Songs From The Stars

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Songs From The Stars Page 1

by Norman Spinrad




  Songs From The Stars - Norman Spinrad

  www.sfgateway.com

  Enter the SF Gateway...

  In the last years of the twentieth century (as Wells might have put it), Gollancz, Britain's oldest and most distinguished science fiction imprint, created the SF and Fantasy Masterworks series. Dedicated to re-publishing the English language's finest works of SF and Fantasy, most of which were languishing out of print at the time, they were – and remain – landmark lists, consummately fulfilling the original mission statement:

  'SF MASTERWORKS is a library of the greatest SF ever written, chosen with the help of today's leading SF writers and editors. These books show that genuinely innovative SF is as exciting today as when it was first written.'

  Now, as we move inexorably into the twenty-first century, we are delighted to be widening our remit even more. The realities of commercial publishing are such that vast troves of classic SF & Fantasy are almost certainly destined never again to see print. Until very recently, this meant that anyone interested in reading any of these books would have been confined to scouring second-hand bookshops. The advent of digital publishing has changed that paradigm for ever.

  The technology now exists to enable us to make available, for the first time, the entire backlists of an incredibly wide range of classic and modern SF and fantasy authors. Our plan is, at its simplest, to use this technology to build on the success of the SF and Fantasy Masterworks series and to go even further.

  Welcome to the new home of Science Fiction & Fantasy. Welcome to the most comprehensive electronic library of classic SFF titles ever assembled.

  Welcome to the SF Gateway.

  Contents

  Title Page

  Gateway Introduction

  Table of Contents

  Clear Blue Lou

  Sunshine Sue

  La Mirage

  Eagle's Nest Syndrome

  The Court of Justice

  The Giving of Justice

  New Lamps for Old

  New Worlds for Old

  Somewhere over the Rainbow

  The Spaceship Enterprise

  Songs from the Stars

  Deus ex Machina

  Word of Mouth

  The Chariot of the Gods

  We All Live in a Yellow Submarine

  The Graveyard Heart

  The Big Ear Lies Silent

  The Big Ear Remembers

  I Have Always Waited for this Moment to Arrive

  The Voice from the Whirlwind

  One Man's Ceiling Is Another Man's Floor

  The Galactic Way

  Speak in Secret Alphabets

  Nobody Promised You a Rose Garden

  Celestial Mechanics

  The Clear Blue Way

  Website

  Also By Norman Spinrad

  Dedication

  Author Bio

  Copyright

  Clear Blue Lou

  Cruising southeast on a golden afternoon for eagles, Clear Blue Lou had left the world behind him. Below, the Sierra foothills were a chiaroscuro tapestry of crumpled green velvet, and the cloudless sky filled his soul with clear blue glory. His spirit was absorbed into a birdlike awareness of the dips and slips of the mountain airstreams. He was Clear Blue Lou, perfect master of the Clear Blue Way. In the towns and communes and farmsteads of Aquaria below, that meant cleansing other people's karma, but up here all alone in the Clear Blue, he himself found his own Way. Every master must dance his own song.

  Lou hung suspended in time and space beneath the clear blue helium-filled eagle; from the ground, he appeared to be riding beneath an almost invisible wing of air. From where he sat in his saddle slung beneath the eagle, the glider wing was a sunshade lens attuning the blue of the sky to a deeper and more tranquil vision. Nowhere else was he more totally in the Way.

  So blissfully was Clear Blue Lou riding the Clear Blue Way that before he knew it, sunset was creeping up behind him.

  Oh shit! he suddenly realized. I've done it again!

  Long streaks of purple and carmine were playing over the eagle wing, and the ribwork of the lower surface had become a cathedral archwork of lengthening shadows. Below, inky pseudopods were oozing east through the rugged canyon bottoms of south-central Aquaria, and the tops of the scattered clouds were turning mauve and pale orange.

  Clear Blue Lou might be in sync with the law of muscle, sun, wind and water, but of this white tetrad of sanctioned powers, the one that made him grunt and sweat was the one he liked the least. And now, to pay back this golden afternoon of sweet karma, he was going to have to pedal.

  The solar eagle is a helium balloon in the form of a subtly flexible glider wing. Hanging bellow it in a saddle, the eagle rider flexes and warps it with the control lines like an aerial puppeteer riding beneath an avian marionette. Given the right wind, an ace like Clear Blue Lou could follow a general vector with no power at all. Unfortunately, such optimum karma occurred maybe a dozen times a year.

  And today was not one of those clays. A light headwind was blowing up from the east, there was less than an hour's sun left, and the last eagle's nest between here and La Mirage was at least eight miles away. He was going to have to pedal.

  The upper surface of the eagle wing is covered with solar cells that produce enough electricity to power two pusher props halfway out toward the tips. In still air, the sun can move the eagle at about ten miles per hour. When it is up.

  When it is not up or when the wind blows the wrong way, there is a central pusher prop run by the pedals. No true eagle freak enjoys pedaling. If he did, he'd be a cycle sailor, who enjoyed that dubious pleasure every time he lost his wind.

  Nevertheless, muscle was part of the Way, and there were perfect masters of certain ways who taught that sweat was good for the soul and sprinted about their rounds on bicycles. There were even those who thought that solar eagles were tinted a suspicious tone of gray.

  As Clear Blue Lou hit the pedals, as his legs established a rhythmic pump and he let his muscles drive his lungs, flesh warped consciousness closer to immediate reality, and Lou as forced to remember that the Eagle Tribe who had built his sky chariot were deeply involved in this mess in La Mirage. They were under a cloud whose belly was black with the shadow of sorcery.

  The sky was deepening to darkness behind him, and the land below had cloaked itself in shadows that made it seem more craggy and forbidding as Clear Blue Lou pedaled laboriously east through the sweet sunset musk given off by the forested foothills. On the eastern horizon, the jagged peaks of the Sierras themselves blazed redly in the setting sun. Beyond them... the Great Waste, from whose depths black science oozed its subtle way into Aquaria, grayed by the time it reached La Mirage, and ostensibly pure as the driven snow by the time it cleared the Exchange.

  Somewhere between here and the other side of the Sierras, someone's hand was quicker than the eye. Or, anyway, eyes that chose to look away. No taint could be pointed to on the whiteness of solar eagles, no molecule made by the hand of man, no power other than that of sun and wind and muscle. Well within the letter of the law.

  Of course, the solar cells had to come from somewhere, and the fabric of the glider balloon was a rather outré derivative of cellulose, and the Eagle Tribe's train of supply drifted back ambiguously into the hermetic mountain william canyons way up in the eastern slopes of the central range where the righteously white did not care to risk sticking their noses.

  Clear Blue Lou did not make a habit of questioning the karma of that which sweetened his own, and he believed in doing likewise for the good karma of others. If it tastes good to the spirit, you can eat it.

  But now, with the landscape gone sinister and his own misattention trapping him in the penitive task
of pedaling, Lou was reminded that not even a perfect master could count on a perpetual free lunch. Perhaps having to keep in the Way by force of will over protest of flesh was good for the soul, a cautionary cosmic zinger.

  Right now it reminded him that this was no joyride after all, that he had been summoned to give his justice in a dispute that touched on the karma of this selfsame eagle that had transformed him from a high-flying rider of the wind to the beast of his own burden with the setting of the sun.

  Good for the soul, like peyote, he told himself sourly, leaning into the pedals. But that didn't mean he had to like the way it tasted going down.

  Within the hour, the land below had sunk into a black abyss, the moonless sky blazed with pinpoint lights like the landscape of some eldritch pre Smash city, and Clear Blue Lou had had more than enough of the yoga of pedaling.

  So it was with a certain sense of relief that he finally spotted the eagle's nest beacon, a powerful 200-watt reflector beam winking at him like a grounded star from the next ridgeline. He shifted gears, and a portion of his footpower was shunted into the pump that recompressed wing helium to kill the eagle's lift for a glide-in. This did not make pedaling any easier, and by the time he established his descent curve, he was groaning and wheezing, and it was pure ecstasy to stop pedaling for good and float down like a moth toward the light.

  Down he came into a high mountain meadow shining ghostly pale under the stars. Only one other eagle was tethered to the hitching rail. Millions of insects circled in the beam of the spotlight on the roof of the single-story rambling lodge cabin.

  The main room of the cabin had walls of undressed timber, smooth-hewn tables and chairs, and a big wood stove where Matty the cook presided over two big iron kettles and a pot of cider, which blasted out food odors that went straight to Lou's empty stomach.

  "Food and flop, Matty," Lou called out. "I've been pedaling for hours."

  "In such a hurry to get to La Mirage?" The only other customer was a tall willowy woman in a yellow Sunshine messenger jumpsuit who sat alone over the remains of her meal, beckoning him to her table. She was neat, she looked a little mean in all the right places, and she seemed just a little hostile.

  "As a matter of fact, I've got all the time in the world," Lou said, beaming invitingly at her as he sat down across from her.

  The Sunshine Girl ran her tongue over her lower lip and smiled back ironically. "Are you soliciting a bribe, oh giver of Clear Blue justice?"

  "Are you offering one?" he asked.

  The Sunshine Girl shrugged. "It might enliven an otherwise dull night," she said.

  Matty set a bowl of rice fried with vegetables under a sauce of soybean chili before him, and Lou considered the karma as he savored the first welcome mouthful.

  Sunshine Sue's whole operation could be on the line when he gave his justice, and from what he had heard, it had been the Eagle Tribe who had first suggested him, not the Sunshines. And here he was, flying in on their product. It could be argued by a good enough sophist that he owed the Sunshine Tribe some counterbalancing equivalent, which might be most pleasantly provided at sport with this member who was both willing and a turn-on.

  On the other hand, the hoary maxim that a stiff prick knows no conscience was not the bottom line for Clear Blue Lou.

  "Is it against your rules to discuss our case?" the Sunshine Girl asked.

  "What's your name?"

  "Little Mary Sunshine," she answered dryly.

  "Well Mary," Lou said, "that depends on whether I'm talking to Little Mary or to Sunshine Sue's Word of Mouth."

  "Off the record. Cross my heart."

  Lou eyed her narrowly. Sunshine Sue's Word of Mouth earned its way by carrying other people's messages, but it also carried public news up and down the length of Aquaria. News that it collected however it could. If he didn't want to trust Little Mary Sunshine, he wouldn't be Clear Blue Lou, but if he trusted her implicitly, he wouldn't be Clear Blue Lou either.

  "And hope to lie?"

  Little Mary laughed. "No, really," she said. "I just want to tell you something. The Sunshine Tribe isn't into black science; we're no grayer than anyone else who does business in La Mirage."

  "That's not exactly a certificate of karmic purity," Lou said dryly.

  "I'm leveling with you, Lou. Sure, you could say that some of our electronic components might not be ultrabright, but our radios are as white as your eagle."

  "I can't think of a blacker science than atomics," Lou said. "Can you?"

  "That's what I'm telling you!" Little Mary said in a tone of some exasperation. "We wouldn't mess with sorcery like that! What do you think we are, monsters?"

  "But you were caught with radioactive power cores in twenty-five radios. Or do you dispute the facts as charged by the Eagles?"

  "The Eagles? Where do they come off so whitely righteous? How did they know about the power cores in the first place? We didn't."

  "You didn't?"

  Little Mary reached out and touched his hand. She looked into his eyes. "Really we didn't," she said quietly. "We bought them on the open market from the Lightning Commune, and we've never had trouble like this with them before; they've always been a reasonably white outfit. And now suddenly they set us up for a sorcery judgment..."

  "How come the Eagles knew about the atomic cores if you didn't?"

  "Now you're catching on," Little Mary Sunshine said.

  I am? Clear Blue Lou thought. But to what? This side of the story didn't add up. And it wouldn't until he got an explanation from the Eagles. And he had an uneasy feeling that they'd have a hard time giving him a straight answer too. And he didn't at all feature whom this was all beginning to point to. He also realized that this discussion had gone a little too far. He had already asked some questions that could be turned into items by Word of Mouth with a little embellishment.

  "This is all off the record?" he said. "It's not going to be all over Aquaria that I discussed this with you in the course of coming on?"

  "Whose karma would that sweeten?" Little Mary said. She smiled. "So you admit you'd like to while away the night together?"

  Oooh, this was getting tasty. But it was also getting dicey. The mind game that was going on would make for fiery sport. But that would tie another Gordian knot in the skein of karma he was being called upon to unravel, with something more intimate than his finger tied up in it.

  At times like these, he could do with being a little less Clear Blue.

  "I admit I'd like to," he said.

  Now she was touching both of his hands. "So would I."

  Lou's flesh surged toward her, but his head held him back. "Some good things," he said dryly, "were not meant to be."

  She sighed and relaxed back against her chair. "Can't blame a girl for trying," she said easily.

  "Were you really trying?" Lou asked.

  "Was I really trying what?" Little Mary Sunshine drawled ingenuously.

  "To suborn a giver of justice with your sweet charms," Lou said half seriously.

  "Was the giver of justice maybe using the situation to see if he could get it down?" she asked slyly.

  "Would I contemplate a thing like that?"

  "Are you sure you don't want to talk that over in my room?"

  "Much as I'd like to, the karma isn't clear," Lou said regretfully. "If we sported, either you'd incline me favorably toward your tribe, or I'd bend over backward the other way to be fair. Unjust either way."

  He laughed. "Besides, right now, neither of us could figure out what was fucking whom anyway."

  "It might be fun trying."

  "I'm sure it would, but I'd hate myself in the morning," Lou said, getting up from the table. He kissed her hand. "Maybe when this is over, we can wake up one morning in bed together and remember this with a smile."

  "I sure hope we all come out of this smiling," Little Mary Sunshine said dubiously. "Nobody's smiling now."

  "That's what I'm here for," Clear Blue Lou said. It was as good an exit line
as any. But with his glands sulking in frustration and his mind already whirling through the numbers, he went to bed already warped into the karmic maelstrom. And he was still a good morning's flight from the scene that awaited him at La Mirage, where the winds that were blowing had more of a whiff of the east about them than usual.

  Next morning after a solitary breakfast of wheatola and hot cider, Clear Blue Lou took off through the damp mist that fogged the high mountain meadows, his spirit soggy with last night's missed pleasures and the sorcery-tainted karma that had trapped him in its evil spell of chastity.

  But soon he was above the fog, soaring rapidly east on a favorable wind and a high mountain sun that warmed his body to wakefulness arid clarified his soul.

  The karma that he was being called upon to judge had already prevented two innocent people from sporting together, and he was one of them. As far as Lou was concerned, that was proof enough that somewhere at the bottom of this lay a mindfuck pattern, a violation of free will, an outrage to both himself and the Great Way. The seeking of justice had already begun.

  For the giving of justice was no neutral intellectual process. In order to clear karma, a perfect master must enter its realities. Otherwise, he would be writing law, not fulfilling destiny; he would be acting like a government. What was left of the world could do without people who thought they could be unmoved movers.

  Atomic power cores aside, karmic imperialism was at work here; it had already quite literally grabbed him by the balls. And justice would require that this karmic debt not go unpaid.

  The fair following wind was taking him rapidly toward the beginning of the central range of the Sierras. No rolling foothills below him now, but apprentice mountains rising up toward him.

  This was the beginning of where the world ended. Or at least the world that the whitely righteous knew. No eagle could cross the High Sierras powered only by sun and wind and muscle. Beyond that immense wall of mountains was the greatest of all Wastes, Aquaria's knowledge of its extent petering out into the infinity of legend. Great was the mega-tonnage that had fallen upon the eastern slopes of the Great Divide during the Smash. Still deadly was the vast radioactive wound which the hand of man had gouged in the body of the Earth.

 

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