stood precariously balanced, peering.
Around the corner of a Winged Smoke house had come a giant. The Pyramid lay in that direction, but so
did the spaceport, and he must have arrived there today, or word of him would have buzzed throughout
the low-life parts of town. Thence he seemed to have walked all the kilometers, for no public conveyance
on Imhotep could have accommodated him, and his manner was not that of officialdom. Although the
babel racket dwindled at sight of him and people drew aside, he moved diffidently, almost apologetically.
Tiredly, too, poor thing; his strength must be enormous, but it had been a long way to trudge in this gee-
field.
"Well, well," said Diana to herself; and loudly, in both Anglic and Toborko, to any possible competition:
"I saw him first!"
She didn't waste time on the interior stairs but, reckless, scrambled down the vines. Though the tower
wasn't very tall, on Imhotep a drop from its battlements could be fatal. She reached the pavement
running.
"Ah, ho, small one," bawled Hassan from the doorway of his inn, "if he be thirsty, steer him to the Sign
of the Golden Cockbeetle. A decicredit to you for every liter he drinks!"
She laughed, reached a dense mass of bodies, began weaving and wriggling through. Inhabitants smiled
and let her by. A drunk took her closeness wrong and tried to grab her. She gave his wrist a karate chop
in passing. He yelled, but retreated when he saw how a Tigery glowered and dropped hand to knife.
Kuzan had been a childhood playmate of Diana's. She was still her friend.
The stranger grew aware of the girl nearing him, halted, and watched in mild surprise. He was of the
planet which humans had dubbed Woden, well within the Imperial sphere. It had long been a familiar of
Technic civilization and was, indeed, incorporated in Greater Terra, its dwellers full citizens. Just the
same, none had hitherto betrod Imhotep, and Diana knew of them only from books and database.
A centauroid himself, he stretched four and a half meters on his four cloven hoofs, including the mighty
tail. The crown of his long-snouted, bony-eared head loomed two meters high. The brow ridges were
massive, the mouth alarmingly fanged, but eyes were big, a soft brown. Two huge arms ended in four-
fingered hands that seemed able to rip a steel plate in half. Dark-green scales armored his upper body
from end to end, amber scutes his throat and belly. A serration of horny plates ran over his backward-
bulging skull, down his spine to the tailtip. A pair of bags slung across his withers and a larger pair at his
croup doubtless held traveling goods. Drawing close, Diana saw signs of a long life, scars, discolorations,
wrinkles around the nostrils and rubbery lips, a pair of spectacles hung from his neck. They were for
presbyopia, she guessed, and she had already noticed he was slightly lame in the off hind leg. Couldn't he
afford corrective treatments?
Why, she herself was going to start putting money aside, one of these years, to pay for anti-senescence. If
she had to die at an age of less than a hundred, she wanted it to be violently.
Halting before him, she beamed, spread arms wide, and said, "Good day and welcome! Never before has
our world been graced by any of your illustrious race. Yet even we, on our remote and lately embattled
frontier, have heard the fame of Wodenites, from the days of Adzel the Wayfarer to this very hour. In
what way may we serve you, great sir?"
His face was unreadable to her, but his body looked startled. "My, my," he murmured. "How elaborately
you speak, child. Is that local custom? Please enlighten me. I do not wish to be discourteous through
ignorance." He hesitated. "My intentions, I hope, shall always be of the best."
His vocal organs made Anglic a thunderous rumble, weirdly accented, but it was fluent and she could
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