made the same request. 'I don't claim to be wise, Lalita, though I'm knowledgeable about a few things that don't matter in the least to most other people. As for rich, though—your father could buy or sell me a dozen times over, I suspect. I'm here very much at Sir Hakon's expense. Don't let the fact that we're friends mislead you into thinking that we're equals in the economic or even social spheres.'

'Oh, you can say that,' Lalita said dismissively. 'You have the whole galaxy at your fingertips and you don't know what it's like for us living on a pile of . . . of dirt.'

The warehouse was on the east side of town, at a distance from the landing field but perhaps more secure for being near the Singh dwelling. The two women walked along the sidewalk of stabilized earth a handsbreadth above the cracked mud of the street proper. Lalita picked her way over the irregular surface without a skip or stumble, despite pools of shadow which the lights of neighboring buildings didn't reach. Hope's three moons were scarcely brighter than planets.

Three people approached from up the street in the direction the women were walking. There was laughter and a snatch of song in which Mincio recognized Beresford's voice.

'Lalita,' Mincio said, 'it's never a good thing to feel trapped. Believe me, poverty is just as confining as . . . as a planet which is a long way from the centers of development. After this tour I'll have a position that will provide for me all the rest of my life without any need for concern on my part. That security is as close to paradise as I ever expect to come.'

She smiled faintly. And if I die before returning to Manticore, then that's security of another sort.

'But don't let the fact that you feel trapped make you blind to the beauties of Hope,' Mincio went on fiercely. 'And to the beauties of your life here. There are many, many women on Manticore who'd trade their lives in a heartbeat to be as lovely and central as you are here.'

'Ah, Ms. Mincio?' Beresford said. A lamp over the adjacent house cast its light through the bars of the fenced courtyard in front of the dwelling. The servant stepped close while his two companions kept a little behind in the shadows.

'Good evening, Beresford,' Mincio said coldly. Beresford was with a pair of female spacers from the Melungeon vessel; they were carrying bottles. Mincio assumed their association with Beresford was a mercenary one. She didn't approve, but it wasn't her place to object; anyway, that would be a waste of breath.

'I've arranged to borrow an air car for you and the master tomorrow,' Beresford said. 'A farmer named Holdt's staying in town and lent it. I was coming to tell him that, but I wonder if you'd . . . ?'

'Yes, all right,' Mincio said. There was no telling when Beresford would get back to the Singh compound, and there was no need for him and his presumed whores to come any closer to the party in his master's honor.

'Thank you, Ms. Mincio,' Beresford said, tipping his hat and returning to his companions. 'We'll be off, then.'

Beresford seemed to like Mincio well enough, and he never failed to treat her as the gentlewoman she was by birth. There was always an undercurrent of amused contempt when he spoke to her, though. Beresford knew his status; Mincio was neither fish nor fowl. As she'd said to Lalita, poverty was as surely a trap as any backward planet could be.

'We should get back anyway,' Mincio said. 'Though I don't know that I'm going to be ready for anything faster than a saraband.'

They turned together, putting the breeze behind them. It felt cool now. Snatches of Beresford's song reached them; Mincio hoped that the girl couldn't understand the words, though she didn't suppose anyone on Hope could be described as 'delicately brought up.'

Two figures came up the alley just ahead of them. A man and a boy, Mincio first thought; then realized she'd been wrong in both identifications. The first growler she'd seen on Hope was following an old woman who wore a cloak and floppy hat as she plodded steadily toward the dance.

'Oh, it's Ms. deKyper,' Lalita said, her lips close to Mincio's ear so as not to be overheard. The old woman was only a few steps ahead. 'She's from Haven. She's been here oh! so many years, studying the Alphanes like you. She used to be rich, but something happened back home and now she just scrapes by.'

'I'd like to meet her,' Mincio said. 'If she's as expert as you say, she'd be a perfect guide for the time we're on Hope.'

'Ms. deKyper?' Lalita called. 'May I introduce our guest, Ms. Mincio of Manticore?'

'Oh my goodness!' deKyper said. She swept her hat off as she turned; a thin, tired woman, showing her advanced age despite prolong, whose eyes nonetheless sparkled in the area light flooding from the compound across the street. 'I'm honored I'm sure. I came as soon as I heard that scholars touring the Alphane worlds had arrived.'

Her face hardened in wooden disapproval. 'You're not, I trust,' she said, 'associated with Lord Orloff and his fellow savages?'

'We are not,' Mincio said, her tone an echo of the older woman's. They touched fingertips. 'While my friend and pupil Sir Hakon Nessler may gather a small souvenir here or there, for the most part we view and record artifacts with the intention of recreating some of them on his estate.'

The growler stuck out a tongue almost twenty centimeters long and licked Mincio's hand. The contact was rough but not unpleasant, something like the touch of a dry washcloth. It was completely unexpected, though, and Mincio jerked back as if from a hot burner.

'Oh, I'm very sorry!' deKyper said. 'She's quite harmless, believe me.'

'I didn't know what it was,' Mincio said in embarrassment. 'I was just startled.'

The growler's broad forehead tapered abruptly to the nose and jaws from which the tongue had snaked. Its skin was covered with fine scales; they showed a sheen but no particular color under the present dim light. According to images and travelers' descriptions, growlers were generally gray or green.

Mincio reached tentatively to stroke the beast's head; it began to purr with the deep buzzsaw note that had gotten the creatures their common name. The sound was a shock to hear even though she knew it was friendly, not a threatening growl.

'Does he have a name?' Mincio asked. The growler licked her wrist as she petted it. The tongue was remarkable, virtually a third hand in addition to the four-fingered appendages on the ends of the arms.

'She, I believe,' deKyper said, 'but I don't know her name.'

She straightened and added with the emphasis of someone who knows she's making an insupportable statement, 'There's no doubt that growlers are the real Alphanes. I can tell by the way she attends when I play Alphane books.'

'Can you read Alphane crystals, Ms. deKyper?' Lalita said. 'Oh, that's wonderful! I didn't know that.'

'Well . . .' the old woman temporized. 'I've discovered the frequency at which the crystal books are intended to be played, but I haven't deciphered the symbology as yet. I'm sure that will come in time.'

And so will Christ and His angels, Mincio thought. Another enthusiast who's discovered the key to the universe by studying the site of the Great Sphinx of Giza; or here, its Alphane equivalent.

Aloud she said, 'Would you care to meet my companion, Sir Hakon Nessler? We like to have a guide knowledgeable about local sites when we visit a planet. Of course there'd be a special honorarium for a scholar like you, if you wouldn't be embarrassed.'

The growler stopped licking Mincio and shuffled close to deKyper again. Though its hind legs were short, the beast was fully bipedal. It leaned its head against deKyper's chest and resumed its thunderous purr.

'I long ago stopped being embarrassed at honest ways to receive money,' deKyper said with a wan smile. 'And it doesn't happen so frequently that I'm apt to get bored with the experience, either. In any case, I'd be proud to accompany real scholars.'

Her resemblance to her pet went beyond a degree of physical similarity that itself was surprising in members of such different species. They both shared a dreamy harmlessness, and neither really belonged—here or perhaps anywhere. Mincio could empathize with the lack of belonging, but she herself was unlikely ever to be mistaken for a dreamer.

Perhaps deKyper understood Mincio's guardedly neutral expression; wistful the old woman might be, but she certainly wasn't stupid. 'It's of particular importance that we translate Alphane books,' she said. 'The knowledge and the public excitement that will generate in the developed regions will bring tourists to the Alphane worlds in large numbers.'

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