He sauntered off behind the bar. The Akellar, with nothing else to look at, was watching her. He said, “I haven’t seen that other—that white woman around. Your friend.”

“My friend. You mean Cam Savenia? She left.”

He liked that; he made an approving sound in his chest. “You know her, don’t you?” he said, and stopped, his eyes on the mirror again. Another pretty woman was coming into the bar.

Paula sat back. The barman put a bell-glass of brandy and ice cream in front of her, and she paid him. The Styth ignored her; he was staring at women. She smothered her irritation. She saw a way to use what he was giving away about himself. She took the spoon out of the glass and sipped the creamy brandy. The object of his stare had disappeared out of the room and he turned back to her.

“What’s that you’re drinking?”

She spooned up ice cream and brandy and held it out to him. He put his head back to look at it, suspicious, and finally opened his mouth and let her feed him. She said, “I worked for Cam once. We don’t know each other very well.”

He savored the ice cream. “That’s good. What is it?”

“Ice cream.” She took another sip of the brandy, cooled and sweetened with the melting milky dessert. He turned sideways on the stool, facing her, his elbow on the bar. She said, “I—,” and broke off. She had lost his attention again to a woman leaving the bar.

“I can’t get used to all these women going around with their faces uncovered,” he said. He reached for his glass. Paula spooned up another bite of the ice cream. She started to eat it, but his eyes followed it, and she offered it to him. He ate it eagerly.

“Mars is a strange place,” she said. She swirled the brandy in the glass. “I have these fish in my wall, swimming around. Of course, this being Mars, they’re probably plastic.” She drank the last of the liquor and pushed the glass away across the bar. “Come up and look at them and tell me if they’re plastic.”

Now his eyes were fixed on her, and he smiled. The smile made him look much younger. He said, “Do you have any of that whiskey left?”

“I have another bottle.”

He got up off the bar stool. They went out the door.

The sun was going down. Long hazy light struck across the garden and penetrated in shafts into the room. She pulled the curtains closed and poured them each a glass of whiskey. They sat on the couch opposite the aquarium.

“What is the Earth like?” he asked. “Like this?”

She shook her head. She was sitting in the curved limb of the couch. “The Earth is the original of which Mars is the copy.”

“Then it is like this.”

She put her glass down on the table, untouched. Toeing off her shoes, she folded her legs under her. “No. You’d have to go to the Earth to see the difference. Do Styths kiss?”

“I don’t know. I don’t recognize the word.”

She knelt beside him, facing him, and leaned forward and put her mouth against his. His mouth was unresponsive. She touched his lips with her tongue, her hand on his shoulder, and his arm went around her waist. A rush of his heavy metallic scent surrounded her. He twisted, pushing her down under him on the couch.

“You’re hurting me.” She could not breathe. Her face was smothered against his shoulder. “You’re too heavy.”

He straightened up on his arms. She could scarcely breathe in the dense fragrance he was giving off. When she kissed him again, his skin was warm, almost feverish. They got up and undressed. His body was perfect. Dressed, he simply looked massive. His broad chest swelled into his back, the muscle and bone smoothly shaped down to his long waist. He had an erection. They lay down side by side on the couch. His skin warmed her. While she explored him with her hands and her mouth she tried to get used to his scent. All in silence they joined together. His eyes closed, as if he were doing it alone. She rubbed herself down on his thick stalk, her hand on his hip, intent on the swelling tension in her groin.

The couch was too narrow. They went down to the floor and handled each other, moving around each other almost without speaking. He was so tall she could not kiss his face when he was inside her. The watery light from the aquarium rippled over his chest. She touched him all over, to see what he liked. Her body swelled closed around him. He took her hips in his hands and drove himself into her, gasping.

“Oh, Jesus.”

She sat back, pleased, her legs across him, and gave him the full tumbler of whiskey. His arms stretched out over his head. For a long while they stayed as they were, the man lying on his back on the floor, and Paula beside him, without saying anything. She felt revenged on him for his condescension. The videone buzzed. She ignored it and it buzzed again.

“Aren’t you going to take that?” he said.

“It’s just my boss.”

“What would he do if he knew we were here like this?” His hand slipped over her thigh.

“Not he, she. Sybil Jefferson.”

“How many men have you had?”

“You aren’t a personal friend.”

His fingers pressed and stroked over the inside of her thigh. His claws grazed her. “Which means what?”

“That I won’t answer a personal question.”

“A lot.” Patterns of light from the aquarium lay across his face like a mask. “How did I do?”

“You didn’t talk,” she said, “which I liked.”

He turned his face toward the aquarium. He was cooling off, and she swung her legs across his body and sat beside him. His cock had drawn back inside the sheath of his foreskin. With her fingers she traced the heavy muscles of his chest. He had no hair on his chest. He wasn’t perfect after all. He put his hand on her hand and pressed her palm against him.

“So it’s not personal, this—” He caressed himself with her hand. “Then it’s business? Are you trying to sell me something?”

“Sell you something?”

“I’ve heard an anarchist can sell anything to anybody.”

“What do you want?”

“The only thing you have that interests me is that whiskey.” He folded his arms behind his head. His scent had disappeared.

“Good,” she said. “I’ll send you a case every aphelion for the rest of your life. Courtesy of the Committee.”

His teeth flashed in a white smile. “Are you serious?”

“I’ll make it two cases.”

“Do it.”

She touched his stomach. His skin was velvet black. “Do you believe in god?”

“I believe in Planck’s Constant and the speed of light. Truth at 186,000 miles per second. What else are you going to sell me? A little philosophy?”

“The Council wants to establish permanent embassies with the Empire.”

“We don’t treat with other governments. The only law in the system is Styth, the rest of you are all outlaws. There’s nothing you can offer us except to submit to us.”

“You didn’t listen to me.”

He pushed her hand away from him. “I don’t have to listen to you—you listen to me.”

“I said that was what the Council wants, not what I want.”

Between his round black eyes two short vertical lines appeared. He rolled smoothly onto his feet. “You think you can talk around me.” His clothes were scattered about the room, and he collected them. Paula sat watching the fish. He sat on the couch and pulled his leggings on. Instead of underwear he wore a kind of cup to protect his organs. He hung a medal on a chain around his neck. The marking in the heavy disk was the sign of the fish.

She said, “Actually, what I want is to make you rich.”

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