Part 12 (1/2)

”Nothing inimical so far,” F'ahl reported, running a finger down one of the few displays not showing an outside view. ”Oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and other trace ga.s.ses in acceptable amounts. Uh... no evidence of unusual radioactive or heavy-metal contamination. Bacteria a.n.a.lysis has barely gotten started, but so far no problems-computer shows similar DNA and protein structures in the ones it's a.n.a.lyzed, but doesn't show any health hazards from them.”

”Hmmm. Well, I'll want to check that data over myself later, but if the Aventine pattern holds here microbes probably won't be a big problem. All right, Yuri, I guess you can go out. But you'd better wear a filter bubble, to be on the safe side. The number two should be adequate unless Qasaman viruses come a lot smaller than ours.”

”Right.” Cerenkov hesitated. ”Governor, as long as we've got a reception committee on its way, I'd like to take my whole team out with me.”

The six Qasamans were almost to the s.h.i.+p now. Pyre watched the magnified view, his eyes s.h.i.+fting from the details of the faces to the silver-blue birds perched on each person's left shoulder to the pistols belted on each hip. ”Governor, I'd recommend we let Yuri go alone first,” he said.

”No, he's right-we ought to show good faith,” Telek said with a sigh.

Cerenkov didn't wait any longer. ”Marck, Decker, Joshua-meet me at the dock with full gear.” He got three acknowledgments and hurried out of the bridge.

”Almo?” Telek called as Pyre turned to follow. ”I want you back here for this.”

Pyre grimaced, but there wasn't time to argue the order now. ”Michael,

Dorjay-back up positions by the hatch,” he called into the intercom. The two

Cobras acknowledged and Pyre once again headed aft.

He pa.s.sed the furious activity near the hatch without actually colliding with anyone; and by the time he skidded to a stop beside Telek, the lounge displays showed Cerenkov just emerging from the airlock.

If the Qasamans had been a shock to the Dewdrop's pa.s.sengers, the reverse was equally true. The welcoming committee jerked raggedly to a stop, and Pyre saw astonishment and disbelief sweep across their faces. He tensed; but the guns stayed firmly in their holsters. One of the birds squawked and flapped its wings, settling down only when its owner reached up to gently stroke its throat.

Pyre was aware of Telek leaning closer to him. ”Do you buy Hersh's theory about the Baliuies?” she murmured.

”That ignorance was bliss?” he muttered back. ”Not for a minute. The Baliuies knew we were the same species, all right-and if we were supposed to free human slaves from the Qasamans they sure as h.e.l.l would have told us.”

Telek grunted. Nnamdi and Christopher, Pyre noted, seemed to have missed the by-play. s.h.i.+fting his own attention fully to the displays, the Cobra waited for the Qasamans to speak, wis.h.i.+ng he knew what sort of game the Baliuies were playing.

The Qasaman delegation had shown a remarkably quick recovery to the contact team's appearance, a fact Cerenkov took to be a good sign. Whether the humans were slaves or masters, it was clear they weren't in the ignorant savage category. Which meant... what? Cerenkov wasn't sure, but he knew it was a good sign anyway.

The delegation had come to a halt now a couple of meters in front of the contact team. Cerenkov half-raised his right hand, freezing midway through the motion as one of the birds abruptly ruffled its wings and emitted a harsh caw. He waited until its owner had calmed it, then brought his hand chest high, palm outward.

”I greet you in the name of the people of Aventine,” he said. ”We come to visit with peaceful intent. I am Yuri Cerenkov; my companions are Marck Rynstadt,

Decker York, and Joshua Moreau. Whom do I have the honor of addressing?”

For another few seconds the translator pendant around his neck continued to talk, and Cerenkov sent a quick prayer skyward that the Trofts had indeed put together a decent translation program. All they would need now would be for him to have dropped an unintentional insult into his greeting....

But if the translator had glitched it wasn't obvious. One of the Qasamans stepped a half pace forward, raising his hand in imitation of Cerenkov's gesture, and began speaking. ”We greet you in turn,” Cerenkov's earphone murmured seconds later. ”I am Moff; I welcome you in the name of Mayor Kimmeron of Sollas and the people of Qasama. Your interpreter speaks our language well.

Why does he rest aboard your craft?”

”Our translator is a machine,” Cerenkov told him carefully, wis.h.i.+ng he knew just how technologically advanced these people were. Would they understand the word computer, or relegate the whole process to black magic? ”Each word I speak is sent to it from this microphone, where it compares the word to those it knows of your language-”

”I understand translation devices,” Moff interrupted him. ”Other visitors here used such things, though we have no need of them on Qasama. Your machine uses many of the same inflections theirs did.”

The hidden question was obvious, and Cerenkov had a split-second decision to make as to how to answer it. Honesty seemed the safest approach. ”If you speak of the Trofts of the Baliu'ckha'spmi demesne, we did indeed purchase our translator from them. That's also how we knew you were here, though they failed to mention that we are of the same race. How did you arrive here, so far away from other human worlds, if I may ask?”

Moff ran his eyes over the Dewdrop for a moment before turning back to Cerenkov.