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the Dark Light Years

Page 15

by Brian W Aldiss


  Old Ainson had come so adrift in this account, he could think of nothing to say. Mention of his own name had befogged him.

  "Did you think I'd been shot?" he asked Quilter took a drag at his bourbon.

  "We didn't know what had happened to you. The International War broke out on Earth in 2037, and we sort of forgot about you. Though there has been a lot of fighting in this sector of space, particularly on Numbers and Genesis. They're practically destroyed. Clementina caught a packet too. You were lucky there were only conventional forces here. Didn't you sec anything of the fighting here?”

  "Fighting on Dapdrof?”

  "Fighting on Pestalozzi.”

  "No fighting here, I don't know about there.”

  "You must have escaped it in this hemisphere. The north hemisphere is practically fried, judging by what I saw of it on the way in.”

  "You never came for me.”

  "Hell, I'm explaining, aren't I? Have some drink; it'll steady you. Only a very few people knew of you, and I guess most of them are dead now. I stuck my neck out to get to you. Now I've got a ship of my own under my command, I'd be glad to take you home - well, there's only a fragment of Great Britain left, but you'd be welcome in the States. It'd sort of square up that old black eye, eh? What do you say, Melmoth?”

  Ainson sucked at the bottle. He could hardly take in the idea of going back to Earth. There would be so much he would miss. But one ought to want to get back home, and there was his duty. ... "That reminds me, Captain. I've got all the tapes and recordings and vocabularies and stuff.”

  "What stuff's that?”

  "Why, now you're forgetting. The stuff I was landed here to get. I have worked out a good bit of the utodian language - the language of these ... these aliens, you know.”

  Quilter looked very uncomfortable. He wiped his lips with his fist.

  "Perhaps we could pick that up some other time.”

  "What, in another forty years? Oh no, I'm not going back to Earth without that gear, Captain. Why, it's my life work.”

  "Quite so," said Quilter with a sigh. A life's work, he thought. And how often was a life's work of no value except to the worker. He hadn't the heart to tell this poor old shell that the aliens were practically extinct, eradicated by the hazards of war from all the planets of the Six Star Cluster, except for some dwindling hundreds here on the southern hemisphere of PestalozzL It was one of the sad accidents of life.

  "We'll take whatever you want to take, Melmoth," he said heavily. He rose and straightened his uniform, beckoning to the two soldiers standing idly near by.

  "Bonn, Wilkinson, run the truck up to the door of the shack and get Mr. Melmoth's kit loaded aboard.”

  It was all happening too fast for Ainson. He felt him-self on the verge of tears. Quilter patted his back.

  "You'll be okay. There must be a pile of credits waiting somewhere in a bank for you; I'll see you get every cent that's due to you. You'll be glad to get out of this crushing gravity.”

  Coughing, the old figure stirred his crutches. How could he say farewell to dear old Quequo, who had done so much to teach him some of her wisdom, and Snok Snok.... He began to weep.

  Quilter tactfully turned his back and surveyed the stiff spring foliage around him.

  "It's the unaccustomed drink, Captain Printer," Ainson said in a minute. "Did you tell me England had been destroyed?”

  "Now don't start worrying about that, Melmoth. It really is wonderful to be alive on Earth now, and I swear that's true. The life is a bit regimented as yet, but all national differences have been composed, at least for the time being. Everyone is reconstructing like mad - of course the war gave a terrific boost to technology. I wish I was twenty years younger.”

  "But you said England....”

  "They are damming half the North Sea to replace the disintegrated areas with topsoil, and London is going to be rebuilt - on a modest scale of course.”

  Affectionately, he put an arm round the curved shoulders, thinking what a stretch of history was Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html embraced in that narrow space.

  The old boy shook his head with vigor, scattering tears.

  "Trouble is, after all these years I'm out of touch. Why, I don't think I'll ever be in contact with anyone properly any more.”

  Moved. Quilter cleared a lump from his own throat. Forty years! You didn't wonder the old guy felt as he did. How the grokkies would lap up the story!

  "Why now, that's a pack of nonsense. You and I have soon got things straight between each other, haven't we, Melmoth?”

  "Yes, yes, that certainly is so. Captain Quinto.”

  At last the military vehicle bumped away from the stockade. Limbs deretracted, the two utods stood on the edge of the middenstead and watched it until it was out of sight. Only then did the younger turn to look at the older. Speech inaccessible to human ears passed between them.

  The younger one moved into the deserted building. He examined the armory. The soldiers had left it untouched, as directed by the one who had spoken about the deaths of so many utods. Satisfied, he turned back and walked without pause through the gate of the stockade. He had remained patiently captive for a small fraction of Ms life. Now it was time that he thought about freedom.

  Time, too. that the rest of his brothers thought about freedom.

 

 

 


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