Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
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The old man, Kormt of Huerdar, Gerlaugâs son, and Speaker for Solis Township, shook his head till the long, grizzled locks swirled around his wide shoulders. âI have thought it through,â he said. His voice was deep and slow and implacable. âYou gave me five years to think about it. And my answer is no.â
Jorun felt a weariness rise within him. It had been like this for days now, weeks, and it was like trying to knock down a mountain. You beat on its rocky flanks till your hands were bloody, and still the mountain stood there, sunlight on its high snowfields and in the forests that rustled up its slopes, and it did not really notice you. You were a brief thin buzz between two long nights, but the mountain was forever.
âYou havenât thought at all,â he said with a rudeness born of exhaustion. âYouâve only reacted unthinkingly to a dead symbol. Itâs not a human reaction, even, itâs a verbal reflex.â
Kormtâs eyes, meshed in crowâs-feet, were serene and steady under the thick gray brows. He smiled a little in his long beard, but made no other reply. Had he simply let the insult glide off him, or had he not understood it at all? There was no real talking to these peasants; too many millennia lay between, and you couldnât shout across that gulf.
âWell,â said Jorun, âthe ships will be here tomorrow or the next day, and itâll take another day or so to get all your people aboard. You have that long to decide, but after that itâll be too late. Think about it, I beg of you. As for me, Iâll be too busy to argue further.â
âYou are a good man,â said Kormt, âand a wise one in your fashion. But you are blind. There is something dead inside you.â
He waved one huge gnarled hand. âLook around you, Jorun of Fulkhis. This is Earth. This is the old home of all humankind. You cannot go off and forget it. Man cannot do so. It is in him, in his blood and bones and soul; he will carry Earth within him forever.â
Jorunâs eyes traveled along the arc of the hand. He stood on the edge of the town. Behind him were its housesâ âlow, white, half-timbered, roofed with thatch or red tile, smoke rising from the chimneys; carved galleries overhung the narrow, cobbled, crazily-twisting streets; he heard the noise of wheels and wooden clogs, the shouts of children at play. Beyond that were trees and the incredible ruined walls of Sol City. In front of him, the wooded hills were cleared and a gentle landscape of neat fields and orchards rolled down toward the distant glitter of the sea: scattered farm buildings, drowsy cattle, winding gravel roads, fence-walls of ancient marble and granite, all dreaming under the sun.
He drew a deep breath. It was pungent in his nostrils. It smelled of leaf-mould, plowed earth baking in the warmth, summery trees and gardens, a remote ocean odor of salt and kelp and fish. He thought that no two planets ever had quite the same smell, and that none was as rich as Terraâs.
âThis is a fair world,â he said slowly.
âIt is the only one,â said Kormt. âMan came from here; and to this, in the end, he must return.â
âI wonderâ ââ Jorun sighed. âTake me; not one atom of my body was from this soil before I landed. My people lived on Fulkhis for ages, and changed to meet its conditions. They would not be happy on Terra.â
âThe atoms are nothing,â said Kormt. âIt is the form which matters, and that was given to you by Earth.â
Jorun studied him for a moment. Kormt was like most of this planetâs ten million or so peopleâ âa dark, stocky folk, though there were more blond and red-haired throwbacks here than in the rest of the Galaxy. He was old for a primitive untreated by medical scienceâ âhe must be almost two hundred years oldâ âbut his back was straight, and his stride firm. The coarse, jut-nosed face held an odd strength. Jorun was nearing his thousandth birthday, but couldnât help feeling like a child in Kormtâs presence.
That didnât make sense. These few dwellers on Terra were a backward and impoverished race of peasants and handicraftsmen; they were ignorant and unadventurous; they had been static for more thousands of years than anyone knew. What could they have to say to the ancient and mighty civilization which had almost forgotten their little planet?
Kormt looked at the declining sun. âI must go now,â he said. âThere are the evening chores to do. I will be in town tonight if you should wish to see me.â
âI probably will,â said Jorun. âThereâs a lot to do, readying the evacuation, and youâre a big help.â
The old man bowed with grave courtesy, turned, and walked off down the road. He wore the common costume of Terran men, as archaic in style as in its woven-fabric material: hat, jacket, loose trousers, a long staff in his hand. Contrasting the drab blue of Kormtâs dress, Jorunâs vivid tunic of shifting rainbow hues was like a flame.
The psychotechnician sighed again, watching him go. He liked the old fellow. It would be criminal to leave him here alone, but the law forbade forceâ âphysical or mentalâ âand the Integrator on Corazuno wasnât going to care whether or not one aged man stayed behind. The job was to get the race off Terra.
A lovely world. Jorunâs thin mobile features, pale-skinned and large-eyed, turned around the horizon. A fair world we came from.
There were more beautiful planets in the Galaxyâs swarming myriadsâ âthe indigo world-ocean of Loa, jeweled with islands; the heaven-defying mountains of Sharang; the sky of Jareb, that seemed to drip lightâ âoh, many and many, but there was only one Earth.
Jorun remembered his first sight of this world, hanging free in space to watch it after the gruelling ten-day run, thirty thousand light-years, from Corazuno. It was blue
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