Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
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Spacemen, you have wandered too far. You have wandered beyond the edge of creation, and now there is only death.
The hours dragged into days. When the shipâs timepieces started disagreeing, time ceased to have meaning.
Basil Donovan sat in his cabin. There was a bottle in his hand, but he tried to go slow. He was waiting.
When the knock came, he leaped from his seat and every nerve tightened up and screamed. He swore at himself. They wouldnât knock when they came for him. âGo on, enterâ ââ His voice wavered.
Helena Jansky stepped inside, closing the door after her. She had thinned, and there was darkness in her eyes, but she still bore herself erect. Donovan had to salute the stubborn courage that was in her. The unimaginative peasant bloodâ âno, it was more than that, she was as intelligent as he, but there was a deep strength in that tall form, a quiet vitality which had perhaps been bred out of the Families of Ansa. âSit down,â he invited.
She sighed and ran a hand through her dark hair. âThanks.â
âDrink?â
âNo. Not on duty.â
âAnd the captain is always on duty. Well, let it go.â Donovan lowered himself to the bunk beside her, resting his feet on Wochaâs columnar leg. The Donarrian muttered and whimpered in his sleep. âWhat can I do for you?â
Her gaze was steady and grave. âYou can tell me the truth.â
âAbout the Nebula? Why should I? Give me one good reason why an Ansan should care what happens to a Solarian ship.â
âPerhaps only that weâre all human beings here, that those boys have earth and rain and sunlight and wives waiting for them.â
And Valdumaâ âno, she isnât human. Fire and ice and storming madness, but not human. Too beautiful to be flesh.
âThis trip was your idea,â he said defensively.
âDonovan, you wouldnât have played such a foul trick and made such a weak, self-righteous excuse in the old days.â
He looked away, feeling his cheeks hot. âWell,â he mumbled, âwhy not turn around, get out of the Nebula if you can, and maybe come back later with a task force?â
âAnd lead them all into this trap? Our subtronics are out, you know. We canât send information back, so weâll just go on and learn a little more and then try to fight our way home.â
His smile was crooked. âI may have been baiting you, Helena. But if I told you everything I know, it wouldnât help. There isnât enough.â
Her hand fell strong and urgent on his. âTell me, then! Tell me anyway.â
âBut there is so little. Thereâs a planet somewhere in the Nebula, and it has inhabitants with powers I donât begin to understand. But among other things, they can project themselves hyperwise, just like a spaceship, without needing engines to do it. And they have a certain control over matter and energy.â
âThe fringe starsâ âthese beings in the Nebula really have been their âgodsâ?â
âYes. Theyâve projected themselves, terrorized the natives for centuries, and carry home the sacrificial materials for their own use. Theyâre doubtless responsible for all the ships around here that never came home. They donât like visitors.â Donovan saw her smile, and his own lips twitched. âBut they did, I suppose, take some prisoners, to learn our language and anything else they could about us.â
She nodded. âIâd conjectured as much. If you donât accept theories involving the supernatural, and I donât, it follows almost necessarily. If a few of them projected themselves aboard and hid somewhere, they could manipulate air molecules from a distance so as to produce the whisperingsâ ââ She smiled afresh, but the hollowness was still in her. âWhen you call it a new sort of ventriloquism, it doesnât sound nearly so bad, does it?â
Fiercely, the woman turned on him. âAnd what have you had to do with them? How are you so sure?â
âIâ âtalked with one of them,â he replied slowly. âYou might say we struck up a friendship of sorts. But I learned nothing, and the only benefit I got was escaping. Iâve no useful information.â His voice sharpened. âAnd thatâs all I have to say.â
âWell, weâre going on!â Her head lifted pridefully.
Donovanâs smile was a crooked grimace. He took her hand, and it lay unresisting between his fingers. âHelena,â he said, âyouâve been trying to psychoanalyze me this whole trip. Maybe itâs my turn now. Youâre not so hard as you tell yourself.â
âI am an officer of the Imperial Navy.â Her haughtiness didnât quite come off.
âSure, sure. A hard-shelled career girl. Only youâre also a healthy human being. Down underneath, you want a home and kids and quiet green hills. Donât lie to yourself, that wouldnât be fitting to the Lady Jansky of Torgandale, would it? You went into service because it was the thing to do. And youâre just a scared kid, my dear.â Donovan shook his head. âBut a very nice-looking kid.â
Tears glimmered on her lashes. âStop it,â she whispered desperately. âDonât say it.â
He kissed her, a long slow kiss with her mouth trembling under his and her body shivering ever so faintly. The second time she responded, shy as a child, hardly aware of the sudden hunger.
She pulled free then, sat with eyes wide and wild, one hand lifted to her mouth. âNo,â she said, so quietly he could scarce hear. âNo, not nowâ ââ
Suddenly she got up and almost fled. Donovan sighed.
Why did I do that? To stop her inquiring too closely? Or just because sheâs honest and human, and Valduma isnât? Orâ â
Darkness swirled before his eyes. Wocha came awake and shrank against the farther wall, terror rattling in his throat. âBossâ âboss, sheâs here againâ ââ
Donovan sat unstirring, elbows on knees, hands hanging empty, and looked at the two who had come. âHello, Valduma,â he said.
âBasilâ ââ Her voice sang against him, rippling, lilting, the unending sharp laughter beneath its surprise.
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