one of the buildings there was an island in the river of streaming isenj: some appeared to be standing still, pressed together and waiting by a doorway. It was closed. He turned to the interpreter.
âQueuing for food,â said Serrimissani, without waiting for his question. âThereâs sufficient, but the logistics of distribution are unwieldy.â
âWhat do the isenj make of humans?â
Serrimissani fixed him with a predatorâs expressionless black eyes. He could almost see her digging for scorpions and crunching them up between those needle teeth. âThey can see kinship with you. They enjoy complex organizations.â
âWhat do you think of them?â
âThey honor their debts.â
âHow much do you get paid for interpreting? Sorry. Is that a rude question?â
âThey do not employ me. I have food and somewhere to rest, just as I have on Wessâej.â
âYou work both sides of the line? And the isenj trust you to be here?â
âWhat could I do that they would not trust? This is not a conflict of knowledge, so I cannot spy. Nor is it a war where the wessâhar take the conflict into their enemiesâ territory. So I do my job and threaten no one. How do you get paid?â
It was a good question. Eddie hadnât had a raise in seventy-six years, and it still irritated him that the BBChan personnel department had decided that he wasnât entitled to service increments because heâd been in cryosuspension for most of that time. Hell, heâd worked with people who seemed to spend their whole career in comas and they still got raises.
But then he hadnât been around to spend his pay, and it had earned plenty of interest. He was surprised how little it suddenly meant to him. Perhaps that was how rich people felt all the time. His stomach felt oddly displaced. âI get tokens that I can exchange for food and other things that I need.â
âWant.â
âSorry?â
âHumans want many things but they need much less than they think,â said the ussissi. âI accept the philosophy of Targassat, having lived among the wessâhar. Beware acquisitiveness, Mr. Michallat. It will take you hostage.â
Eddie savored the moment of being lectured in asceticism by a mongoose. It almost dispelled the aching bewilderment at realizing he was rich and none the better for it. The transport came to a halt.
Serrimissani turned her head very slowly. There was no wet gloss to her eyes; they looked matte as velvet, sinister, utterly void. âAre you ready?â
Eddie caught the bee-cam and pocketed it. âIâve interviewed Minister Ual before. Iâm ready.â
The ministryâand Eddie had no other word for itâwas conspicuous in the unbroken wall of buildings by the fact that it was very, very plain. There were no extravagant designs, either painted or carved. As he walked through the door and into the reception hall, the first thing that struck him was that it was empty . It was also vast. It was at least twelve meters high and lined with smooth aquamarine stone, a stark and cool contrast to the hot rusts and ambers and purples outside.
There seemed to be nobody around. Then he heard movement, and Serrimissani tugged at his sleeve and bobbed her head in the direction of one of the archways off to one side. An isenj appeared. There was an exchange of high-pitched sounds.
Eddie occupied himself by letting the bee-cam wander around the hall. So status bought you space, did it? Yes, isenj were a lot like humans.
âUal is ready to see you and asks if you would like refreshment,â Serrimissani said.
âNot the fungus.â
âWater flavored with something that the Actaeon provided.â
âGod, I hope itâs coffee.â
There were moments when Eddie knew he had touched common ground with the isenj. It was easy to expect them to be utterly alien because they looked unlike
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