Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
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âTheyâre stranglinâ faith,â muttered someone else.
Anyone in the Empire may worship as he chooses, but should permission be granted to preach demonstrable falsehoods, archaic superstitions, or antisocial nonsense? The old âfreeâ Earth was not noted for liberalism.
âWe want to be free.â
Free? Free for what? To loose the thousand Earthly races and creeds and nationalisms on each otherâ âand on the Galaxyâ âto wallow in barbarism and slaughter and misery as before we came? To let our works and culture be thrown in the dust, the labor of a century be demolished, not because it is good or bad but simply because it is Valgolian? Epsilon Eridanian!
âWeâll be free. Not too long to wait, eitherâ ââ
Thatâs up to nobody else but you!
I couldnât get much specific information, but then I hadnât expected to. I collected my pay and drifted on eastward, talking to people of all classesâ âfarmers, mechanics, shopowners, tramps, and such data as I gathered tallied with those of Intelligence.
About twenty-five percent of the population, in North America at leastâ âit was higher in the Orient and Africaâ âwas satisfied with the Imperium, felt they were better off than they would have been in the old days. âThe Eridanians are pretty decent, on the whole. Some of âem come in here and act nice and human as you please.â
Some fifty percent was vaguely dissatisfied, wanted âfreedomâ without troubling to define the term, didnât like the taxes or the labor draft or the enforced disarmament or the legal and social superiority of Valgolians or some such thing, had perhaps suffered in the reconquest. But this group constituted no real threat. It would tend to be passive whatever happened. Its greatest contribution would be sporadic rioting.
The remaining twenty-five percent was bitter, waiting its chance, muttering of a day of revengeâ âand some portion of this segment was spreading propaganda, secretly manufacturing and distributing weapons, engaging in clandestine military drill, and maintaining contact with the shadowy Legion of Freedom.
Childish, melodramatic name! But it had been well chosen to appeal to a certain type of mind. The real, organized core of the anarch movement was highly efficient. In those months I spent wandering and waiting, its activities mounted almost daily.
The illegal radio carried unending programs, propaganda, fabricated stories of Valgolian brutality. I knew from personal experience that some were false, and I knew the whole Imperial system well enough to spot most of the rest at least partly invented. I realized we couldnât trace such a well-organized setup of mobile and coordinated units, and jamming would have been poor tactics, but even soâ â
The day is coming.â ââ ⊠Earthmen, free men, be ready to throw off your shackles.â ââ ⊠Stand by for freedom!
I stuck to my role. When autumn came, I drifted into one of the native cities, New Chicago, a warren of buildings near the remains of the old settlement, the same gigantic slum that its predecessor had been. I got a room in a cheap hotel and a job in a steel mill.
I was Conrad Haugen, Norwegian-American, assigned to a spaceship by the labor draft and liking it well enough to re-enlist when my term was up. I had wandered through much of the Empire and had had a great deal of contact with Eridanians, but was most emphatically not a Terrie. In fact, I thought it would be well if the redskin yoke could be thrown off, both because of liberty and the good pickings to be had in the Galaxy if the Empire should collapse. I had risen to second mate on an interstellar tramp, but could get no further because of the law that the two highest officers must be Valgolian. That had embittered me and I returned to Earth, footloose and looking for trouble.
I found it. With officerâs training and the strength due to a home planet with a gravity half again that of Earth, I had no difficulty at all becoming a foreman. There was a big fellow named Mike Riley who thought he was entitled to the job. We settled it behind a shed, with the workmen looking on, and I beat him unconscious as fast as possible. The raw, sweating savagery of it made me feel ill inside. Theyâd let this loose among the stars!
After that I was one of the boys and Riley was my best friend. We went out together, wenching and drinking, raising hell in the cold dirty canyons of steel and stone which the natives called streets. Valgolia, Valgolia, the clean bare windswept heights of your mountains, soughing trees and thunderous waters and Maara waiting for me to come home! Riley often proposed that we find an Eridanian and beat him to death, and I would agree, hiccupping, because I knew they didnât go alone into native quarters any more. I sat in the smoky reek of the bars, half deafened by the clatter and raucousness called music, trying not to think of a certain low-ceilinged, quiet tavern amid the gardens of Kalariho, and sobbed the bitterness of Conrad Haugen into my beer.
âDirty redskins,â I muttered. âDirty, stinking, bald-headed, sons of bitches. Them and their goddamn Empire. Why, yâknow, if ât hadnâ been fâ their laws Iâd be skipper oâ my own ship now. I knew moreân that slob oâ a captain. But he was born Eridanianâ âGod, to get my hands on his throat!â
Riley nodded. Through the haze of smoke I saw that his eyes were narrowed. He wasnât drunk when he didnât want to be, and at times like this he was suddenly as sober as I was, and that in spite of not having a Valgolian liver.
I bided my time, not too obviously anxious to contact the Legion. I just thought they were swell fellows, the only brave men left in the rotten, stinking
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