Silent Running

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Silent Running Page 8

by Harlan Thompson


  “Huey,” Lowell said softly, “when I was a kid, I once put a note with my name and address into a bottle and threw it into the ocean . . . I never did find out if anyone ever found it . . .

  Suddenly, Lowell broke off, almost with a sigh.

  Then it came, the thing he’d been expecting.

  A blinding flash . . . ! A loud deafening boom . . . !

  The ship Valley Forge exploded in a terrible light, bleaching out the sky, changing it to orange, to yellow, to a stark, unbearable white.

  Way, way off, Dome One was a small, bright beacon.

  Inside Dome One, Dewey moved about, watering a plant here, tending a fern there. Around him birds sang, frogs croaked.

  All at once, almost ironically, from Berkshire came lovely music, a soft compelling song of children in the sun, on the earth:

  “Fields of children running wild

  In the sun.

  Like a forest is your child growing

  wild

  In the sun.”

  Dewey went on working. He suddenly paused, then leaned to examine a rose that had bloomed to full, brilliant, dazzling maturity. The song went on:

  “Doomed in his innocence

  In the sun.

  Gather your children to your side

  In the sun.

  Tell them all they love will die

  Tell them why

  In the sun.

  Tell them it’s not too late

  Cultivate

  One by one.”

  Again came a silence as it had to Lowell in that other time when he had stood in his garden listening . . .

  The song concluded:

  “Tell them to harvest and rejoice

  In the sun.”

  Table of Contents

  Back Cover

  Preview

  Titlepage

  Copyright

  Dedication

  SILENT RUNNING

  ONE

  TWO

  THREE

  FOUR

  FIVE

  SIX

  SEVEN

  EIGHT

  NINE

  TEN

  ELEVEN

 

 

 


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