
Riker was only a moment slower than the Klingon, but relaxed almost immediately when he saw that the
four Jarada approaching them were unarmed and wore ceremonial sashes of brightly colored, knotted
cords across their thoraxes. By the time the rest of the away team had finished turning, the Jarada were
crouched in a ritual greeting posture.
The insectoids had four pairs of limbs, with the lowermost set, the thick and sturdy strong-legs, used to
support most of the body’s weight and to provide the power they needed when they moved. Immediately
above the strong-legs were the longer and more slender balance-legs, which served to steady their
bodies after a long leap or to hold their torsos in a prescribed orientation, as now, when they were
tucked close together beneath their abdomens in the formal crouch.
The Jarada had barrellike segmented torsos that gleamed with an almost metallic luster, as though each
Jarada had polished its carapace until it glistened. Two sets of arms were attached to the upper end of
their torsos, the lower pair larger and the top pair almost vestigial. The Jarada extended their larger
true-arms toward their guests, holding their three-clawed hands facing upward, while crossing their tiny
feeding-arms over their upper thoraxes.
Their heads, Picard noted again, were all planes and angles with narrow snouts and broad foreheads.
Large compound eyes with broad central facets surrounded by smaller side facets were set on the sides
of their heads, and their faces were framed by long, feathery antennae that quivered at every sound.
The largest Jarada, a space-black individual who wore a heavily ornamented sash and was about as tall
as Keiko, took one step forward and repeated the formal crouch. Behind him, the other three Jarada
bent their legs to bring their bodies still closer to the ground. “Greetings, Picard-Captain and esteemed
guests. I am Zelfreetrollan, First Among Council for those of the People who dwell on this planet. Your
presence honors our lowly Hive.”
Picard bowed and extended his palms outward in the closest approximation he could make to the
Jarada’s gesture. From the corner of his eye he could see the rest of the away team copying his
movements. “First Among Council, your invitation honors my people, both those that accompany me on
my vessel and those on the hundreds of worlds that belong to our Federation. It is our fondest hope that
we can reach an agreement that will enable you to join us in a full partnership which will enrich all our
people.”
Zelfreetrollan flexed his legs, briefly dipping into a deeper crouch. “Our people, too, share that wish. We
will conduct you now to a Meditation Chamber, where you can prepare yourselves for the beginning of
our discussions. When you have recovered sufficiently from your journey, we will require that our
Protocol Officer attend upon you and instruct you on the Way of our Hive.” After another deep crouch
he turned and started down the walk in the direction from which he had come. The other three Jarada, all
smaller than Zelfreetrollan and with russet- or chestnut-colored exoskeletons, stepped aside until the
away team had passed them.
A spicy odor, like cinnamon or nutmeg, hit Picard as the three Jarada fell in behind the away team as an
honor guard. Suddenly he was seven years old again, watching his mother grate nutmeg for gnocchis, the
shell-like dumplings she had made for family dinner every Sunday of his childhood.
Shaking off the memory, Picard focused his attention on the Jarada. Zelfreetrollan moved quickly in spite
of his height, with his strong-legs reaching out in wide arcs that covered the ground more easily than a
human’s and his balance-legs catching his weight to extend his stride. His chitin-covered feet clicked
against the bricks like the mechanical tapping of an intake controller putting its valves through a