The World of Ptavvs

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by Larry Niven




  A MIND’S EYE VIEW

  Kzanol thought he was insane. Suddenly he was in the body of an alien called Greenberg, swamped by a flood of Greenberg’s memories.

  He suddenly noticed other aliens in the room with him, and they were coming toward him. But he couldn’t tap them…he had no control over their minds. Had he lost the Power? Without that Power, a thrint was no longer a member of the race that enslaves galaxies…he was merely a worthless ptavv.

  The aliens were getting closer…calling Greenberg’s name.

  Kzanol carefully manipulated Greenberg’s unfamiliar body—and reached for the disintegrator!

  Also by Larry Niven

  Published by Ballantine Books:

  ALL THE MYRIAD WAYS

  CONVERGENT SERIES

  FLIGHT OF THE HORSE

  THE FLYING SORCERERS (with David Gerrold)

  A GIFT FROM EARTH

  A HOLE IN SPACE

  THE LONG ARM OF GIL HAMILTON

  NEUTRON STAR

  THE PROTECTOR

  RINGWORLD

  THE RINGWORLD ENGINEERS

  TALES OF KNOWN SPACE:

  The Universe of Larry Niven

  A WORLD OUT OF TIME

  A Del Rey Book

  Published by Ballantine Books

  Copyright © 1966 by Larry Niven

  A much shorter version of “World of Ptavvs” first appeared in Worlds of Tomorrow, copyright © 1965 by Galaxy Publishing Corporation

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada, Limited, Toronto, Canada.

  ISBN 0-345-30054-8

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  First Ballantine Books Edition: August 1966

  Ninth Printing: September 1982

  First Canadian Printing: September 1966

  Second Canadian Printing: August 1971

  Cover art by Rick Sternbach

  CONTENTS

  World of Ptavvs

  Bonus:

  the original World of Ptavvs short-story

  * * *

  There was a moment so short that it had never been successfully measured, yet always far too long. For that moment it seemed that every mind in the universe, every mind that had ever been or that would ever be, was screaming its deepest emotions at him.

  Then it was over. The stars had changed again.

  Even for Kzanol, who was a good astrogator, there was no point in trying to guess where the ship was now. At .93 lights, the speed at which the average mass of the universe becomes great enough to permit entry into hyperspace, the stars become unrecognizable. Ahead they flared painful blue-white. Behind they were dull red, like a scattered coal fire. To the sides they were compressed and flattened into tiny lenses. So Kzanol sucked a gnal until the ship’s brain board made a thudding sound, then went to look.

  The brain screen said, “Reestimate of trip time to Thrintun: 1.72 days.”

  Not good, he decided. He should have come out much closer to Thrintun. But luck, more than skill, decided when a hyperspace ship would make port. The Principle of Uncertainty is the law of hyperspace. There was no need to be impatient. It would be several hours before the fusor recharged the battery.

  Kzanol swung his chair around so he could see the star map on the rear wall. The sapphire pin seemed to twinkle and gleam across the length of the cabin. For a moment he basked in its radiance, the radiance of unlimited wealth. Then he jumped up and began typing on the brain board.

  Sure there was reason to be impatient! Even now somebody with a map just like his, and a pin where Kzanol had inserted his sapphire marker, might be racing to put in a claim. The control of an entire slave world, for all of Kzanol’s lifetime, was his rightful property; but only if he reached Thrintun first.

  He typed: “How long to recharge the battery?”

  The brain board thudded almost at once. But Kzanol was never to know the answer.

  Suddenly a blinding light shone through the back window. Kzanol’s chair flattened into a couch, a loud musical note rang, and there was pressure. Terrible pressure. The ship wasn’t ever supposed to use that high an acceleration. It lasted for about five seconds. Then—

  There was a sound like two lead doors being slapped together, with the ship between them.

  The pressure eased. Kzanol got to his feet and peered out the rear window at the incandescent cloud that had been his fusor. A machine has no mind to read; you never know when it’s going to betray you—

  The brain board thudded.

  He read, “Time to recharge battery:” followed by the spiral hieroglyph, the sign of infinity.

  With his face pressed against the molded diamond pane, Kzanol watched the burning power plant fade among the stars. The brain must have dropped it the moment it became dangerous. That was why it had been trailed half a mile behind the ship: because fusors sometimes exploded. Just before he lost sight of it altogether, the light flared again into something brighter than a sun.

  Thud, said the brain. Kzanol read, “Reestimate of trip time to Thrintun:” followed by a spiral.

  The shock wave from the far explosion reached the ship. It sounded like a distant door slamming.

  There was no hurry now. For a long time Kzanol stood before his wall map, gazing at the sapphire pin.

  The tiny star in the tiny jewel winked back at him, speaking of two billion slaves and a fully industrialized world waiting to serve him; speaking of more wealth and power than even his grandfather, the great Racarliw, had known; speaking of hundreds of mates and tens of thousands of personal retainers to serve his every whim during his long, lazy life. He was chain-sucking, and the eating tendrils at the corners of his mouth writhed without his knowledge, like embattled earthworms. Useless regrets filled his mind.

  His grandfather should have sold the plantation when Plorn’s tnuctip slaves produced antigravity. Plorn could and should have been assassinated in time. Kzanol should have stayed on Thrintun, even if he had to slave it for a living. He should have bought a spare fusor instead of that extra suit and the deluxe crash couch and the scent score on the air plant and, with his last commercial, the sapphire pin.

  There had been a day when he’d sat clutching a blue-green plastic cord which would make him a spacecraft owner or a jobless pauper. Bowed white skeletal shapes had raced round and round him: mutated racing viprin, the fastest animal anywhere in the galaxy. But, by the Power! Kzanol’s was faster than all the rest. If only he’d thrown away that thread…

  For a time he relived his life on the vast stage tree plantation where he had become an adult. Kzathit Stage Logs, with its virtual monopoly on solid fuel takeoff logs, now gone forever. If only he were there now…

  But Kzathit Stage Logs had been a spaceport landing field for almost ten years.

  He went to the locker and put on his suit. There were two suits there, including the spare he’d bought in case one ceased to function. Stupid. If the suit failed he’d be dead anyway.

  He ran a massive, stubby finger around the panic button on his chest. He’d have to use it soon; but not yet. There were things to do first. He wanted the best possible chance of survival.

  At the brain board he typed: “Compute a course for any civilized planet, minimum trip time. Give trip time.”

  The brain purred happily to itself. Sometimes Kzanol thought it was happy only when it was working hard. He often tried to guess at the emotionless thoughts of the machine. It bothered him that he couldn’t read its mind. Sometimes he even worried about his inability to give it orders except through the brain board. Perhaps it was too alien, he thought; thrintun had never made contact with other than protoplasmic life. While
he waited for his answer he experimentally tried to reach the rescue switch on his back.

  He hadn’t a chance; but that was the least of his worries. When he pushed the panic button the suit stasis field would go on, and time would cease to flow inside his suit. Only the rescue switch would protrude from the field. It had been placed so that Kzanol’s rescuer, not Kzanol, could reach it.

  Thud! The screen said, “No solution.”

  Nonsense! The battery had a tremendous potential, even after a hyperspace jump it must still have enough energy to aim the ship at some civilized planet. Why would the brain…?

  Then he understood. The ship had power, probably, to reach several worlds, but not to slow him down to the speed of any known world. Well, that was all right. In his stasis field Kzanol wouldn’t care how hard he hit. He typed: “Do not consider decrease of velocity upon arrival. Plot course for any civilized planet. Minimize trip time.”

  The answer took only a few seconds. “Trip time to Awtprun 72 Thrintun years 100.48 days.”

  Awtprun. Well, it didn’t matter where he landed; he could hop a ship for Thrintun as soon as they turned oil his field generator. Would some other prospector find Racarliwun in seventy-two years? Probably.

  Spirit of the Power! Hurriedly he typed: “Cancel course to Awtprun.” Then he sagged back in his chair, appalled at his narrow escape.

  If he had hit Awtprun at more than nine-tenths light, he could have killed upward of a million people. That was assuming he hit an ocean! The shock wave would knock every flying thing out of the air for a thousand miles around and scour the land clean, sink islands, tear down buildings half around the world.

  For a blunder like that, he’d draw death after a year of torture. Torture in the hands of a telepathic, highly scientific society was a horrible thing. Biology students would watch, scribbling furiously, while members of the Penalty Board carefully traced his nervous system with stimulators…

  Gradually his predicament became clear to him. He couldn’t land on a civilized planet. All right. But he couldn’t land on a slave planet either; he’d be certain to knock down a few overseers’ palaces, as well as killing billions of commercials’ worth of slaves.

  Perhaps he could aim to go through a system, hoping that the enlarged mass of his ship would be noticed? But he dared not do that. To stay in space was literally unthinkable. Why, he might go right out of the galaxy! He saw himself lost forever between the island universes, the ship disintegrating around him, the rescue button being worn down to a small shiny spot by interstellar dust…No!

  Gently he rubbed his closed eyes with an eating tendril. Could he land on a moon? If he hit a moon hard enough, the flash might be seen. But the brain wasn’t good enough to get him there, not at such a distance. A moon’s orbit is a twisty thing, and he’d have to hit the moon of a civilized planet. Awtprun was the closest, and Awtprun was much too far.

  And to top it off, he realized, he was sucking his last gnal. He sat there feeling sorry for himself until it was gone, then began to pace the floor.

  Of course!

  He stood stock still in the middle of the cabin, thinking out his inspiration, looking for the flaw. He couldn’t find one. Hurriedly he tapped at the brain board: “Compute course for a food planet minimizing trip time. Ship need not slow on arrival. Give details.”

  His eating tendrils hung limp, relaxed. It’s going to be all right, he thought, and meant it.

  For protoplasmic life forms, there are not many habitable planets in the galaxy. Nature makes an unreasonable number of conditions. To insure the right composition of atmosphere, the planet must be exactly the right distance from a G type sun, must be exactly the right size, and must have a freakishly oversized moon in its sky. The purpose of the moon is to strip away most of the planet’s atmosphere, generally around 99 percent of it. Without its moon a habitable world becomes shockingly uninhabitable; its air acquires crushing weight, and its temperature becomes that of a “hot” oven.

  Of the 219 habitable worlds found by Thrintun, 64 had life. Seventeen had intelligent life; 18 if you were broad minded. The 155 barren worlds would not be ready for Thrintun occupancy until after a long seeding process. Meanwhile, they had their uses.

  They could be seeded with a tnuctipun-developed food yeast. After a few centuries the yeast generally mutated, but until then the world was a food planet, with all its oceans full of the cheapest food in the galaxy. Of course, only a slave would eat it; but there were plenty of slaves.

  All over the galaxy there were food planets to feed the slave planets. The caretaker’s palace was always on the moon. Who would want to live on a world with barren land and scummy seas? Not to mention the danger of bacteria contaminating the yeast. So from the moons a careful watch was kept on the food planets.

  After the yeast had mutated to the point where it was no longer edible, even to a slave, the world was seeded with yeast-eating whitefood herds. Whitefoods ate anything, and were a good source of meat. The watch was continued.

  At his present speed Kzanol would hit such a planet hard enough to produce a blazing plume of incandescent gas. The exploded rock would rise flaming into space, vivid and startling and unmistakable even to a watcher on the moon. The orange glow of the crater would last for days.

  Chances were that Kzanol would end underground, but not far underground. The incandescent air and rock which move ahead of a meteorite usually blow the meteorite itself back into the air, to rain down over a wide area. Kzanol, wrapped safely in his stasis field; would go right back out his own hole, and would not dig himself very deep on the second fall. The caretaker could find him instantly with any kind of rock-penetrating instrument. A stasis field is the only perfect reflector.

  The brain interrupted his planning. “Nearest available food planet is F124. Estimated trip time 202 years 91.4 days.”

  Kzanol typed: “Show me F124 and system.”

  The screen showed specks of light. One by one, the major planets and their moon systems were enlarged. F124 was a steamy, quick-spinning ball: a typical food planet, even its moon’s rotation was almost nil. The moon seemed overlarge, but also overdistant. An outer planet made Kzanol gasp in admiration. It was ringed! Gorgeously ringed. Kzanol waited until all the major worlds had been shown. When the asteroids began to appear in order of size he typed: “Enough. Follow course to F124.”

  He’d left his helmet off. Other than that he was fully dressed for the long sleep. He felt the ship accelerating, a throb in the metal from the motors. The cabin’s acceleration field canceled the gees. He picked up his helmet and set it on his neck ring, changed his mind and took it off. He went to the wall and tore off his star map, rolled it up and stuck it through the neck ring into the bosom of his suit. He had the helmet ready to tog down when he started to wonder.

  His rescuer could claim a large sum for the altruistic act of rescuing him. But suppose the reward didn’t satisfy him? If he were any kind of thrint he would take the map as soon as he saw it. After all, there was no law against it. Kzanol had better memorize the map.

  But there was a better answer.

  Yes! Kzanol hurried to the locker and pulled out the second suit. He stuffed the map into one arm. He was elated with his discovery. There was plenty of room left in the empty suit. Briskly he moved about the cabin collecting his treasures. The amplifier helmet, universal symbol of power and of royalty, which had once belonged to his grandfather. It was a light but bulky instrument which could amplify the thrint’s native Power to control twenty to thirty non-thrints into the ability, to control an entire planet. His brother’s farewell present, a disintegrator with a hand-carved handle. He had a thought which made him put it aside. His statues of Ptul and Myxylomat. May they never meet! But both females would be dead before he saw them again, unless some friend put them in stasis against his return. His diamond-geared, hullfab-cased watch with the cryogenic gears, which always ran slow no matter how many times it was fixed. He couldn’t wear it to F124; it was fo
r formal events only. He wrapped each valuable in one of his extra robes before inserting it into the suit.

  There was room left over.

  In a what-the-hell mood he called the little racarliw slave over from the storage locker and made it get in. Then he screwed the helmet down and pushed the panic button.

  The suit looked like a crazy mirror. All the wrinkles remained, but the suit was suddenly more rigid than diamond or hullfab. He propped it in a corner, patted it fondly on the head, and left it.

  “Cancel present course to F124,” he typed. “Compute and follow fastest course to F124 using only half of remaining power, completing all necessary power maneuvers within the next day.”

  A day later, Kzanol was suffering mild gnal withdrawal symptoms. He was doing everything he could think of to keep himself busy so that he wouldn’t have to think about how much he wanted a gnal.

  He had, in fact, just finished an experiment. He had turned off the field in the second suit, placed the disintegrator in its glove, and turned on the field again. The stasis field had followed its metal surface. The digging instrument had gone into stasis along with the suit.

  Then the drive went off. Feeling considerable relief, Kzanol went to the board and typed: “Compute fastest course to eighth planet of F124 system. Wait ½ day, then follow course.” He put on his suit, picked up the disintegrator and some wire line, and went out the airlock. He used the line to stop his drift until he was motionless with respect to the ship.

  Any last thoughts?

  He’d done the best he could for himself. He was falling toward F124. The ship would reach the unwatched, uninhabitable eighth planet years before Kzanol hit the third. It should make a nice, big crater, easy to find. Not that he’d need it.

  There was a risk, he thought, that the rescue switch might be set off by reentry heat. If that happened he would wake up underground, for it took time for the field to die. But he could dig his way out with the disintegrator.

  Kzanol poised a thick, clumsy finger over the panic button. Last thoughts?

 

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