "Protocol demands..."
"I know, I know. And I'm all in favour of protocol. I just wish... Oh well -- put me through to the Palace."
The wall-screen opposite the Mortimer's desk, which had gone restfully blank, flickered for a moment. Then the image resolved into a sun-scorched garden with a blue synthetic-surface tennis court, on which a young blonde woman in a white bikini top and shorts was playing against a stick-man robot.
Mortimer coughed gently, knowing that the system would make him audible to the woman. She missed a shot, turned on her heel, and doubtless saw his image on one of the large screen arranged around the court.
"Oh, Lenny," she said, "it's you."
"Yes, Majesty," he replied. "This
is
the time for our weekly meeting."
"Yes of course it is, Lenny. I know that. It's just that I've just got Ecky playing well enough to be interesting but not beating me every time."
"I am sorry, Majesty, but..."
"No, no, Lenny, you're right as usual. Terribly sorry."
She didn't sound sorry, Mortimer thought, but it wasn't his place to say anything. He preserved a tactful silence as she picked up a towel from somewhere, accepted a cold drink from another robot, and dropped onto a reclining seat. The conference system adjusted and improved its 3D resolution, until his office seemed to abut directly onto the Palace gardens, and each party appeared correctly life-sized to the other.
"Forgive me, ma'am," he said, "But is such exposure to the sun wise? The carcinogenic effects..."
"Oh, don't be a fusspot, Lenny," the Queen of England replied. "I've had all the anti-cancer whatyoucall'ems, remember? And the melaniser thingies. No problem."
"Nonetheless, ma'am..."
"Oh, you just don't trust technology, Lenny," the Queen pouted and took a sip of her drink, absent-mindedly bending one leg as she did so and thus flashing far more tanned royal thigh than Mortimer liked to have drawn to his attention. "Anyway, what do you want to talk about this week?"
"Well, ma'am, the matter of the state visit next week is our first priority."
"Oh,
that
." The Queen pouted again. "Do I really have to put the old bugger up here?"
"Yes, ma'am." Mortimer knew this was a rhetorical question, but he felt obliged to take it literally, in an attempt to remind his monarch of her responsibilities. "The state visit was arranged months ago. It puts you personally in the position of hostess to a fellow head of state."
"I know, I know." Another pout. "Dreadful bore, though..."
"I recall that you appeared comfortable enough with the visit of the American President last year, ma'am."
"Yes, Lenny -- but she was a total sweetie, and her daughter was cute."
Mortimer restrained a sigh. He knew that the Queen truly wasn't the mindless airhead she appeared -- as Prime Minister, he had access to her school records, which were fine, and her university place had been gained entirely on merit -- indeed, she'd insisted on applying under an assumed name. He suspected that she enjoyed annoying him. "Nonetheless, His Holiness
is
the Pope, ma'am," he ventured.
"
One
of the popes," the Queen replied.
"He is the occupant of the Vatican. Convention requires that we treat his claim as primary."
"Still, I think that the one in Rio de Janeiro sounds much more fun. The one in Chicago is ghastly, though."
"However, neither of them were invited."
"This one wasn't by me," the Queen said. "And I wouldn't, frankly. Horrid ideas he's got. Even the one in Chicago lets women be priests, after all."
"That is so, certainly. His Holiness regards tradition as paramount."
"Yes -- just like you," the Queen shot back.
The Prime Minister, leader of the Traditionalist Party (only the third largest in the House and second largest in the current coalition, but he was accepted as a compromise leader by the others) nodded, refusing to be provoked by that. "In some ways, yes, ma'am."
"Hmm." Queen Anne III took another sip of her drink.
"The invitation was approved by your grandfather, ma'am," the Prime Minister ventured. "When he and your father both abdicated, I am sure that they believed that you would honour their commitments in such matters..."
"They abdicated because they were bored of being figureheads," the Queen almost snapped. "They know that they'll be able to wield some real power as regents in the Mars colonies and the Asteroid Belt stations. Anyway, you weren't Prime Minister back then."
This was true, but Mortimer refrained from commenting on what he might have said or done if he had been; it might be difficult to do so without sounding critical of the Queen. "We
are
committed to this meeting," he said simply.
"Yes, yes -- I know." The Queen sighed. "But you know why I accepted this job."
"I was, as you say, not in office at the time, ma'am."
"That speech I gave at the time was the truth, Lenny." The Queen stared at his image on her screen. "I thought that it was worth having somebody in some kind of position of power here who's under seventy. I can't claim to be any kind of democratic representative, but better this..." she gestured vaguely with her drink "...figurehead thing than no one at all."