Read The Fugitive Worlds Online
Authors: Bob Shaw
Tags: #Science fiction, #Fiction, #Science Fiction - General, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #General
The roiling dazzlement went on for a matter of seconds,
and then they were adrift in the sterile sunlit air, hundreds
of miles above the surface of Dussarra. All about them was a panoply of stars, galaxies and frozen comets in which the ship's exhaust formed a glowing cloud as, holding to a freakishly steady course, the vessel dwindled from their perceptions. The only way now in which Toller could return to his home world was by using the alien magic of a matter transmitter, but he had little time at that stage to ruminate over the situation.
Being adrift in a planet's upper atmosphere, with nothing but thousands of miles of empty air yawning below, was a harrowing experience even for a veteran Kolcorronian skyman, and Toller knew it had to be correspondingly worse for Divivvidiv. The alien was not quaking, but the movements of his arms and legs seemed aimless, and there were no wisps of mental communication from him.
"Let's get him into his fallbag before we all freeze to death," Toller said. Steenameert nodded and they drew themselves close to Divivvidiv on the common line. The alien's bulky parachute hampered them in the task of drawing the fleece-lined sack up over his head and adjusting the various closures and ventilation ring.
This is more comfortable than I had expected,
Divivvidiv told them. I
may be able to sleep and dream during the fall
—
but what will happen if I have difficulty in getting out of the
bag when it is time to use the parachutes?
"Put your mind at ease," Toller called into the neck of the bag. "We will not allow you to bounce."
The scarf covering most of his face was already stiff with frozen exhalations and in spite of the protection of his skysuit he was beginning to shiver. He separated from the alien and struggled into his own fallbag, a job he accomplished slowly because of the awkward presence of his sword. He began to feel oddly guilty as he realized he was in a way looking forward to a spell in the bag's snug and undemanding warmth.
As soon as he had cocooned himself he closed his eyes and prepared to doze. He was falling towards the planet, but it was going to be quite some time before his speed built up enough to produce slipstream sounds. For the present all was quiet, and he was very tired, and nothing was required of him. . . .
Toller awoke an indeterminate time later and knew at once that there was darkness outside. Dussarra's shadow had swung round to encompass the three specks of life which, having surrendered themselves to the planet's gravity, were making the long pilgrimage from the fringes of space. Suddenly curious about how the alien world would look at night, Toller roused himself, opened the neck of the fallbag and peered out.
He could see the featureless shapes representing Steenameert and Divivvidiv close by, outlined against the silver blazes of the universe, but his gaze was captured and held by the spectacle of the enigmatic planet laid out below him. The visible hemisphere was mostly in darkness, with only a slim line of blue-white radiance adorning its eastern edge. Toller had seen Land and Overland in similar conditions many times, but there the areas where night held sway had always been dominated by a slumberous blackness which was only relieved by astronomical reflection. He was unprepared for his first glimpse of the nightside of a world which was the home of an advanced technical civilization.
The major land masses, which had appeared insignificant in daytime, were glittering networks of yellow light. Islands appeared brighter in contrast to the surrounding darkness, but even the oceans were plentifully speckled with points of brilliance which conjured in Toller's mind visions of gargantuan ships, as large as cities, engaged in global commerce. The planet might have been a vast metal sphere pierced in a million places to emit light from an interior source.
Toller gazed down at it for a long time and then, feeling subdued and chastened, pulled the neck of the fallbag
up over his head and closed it to shut out the intrusive cold.
He knew he had been deceived and trapped the instant his feet touched the ground.
The three parachutes had opened almost in unison above a night-black landscape in which the only sign of habitation was a thin line of lights, several miles away to the west. There had been no wind to complicate the touchdown for the inexperienced Divivvidiv, and Toller had felt a resurgence of his old optimism as the trio sank into a starlit expanse of grassland. He had prepared himself for a gentle impact, the sensation of his boots going into yielding turf, the feel and smell of grass. . . .
All visual indicators had remained unchanged. As far as the evidence of his eyes was concerned, Toller had touched down in what could have been the rolling savannahs of his home world. Steenameert and Divivvidiv were not far away to his left. They too were standing in grass—and yet Toller could feel flat masonry beneath his feet. He and his two companions were alone in an open stretch of empty pasture —and yet he could hear movement all around, sense the pressure of minds.
"Defend yourself, Baten," he shouted, drawing his sword. "We are betrayed!"
He turned towards Divivvidiv, snorting in his rage, but the swaddled figure of the alien was nowhere to be seen. It was as if he had ceased to exist.
Put the weapon down, Toller Maraquine.
Divivvidiv's tone was both kindly and contemptuous.
You are surrounded by more than a thousand stability officers
—
many of them armed
—
and any hostile action on your part will most surely result in your death.
Toller shook his head and spoke in a growl. "I can take many of them with me."
Possibly, but if that were the way of it you would never see
your female again. She is only a few miles from here and
within a matter of minutes you could be in her company. Alive
you might, possibly, be of some comfort or service to her; but
if you are dead. . . .
Toller allowed his sword to fall, heard it ringing on stone pavement, and his eyes filled with tears of frustration.
It was not until Toller and Steenameert had submitted to the pressure of many hands, and to having their wrists bound together behind their backs, that the alien scales were lifted from their eyes. Retinal communications were permitted to pass to the brain, unaffected by external forces, and suddenly the two Kolcorronians could see normally again.
Night still reigned, but the perceived starlit meadows had been replaced by a complex diorama of dimly lit buildings in the middle distance and ranks of shadowy Dussarran figures in the foreground. Toller guessed he was near the center of an enormous plaza. The surrounding buildings were delineated by gentle curves, in contrast to the rectangular architecture of his home world, and their outlines were punctuated by slim trees which swayed continuously although the humid night air was perfectly still. The only familiar element Toller could find was the face of Steenameert, turned towards him above a sea of industrious, seething, black-clad alien figures.
"It seems that you have won," Toller said, fighting to keep his voice steady. "Sorcery prevails over strength."
Divivvidiv moved a little closer through the crush of odorous bodies.
For your own good, Toller Maraquine, put behind
you all your primitive ideas about sorcery. There are no unfair
advantages in nature. What is commonplace to my people seems magical to yours, but that is simply because we are more advanced in every branch of learning.
"It is as good as magic when men are deceived by their own eyes."
That was simply done. When I was close enough to the ground I was able to enlist the telepathic aid of some of my
fellow Dussarrans. As soon as you and your companion were
sufficiently outnumbered we were able to dictate what you
could see, in the same way that a crowd can drown out a single
voice. Nothing magical about it!
"But you cannot deny that luck was on your side," Toller grumbled, feeling himself being pushed towards a vehicle which had arrived in the vicinity. "For us to land where we
did—so close to a city, in the midst of your lackeys . . . That
had to be magic or blind luck."
Neither!
Divivvidiv and Toller were losing sight of each
other in the press of bodies, but the alien's silent words were
clear.
As soon as I had given warning of what was happening
my people took control of the local wind cells and guided us
to this spot. I told you at the outset, Toller Maraquine
—
your
mission had NO chance of succeeding.
I am now returning to my post, so it is unlikely that we
will ever see each other again, but you have no need to
fear for your life. Unlike you Primitives, we Dussarrans do
not. . . .
Uncharacteristically for Divivvidiv, the incisive quality
of his thought processes faded. There was a moment of woolliness, shadings of what Toller half-identified as guilt, and then the psychic contact was broken. The concept of telepathy was so new to Toller that he felt a dull amazement
at even being able to think in such terms, but he was left
with the conviction that the alien had suffered an unexpected
crisis of conscience, perhaps triggered by the stresses of the
fall from the edge of space.
Guilt!
The word was a spiteful mosquito hovering and
dipping in Toller's confused consciousness.
Is greyface lying
to me? Are Baten and I being tricked? Are we being led
meekly to our deaths?
Clumsily and inexpertly, he tried to reach out with his
mind to the one Dussarran he knew, but there was only an
echoing mental silence. Divivvidiv had withdrawn, was lost behind the palisades of his previous existence, and there was
no time for retrospection. The vehicle which had nuzzled through the nocturnal ferment of the alien cityscape looked like nothing so much as a huge black egg. It floated a hand's
breadth above the seamless pavement. An opening appeared
in its side with no apparent aid from mechanisms that Toller
could visualize—in one instant the shell was complete, in the next there was a circular entrance to a redly glowing interior. Dozens of hands were pushing him and Steenameert towards
it.
Toller's first instinct was to resist with all the power he
could muster, but one part of him had somehow come to hope that Divivvidiv was not entirely his enemy. It was a
slim hope—based on little more than certain nuances of
thought and the notion that the alien might have a sense of
humor—but it was the only dim guide star remaining to
him.
With Steenameert jostling against him he clambered into
the vehicle, feeling it rock slightly under the shifting of their
weight. The door flowed itself out of existence, like molten
metal closing in response to surface tension, and a sudden
pressure under foot told them the vehicle was rising into the
night sky. There were no seats, but that was of no importance
in the cramped interior because the thickly quilted skysuits of the two Kolcorronians largely filled the available space.
It was easier to remain standing. Toller had been too hot for some time, but was only becoming aware of it as stealthy
rivulets of sweat darted down his back.