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Peters turned. Dreelig, Dee, and Donollo were making an entrance, and it was worth watching. The older Grallt strode in the lead wearing his gray suit, back straight, looking down his nonexistent nose at the company. Dee had on a tunic in the same gray but cut low in front, and a skirt the same color, wide pleats draped straight and ending just above the knee. She hovered at Donollo’s right elbow, and Dreelig was half a step behind, carrying an ordinary-looking briefcase.

They took a table next to the sailors, staying in character, Donollo handing Dee into the chair with gallantry, leaving Dreelig to find his own seat. Donollo caught Peters’ eye and seated himself pompously; they all held the pose for several heartbeats, then relaxed, and Dee broke out in a long peal of Grallt laughter.

“What do you think?” Dreelig asked, leaning toward the sailors. “Will it be effective?”

Conversation in the mess room had all but stopped during the performance; the low buzz started again, and Peters shrugged. “It works on your folks,” he pointed out. “I reckon it’ll be dynamite back home.”

Todd was grinning. “President of Mars come to check up on the peons, but real informal, you know? Add a little fast talk, and you could sell ‘em building lots on the Moon.”

Donollo said something, and Dreelig translated, “We have played an important one and his assistant before, but this is a little different. Dee’s costume is very effective, don’t you think?”

“Oh, yes,” said Todd. Peters kept silent.

“I don’t like it very much,” said Dee, looking down at herself. “There’s too much of me outside my clothing. But this is my first downside assignment, and if it works it will do very well.”

“You definitely have the basics in place,” Todd told her. She stuck out her tongue at him. The tip of it was split into two points.

“For now, if you will excuse us, we should eat,” Dreelig said, ignoring the byplay. “We have a great deal of work to do.”

“Sure,” said Peters. “Let us know when you’re ready to leave, we need to go change.”

“Certainly,” Dreelig acknowledged. “It won’t be for several utle yet. Gell isn’t ready, and there is no sense in our arriving in the night.” The noise level in the mess room had come back to normal or a little above, only a few glances from the other diners betraying their interest.

“Then I reckon I could use a nap,” Peters said. “We done put in most of a day already, and it’s likely to be a while before we get a chance at the rack again.”

“Good idea,” Dreelig approved. “Meet us in the operations bay at the sixth utle. That will leave ample time for the trip.”

Peters had a restless nap, nodding off and waking up, spending a good bit of time in the study chair, staring out the window. The Moon was visible for a while, looking pretty much as it did from the deck of the ship at sea. Then the slow revolutions of the ship brought Earth into view, and he tried to figure out which part of it he was looking at. It was hard. He’d seen the pictures taken from space last century, but none of them had prepared him for the difficulty of seeing past the brilliant white cloud patterns to the relatively faint and irregular land outlines.

Finally a reddish-white splotch resolved itself into the Sahara and north Africa, and he realized another part of the problem. He’d been looking at it as if it were in conventional globe position, North up, but the big white blob at the lower right wasn’t clouds, it was the Arctic, and if that was right, it wasn’t light yet in Jax. He checked the handheld. Sure enough, it was coming up on five in the morning back there.

He napped again, waking in plenty of time to get ready. Noises in the head said Todd had done so as well; he waited until the other had finished his shower before going in himself. That done, he dressed in dark blue jumper with white piping and stovepipe trousers, realizing as he did so that he was already used to the kathir suit. The skivvies and T-shirt felt rumpled and constricting, and the scratchy wool of the uniform rasped his skin.

Todd joined him when he rapped on the door. He had added neckerchief and salad bar, and his white hat was firmly screwed onto his head. Peters snorted, made excuses, and went back to add those items to his own outfit. If they were going to do this, might as well do it right.

Chapter Seven

Going down through atmosphere was more spectacular than going up. The dli went in belly first; streamers of pale-yellow and gold fire waved in the ports, and a low rumbling hiss vibrated the walls. That only lasted a few minutes, after which Gell brought the craft into level flight, which was as noiseless and sensationless as before. They were over open ocean, still very high up, for what seemed a long time before Gell pointed out the windshield. “Jax,” he said, and sure enough, white breakers and pale yellow sand were visible, far ahead and below.

They came in over the beach at what seemed like treetop height. When they turned over the river toward Mayport a powerboat was racing along, throwing up a white rooster tail. Gell pointed at it, then pantomimed, right hand hovering over the panel, nearly touching, then a fluttering gesture to simulate water flying up behind. Big grin. “Maybe we ought to let him do it,” Todd suggested from the back seat. “Be something to see.”

“Yeah, but I’d rather see it than do it,” Peters said sourly. When Gell looked at him, he pointed at himself, then sat up straight, one hand over his forehead as if shielding his eyes from the sun, the other pointing far into the distance past the pilot. Gell’s reply was a chuckle that sounded like a fifty-caliber gun in the distance.

They skimmed over the pines onto the athletic field, Gell working the control in tiny increments. Peters had time to note a ring of Marines and a glittering welcoming party, then they were down, the only indication that the flight was over being the cessation of movement out the window. He said “thanks” to Gell in Grallt, and added “good flight” in English as he and Todd got up to leave.

Dreelig and the others were still seated, Donollo with his head back, apparently asleep. “This is our stop,” Peters said.

“Yes, but not ours,” Dreelig told him. “We are going on to Washington. We will return at the fourth utle of the sixth ande.”

Peters held up the watch. “You got any idea what time that’ll be, local?”

Dreelig consulted with Dee, who counted on her fingers. “Well after dark, I don’t know the number exactly,” she said.

“If we ain’t waitin’ when you show up, have Gell make a low pass over the admin building,” Peters suggested. “That’ll let us know you’re here.”

“I would not do any such thing,” said Dreelig. “Kh kh! Gell has too many excuses for special performances while flying without making up more. If you are not here, we will wait.”

“We’ll be here,” Peters assured him.

They stepped down over the trailing edge and saluted the brass, the one with the most braid returning the salute. There was a clunk! behind, and Peters spun to see the hatch closed and the dli rising off the grass. The admiral said “As you were, sailor,” pretty sharply, and the two of them watched the craft vanish over the admin building, heading north.

“I take it we don’t get to talk to the ambassador,” the admiral said.

“Yes, sir, I mean no, sir,” Peters floundered. “The ambassador and his party have an appointment in Washington.”

“I see. You men been booted out?”

Peters flushed. “No, sir, we are runnin’ errands. There’s some things we oughta bring along for the trip, and since they had to come down anyway, they brought us along to make the arrangements, sir.”