World without Stars

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Authors: Poul Anderson

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BOOK: World without Stars
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World Without Stars

Poul Anderson

Contents

Chapter I

Chapter II

Chapter III

Chapter IV

Chapter V

Chapter VI

Chapter VII

Chapter VIII

Chapter IX

Chapter X

Chapter XI

Chapter XII

Chapter XIII

Chapter XIV

Chapter XV

Chapter XVI

Chapter XVII

About the Author

I

G
OD WAS RISING
in the west, and this time the sun was down—only lately, a few clouds were still red above the eastern treetops, against
purple dusk; but over the hours that light had waned, until it was little more than an echo of what now swung above Lake Silence—so
that His pale glory stood clear to be adored.

The Pack could not all make worship. They had met on a ridge near the lairs and howled when the fingers of God’s foremost
arm glimmered into view. But He would take long to mount so high that His entire self was revealed. The hes must hunt, the
shes wreak, the youngs gather, lest God’s Coursers perish. Moreover and worse, the whole Pack unmoving here, so distant from
their hills, could draw the notice of a downdevil out of the sea depths; and night or no, the downdevil might then send a
war fleet of the Herd … if, indeed, that which had lately arrived in fire and thunder was not enemy work itself. Ya-Kela,
the One, had brought some bold followers who would go with him to see about that. But first he stood his watch of homage on
behalf of the whole folk.

Slowly, slowly, God climbed into heaven. Ya-Kela crouched on the back of Crooked Rock and sang. He sang the Welcome, and the
Praise, and the Strength. Then the last coals of sunset went out, and the sky was empty of everything save God, the angels,
and three planets, and God cast a white glade from the world’s edge, down the width of Lake Silence until it was lost among
the reeds at this shore. The night was still and cool. A breeze gusted, smelling of damp; a fish leaped in a single clear
spash, a wing cried its lonely note, reeds rustled and were answered by the inland brush; but otherwise ya-Kela and God had
darkness to themselves.

He stopped a while to rest and eat. He was hoarse, the rock was harsh beneath his webs and tail, and weariness dragged at
him.
Yes
, he thought,
I grow old. But I am yet the One of the Pack
. —A distant boom made him start. Drums? It was not impossible for the Herd to come raiding by night. But it was rare. The
downdevils feared God and so their worshipers did too. …
Only a twyhorn, off in Umber Swamp
, he decided.

He looked west again, and was astonished to see God’s body flame in sight.
Why, I must have dozed
, he thought in dismay.
Does that mean anything other than that I am in truth old?
Hastily he went through the invocations and gestures he had missed, until he was caught up. The legends haunted him about
creatures that had long ago come from the sky and returned—to Herd day or Pack night, who knew save God and the downdevils?
Were these unknown newcomers at Balefire Head, whom he must presently seek out, the same ones? More than ever, the world needed
shielding against strangeness. “I call to Thee, we call to Thee, Thou Who casteth out the sun, arise, arise, arise ….”

II

O
N ANOTHER EVENING
, very far away, I had heard another song. This was when I got back to City.

Like most who colonize a planet, the settlers of Landomar wanted nature and elbow room. There is no other good reason for
planting yourself at the bottom of a gravity well. The reason is not quite logical—after all, most of us can satisfy our ape
instincts with an occasional groundside visit somewhere, or just with a multisense tape—but I suppose that a gene complex
still crops up occasionally which makes the owner want to belong to a specific patch of earth. So if you can find a habitable
uninhabited world (statistically rare, but consider how many stars the universe holds) you go with a band of like-minded people
to claim it. I don’t know whether breeding then reinforces the instinct, or the original parents remain culturally dominant
over the centuries. In all events, after a while you have a scattered population which doesn’t want outsiders building a starport.

At the same time, starports are necessary. Theoretically they shouldn’t be, when any point in space is as close as any other
point. In practice, though, an expanding race needs them. First, you have to make up energy differentials between one system
and the next in stages. That’s obvious enough in the case of the really remote galaxies; we could get there, but we couldn’t
match a relative velocity which is a goodly fraction of
c
. However, just the variation between, say, the inner and outer part of a spiral arm is a bit too fuel-consuming to overcome
in a single jump.

Then second, you need a base for observation, so you can
establish precisely where your next goal is and how fast it’s moving. And third, of course, you want docks, yards, supply
depots. Those could be built anywhere, but since the advanced bases are required for the first two reasons, they soon serve
the third function also. And the fourth: rest, recreation, a place to roister and brag and ease off. For this purpose, even
a spaceman born is happiest when the environment isn’t entirely artificial.

They were more reasonable on Landomar than on some worlds I could name. They wouldn’t let us build on the ground, but they
made no objection to an orbital satellite. We could go down to their villages and farmsteads, hunt in their forests, sail
on their oceans. They didn’t mind our money in the least. Then, as City got bigger, with more and more to offer, their young
folk started coming to us, to visit, eventually to work. The elders grumbled, until we brought in socio-dynamicists to extrapolate
the trend for them and prove that it would never really affect their own timeless oneness with the planet. At most, a cluster
of small space-oriented service enterprises would develop groundside. Which is what happened.

I had spent several days there, arranging for stores, isotopes, and so forth. I also hoped to recruit a gunner. But in that
I’d failed. Those few who applied had no aptitude. Well, there was a man, a hunter by trade; but the psychograph showed that
he enjoyed killing too much. I felt a little tired and depressed. It didn’t help, either, that Wenli was ill. Nothing serious,
but the kid would doubtless be adult when I returned, and I like to remember my get as happy while they’re small.

So I was eager to leave dust behind. My boat hit sky with a yell. Landomar became a giant cloud-banded shield, soft blue against
the black. Before long City hove in view.

You can’t add randomly to a satellite, or the spin properties would get ridiculous. But City had existed for a few
centuries now, and grown in a way that the Landomar elders would not admit was organic. I remembered the original cheerless
metal shell. Today I saw towers rocketing from parapets, domes and ports glowing brighter than stars, the Ramakan memorial
rakish across the galactic clouds; I could see ships in dock and boats aswarm; and as nearly as any spaceman (except Hugh
Valland) ever does, I felt I was home.

I cycled through the lockfield faster than was strictly safe and did no more than tell the mechmen to check out an irregularity
which had registered in the boat-pilot’s gamma rhythm. At once, wreck all formality, I was out of the dock area and its crowds,
along the ramps and through the halls toward Lute’s place.

She lives in high-weight, overlooking space itself. That’s expensive, but her husbands can afford to pay their share. Not
that she picks them on any such basis—not Lute—it’s only that a handsome, intelligent woman attracts able men. She’s probably
my favorite portwife.

So I hurried down the last corridor. It was empty at the moment. My feet thudded on the floor, which gave me a springier response
than Landomar’s overrated lawns, and the ventilators seemed to purr louder than usual. The color patterns in the walls happened
to be grays and greens, and that was right too; they fitted with the touch of sadness, homesickness-in-advance, which counterpointed
my pleasure in getting back.

The music did likewise: so much so that I was almost on top of it before it registered on me. An omnisonor was being played,
uncommonly well. The tune was archaic, paced like sea tides, but with ringing chords below; and then a man’s voice joined
in, quite softly:


Mary O’Meara, the stars and the dewfall have covered your hilltop with light
.

The wind in the lilies that blossom around you goes bearin’ your name from the height
.

My girl, you are all of the night
.”

I rounded the hall’s curve about the satellite and saw him. He lounged in a bay close to Lute’s door. The broad port framed
him in darkness and a crescent moon. His fingers ran casually over the keys of the instrument in his lap, his eyes were half
closed and he was singing to himself.


A ship out of shadow bears homeward by starlight, by stars and the loom of your hill
.

A hand at a brow is uplifted in peerin’, salutin’ and shakin’ with chill
.

My dear, are you waitin’ there still?

In a pause for breath, he noticed me. Something I did not understand went out of his face, to be replaced by a friendly grin.
“Hello,” he said. His accent had an odd lilt. “Sorry about the racket.”

“Enjoyable, sir,” I answered formally.

“I was passin’ the time,” he said, “waitin’ for Captain Argens.”

“Myself.” I bowed.

He unsprawled his height, which was considerable, and thrust out a muscular hand. Archaic for certain! But I made the clasp,
and took that moment to study him.

His dress was conventional: blue tunic, white breeks, flexible halfboots. The comets of a Master’s rating glowed on his wide
shoulders. But the physical type was one that you don’t see often: fair skin over craggy features, close-cropped yellow hair,
fire-blue eves. “Hugh Valland,” he said, “off the
Lady Lara
.”

“Felipe Argens,” I responded, mechanically in my startlement.
I’m old enough to recognize that anyone bearing a name like his must be a great deal older.

“Hear you’re lookin’ for a gunner,” he said.

“Well … yes.” That was no surprise. Gossip flies fast when more than one ship is in port. “You’re interested?”

“Yes, sir, I am. The
Lady’s
inbound again, so her skipper don’t mind lettin’ me off my contract. Understand you’re goin’ to Earth.”

“Eventually,” I nodded. “Might be some time, though.”

“That’s all right. Just so we get there.”

I made a fast computation. If this man had served on the
Lady
he’d have a record and shipmates to consult: much better than a psychograph. Though he already looked good.

“Fine; let’s talk,” I said. “But, uh, why didn’t you wait in the apartment? My wife would have been glad—”

“Hear tell she’s got a sick kid. Didn’t know if she’d want to play hostess.” I liked him better and better.

The door dilated for me and Lute met us. “How’s Wenli?” I asked after presentations.

“Fretful,” she said. “Fever. I had her down to the clinic and they confirmed it’s a neovirus.”

Nothing to be alarmed about, oh, no, not with supportive treatment. But when a thing that was extraterrestrial to start with
mutates, the biotechs in a frontier post like City don’t have the equipment to tailor a quick-cure molecule. In twenty years
or so, having reached optimum adulthood, Wenli would get her antithanatic; thereafter her cells would instantly reject any
hostile nucleic acids. But for now my little girl must rely on what poor defenses nature had provided. Recovery would be slow.

She was asleep. I peeked in at the flushed round face, then went back to the others. Valland was jollying Lute with an anecdote
from his latest voyage. They’d needed to gain prestige in a culture which rated poetics as the highest art, so he’d introduced
the limerick. Watching her laugh, I felt a
twinge of jealousy. Not personal; Lute is so thoroughly decent that it isn’t even awkward when two of her men happen to be
in port at the same time. No, I only wished I had Valland’s gift of blarney.

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