Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
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âStrange,â mused Chiang. âStrange that we should have had that accident.â ââ âŠâ
They had heard the story a hundred times before, but they gathered around to listen; there was nothing else to do while the slow hours dragged on.
âWe were ten, all told, five men and their wives. Exploratory expeditions are often out for years at a time, so the Service makes it a policy to man the ships with married couples. Itâs hard for a Khazaki to appreciate the absolute equality between the sexes which human civilization has achieved. Itâs due to the advanced technology, of course, and weâre losing it as we go back to barbarismâ ââ
Anse felt a small hand laid on his arm. He looked down into the dark eyes of DuFrere Marie. She was a pretty girl, a little younger than he, and until heâd really noticed Ellen heâd been paying her some attention.
âI donât care about equality,â she whispered. âA woman shouldnât try to be a man. Iâd want only to cook and keep house for my man, and bear his children.â
It was, Anse realized, a typical Khazaki attitude. Butâ âhe remembered with a sudden pity that Carson had been courting Marie. âThis is pretty tough on you,â he muttered. âIâll try to see that Carse is saved.â ââ ⊠If we win,â he added wryly.
âHim? I donât care about that Masefield. Let them hang him. But Anseâ âbe carefulâ ââ
He looked away, his face hot in the gloom, realizing suddenly why Masefield Carson hated him. Briefly, he wished he hadnât had such consistent luck with women. But the accident that there was a preponderance of females in the second and third generations of Khazaki humans had made it more or less inevitable, and heâ âwell, he was only human. Thereâd been Earthling girls; and not a few Khazaki women had been intrigued by the big Terrestrial. Yes, I was lucky, he thought bitterly. Lucky in all except the one that mattered.
ââ âweâd been a few weeks out of Avandarâ âit was an obscure outpost then, though I imagine itâs grown sinceâ âwhen we detected this Sol-type sun. Seeing that there was an Earth-like planet, we decided to investigate. And since we were all tired of being cooped in the ship, and telescopes showed that any natives which might exist would be too primitive to endanger us, we all went down in the lifeboat.
âAnd the one-in-a-billion chance happenedâ ââ ⊠the atomic converters went out of control and we barely escaped from the boat before it was utterly consumed. We were stranded on an alien planet, with nothing but our clothes and a few hand weaponsâ âand with our ship that would go faster than light circling in its orbit not ten thousand kilometers above us!
âNo chance of rescue. There are just too many suns for the Galactic Coordinators to hope to find a ship that doesnât come back. Expansion into this region of space wasnât scheduled for another two centuries. So there we were, and until we could build a boat which would take us back to our shipâ âthere we stayed!
âAnd itâs taken us fifty years so far.â ââ âŠâ
Pragakech came in with the rain glistening on his fur and running in small puddles about his padding feet. âWeâre ready,â he said. âEvery warrior whose hiding place we knew has been contacted.â
âThen we might as well go.â Janazik got up and stretched luxuriously. His eyes were like molten gold in the murky light.
âSo soon?â Marie held Anse back with anxious hands. âThis same night?â
âThe sooner the better,â Anse said grimly. âEvery day that goes by, more of our friends will be found out and killed, more places will be searched for Ellen, Volakechâs grip on the city will grow stronger.â He put the spiked helmet back on his head, and buckled the sword about his mailed waist. âCome on, Janazik. The rest stay here and wait for word. If weâre utterly defeated, such of us as survive will manage to get back and lead you out of Krakenauâ âsomehow.â
Marie started to say something, then shook her head as if the words hurt her throat and drew Anseâs face down to hers. âGoodbye, then,â she whispered. âGoodbye, and the gods be with you.â
He kissed her more awkwardly than was his wont, feeling himself a thorough scoundrel. Then he followed Pragakech and Janazik out the trapdoor.
IVThe courtyard was filled with Khazaki warriors, standing silently in the slow heavy rain. It was the darkness of early morning, and only an occasional wan lightning flash, gleaming on spears and axes, broke the chill gloom. Anse was aware of softly-moving supple bodies pressing around him, of night-seeing eyes watching him with an impassive stare. It was he and Janazik who had the plan, and who had the most experience in warfare, and the rest looked to them for leadership. It was not easy to stand under that cool, judging scrutiny, and Anse strode forth into the street with a feeling of relief at the prospect of action.
As they moved toward the castle, along the narrow cobbled lanes winding up the hills, their army grew. Warriors came loping from alleys, came slipping out of the dark barricaded houses, seemed to rise out of the rainy night around them. All Krakenau was abroad, it seemed, but quietly, quietly.
And throughout the town other such forces were on the move, gathering under the lead of anyone who could be trusted, converging on the citadel and the rocketship it guarded.
Tonightâ âvictory, or destruction of the boat and a drawn battleâ ââ ⊠or repulsion and ultimate shattering defeat. The gods are abroad tonight.
Somewhere, faint and far through the dull washing of rain, a trumpet blew a harsh challenge, once and again. After it came a distance-muted shouting of voices and a clattering of swords.
âOne of our bands has come across a patrol,â said Janazik unnecessarily. âNow all hell will be loose
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