Part 1:
DIAMOND
1.Three hundred dead kings waited with eternal patience as the khaki-clad woman approached the enclosure. Six hundred sightless eyes watched as she came to a halt before their successor. A slight breeze caused some of their weapons to rattle, some of their robes to stir, as they stood, silent and unmoving, the harsh sentinels of the current ruler's ancestral court, mute possessors of the accumulated wisdom of their race.
The emperor, his golden fur rippling in the bright sunlight, sat on a tall wooden stool, observing the woman. He displayed no fear, no apprehension, merely curiosity. A withered advisor stood directly behind him, while on each side of him, clad in brilliantly-hued ceremonial armour and feathered headdresses, were some fifty warriors, their axes at the ready, motionless as statues. They had formed an aisle for her approach, and now they closed ranks and formed a circle to contain her.
The woman bowed from the waist. The warriors tensed at the sudden motion, but the emperor merely inclined his head slightly.
"I have observed your progress for many hours," he said at last. "Who are you, and why have you come to the land of the Enkoti?"
"My name is Susan Beddoes," answered the woman, "and I come in peace. I carry no weapons."
"I know," he answered. "If you had brought weapons with you, you would not have lived to reach my kingdom." He paused. "Why did your ship land so far away?"
"I did not wish to frighten you."
"We have seen a ship before. It belonged to another, similar to you, but taller, who visited us many years ago."
Beddoes nodded. "His name was Wilson McConnell."
"He gave us many gifts."
"I have brought gifts as well. They are in my ship."
"How is it that you speak the language of the Enkoti?"
"I do not speak it," she replied, indicating a tiny device that pressed against her larynx. "What you hear is not my voice, but the voice of the mechanism that translates your words into my language and my words into yours. Though I hope, before long, to be able to converse without it."
"Ah," he said noncommitally.
"You do not seem impressed," said Beddoes.
The emperor shrugged, his golden fur rippling and reflecting the sunlight. "Why should I be? It is just a toy."
"You've seen one before?"
"Yes."
The old advisor leaned forward and whispered something, and the emperor nodded almost imperceptibly.
"Let me tell you this, Susan Beddoes," continued the emperor. "I come from an unbroken line of 300 sitates, and the most ancient of them had created codes of law and behavior for the Enkoti and imposed order upon our domain when the great river that flows to our west was little more than a stream. Neither I nor my people are children; we will not be treated as such."
"That was never my intention," answered Beddoes.
"I am the Sitate Disanko, the three hundred and first in my dynasty. I will be treated with the respect due my position."
"I meant no offense," said Beddoes. She gestured to the three hundred dead Enkoti, each perfectly preserved. "Are these your forebears?"
"That is correct." Disanko stared at her. "Wilson McConnell told me that you buried your dead in the ground. How can you pay respect to them when their bodies are eaten away by worms and insects?"
"That's a good question," admitted Beddoes.
"Then perhaps you will answer it."
"My race venerates the spirit, rather than the flesh that houses it."
"It is indeed the spirit that sets us above the animals," said Disanko, "but the spirit must have a home, or the Maker of All Things would not have provided each spirit with one."
"An interesting concept," said Beddoes. "I will think upon it."
"McConnell was an explorer, and a mapmaker," said Disanko, seeming to tire of the subject. "Are you also here to make maps?"
"No," she replied. "I am an exoentomologist."
"I do not understand the word."
"An entomologist studies insects," explained Beddoes. "An exoentomologist studies insects that live on worlds other than her own."
"You have come all this way to study insects?" said Disanko with an air of disbelief.
"Yes."
The sitate paused and stared at her through oblique, sky-blue eyes. "There are insects all over the planet. Why have you come to the heart of my kingdom?"
"I will need help with my field work," she replied. "McConnell's reports say that the Enkoti are the most powerful race on Faligor, so I have sought you out. I am willing to pay for your assistance."
"With what will you pay?"
"I have a line of credit at the Bank of Rockgarden," she replied. "I can pay in credits, New Stalin rubles, Maria Theresa dollars..."
Disanko's thin lips pulled back from his teeth in what Beddoes hoped was a smile.
"Wilson McConnell explained money to me when he was here. It is a foolish concept."
"It is a concept that is in practice upon more than 50,000 worlds," said Beddoes.
"That does not make it less foolish, only more widespread," answered Disanko. "Why should anyone work for something that has no value in itself?"
"It has value to me," she said.
The withered old advisor leaned forward and whispered to Disanko again. The sitate answered, the old advisor shook his head vigorously and said something more, and finally Disanko turned back to Beddoes.
"What have you to trade for our help?" asked the sitate.
Beddoes smiled, relieved. "I have medicines, and machines that will make your work easier. I have translating devices so that you can speak to members of other races. I have mutated seeds that will double your crop production. I have communication devices that will make it unnecessary for you to send a runner from one village to another with messages. I have gadgets that will tell you if there are rocks beneath a field before you break your plows on them." She paused. "I have things you've never dreamed of, Sitate Disanko."
"Do not be so certain that your trinkets are greater than a sitate's dreams," he cautioned her.
"If I have offended you, it is due to my ignorance of your customs, and I beg your forgiveness and understanding," said Beddoes.
"We will eat now," announced Disanko. "Then you will tell me exactly what your work entails, and how many of my people you will require, and for how long, and what you will trade for their services. Then I will consult with my ancestors, and we will eat and sleep again, and tomorrow morning I will give you my answer."
"That will be acceptable," said Beddoes.
Disanko stared at her again. "I do not recall asking if it was acceptable. Your kingdom is many stars distant from here; you are in my kingdom now."
Beddoes bowed again. "I must return to my ship to get the goods I wish to trade. I can be back before dark."
"First you will eat with me," said Disanko firmly. "If it requires an extra day for me to make my decision, the insects will still be there."
Beddoes shrugged. "As you wish."
He shook his head. "As I command."
"When do we eat?" asked Beddoes.
"Soon," said Disanko. He stood up, and suddenly Beddoes became aware of the sounds of the village, the laughing and playing of children, the comings and goings of laborers, and she realized for the first time that her meeting with the sitate had taken place in total silence. "You may look around first, if you wish," said the sitate.
"Thank you. I'd very much like to."
Disanko summoned one of his warriors. "Her life is your life."
"I don't understand," said Beddoes.
"There are many wild animals beyond our city, and some of them are eaters of flesh. Tubito will protect you, to the point of sacrificing his life, if need be."
"That won't be necessary," said Beddoes.
"Let us hope that it is not necessary," said Disanko. "He has been a good and loyal servant, and I should be most displeased to lose him."
Beddoes studied the sitate, trying to determine whether he was issuing a threat or merely stating a fact, but his golden face disclosed no emotion, and finally she turned to Tubito, who looked questioningly at Disanko. The sitate nodded, and Tubito bowed and began leading her past Disanko's exquisitely preserved ancestors.
Eventually they reached a major avenue, and she followed him between rows of surprisingly complex wood-and-grass houses. Children came out to stare at her, and she noticed that, once away from Disanko, Tubito's entire demeanor had changed. He smiled, he spoke to the children, he waved to a number of the women who paused to watch them.
Suddenly she was conscious of the pungent odor of animals, and she saw that they were approaching a number of large, meticulously-constructed pens that housed the community's meat animals. Laced around the wooden bars were row upon row of thorns, obviously placed there to keep the domestic animals in and the predators out.
"Would you like to walk out beyond the city?" asked Tubito.
"If we have time," answered Beddoes.