If there was going to be fighting.

Two aircraft crossed the edge of the clearing and banked in opposite directions. They were one- or two-place autogyros, moving at 100 kph or slower.

Nobody fired at them, but one of the crewmen screamed, 'Federation dog-mothers!' and waved his cutting bar. Leon grabbed the man's arm and growled at him before Ricimer could react.

The first aircraft vanished beneath the treetops again. Three more autogyros appeared. One of them settled into the clearing. It bounced twice on the rocky soil but came to a halt within fifteen meters. Its four consorts began to circle the starship slowly at a hundred meters.

Choransky, Bivens, and several other officers stamped down the Cargo Three ramp. They were all armed. Martre wore the helmet and torso of a hard suit and carried another flashgun. He nodded as Gregg fell in step to one side of the command group and Ricimer joined on the other.

The autogyro's four-bladed support rotor slowed to a halt. The passenger getting out of the tandem seat to the rear was male, but Gregg noticed with distaste that the pilot was a woman. Gregg wasn't a religious zealot, but the way the North American Federation put women in positions of danger-women even served in the crews of Federation starships-would be offensive to any decent man.

The autogyro was powered by an air-cooled diesel. Gregg didn't realize how noisy it was until the passenger shouted an order and his pilot shut the clattering motor off.

'What do you mean shooting at us?' Captain Choransky shouted while he was still twenty meters from the aircraft. 'Look at that!'

He pointed over his shoulder in the general direction of the Sultan. Through air at such long range, the plasma bolt had only scoured away a patch of yellow-brown corrosion the Venerian atmosphere had left on the starship's white hull. Even such a relatively light weapon could have been fatal if it hit the thrusters during the descent, or if the Sultan's hull was crazed by long vibration.

'You have no right to be here!' the Federation envoy said shrilly. 'The Administration of Humanity has awarded exploitation of this sector to America!'

The envoy was a tall, thin man with a full beard but almost no hair above the line of his ears. He wore a gray tunic over blue trousers, perhaps a uniform, with gaudy decorations on his left breast. His holstered pistol was for show rather than use, and he looked extremely apprehensive of the heavily-armed Venerians.

'Brisbane's authority is a farce!' Choransky said. He stopped directly in front of the envoy and stood with his arms akimbo, emphasizing the breadth of his chest. 'The Secretary General can't fart unless President Pleyal tells him to.'

The envoy swallowed. He met Choransky's glare, but Gregg had the feeling that was to avoid having to admit the presence of the other murderous-looking Venerians surrounding him. The Fed's courage wasn't in doubt.

'Whatever President Pleyal may be to you,' the envoy said, 'he is my head of state. And his orders are that his domains beyond Earth shall have no dealings except with vessels of the North American Federation.'

Choransky poked the envoy's chest with one powerful finger. 'Balls!' he said. 'Captain Mostert turned over his whole cargo on Virginia last year. I'm from Captain Mostert. Don't you recognize the damned ship?'

The Federation envoy made an angry moue with his lips. 'Port Commander Finchly, who dealt with your Captain Mostert,' he said, 'was arrested and carried back to Earth last month to stand trial. His replacement, Port Commander Zaloga, arrived with the orders for his predecessor's arrest.'

Choransky seized the grip of the cutting bar dangling from his belt. He also wore a slung rifle. The envoy shut his eyes but didn't move.

'God grind your stupid bones to meal!' the captain said, his voice low-pitched but sincere. Then he went on in a grating but nearly normal tone, 'Look, you tell your Commander Zaloga this. I'm bringing my other ships down, because they stink worse 'n sewers with the Molts we're carrying. And you bastards need Molts!'

The envoy's eyelids quivered.

'Then we'll come talk to Zaloga, and talk like sensible people. If he's looking for a little something for himself to clear this, well, I guess something can be arranged. But no more shooting!'

The envoy nodded, then opened his eyes. 'I'll tell the commander,' he said, 'and I'm sure he'll talk with you himself. But as for your business-'

For an instant there was something more than fear and formality in the Fed's voice. 'Gentlemen, you know President Pleyal. It's as much as a man's life is worth to cross him.'

Choransky gripped the envoy by the shoulder, gently enough, and turned the man back toward his autogyro. 'Pleyal's a long way away,' the Venerian captain said. 'I'm here, and believe me, I'm not taking these stinking Molts back to Venus with me.'

Ricimer stepped in front of the envoy. 'Sir,' he said. 'Without trade your colony will die, and without outside resources the homeworlds-even Earth in her present condition-will die also. No orders that restrict trade can be in keeping with the will of God for mankind to survive.'

The Federation officer stared as Ricimer moved out of the way again. 'Does President Pleyal recognize a god beyond himself?' he asked, half a taunt. He got into the aircraft.

'And no shooting!' Choransky repeated in a loud voice as the Fed pilot restarted her motor.

9

Virginia

The roar of the vessels landing made bones quiver. The glare of the thrusters was so intense that Gregg felt the bare backs of his hands prickle. He'd lowered his visor to protect his sight.

They'd had to reload the Molts temporarily. With luck, the other ships could manage to avoid the Sultan when they landed around the edges of the clearing, but there was no way to safely mark the location of off-loaded cargo among the trees. The aliens moaned as they were forced back aboard the vessel.

From the Sultan's open hatchways Gregg, Ricimer, and a score of other crewmen and officers watched their consorts land. Partly because of his filtered vision, partly due to simple unfamiliarity with the fine points of starship construction, it wasn't until the vessels were within fifty meters of the ground that Gregg understood what was wrong.

'That's not the Preakness with the Dove,' he bellowed to Ricimer. The spacer couldn't possibly hear him-and had no doubt known the truth within seconds of the time the starships came in sight, making a rare and dangerous simultaneous landing. 'That's some Earth ship! She's got a metal hull!'

Whatever the vessel was, she landed neatly in the clear area. The Dove came down in an orange fireball fifty meters within the margin of the forest, blasting splinters in every direction.

Virginia's vegetation didn't sustain flames very well when it was green. The fire wouldn't be dangerous, but it would smolder and reek for days or longer. Ricimer, his face screened by the rosy filter which pivoted down from inside the brim of his cap, shook his head in disgust at the Dove's awkwardness.

The strange vessel was about the 150 tonnes of the Dove. The hull was more smoothly curved than that of a Venerian ship, but there were a dozen or more blisters marring the general lines. Some of the blisters were obviously weapons installations.

Metal was easier to form into complex shapes than mold-cast ceramics. It was also easier to tack this or that extra installation onto a metal hull later, instead of getting the design right the first time.

The Preakness had started her landing approach. Radio was useless when a starship's thrusters were swamping the RF spectrum with ions. Gregg didn't expect to learn anything until all the vessels were down.

A personnel hatch on the newcomer's belly curve opened. The rock beneath still glowed white from the landing, distorting the vessel's appearance with heat waves.

A man-a very big man-wearing a silver hard suit jumped out of the ship and ran heavily toward the

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