Dimak looked at him blankly. "I don't actually know," he said.
Peter leaned in close and imitated the voice Dimak used for secrets. "I'm the Hegemon," he said. "Officially, your boss works for me."
Dimak whispered back, "You save the world, we'll finance the colony program."
"I could have used a little more money for my operations, I can tell you," said Peter.
"Every Hegemon feels that way," said Dimak. "Which is why our funding doesn't come through you."
Peter laughed. "Smart move. If you think the colonization program is very very important."
"It's the future of the human race," said Dimak simply. "The Buggers--pardon me, the Formics--had the right idea. Spread out as far as you can, so you can't be wiped out in a single disastrous war. Not that it saved them, but...we aren't hive creatures."
"Aren't we?" said Father.
"Well, if we are, then who's the queen?" asked Dimak.
"In this place," said Father, "I suspect it's Graff."
"And we're all just his little arms and legs?"
"And mouths and...well, yes, of course. A little more independent and a little less obedient than the individual Formics, of course, but that's how a species comes to dominate a world the way we did, and they did. Because you know how to get a large number of individuals to give up their personal will and subject themselves to a group mind."
"So this is philosophy we're doing here," said Dimak.
"Or very cutting-edge science," said Father. "The behavior of humans in groups. Degrees of allegiance. I think about it a lot."
"How interesting."
"I see that you're not interested at all," said Father. "And that I'm now in your book as an eccentric who brings up his theories. But I never do, actually. I don't know why I did just now. I just...it's the first time I've been in Graff's house, so to speak. And meeting you was very much like visiting with him."
"I'm...flattered," said Dimak.
"John Paul," said Mother, "I do believe you're making Mr. Dimak uncomfortable."
"When people feel great allegiance to their community, they start to take on the mannerisms as well as the morals of their leader," said Father, refusing to give up.
"If their leader has a personality," said Peter.
"How do you get to be a leader without one?" asked Father.
"Ask Achilles," said Peter. "He's the opposite. He takes on the mannerisms of the people he wants to have follow him."
"I don't remember that one," said Dimak. "He was only here a few days before he--before we discovered he had a track record of murder back on Earth."
"Someday you have to tell me how Bean got him to confess. He won't tell."
"If he won't tell, neither will I," said Dimak.
"How loyal," said Father.
"Not really," said Dimak. "I just don't know myself. I know it had something to do with a ventilation shaft."
"That confession," said Peter. "The recordings wouldn't still be here, would they?"
"No, they wouldn't," said Dimak. "And even if they were, they're part of a sealed juvenile record."
"Of a mass murderer."