A Circus of Hells by Poul Anderson. Part one

one bearing refreshments–and its chairs, in deference to the

guests–the room stretched dreary. Pictures of former personnel,

trophies and citations for former accomplishments, seemed to make its

walls just the more depressing. An animation showed a park on Terra,

trees nodding, in the background the skyward leap of a rich family’s

residential tower and airborne vehicles glittering like diamond dust;

but it reminded him too well of how far he was from those dear comforts.

He preferred the darkness in the real window. It was open and a breeze

gusted through, warm, laden with unearthly odors.

The Merseians were a more welcome sight, if only as proof that a

universe did exist beyond Irumclaw. Forty of them stood in a row,

enduring repeated introductions with the stoicism appropriate to a

warrior race.

They resembled especially large men … somewhat. A number of their

faces might have been called good-looking in a craggy fashion; their

hands each had four fingers and a thumb; the proportions and

articulations of most body parts were fairly anthropoid. But the posture

was forward-leaning, balanced by a heavy tail. The feet, revealed by

sandals, were splayed, webbed, and clawed. The skin was hairless and

looked faintly scaled; depending on sub-species, its color ranged from

the pale green which was commonest through golden brown to ebony. The

head had two convoluted bony orifices where man’s has external ears. A

ridge of serrations ran from its top, down the spine to the end of the

tail.

Most of this anatomy was concealed by their uniforms: baggy tunic, snug

breeches, black with silver trim and insignia. The latter showed family

connections and status as well as rank and service. The Merseians had

politely disarmed themselves, in that none carried a pistol at his wide

belt; the Terrans, in turn, had refrained from asking them to remove

their great knuckleduster-handled war knives.

It wasn’t the differences between them and men that caused trouble,

Flandry knew. It was the similarities–in planets of origin and thus in

planets desired; in the energy of warm-blooded animals, the instincts of

ancestors who hunted, the legacies of pride and war–

“Afal Ymen, may I present Lieutenant Flandry,” Abdullah intoned. The

young man bowed to the huge form, whose owner corresponded approximately

to a commander, and received a nod of the ridged and shining pate. He

proceeded, exchanging names and bows with every subordinate Merseian and

wondering, as they doubtless did too, when the farce would end and the

drinking begin.

“Lieutenant Flandry.”

“Mei Tachwyr.”

They stopped, and stared, and both mouths fell open.

Flandry recovered first, perhaps because he became aware that he was

holding up the parade. “Uh, this is a, uh, pleasant surprise,” he

stammered in Anglic. More of his wits returned. He made a formal Eriau

salutation: “Greeting and good fortune to you, Tachwyr of the Vach

Rueth.”

“And … may you be in health and strength, Dominic Flandry … of

Terra,” the Merseian replied.

For another moment their eyes clashed, black against gray, before the

man continued down the line.

After a while he got over his astonishment. Albeit unexpected, the

happenstance that he and Tachwyr had met again did not look especially

important. Nonetheless, he went robotlike through the motions of

sociability and of being an interpreter. His gaze and mind kept straying

toward his former acquaintance. And Tachwyr himself was too young to

mask entirely the fact that he was as anxious to get together with

Flandry.

Their chance came in a couple of hours, when they managed to dodge out

of their respective groups and seek the refreshment table. Flandry

gestured. “May I pour for you?” he asked. “I fear that except for the

telloch, we’ve run out of things native to your planet.”

“I regret to say you have been had,” Tachwyr answered. “It is a dreadful

brand. But I like your–what is it called?–skoksh?”

“That makes two of us.” Flandry filled glasses for them. He had already

had several whiskies and would have preferred this one over ice.

However, he wasn’t about to look sissified in front of a Merseian.

“Ah … cheers,” Tachwyr said, lifting his tumbler. His throat and

palate gave the Anglic word an accent for which there were no Anglic

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