Harry Harrison - Eden 01 - West of Eden

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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
WEST OF EDEN
Harry Harrison
ISBN 0-553-24935-5. Published 1984.
CONTENTS
BOOK 1
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
BOOK 2
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
8: And the LORD God planted a garden
eastward in Eden;
and there he put the man
whom he had formed.
16: And Cain went out from the presence
of the LORD, and dwelt
in the land of Nod,
on the east of Eden.
GENESIS
The great reptiles were the most successful life forms ever to populate this world. For 140 million years
they ruled the Earth, filled the sky, swarmed in the seas. At this time the mammals, the ancestors of
mankind, were only tiny, shrew-like animals that were preyed upon by the larger, faster, more intelligent
saurians.
Then, 65 million years ago, this all changed. A meteor six miles in diameter struck the Earth and caused
disastrous atmospheric upheavals. Within a brief span of time over seventy-five percent of all the species
then existent were wiped out. The age of the dinosaurs was over; the evolution of the mammals that they
had suppressed for 100 million years began.
But what if that meteor had not fallen?
What would our world be like today?
PROLOGUE: KERRICK
I have read the pages that follow here and I honestly believe them to be a true history of our world.
Not that belief was easy to come by. It might be said that my view of the world was a very restricted one.
I was born in a small encampment made up of three families. During the warm seasons we stayed on the
shore of a great lake rich with fish. My first memories are of that lake, looking across its still water at the
high mountains beyond, seeing their peaks grow white with the first snows of winter. When the snow
whitened our tents, and the grass around as well, that would be the time when the hunters went to the
mountains. I was in a hurry to grow up, eager to hunt the deer, and the greatdeer, at their side.
That simple world of simple pleasures is gone forever. Everything has changed—and not for the better.
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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
At times I wake at night and wish that what happened had never happened. But these are foolish thoughts
and the world is as it is, changed now in every way. What I thought was the entirety of existence has
proved only to be a tiny corner of reality. My lake and my mountains are only the smallest part of a great
continent that stretches between two immense oceans. I knew of the western ocean because our hunters
had fished there.
I also knew about the others and learned to hate them long before I ever saw them. As our flesh is warm,
so is theirs cold. We have hair upon our heads and a hunter will grow a proud beard, while the animals
that we hunt have warm flesh and fur or hair, but this is not true of Yilanè. They are cold and smooth and
scaled, have claws and teeth to rend and tear, are large and terrible, to be feared. And hated. I knew that
they lived in the warm waters of the ocean to the south and on the warm lands to the south. They could
not abide the cold so did not trouble us.
All that has changed and changed so terribly that nothing will ever be the same again. It is my unhappy
knowledge that our world is only a tiny part of the Yilanè world. We live in the north of a great continent
that is joined to a great southern continent. And on all of this land, from ocean to ocean, there swarm only
Yilanè.
And there is even worse. Across the western ocean there are even larger continents—and there there are
no hunters at all. None. But Yilanè, only Yilanè. The entire world is theirs except for our small part.
Now I will tell you the worst thing about the Yilanè. They hate us just as we hate them. This would not
matter if they were only great, insensate beasts. We would stay in the cold north and avoid them in this
manner.
But there are those who may be as intelligent as hunters, as fierce as hunters. And their number cannot be
counted but it is enough to say that they fill all of the lands of this great globe.
What follows here is not a nice thing to tell, but it happened and it must be told.
This is the story of our world and of all of the creatures that live in it and what happened when a band of
hunters ventured south along the coast and what they found there. And what happened when the Yilanè
discovered that the world was not theirs alone, as they had always believed.
WEST OF EDEN
BOOK ONE
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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
CHAPTER ONE
Isizzo fa klabra massik, den sa rinyur meth alpi.
Spit in the teeth of winter, for he always dies in the spring.
Amahast was already awake when the first light of approaching dawn began to spread across the ocean.
Above him only the brightest stars were still visible. He knew them for what they were; the tharms of the
dead hunters who climbed into the sky each night. But now even these last ones, the best trackers, the
finest hunters, even they were fleeing before the rising sun. It was a fierce sun here this far south,
burningly different from the northern sun that they were used to, the one that rose weakly into a pale sky
above the snow-filled forests and the mountains. This could have been another sun altogether. Yet now,
just before sunrise, it was almost cool here close to the water, comfortable. It would not last. With
daylight the heat would come again. Amahast scratched at the insect bites on his arm and waited for
dawn.
The outline of their wooden boat emerged slowly from the darkness. It had been pulled up onto the sand,
well beyond the dried weed and shells that marked the reach of the highest tide. Close by it he could just
make out the dark forms of the sleeping members of his sammad, the four who had come with him on this
voyage. Unasked, the bitter memory returned that one of them, Diken, was dying; soon they would be
only three.
One of the men was climbing to his feet, slowly and painfully, leaning heavily on his spear. That would
be old Ogatyr; he had the stiffness and ache in his arms and legs that comes with age, from the dampness
of the ground and the cold grip of winter. Amahast rose as well, his spear also in his hand. The two men
came together as they walked towards the water holes.
"The day will be hot, kurro," Ogatyr said.
"All of the days here are hot, old one. A child could read that fortune. The sun will cook the pain from
your bones."
They walked slowly and warily towards the black wall of the forest. The tall grass rustled in the dawn
breeze; the first waking birds called in the trees above. Some forest animal had eaten the heads off the
low palm trees here, then dug beside them in the soft ground to find water. The hunters had deepened the
holes the evening before and now they were brimming with clear water.
"Drink your fill," Amahast ordered, turning to face the forest. Behind him Ogatyr wheezed as he dropped
to the ground, then slurped greedily.
It was possible that some of the creatures of the night might still emerge from the darkness of the trees so
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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
Amahast stood on guard, spear pointed and ready, sniffing the moist air rich with the odor of decaying
vegetation, yet sweetened by the faint perfume of night-blooming flowers. When the older man had
finished he stood watch while Amahast drank. Burying his face deep in the cool water, rising up gasping
to splash handfuls over his bare body, washing away some of the grime and sweat of the previous day.
"Where we stop tonight, that will be our last camp. The morning after we must turn back, retrace our
course," Ogatyr said, calling over his shoulder while his eyes remained fixed on the bushes and trees
before him.
"So you have told me. But I do not believe that a few days more will make any difference."
"It is time to return. I have knotted each sunset onto my cord. The days are shorter, I have ways of
knowing that. Each sunset comes more quickly, each day the sun weakens and cannot climb as high into
the sky. And the wind is beginning to change, even you must have noticed that. All summer it has blown
from the southeast. No longer. Do you remember last year, the storm that almost sank the boat and blew
down a forest of trees? The storm came at this time. We must return. I can remember these things, knot
them in my cord."
"I know you can, old one." Amahast ran his fingers through the wet strands of his uncut hair. It reached
below his shoulders, while his full blond beard rested damply on his chest. "But you also know that our
boat is not full."
"There is much dried meat…"
"Not enough. We need more than that to last the winter. The hunting has not been good. That is why we
have journeyed farther south than we ever have before. We need the meat."
"One single day, then we must return. No more than that. The path to the mountains is long and the way
hard."
Amahast did not speak in answer. He respected Ogatyr for all the things that the old man knew, his
knowledge of the correct way to make tools and find magic plants. The oldster knew the rituals needed to
prepare for the hunt, as well as the chants that could ward off the spirits of the dead. He had all of the
knowledge of his lifetime and of the lifetimes before him, the things that he had been told and that he
remembered, that he could recite from the rising of the sun in the morning to the setting at night and still
not be done. But there were new things that the old one did not know about, and these were what troubled
Amahast, that demanded new answers.
It was the winters that were the cause of it, the fierce winters that would not end. Twice now there had
been the promise of spring as the days had grown longer, the sun brighter—but spring had never come.
The deep snows had not melted, the ice on the streams stayed frozen. Then there had been hunger. The
deer and the greatdeer had moved south, away from their accustomed valleys and mountain meadows that
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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
now stayed tight-locked in winter's unyielding grip. He had led the people of his sammad as they had
followed the animals, they had to do that or starve, down from the mountains to the broad plains beyond.
Yet the hunting had not been good, for the herds had been thinned out by the terrible winter. Nor was
their sammad the only one that had troubles. Other sammads had been hunting there as well, not only
ones that his people were joined to by marriage, but sammads they had never seen before. Men who
spoke Marbak strangely, or not at all, and pointed their spears in anger. Yet all of the sammads were
Tanu, and Tanu never fought Tanu. Never before had they done this. But now they did and there was
Tanu blood on the sharp stone points of the spears. This troubled Amahast as much as did the endless
winter. A spear for hunting, a knife for skinning, a fire for cooking. This was the way it had always been.
Tanu did not kill Tanu. Rather than commit this crime himself he had taken his sammad away from the
hills, marching each day towards the morning sun, not stopping until they had reached the salt waters of
the great sea. He knew that the way north was closed, for the ice there came to the ocean's edge and only
the Paramutan, the skin-boat people, could live in those frozen lands. The way south was open but there,
in the forests and jungles where the snow never came, were the murgu. And where they were was death.
So only the wave-filled sea remained. His sammad had long known the art of making wooden boats for
summer fishing, but never before had they ventured out of sight of land or away from their camp upon the
beach. This summer they must. The dried squid would not last the winter. If the hunting were as bad as
that of the winter before then none of them would be alive in the spring. South, then, it must be south, and
that was the way they had gone. Hunting along the shore and on the islands off the coast, in fear always
of the murgu.
The others were awake now. The sun was above the horizon and the first shrieks of the animals were
sounding from the depths of the jungle. It was time to put to sea.
Amahast nodded solemnly when Kerrick brought him the skin bag of ekkotaz, then dipped out a handful
of the thick mass of crushed acorns and dried berries. He reached out with his other hand and ruffled the
thick mat of hair on his son's head. His firstborn. Soon to be a man and take a man's name. But still a boy,
although he was growing strong and tall. His skin, normally pale, was tanned golden now since, like all of
them on this voyage, he wore only a deerskin tied at his waist. About his neck, hung from a leather thong,
there was a smaller version of the skymetal knife that Amahast also wore. A knife that was not as sharp as
stone but was treasured for its rarity. These two knives, the large and small, were the only skymetal the
sammad possessed. Kerrick smiled up at his father. Eight years old and this was his first hunt with the
men. It was the most important thing that had ever happened to him.
"Did you drink your fill?" Amahast asked. Kerrick nodded. He knew there would be no more water until
nightfall. This was one of the important things that a hunter had to learn. When he had been with the
women—and the children—he had drunk water whenever he had felt thirsty, or if he had been hungry he
had nibbled at the berries or eaten the fresh roots as they dug them up. No more. He went with the hunters
now, did what they did, went without food and drink from before sunrise until after dark. He gripped his
small spear proudly and tried not to start with fright when something crashed heavily in the jungle behind
him.
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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
"Push out the boat," Amahast ordered.
The men needed no urging; the sounds of the murgu were growing louder, more threatening. There was
little enough to load into the boat, just their spears, bows and quivers of arrows, deerskins, and bags of
ekkotaz. They pushed the boat into the water and big Hastila and Ogatyr held it steady while the boy
climbed in carefully holding a large shell that contained glowing embers from the fire.
Behind them on the beach Diken struggled to rise, to join the others, but he was not strong enough today.
His skin paled with the effort and great drops of perspiration stood out on his face. Amahast came and
knelt beside him, took up a corner of the deerskin that he was lying on and wiped the wounded man's
face.
"Rest easy. We'll put you into the boat."
"Not today, not if I cannot climb aboard myself." Diken's voice was hoarse, he gasped with the effort of
speech. "It will be easier if I wait here for your return. It will be easier on my hand."
His left hand was now very bad. Two fingers had been bitten, torn away, when a large jungle creature had
blundered into their camp one night, a half-seen form that they had wounded with spears and driven back
into the darkness. At first Diken's wound had not looked too serious, hunters had lived with worse, and
they had done all the things for him that could be done. They had washed the wound in sea water until it
bled freely, then Ogatyr had bound it up with a poultice made from the benseel moss that had been
gathered in the high mountain bogs. But this time it had not been enough. The flesh had grown red, then
black, and finally the blackness had spread up Diken's arm; its smell was terrible. He would die soon.
Amahast looked up from the swollen arm to the green wall of the jungle beyond.
"When the beasts come my tharm will not be here to be consumed by them," Diken said, seeing the
direction of Amahast's gaze. His right hand was clenched into a fist; he opened and closed it briefly to
disclose the flake of stone concealed there. The kind of sharp chip that was used to butcher and skin an
animal. Sharp enough to open a man's vein.
Amahast rose slowly and rubbed the sand from his bare knees. "I will look for you in the sky," he said,
his expressionless voice so low that only the dying man could hear it.
"You were always my brother," Diken said. When Amahast left he turned his face away and closed his
eyes so he would not see the others leave and perhaps give some sign to him. The boat was already in the
water when Amahast reached it, bobbing slightly in the gentle swell. It was a good, solid craft that had
been made from the hollowed-out trunk of a large cedar tree. Kerrick was in the bow, blowing on the
small fire that rested on the rocks there. It crackled and flamed up as he added more bits of wood to it.
The men had already slipped their oars between the thole pins, ready to depart. Amahast pulled himself in
over the side and fitted his steering oar into place. He saw the men's eyes move from him to the hunter
who remained behind upon the beach, but nothing was said. As was proper. A hunter did not show
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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
pain—or show pity. Each man has the right to choose when he will release his tharm to rise up to erman,
the night sky, to be welcomed by Ermanpadar, the sky-father who ruled there. There the tharm of the
hunter would join the other tharms among the stars. Each hunter had this right and no other could speak
about it or bar his way. Even Kerrick knew that and was as silent as the others. "Pull," Amahast ordered.
"To the island."
The low, grass-covered island lay close offshore and sheltered the beach here from the strength of the
ocean waves. Further to the south it rose higher, above the salt spray of the sea, and there the trees began.
With grass and shelter there was the promise of good hunting. Unless the murgu were here as well.
"Look, in the water!" Kerrick called out, pointing down at the sea. An immense school of hardalt was
passing beneath them, tentacles trailing, their seemingly numberless, boneless bodies protected by their
shells. Hastila seized up his spear by the butt end and poised it over the water. He was a big man, taller
even than Amahast, yet very quick for all of that. He waited a moment—then plunged the spear down
into the sea, deep down until his arm was in the water, then heaved upward.
His point had struck true, into the soft body behind the shell, and the hardalt was pulled from the water
and dumped into the bottom of the boat where it lay, tentacles writhing feebly, black dye oozing from its
punctured sac. They all laughed at that. He was truly named, Hastila, spear-in-hand. A spear that did not
miss.
"Good eating," Hastila said, putting his foot on the shell and pulling his spear free of the body.
Kerrick was excited. How easy it looked. A single quick thrust—and there was a great hardalt, enough
food to feed them all for a day. He took his own spear by the butt, just as Hastila had done. It was only
half the length of the hunter's spear but the point was just as sharp. The hardalt were still there, thicker
than ever, one of them roiling the surface just below the bow.
Kerrick thrust down, hard. Feeling the point sink into flesh. Seizing the haft with both hands and pulling
up. The wooden shaft shook and tore at his hands but he held on grimly, tugging with all of his strength.
There was a great thrashing of foam in the water as the wet-shining head rose up beside the boat. His
spear tore free of the thing's flesh and Kerrick fell backwards as the jaws opened, rows of teeth before
him, a screeching roar so close the stinking breath of the creature washed over him. Sharp claws
scratched at the boat, tore pieces from the wood.
Then Hastila was there, his spear plunging between those terrible jaws, once, twice. The marag screamed
louder and a gush of blood spattered the boy. Then the jaws closed and, for an instant, Kerrick looked
into that round unblinking eye poised before his face.
A moment later it was gone, sinking beneath the surface in a flurry of bloody foam.
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West of Eden - Harry Harrison
"Pull for the island," Amahast ordered. "There will be more of these beasts, bigger ones, following after
the hardalt. Is the boy hurt?"
Ogatyr splashed a handful of water on Kerrick's face and rubbed it clean. "Just frightened," he said
looking at the drawn face.
"He is lucky," Amahast said grimly. "Luck comes only once. He will never thrust a spear into darkness
again."
Never! Kerrick thought, almost shouting the word aloud, looking at the torn wood where the thing's claws
had raked deep. He had heard about the murgu, seen their claws on a necklace, even touched a smooth
and multicolored pouch made from the skin of one of them. But the stories had never really frightened
him; tall as the sky, teeth like spears, eyes like stones, claws like knives. But he was frightened now. He
turned to face the shore, sure that there were tears in his eyes and not wanting the others to see them,
biting his lips as they slowly approached the land. The boat was suddenly a thin shell above a sea of
monsters and he desperately wanted to be on solid ground again. He almost cried aloud when the prow
grated against the sand. While the others pulled the boat out of the water he washed away all traces of the
marag's blood.
Amahast made a low hissing sound between his teeth, a hunter's signal, and they all froze, silent and
motionless. He lay in the grass above them, peering over the rise. He motioned them flat with his, hand,
then signaled them forward to join him. Kerrick did as the others did, not rising above the grass, but
carefully parting the blades with his fingers so he could look between them.
Deer. A herd of the small creatures was grazing just an arrow-shot away. Plump with the rich grass of the
island, moving slowly, long ears twitching at the flies that buzzed about them. Kerrick sniffed through
widened nostrils and could smell the sweetness of their hides.
"Go silently along the shore," Amahast said. "The wind is blowing from them towards us, they will not
smell us. We will get close." He led the way, crouching as he ran, and the others followed, Kerrick
bringing up the rear.
They notched their arrows while still bent low behind the bank, drew their bows, then stood and let fly
together.
The flight of arrows struck true; two of the creatures were down and a third wounded. The small buck
was able to stagger some distance with the arrow in its body. Amahast ran swiftly after it and closed on
the creature. It turned at bay, its tiny span of horns lowered menacingly, and he laughed and jumped
towards it, seized the horns in his hands and twisted. The creature snorted and swayed, then bleated as it
fell. Amahast arched its neck back as Kerrick ran up.
"Use your spear, your first kill. In the throat—to one side, stab deep and twist."
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摘要:

WestofEden-HarryHarrisonWESTOFEDENHarryHarrisonISBN0-553-24935-5.Published1984.CONTENTSBOOK1PrologueChapter1Chapter2Chapter3Chapter4Chapter5Chapter6Chapter7Chapter8Chapter9Chapter10Chapter11Chapter12Chapter13Chapter14Chapter15Chapter16Chapter17Chapter18Chapter19Chapter20Chapter21Chapter22Chapter23Ch...

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