PETER HAWLEY STROLLED down a side street with a dog at his heel. It was a dog of many breeds, but not a mixture of careless parentage. Peter paused at a cross-street and looked uncertainly to left and right. “What do you make, Buregarde?”
“The noble dog says right,” replied Buregarde.
“Right,” said Peter turning up the street. “And stop this ‘Noble dog’ routine.”
“Man is dog’s best friend,” said Buregarde. “If you’d called me something sensible, I wouldn’t have looked it up. There is a statue to me in the Okeefenokee back on Earth. I am the noble dog. Pogo says so.”
“I—”
“Easy Peter!” said the dog in a near-whisper.
“All right. Do we play down the chatter?”
Buregarde sat, lifted his nose and sniffed. His natural voice gave a faint whine of discontent. “I’m supposed to have a nose,” he complained. “This is like trying to smell out a lone mouse in a zoological garden in midsummer.”
“Why the warning?” asked Peter.
“All races smell the same when they are poised for violence,” said the dog. “Trouble is that man-smell isn’t pointed the way it’s going, only where it’s coming from.”
Peter grunted. “Catch any woman-smell?”
“Just the usual whiff. Stale scent. She was here; she passed this way. But which way?”
“We can guess they made it away from the spaceport.”
“Unless,” said the dog taking another sniff of the air, “they’re taking her back to some other spacecraft.” Buregarde looked up at Peter. “Do you catch anything?”
“Just the usual mingled fright and danger, frantic despair.”
“Directional?”
Peter shook his head. “No,” he said. “The source is too close.”
“Let’s stroll up this street to the end and come back on the other side,” said the dog. “Quietly.”
In a saunter they went, alert and poised. A man and his dog from all appearances. But in Xanabar, the principal city of Xanabar the Empire they were huntsman and companion.
Like all cities of more than ten million souls, Xanabar had its glistening and lofty area and its slums—and what would have been a waterfront region in a seafaring city. The conditions were the same as they’d been everywhere for a few decades of thousands of years. Only the technology changes. Man’s cave is stainless steel and synthetic plastic; the cave’s man is swinging a better axe, and his hide is protected from the weather by stuff far more durable than his awn skin. But he’s the same man with the same hackles; they just rise for a few more thousand reasons than the hackles of his ancestors.
“Got it!” said Buregarde coming to a brief point at a closed door.
“Let’s go in!”
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