Read No World of Their Own Online

Authors: Poul Anderson

No World of Their Own (3 page)

“Since then, we have been striving to hunt him down. There are patrols all over the district, but no trace has been found. My lord, it doesn't seem possible!”

Brannoch's face might have been carved in dark wood. “So,” he murmured. His eyes rested on the image of captured motion. “Quite naked, too. No weapon, no artifact. Are there any estimates of the range of his … power?”

“Roughly 500 yards, my lord. That was approximately the distance within which our apparatus failed. He moved too fast for longer-range weapons to be brought against him in those few seconds.”

“How about the humans?”

“They seemed as shocked as we, my lord. They were unarmed and made no attempt to resist us. Their language was unknown. At present, they are under psychostudy, which I imagine will include a course in Solar, and I've no access to them. But the records division tells us, from the documents aboard, that the language is—” T'u Hayem searched his memory. “Old American. The documents are being translated, but I haven't been told of any findings made.”

Old American!
thought Brannoch.
How old is that ship, anyway?
Aloud: “What other material do you have?”

“Stats of all the documents, pictures, and whatever else was found aboard, my lord. It—it wasn't easy to get them.”

Brannoch grunted indifferently. “Is that all?”

T'u Hayem's mouth fell open. “All, my lord? What else could I do?”

“Much,” said Brannoch curtly. “Among other things, I want a complete report on the findings of the interrogators, preferably a direct transcript. Also the exact disposition made of this case, daily bulletins of progress on the alien hunt—yes, much.”

“My lord, I haven't the authority to—”

Brannoch gave him a name and address. “Go to this fellow and explain the problem … at once. He'll tell you whom to get in touch with at the field and how to apply the right pressures.”

“My lord”—T'u Hayem wrung his hands—“I thought perhaps, my lord—you know m-my wife—”

“I'll pay you the flat rate for this stuff, applied against your debts,” said Brannoch. “If it turns out to be of some value, I'll consider a bonus. You may go.”

Silently, t'u Hayem bowed and backed out.

Brannoch sat motionless for a while after he was gone, and then ran through the series of stat-pictures. They were good, clear ones, page after page of writing in a language whose very alphabet was strange to him.
Have to get this translated,
he thought, and then he recalled the name of a scholar who would do it and keep a closed mouth.

He lounged a bit longer, then rose and went to the north wall of the room. It showed a moving stereo-pattern, very conventional; but behind it was a tank of hydrogen, methane, and ammonia at a thousand atmospheres pressure and minus one hundred degrees temperature, and there was visual and aural apparatus.

“Hello, you Thrymkas,” he said genially. “Were you watching?”

“I was,” said the mechanical voice. Whether it was Thrymka-1, -2, -3, or -4 which spoke, Brannoch didn't know, nor did it matter. “We are all in linkage now.”

“What do you think?”

“Apparently this alien has telekinetic powers,” said the monsters unemotionally. “We assume these to be simply over electronic flows, because it is noted that everything he controlled or disabled involved electronic tubes. Only a small amount of telekinetic energy would be needed to direct the currents in vacuum as he wished and thus to take over the whole device.

“With high probability, this means that he is telepathic to some degree: sensitive to electrical and other neural pulses and capable of inducing such currents in the nervous systems of others. However, he could hardly have read the minds of his guards. Thus his action was probably just to remain free until he could evaluate his situation. But what he will then do is unpredictable until more is known of his psychology.”

“Yeh. That's what I thought too,” said Brannoch. “How about the ship—any ideas?”

“Verification must await translation of those documents, but it seems probable that the ship is not from some lost colony but from Earth herself—the remote past. In the course of wanderings, it chanced on the planet of this alien and took him along. The distance of said planet depends on the age of the ship, but since that seems to date from about 5000 years ago, the planet cannot be more than 2500 light-years removed.”

“Far enough,” said Brannoch. “The known universe only reaches a couple of hundred.”

He took a turn about the room, hands clasped behind his back. “I doubt that the humans matter,” he said. “Especially if they really did come from Earth; then they're only of historical interest. But this alien—That electron-control effect is a new phenomenon. Just imagine what a weapon!” His eyes blazed. “Put the enemy guns out of action, even turn them on their owners—disable the Technon itself!”

“The same thought has doubtless occurred to the Solar authorities,” said the Thrymkas.

“Uh-huh. Which is why they're pressing the hunt so hard. If they don't catch him, these human friends of his may know how to do it. Even if they do make the capture, he's still likely to be influenced by his crewmates. Which makes the fellows of more importance than I'd realized.” Brannoch prowled the floor, turning the fact over in his mind.

All at once, he felt very alone. He had his aides here, his bodyguard, his agents, his spy ring, but they were few among the hostile billions of Sol. It would take almost four and a half years to get a message home; it would take as long for the fleet to arrive.

Sharp within him rose the image of his home: the steep, windy mountains of Thor, whistling stormy skies, heath and forest and broad fair plains, gray seas rolling under the tidal drag of three moons. He recalled the hall of his ancestors, stone and timber rearing heavily to smoky rafters and ancient battle flags, his horses and hounds and the long halloo of hunting. The love and longing for his planet was an ache within his breast.

But he was a ruler, and the road of kings was hard. Also, and here he grinned, it would be fun to sack Earth, come the day.

His mission had suddenly narrowed. He had to get this alien for Centauri, so the scientists back home could study the power and duplicate it in a military unit. Failing that, he had to prevent Sol from doing the same—by killing the creature if necessary. He dismissed the idea of joining the chase with his own agents: too much of a giveaway, too small a chance of success. No, it would be better to work through those human prisoners.

But what hold could he get on men whose world was 5000 years in its grave?

Returning to the scanner, he went back through its spool. Some of the frames showed pictures and other objects which must be of a personal nature. There was one photograph of a woman which was quite excellent.

An idea occurred to him. He walked back onto the balcony, picked up his wineglass and toasted the morning with a small laugh. Yes, it was a fine day.

III

Langley sat up with a gasp and looked around him. He was alone. For a moment, he sat very still, allowing memory and thought to enter him in a trickle. The whole pattern was too shatteringly big to be grasped at once.

Earth, altered almost beyond recognition: no more polar caps, the seas encroaching miles on every shore, unknown cities, unknown language, unknown men. There was only one answer, but he thrust it from him in a near panic.

There had been the landing, Saris Hronna's stunningly swift escape (why?), and then he and his companions had been separated. There were men in blue who spoke to him in a room full of enigmatic machines that whirred and clicked and blinked. One of those had been switched on, and darkness had followed. Beyond that, there was only a dream-like confusion of half-recalled voices. And now he was awake again and naked and alone.

Slowly, he looked at the cell. It was small, bare save for the couch and washstand which seemed to grow out of the green-tinted, soft and rubbery floor. There was a little ventilator grille in the wall, but no door that he could see.

He felt himself shaking, and fought for control. He wanted to weep, but there was a dry hollowness in him.
Peggy,
he thought.
They could at least have left me your picture. It's all I'll ever have, now.

A crack appeared in the farther wall, dilated until it was a doorway, and three men stepped through. The jerk which brought Langley erect told him how strained his nerves were.

He crouched back, trying to grasp the details of appearance on these strangers. It was hard, somehow. They were of another civilization; clothes and bodies and the very expressions were something new.

Two of them were giants, nearly seven feet tall, their muscled bodies clad in a tight-fitting black uniform, their heads shaven. It took a little while to realize that the wide brown faces were identical. Twins?

The third was a little below average height, lithe and graceful. He wore a white tunic, deep-blue cloak, soft buskins on his feet, and little else. But the insigne on his breast, a sunburst with an eye, was the same as that of the two huge men behind him. He shared their smooth tawny skin, high cheekbones, faintly slanted eyes. But straight black hair was sleeked over his round head, and the face was handsome: broad low forehead, brilliant dark eyes, snub nose, strong chin, a wide full mouth. Overall ran a nervous mobility.

All three bore holstered sidearms.

Langley had a sense of helplessness and degradation in standing nude before them. He tried for a poker face and an easy stance, but doubted that it was coming off. There was a thick lump as of unshed tears in his throat.

The leader inclined his head slightly. “Captain Edward Langley,” he said, pronouncing it with a heavy accent. His voice was low, resonant, a superbly controlled instrument.

“Yes.”

“I take it that means
sya.”
The stranger was speaking the foreign tongue, and Langley understood it as if it had been his own. It was a clipped, rather high-pitched language, inflectional but with a simple and logical grammar. Among so much else, Langley felt only a vague surprise at his own knowledge, a certain relief at not having to study. “Permit me to introduce myself. I am Minister Chanthavar Tang vo Lurin, chief field operative of the Solar militechnic intelligence corps and, I hope, your friend.”

“Thank you, sir,” Langley answered stiffly.

“You must pardon such impoliteness as we may have shown you,” said Chanthavar with an oddly winning smile. “Your comrades are safe, and you will soon rejoin them. However, as a spaceman you realize that we could not take chances with a complete stranger.”

He gestured to one of the guards, who laid a suit of clothes on the couch. It was similar to Chanthavar's, though lacking the military symbol and the jeweled star which he bore. “If you will put these on, Captain—it is the standard dress of the free-born, and I'm afraid you'd feel too conspicuous in your own.”

Langley obeyed. The material was soft and comfortable. Chanthavar showed him how to close the fastenings, which seemed to be a kind of modified zipper. Then he sat down companionably on the bed, waving Langley to join him. The guards remained rigid by the door.

“Do you know what has happened to you?” he asked.

“I … think so,” said Langley dully.

“I'm sorry to tell you this.” Chanthavar's voice was gentle. “Your log has been translated, so I know you didn't realize how the superdrive actually operates. Curious that you shouldn't, if you could build one.”

“There was an adequate theory,” said Langley. “According to it, the ship warped through hyperspace.”

“There's no such animal. Your theory was wrong, as must have been discovered very soon. Actually, a ship is projected as a wave pattern, re-forming at the point of destination. It's a matter of setting up harmonics in the electronic wave trains such that they reconstitute the original relationship at another point of space-time. Or so the specialists tell me. I don't pretend to understand the mathematics. Anyhow, there's no time of passage for those aboard. But according to an external observer, the trip is still made only at the speed of light. No better system has ever been found, and I doubt that it ever will. The nearest star, Alpha Centauri, is still nearly four and a half years away.”

“We'd have known that,” said Langley bitterly, “except for the trouble with the space positioning. Because of that, it took us so long to find our test rockets that we had no way of observing that a finite time of passage had gone by. On my own voyage, the time lag was lost in the uncertainty of exact stellar positions. No wonder we had such trouble approaching Earth as we came home. Home!” he exploded, with a stinging in his eyes. “We crossed a total of some 5000 light-years. So it must be that many years later we came back.”

Chanthavar nodded.

Langley asked wearily: “What's happened in all that time?”

Chanthavar shrugged. “The usual. Overpopulation, vanishing natural resources, war, famine, pestilence, depopulation, collapse, and then the resumption of the cycle. I don't think you'll find people very different today.”

“Couldn't you have taught me—”

“Like the language? Not very well. That was a routine hypnotic process, quite automatic and not involving the higher centers of the brain. You were interrogated in that state too. But as for your more complex learning, it's best done gradually.”

There was a deadness in Langley, a stricken indifference. He twisted away from it by trying to focus his mind on detail—anything, just so it was impersonal enough. “What kind of world is it now? And what can I do in it?”

Chanthavar leaned forward, elbows on knees, cocking a sidewise eye at the other. Langley forced himself to pay attention. “Let's see. Interstellar emigration began about your time—not too extensive at first, because of the limitations of the superdrive and the relative scarcity of habitable planets. During later periods of trouble, there were successive waves of such outward movement, but most of these were malcontents and refugees who went far from Sol lest they be found later, and have been lost track of. We presume there are many of these lost colonies, scattered throughout the galaxy, and that some of them must have evolved into very different civilizations. But the universe we actually know something about and have even an indirect contact with, only reaches a couple of hundred light-years. Who would have any reason to explore further?

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