by Ben Bova
“You’re in danger, too,” I said, clasping her soft warm hand in mine.
She laughed lightly. “Both of us, then. Together.”
Epilogue: Paradise
We lay side by side on our bellies in the high grass. We had been tracking the boar all morning. The sun burned hot above, but beneath the shade of the broad-leafed trees the air was cool with the breeze blowing in from the nearby sea.
Anya didn’t look much like a goddess. She wore an animal pelt, arms and legs bare, her lovely face smudged with dirt, her flowing onyx hair wildly tangled.
She smiled at me, and her beauty shone through all the stains and smears of this existence. We were in Paradise, the broad, beautiful, game-filled forest that stretched across the northern rim of Africa. The basin that would one day be known as the Mediterranean Sea was filling from the enormous waterfall spilling in from the Atlantic Ocean where the Pillars of Hercules stood. Every day the sea grew, bringing fresh rains to nourish the broad, green forest.
North of the filling basin the land that would become Europe was almost completely covered by a two-mile-thick ice sheet that stretched all the way to the North Pole. An Ice Age gripped much of the world, and the human race—scattered across Africa for the most part, in tiny bands of nomadic hunters—had yet to invent agriculture or build villages.
Paradise. A hunting ground teeming with game and freedom. Anya and I were happy here. Who wouldn’t be? There were no chiefs here among the meager human tribes, no kings or vassals, no cities to confine us, no wars to bring slaughter and misery.
What would one day become the island of Britain was still attached to the mainland of Europe, buried beneath the glaciers that would not melt for another thousand centuries.
Silently, Anya tapped me on the shoulder. I could not see the boar through the high grass, but I heard it snuffling. We were upwind of the beast, yet it still sounded wary, dangerous.
Inching along slowly on our bellies, we followed the boar’s grumbles. I moved slightly ahead of Anya. Like her, I was gripping a wooden spear in one hand, its tip hardened by fire.
With the tip of the spear I slowly, carefully parted the tufts of grass obscuring my vision. There was the boar, rooting in the ground with its curved tusks, unaware of our presence and its impending death. It was a big animal, enough meat to feed our little band of hunters for many days. If we could kill it. If it didn’t kill us first.
Anya tapped my shoulder again and made a circling motion with her free hand. I nodded, and she slithered off to my right as silently as a snake. I smiled at my huntress. In later ages she would be worshipped as Athena, warrior and giver of wisdom. In this era she was a Neolithic hunter, happy and free.
I worried that she might move too far in her ploy to attack the boar from two sides. If the breeze changed even a little the beast would sniff us out and bolt away. Or charge at her with those powerful, sharp tusks.
And that is just what happened. Almost.
The boar’s head suddenly snapped up. It grunted, much like an old man suddenly disturbed in his slumber. My senses went into overdrive. I saw the boar’s muscles tense beneath its shaggy coat. If it charged at Anya while she was still inching along the ground, prone, it could rip her apart before she could use her spear to defend herself.
I leaped to my feet and bellowed at the animal. It froze for an instant, then turned toward me, its narrow little eyes blinking. For a moment I thought it would scamper away, and our whole morning’s stalk would be wasted. Instead it bunched its muscles, lowered its head, and charged straight at me.
I gripped my spear in both hands, ready to impale the beast when it got close enough. But then Anya burst out of the foliage to my right and nailed the animal through its ribs with her spear. The boar growled and twisted, yanking the spear from Anya’s hands. Slathering, spouting blood, it turned on her.
I raced forward and rammed my spear through its hindquarters, nailing it to the ground. It screeched horribly as it thrashed about, trying to work itself loose. I held on to my spear, keeping the beast pinned.
Anya jumped lightly to the boar’s side, yanked her spear out, then jammed it in again at the base of the animal’s skull. It collapsed and went silent.
“Well done,” I said, puffing.
She laughed. “Well done yourself, Orion.”
By the time we finished quartering the carcass we were both grimy and splattered with the boar’s blood and entrails. I grinned at her. Anya didn’t look like a goddess now—unless perhaps she was Artemis, goddess of the hunt.
As we toted the meat through the forest, back to the clearing where our band had made its little camp, Anya said happily, “We’ll feast tonight.”
“And tomorrow,” I said. “Several tomorrows.”
Her cheerful smile faded. “How many tomorrows do we have, Orion?”
I knew what she meant. “As many as we desire, dear one.”
But she shook her head sadly. “Aten is scheming to destroy you, darling. You know that.”
“Let him scheme. We can stay here in Paradise as long as we want to.”
“I wish that were true.”
“Why not?” I demanded.
She caught me with those infinite gray eyes of her. “Aten must be plotting with others of the Creators to eliminate you, erase you from the continuum as if you never existed.”
“He can try,” I growled.
“He is trying! I can sense it.”
“We’re safe enough here.”
“For how long? A week? A year?”
Shaking my head, I admitted, “I still don’t understand how you can travel through time and yet still be bound by it.”
“The point is, Orion,” she said, very seriously, “that the longer we stay here in Paradise the longer Aten has to plan your destruction.”
“Maybe I should destroy him, then.”
Her eyes widened. “Destroy a Creator?”
“He’d destroy me if he could. Why shouldn’t I fight back?”
“But … destroy a Creator?” The idea seemed to shock her.
I stopped and let the bloody chunk of the boar slide from my shoulders to the ground. “We’ve got to do something. You’re right about that.”
“What do you have in mind?” she asked.
“I don’t know. Not yet.” I felt a weight far heavier than the boar settling on my shoulders. “But I’ve got to do something, don’t I?”
“We have to do something, my darling. You and I, together.”
I lifted the bloody meat off her shoulder and took her in my arms and kissed her. Two Neolithic hunters, covered with grime and gore, who loved each other through all the eons and light-years of the continuum. We would face Aten and the other Creators together, for all eternity if need be.
TOR BOOKS BY BEN BOVA
Able One
The Aftermath
As on a Darkling Plain
The Astral Mirror
Battle Station
The Best of the Nebulas (editor)
Challenges
Colony
Cyberbooks
Escape Plus
The Green Trap
Gremlins Go Home (with Gordon R. Dickson)
Jupiter
The Kinsman Saga
Leviathans of Jupiter
Mars Life
Mercury
The Multiple Man
Orion
Orion Among the Stars
Orion and the Conqueror
Orion in the Dying Time
Out of the Sun
Peacekeepers
Power Play
Powersat
The Precipice
Privateers
Prometheans
The Rock Rats
Saturn
The Silent War
Star Peace: Assured Survival
The Starcrossed
Tales of the Grand Tour
Test of Fire
Titan
To Fear the Light (with A. J. Austin)
To Save the Sun (with A. J. Austin)
The Trikon Deception (with Bill Pogue)
Triumph
Vengeance of Orion
Venus
Voyagers
Voyagers II: The Alien Within
Voyagers III: Star Brothers
The Return: Book IV of Voyagers
The Winds of Altair
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ben Bova is the author of five previous novels in this series: Orion, Vengeance of Orion, Orion in the Dying Time, Orion and the Conqueror, and Orion Among the Stars.
Bova is also a six-time winner of the Hugo Award, a former editor of Analog, a former editorial director of Omni, and a past president of both the National Space Society and the Science Fiction Writers of America. He is the author of more than a hundred works of science fact and fiction. He lives in Florida.
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
ORION AND KING ARTHUR
Copyright © 2011 by Ben Bova
Originally published as an audiobook by Audible
All rights reserved.
Cover art by John Stanko
A Tor Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
www.tor-forge.com
Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.
The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:
Bova, Ben, 1932–
Orion and King Arthur / Ben Bova. — 1st ed.
p. cm.
“A Tom Doherty Associates book.”
ISBN 978-0-7653-3017-8 (hardcover)
ISBN 978-1-4299-4752-7 (e-book)
1. Orion (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Time travel—Fiction. 3. Gods—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3552.O84O676 2012
813'.54—dc23
2012011662
e-ISBN 9781429947527
First E-Book Edition: July 2012
Table of Contents
Cover
Dedication
Contents
Epigraph
Prologue: Heorot
Book I: Dux Bellorum
Chapter One: Amesbury Fort
Chapter Two: The Bretwalda
Interlude
Chapter Three: Spoils of War
Chapter Four: Cadbury Castle
Chapter Five: Power and Glory
Chapter Six: Bernicia
Chapter Seven: Wroxeter and Cameliard
Book II: King of the Britons
Chapter Eight: The Sword of Kingship
Chapter Nine: Leodegrance’s Wedding Gift
Chapter Ten: Among the Saxons
Interlude
Book III: The Death of Arthur
Chapter Eleven: Castle Tintagel
Chapter Twelve: Guinevere and Lancelot
Chapter Thirteen: The Lady of the Lake
Chapter Fourteen: Morganna and Modred
Chapter Fifteen: The Battle of Camlann
Epilogue: Paradise
Tor Books by Ben Bova
About the Author
Copyright