Elizabeth Wollheim- DAW 30th Anniv Science Fiction

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DAW
30th Anniversary
Science Fiction
ELIZABETH R. WOLLHEIM
SHEILA E. GILBERT
DAW BOOKS, INC.
DONALD A. WOLLHEIM, FOUNDER
375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014
ELIZABETH R. WOLLHEIM
SHEILA E. GILBERT
PUBLISHERS
http://www.dawbooks.com
Copyright © 2002 by Elizabeth R. Wollheim and Sheila E. Gilbert. All rights reserved.
Jacket art by G-Force Design. Text design by Stanley S. Drate / Folio Graphics Co., Inc.
DAW Books Collectors No. 1221. DAW Books are distributed by Penguin Putnam Inc.
All characters and events in this book are fictitious. All resemblance to persons living or dead is coincidental.
This book is printed on acid-free paper. ©
With special thanks to the folks
at Tekno Books for their help in
seeing this project to fruition.
We dedicate these volumes
in loving memory of our founders,
Donald A. Wollheim
and
Elsie B. Wollheim,
and of our resident curmudgeon,
Mike Gilbert.
And for all DAW authors, past, present and future
First Printing, May 2002 123456789 10
DAW TRADEMARK REGISTERED
U.S. PAT. OFF. AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES
-MARCA REGISTRADA
HECHO EN U.S.A.
PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.
Acknowledgments
THE HOME FRONT ©2002 by Brian Stableford
ABOARD THE BEATITUDE ©2002 by Brian W. Aldiss
ODD JOB #213 ©2002 by Ron Goulart
AGAMEMNON'S RUN ©2002 by Robert Sheckley
GRUBBER ©2002 by Neal Barrett, Jr.
THE SANDMAN, THE TINMAN, AND THE BETTY B ©2002 by C. J. Cherryh
THE BIG PICTURE ©2002 by Timothy Zahn
A HOME FOR THE OLD ONES, an excerpt from the forthcoming novel From Gateway to the Core, ©2002 by
Frederik Pohl. Published by permission of the author.
NOT WITH A WHIMPER, EITHER ©2002 by Tad Williams
THE BLACK WALL OF JERUSALEM ©2002 by Ian Watson
STATION GANYMEDE ©2002 by Charles L. Harness
DOWNTIME ©2002 by C. S. Friedman
BURNING BRIDGES ©2002 by Charles Ingrid
WORDS ©2002 by Cheryl J. Franklin
READ ONLY MEMORY ©2002 by eluki bes shahar
SUNSEEKER ©2002 by Katrina Elliott
THE HEAVENS FALL ©2002 by Steven Swiniarski
PASSAGE TO SHOLA ©2002 by Lisanne Norman
PRISM ©2002 by Julie E. Czerneda
Introductions
MY father never told me that he was planning to leave his job at Ace Books. It was 1971, and I was
in college. I can only assume that he didn't want to distract me from my studies-that he wanted to shelter
me for as long as he could. So I found out after the fact, with the rest of the science fiction world. It was
as much of a shock to me as it was to anyone else. Actually it was more of a shock to me than to anyone
else-for my dad, the most responsible and loyal man I knew, had just picked up and walked away from
his job! It was simply unimaginable but it had happened, and it rattled my world down to its deepest
foundations.
Don had been continually employed in editorial positions since 1941 when he had his first (unpaid)
job editing pulp magazines. He continued to edit magazines, compiled numerous anthologies, worked in
editorial positions at some of the very first paperback book lines ever produced, and in 1952, convinced
A. A. Wyn, owner of Ace Publications, to let him initiate a line of paperback books for Ace.
The one thing he hadn't been in thirty years was unemployed.
My dad took his responsibility to our family very seriously. He also took his work very seriously. But
something monumental had begun to happen to the publishing industry. Publishing was becoming "big
business" and was no longer the intimate, eccentric, personality-driven industry it had once been. Don,
who had been present during the birth of the paperback book, didn't like what was happening. He was
Editor-in-Chief of Ace Books for nineteen and a half years and eventually became the Vice President as
well. He considered Ace his list, his creation, and for most of our field at the time, the name Donald A.
Wollheim was synonymous with Ace Books. But Ace wasn't really Don's company, and with the death
of A. A. Wyn in 1968 that became glaringly obvious.
As Ace became more and more "corporate," passing from the hands of one owner to another, the
situation became less and less tolerable for Don. By 1971, he had come to the end of his
rope-so he did the unthinkable. With no concrete prospects for the future, and no warning to his
employers, he left his office at Ace Books, never to return.\
It was a very tense time for our family, for although Elsie, my mom, had been a professional woman
before my birth, my father had been the sole support of our household since 1951. Don wasn't entirely
sure what to do. What he was sure of was this: he would never again work for years building an editorial
list only to lose it. There was only one way to avoid that: by founding his own publishing company. But
how could he? As a long-term employee of a notoriously frugal publisher, he had never been able to
amass the money necessary for such an enterprise. All Don had was his reputation.
Luckily, it proved to be enough.
In the fall of 1971, Don met with Herb Schnall, one of the chief executives of New American
Library. After several brief meetings, Herb made a statement which would change publishing history: he
told Don that New American Library would take him "any way [he wanted] to come." Don could write
his own ticket. It was an offer Don couldn't refuse.\
Elated, Don came home to think about his options. My dad, my mom, and I sat at the table in
our narrow galley kitchen in Queens, and tried to define Don's dream. He wanted the strong national
distribution which only a big company could offer- hence his meeting with NAL-but unlike most
independently distributed lines, he also wanted the professional production and promotion facilities of a
big publishing company. He wanted his company's list to be sold aggressively with the strength of a big
corporate imprint, yet he wanted total artistic freedom, not only inside his books but in relation to the
cover art and design as well, and he did not want to share the ownership of his company. Basically, he
wanted to form a private corporation and enter into a contractual arrangement with New American
Library to provide the services that he needed.
But corporate parameters were not Don's only concern.
For thirty years Don had edited all types of fiction. He had edited not only literary books but most of
the genres-from westerns to crime to thrillers to mysteries to detective and horror novels. He had put the
light into the window of the ever present mansion on the cover of the Gothic romance, had published
William Burroughs' first work, and had introduced J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings to the
American paperback audience. He even edited nurse novels and cookbooks. But since the age of eleven
he had had only one real love-science fiction. He had waited a lifetime for this opportunity, and he
decided to dedicate his new company to the books he loved the most. He wanted to found the first
publishing company devoted exclusively to science fiction and fantasy.
In November of 1971, NAL agreed to Don's proposal, and DAW Books, Inc. was born.
My father had signed a contract, but he was still a long way from fulfilling his dream. As we sitting in
the kitchen-our traditional spot for family discussions-and Don thought aloud about possible employees
to help him in his new venture, I noticed my mom, Elsie, becoming more and more agitated. Finally, she
exploded: "Don, what about ME?" My dad looked quite stupefied. It was clear that he had never even
considered that his wife would join him in this enterprise, but Elsie was the logical choice: she had legal
experience, and had run her father's company. The obvious solution was staring him straight in the face.
Bringing Elsie into the company may very well have been Don's shrewdest business decision. Elsie
embraced her new position as Corporate Secretary-Treasurer of DAW with all the fervor of a mother
grizzly defending her young. Every aspect of DAW and all DAW authors were sheltered under her huge
protective wing. And for a petite woman, she had enormous wings indeed! Marion Zimmer Bradley once
said, "Elsie has the spirit of a lion in the body of a sparrow." And it was never more true than when she
took up her position as Champion-Of-All-Things-DAW. The next six months were a nightmare.
With liftoff scheduled for April 1972, Don was under the gun to purchase, edit, and package six
months' worth of titles in thirty days to catch up with NAL's production schedule. Elsie had to set up
accounts payable, accounts receivable, royalty reports, bookkeeping, and an entire subsidiary rights
department. Together, they wrote the first DAW boilerplate contract. For my father, himself a published
author with eighteen books and numerous short stories to his credit, it was important to formulate a
writer-friendly contract.\
My parents were nervous wrecks. Don couldn't sleep or eat-I remember more than one occasion
when Elsie or I had to run to the kitchen to get Don something sweet because he was feeling
light-headed. Don and Elsie were exhausted, but it was with the excited exhaustion of new parents. It
was a frightening and exhilarating time.
The following spring, the first DAW books were due to debut at the 1972 Lunacon, but the night
before the convention started, they still hadn't left the warehouse in New Jersey. Elsie and Don were up
the entire night collecting their very first DAW books and hand delivering them to the dealers at New
York's local convention. Lunacon was thereafter a very special time for my folks.
As for me, I went back to college and graduated with a degree in English Lit, while serving a
simultaneous four-year stint in art school. My parents had kept me apprised of the goings-on at DAW,
and sent me occasional manuscripts to read and comment on, particularly when Don had discovered
someone he felt was noteworthy. I especially remember Don's excitement in 1974 when he sent me Gate
of Ivrel, C. J. Cherryh's first novel, and The Birthgrave, Tanith Lee's first full-length fantasy novel.\
Although I was Corporate Vice President of DAW from the get go, and had always been involved
on a certain level, Don never \pressured me to come home to New York right after graduation. He
thought it would be healthier for me to find my own sea legs in the business world. With my experience
working as a freelance copyeditor for Ace Books (under my father's stern tutelage) during high school, I
landed a job in one of the last hot-type printing houses in Cambridge, Massachusetts as a proofreader,
then later, a dual position as proofreader and darkroom technician for one of the very first computerized
printing houses in the industry. What a disaster! For every mistake corrected, the printing computer
(which took up most of a good-sized wall) would generate numerous new ones. Whole chapters would
suddenly become italicized. Thankfully, computers have improved enormously since those days. My two
years working for printers have proved invaluable to me as a publisher.\
Finally, in 1975, I came home and took up a position as Don's general assistant and Associate
Editor. By this time DAW was an established, successful line, and Don and Elsie were a recognized
corporate couple. However, it is never easy working with your parents, and Don and Elsie were no
exception. One of the saving graces of my situation was the presence of my old friend Sheila Gilbert, who
was working as a copywriter for NAL. Sheila and I had known each other since we were thirteen and
eleven, respectively, and had bonded through various embarrassing fan activities, such as the Galaxy of
Fashion Show at the 1967 NYcon, where I was the "Bride of the Future," and Sheila and her oldest
sister Marsha were "The Gemini Twins." Numerous were the times I sought refuge in my old friend's
office, and as the years passed, Sheila was promoted to head up the Signet science fiction list, and I
wrested more and more editorial and art direction control from the unyielding hands of my father. Sheila
and I became close friends.
Neither of us realized just how important that friendship would prove to be.
In April 1985, when I had been working with my parents for ten years, catastrophe struck. Don went
into the hospital with a complicated critical illness, and remained there on the brink of death for seven
brutal months. We were just about to launch the fledgling DAW hardcover list, which was my exclusive
domain, with a novel from our most important writer, C. J. Cherryh, as well as a first novel from a very
promising newcomer, Tad Williams. Elsie bravely insisted that I attend the American Booksellers
Association Convention in San Francisco, where the DAW hardcover list was being debuted with special
bound galleys, and where I was planning to meet Tad for the first time. I left New York not knowing if I
would ever see my father alive again.
Well, Don survived, but it didn't take me long to discover what had made him so sick. At fourteen
years of age, the health of DAW Books had begun to flag. The science fiction and fantasy industry had
gone through some fundamental changes, and our company was desperately in need of renovation.
During those terrible months, Elsie and I fought not only to keep Don alive, but to save the life of DAW
as well.
Meanwhile, Sheila had been considering leaving her job at Signet. Elsie and I realized that she would
be the perfect person to join us: she had editorial experience, knew our list, and was practically part of
the family already. With no guarantee that we would be able to pull the company out of its slump, she
agreed.
1985 was a difficult year, but Don survived and so did DAW. During Don's long illness and
recovery-it was a year before he would return to the office-Sheila and I, with the loving support of Elsie,
took over the company.\
Don would never again be well enough to lead DAW.
Now, thirty years and more than twelve hundred titles since its founding, Don and Elsie are gone, but
the essence of DAW remains the same: a small, personal business owned exclusively by me and Sheila.
Sheila and I were startled to realize, as we were writing these introductions, that we have now been
running the company longer than Don did. Like Don and Elsie before us, we are committed to keeping a
"family" spirit at DAW-something we feel (as Don did) is all too rare in today's world of international
conglomerate publishing. If anything, DAW is even more family-oriented now than it was in the beginning.
Sheila and I brought our husbands, Mike Gilbert and Peter Stampfel, into the business. Our Business
Manager Amy Fodera introduced us to her husband, Sean Fodera, who is now our Director of
Subsidiary Rights, Contracts, and Electronic Publishing. Our Managing Editor Debra Euler is single, but
we've told her that when she does marry, her husband will have a job waiting for him at DAW! (Or
conversely, she has first right of refusal if we hire another employee.) Even our wonderful free-lance
cover designer has been with us for nearly a dozen years.
With just six hardy employees (sadly, we lost Mike in August 2000), DAW Books manages to stay
afloat in a sea of ocean liners. But our true family extends far beyond the DAW corporate offices. This
real family includes the many wonderful authors who publish with us, the artists who grace the covers of
our books with their beautiful paintings, and you, the readers who have loyally supported our little
company for thirty years. We couldn't have done it without you-and we plan to keep giving you the finest
in science fiction and fantasy for decades to come. BETSY WOLLHEIM
I REMEMBER the day DAW was born. I remember it because the events which led up to DAW's
birth had a definite impact on my own life, and though I didn't know it at the time, the creation of DAW
Books, Inc. in the fall of 1971 would eventually affect my future both personally and professionally.
Of course, my relationship with the Wollheim family began long before DAW was even the
glimmering of an idea in Don Wollheim's imagination. I first met Don, Elsie, and Betsy at a Lunacon in
Manhattan in the spring of 1963. I was thirteen years old and it was my first science fiction convention.
And among the many interesting people I had a chance to meet (some of whose works filled the
bookcases of my own science fiction and fantasy reading family) were the Wollheims. My memory is that
they Were quite patient with and welcoming to an enthusiastic teen at her first convention. Perhaps the
fact that Betsy was eleven at the time had something to do with it. Perhaps it merely foreshadowed the
days when we would begin referring to Elsie as our "corporate Mom," a title any DAW author who was
fortune enough to become part of our DAW family while Elsie was still alive would certainly understand.
Over the following seven years, I continued to run into the Wollheims at conventions and parties, and
when I graduated college and started looking for a job in publishing I sent Don, who at the time was the
Editor-in-Chief at Ace Books, a letter of inquiry about a job. Fortune smiled upon me, because the day
after I had accepted-but not yet started-a job at another publishing company, I received a phone call
from Don. He had a junior editorial position to fill, and he wanted me to come in for an interview. The
idea of being paid to read and work on the books I would have been reading anyway seemed like a
dream come true.
I started working for Don at Ace Thanksgiving week of 1970, and life was good. Then, one day in
the fall of 1971, Don walked into my office to say good-bye. He was leaving the company that very day.
I was totally stunned by the news.
Later, I heard that Don was starting his own company, DAW Books, Inc., which would be
distributed by New American Library. Perhaps a month after that, I had a phone call from Ruth
Haberstroh, a friend who had once shared an office with me at Ace and who was working at New
American Library. She told me that before calling me she had asked Don if he was going to hire me. He
responded that he wasn't going to be hiring anyone for a while, and so Ruth offered me a job at NAL. So
in January 1972, I left Ace and joined NAL. One of the benefits of this move was that I could now
frequently see Don and Elsie-and Betsy, as well, once she joined her parents in the family business.
In 1978, I took over the Signet science fiction line, which, in theory, might have put me in competition
with DAW, but in reality it did nothing of the kind. Our lists were extremely compatible.
In 1985, Don became critically ill and Betsy had to take on the full responsibility for running DAW.
She and Elsie asked me to join them, and after the July Fourth weekend, that was exactly what I did.
And, of course, I've been here ever since. In the ensuing years, various members of my family-my
husband Mike, and my sisters Marsha and Paula-began working with us in a freelance capacity, with
Mike eventually becoming our resident curmudgeon until his untimely death in August of 2000.
We've always said that we consider DAW and everyone associated with it as one big extended
family. And that is truly the way we feel about our own terrific staff and all the people we work closely
with at Penguin Putnam, Inc., about our stalwart freelancers who never let us down, the artists who
create such eyecatching images for us, and, of course, our authors, who, over the years we've worked
with them, have become our close friends as well as our valued colleagues.
As thirty is a fairly momentous birthday in human terms (rest assured, however, that you will still be
able to trust DAW to provide you with the kind of reading experiences you've come to expect), we
wanted to celebrate this coming of age in a special way. And, we reasoned, what could be more
appropriate than a book of stories written by the authors who have been such an important part of DAW
over the last three decades. As we looked down our impressively large list of names, though, we realized
that the only way this project could be accomplished without becoming completely unwieldy would be to
divide the stories into two volumes by category. Thus, the books you now see before you: DAW 30th
Anniversary: Science Fiction and DAW 30th Anniversary: Fantasy.\
Of course, thirty years is a long time, and as we went through our list we were saddened by the
knowledge that a number of the authors we would have loved to have stories from were no longer
around to provide them. Despite that, we are very pleased with the number of authors who were kind
enough to join us in our thirtieth birthday celebration by creating the wonderful tales you'll find included
here. Some of the contributors wrote stories which take place in the universes in which their popular
DAW series are set, others have chosen to explore entirely new territory, and yet others have given us a
glimpse of the worlds and characters from novels which will see publication in the upcoming years.
When DAW Books was founded, the original logo used on all our books read: DAW = sf, a
corporate emblem designed by well-known science fiction artist Jack Gaughan. At that time the logo was
extremely appropriate. We were the first company devoted exclusively to the publication of science
fiction and fantasy, and as far more science fiction was being published (certainly this was true for DAW
in those days) the genre hadn't been broken down into two distinct categories. But over the course of the
1970s, '80s, and '90s, as more writers came into the field from the social sciences and humanities rather
than the hard sciences, both styles and subject matter began to change. And as technological leaps began
to transform science fiction into science fact, creating believable yet innovative science-based fiction
became far more difficult. At the same time, the ever-increasing changes wrought by technology in both
the working place and our own homes led more people to read fantasy, probably as a means to escape
the stresses and demands of the "real" world.\
In recognition of these changes, the very look of DAW Books, as well as the contents, began its own
evolutionary process, one that continues to this very day. Our logo went from DAW - sf to a design
which incorporated the three letters in our name, and also labeled the particular book it appeared on as
either science fiction or fantasy. Of course, this led to a bit of a dilemma when a novel or series didn't fall
fully into one category or the other but actually melded elements of both.
What you now hold in your hands is your invitation to join our 30th anniversary celebration. The
stories in each volume appear in chronological order, based on the first time the author was published by
DAW. Thus our fantasy volume begins with Andre Norton, whose Spell of the Witchworld was the
very first DAW book to see print in April 1972. The first story in the science fiction volume is by Brian
Stableford, whose To Challenge Chaos was published in May 1972.
We hope that you will find these anthologies as enjoyable as we have, and that it will offer you a
chance to read some new work by old favorites, or perhaps afford you the pleasure of discovering some
of our authors for the very first time. Thank you for helping to make our first thirty years as memorable as
they have been, and we look forward to sharing many more years of good books with all of you.
SHEILA GILBERT
Contents
THE HOME FRONT Brian Stableford
ABOARD THE BEATITUDE Brian W. Aldiss
ODD JOB #213 Ron Goulart
AGAMEMNON'S RUN Robert Sheckley
GRUBBER Neal Barrett, Jr.
THE SANDMAN, THE TINMAN, AND THE BETTY B C. J. Cherryh
THE BIG PICTURE Timothy Zahn
A HOME FOR THE OLD ONES (an excerpt from the forthcoming novel From Gateway to the Core)
Frederik Pohl
NOT WITH A WHIMPER, EITHER Tad Williams
THE BLACK WALL OF JERUSALEM Ian Watson
STATION GANYMEDE Charles L. Harness
DOWNTIME C. S. Friedman
BURNING BRIDGES Charles Ingrid
WORDS Cheryl J. Franklin
READ ONLY MEMORY eluki bes shahar
SUNSEEKER Kate Elliott
THE HEAVENS FALL S. Andrew Swann
PASSAGE TO SHOLA Lisanne Norman
PRISM Julie E. Czerneda
Brian Stableford
The science fiction field has been tremendously fortunate in
attracting editors who care deeply and passionately about the genre
and its potential, among which the two most important were John W.
Campbell, Jr. and Don Woliheim. If it were not for Don's efforts, first as
a magazine editor, then as a paperback editor and finally as a publisher
the field would not have proliferated or progressed as quickly as it did,
and many fine writers might have been lost to it.
Don gave crucial publishing opportunities to dozens of writers, some
of whom went on to become important figures in modern American
literature (including Philip K. Dick and Ursula le Guin] while others were
enabled by him to produce work of striking and defiant originality
treasured by the few (including Barrington J. Bayley and Michael Shea).
He was far more useful to writers like the latter stripe than any small
press publisher because he never lost sight of the need to attract
readers to his lines by publishing solid commercial fiction in economically
effective packages.
Don was by far the most eclectic editor ever to work in the SF field,
sustaining the careers of a dozen British writers whose domestic market
was too tiny to offer adequate commercial support, and also introducing
numerous foreign-language writers into the American market. I am one
of the least of many writers who would not have been able to follow
their vocation without his interest and help; he was a crucial element in
shaping my life as a reader and writer and the hindsight I have gained
since his death has allowed me to see ever more clearly how
extraordinarily valuable his input was. I am very pleased and proud to
be able to make a memorial contribution to this anthology.
—BS
THE HOME FRONT
Brian Stableford
NOW that we have lived in the security of peace for more than thirty years a
generation has grown up to whom the Plague Wars are a matter of myth and
legend. Survivors of my age are often approached by the wondering young and
asked what it was like to live through those frightful years, but few of them can
answer as fully or as accurately as I.
In my time I have met many doctors, genetic engineers, and statesmen who
lay claim to having been in "the front line" during the First Plague War, but the
originality of that conflict was precisely the fact that its real combatants were
invading microbes and defensive antibodies. All its entrenchments were
internal to the human body and mind. It is true that there were battlegrounds of a
sort in the hospitals, the laboratories, and even in the House of Commons, but
this was a war whose entire strategy was to strike at the most intimate locations
of all. For that reason, the only authentic front was the home front: the nucleus
of family life.
Many an octogenarian is prepared to wax lyrical now on the reelings of
dread associated with obligatory confinement. They will assure you that no one
would risk exposure to a crowd if it could possibly be avoided, and that every
step out of doors was a terror-laden trek through a minefield. They exaggerate.
Life was not so rapidly transformed in an era when a substantial majority of the
population still worked outside the home or attended school, and only a
minority had the means or the inclination to make all their purchases
electronically. Even if electronic shop-pimg had been universal, that would
have brought about a very dramatic increase in the number of people employed
in the deliv-ery business, all of whom would have had to go abroad and
inter-act vith considerable numbers of their fellows.
For these reasons, total confinement was rare during the First Plague War,
and rarely voluntary. Even I, who had little choice in the matter after both my
legs were amputated above the knee following the Paddington Railway Disaster
of 2119, occasionally sallied forth in my electrically-powered wheelchair in
spite of the protestations of my wife Martha. Martha was almost as firmly
anchored as I was, by virtue of the care she had to devote to me and to our
younger daughter Frances, but it would have taken more than rumors of war to
force Frances' teenage sister Petra to remain indoors for long.
The certainty of hindsight sometimes leads us to forget that the First Plague
War was, throughout its duration, essentially a matter of rumor, but such was the
case. The absence of any formal declaration of war, combined with the highly
dubious status of many of the terrorist organizations which competed to claim
responsibility for its worst atrocities, sustained an atmosphere of uncertainty
that complicated our fears. To some extent, the effect was to exaggerate our
anxieties, but it allowed braver souls a margin of doubt to which they could
dismiss all inconvenient alarms.
I suppose I was fortunate that the Paddington Disaster had not disrupted my
career completely, because I had the education and training necessary to set
myself up as an independent share-trader operating via my domestic unit. I had
established a reputation that allowed me to build a satisfactory register of
corporate and individual clients, so I was able to negotiate the movement of
several million euros on a daily basis. I had always been a specialist in the
biotech sector, which was highly volatile even before the war started—and it
was that accident of happenstance more than any other which placed my
minuscule fraction of the home front at the center of the fiercest action the war
produced.
Doctors, as is only natural, think that the hottest action of the plague wars
was experienced on the wards which filled up week by week between 2129 and
2133 with victims of hyperflu, assertive MSRA, neurotoxic Human Mosaic
Virus and plethoral hem-orrhagic fever. Laboratory engineers, equally
understandably, think that the crucial battles were fought within the bodies of
the mouse models housed in their triple-X biocontainment facilities. In fact, the
most hectic action of all was seen on the London Stock Exchange, and the only
hand-to-hand fighting involved the sneakthieves and armed robbers who
continually raided the nation's greenhouses during the six months from
September 2129 to March 2130: the cruel winter of the great plantigen panic.
I never laid a finger on a single genetically modified potato or carrot, but I
was in the thick of it nevertheless. So, perforce, were my wife and children;
their lives, like mine, hung in the balance throughout. That is why my story is
one of the most pertinent records of the First Plague War, as well as one of the
most poignant.
Although my work required fierce concentration and a readiness to react to
market moves at a moment's notice, I was occasionally forced by necessity to
let Frances play in my study while I worked. It was not safe to leave her alone,
even in the adjacent ground-floor room where she attended school online. She
suffered from an environmentally induced syndrome which made her unusually
prone to form allergies to any and all novel organic compounds.
In the twentieth century such a condition would have proved swiftly fatal,
but, by the time Francis was born in 2121, medical science had begun to catch
up with the problem. There were efficient palliatives to apply to her occasional
rashes, and effective ways of ensuring that she received adequate nutrition in
spite of her perennial tendency to gastric distress and diarrhea. The only
aspects of her allergic attacks which seriously threatened her life were general
anaphylactic shock and the disruption of her breathing by massive histamine
reactions in the throat. It was these possibilities that compelled us to keep very
careful control over the contents of our home and the importation of exotic
organic molecules. By way of completing our precautions, Martha, Petra and I
had all been carefully trained to administer various injections, to operate
breathing apparatus, and—should the worst ever come to the worst—to perform
an emergency tracheotomy.
Frances was very patient on the rare occasions when she had to be left in
my sole care, and seemed to know instinctively when to rnaintain silence, even
though she was a talkative child by nature. When business was slack, however,
she would make heroic attempts to understand what I was doing.
As chance would have it, she was present when I first set up my position in
plantigens in July 2129, and it was only natural that she should ask me to
explain what I was doing and why.
"I'm buying lots of potatoes and a few carrots," I told her, oversimplifying
recklessly.
"Isn't Mummy doing that?" she asked. Martha was at the supermarket.
"She's buying the ones we'll be cooking and eating. I'm buying ones that
摘要:

DAW30thAnniversaryScienceFictionELIZABETHR.WOLLHEIMSHEILAE.GILBERTDAWBOOKS,INC.DONALDA.WOLLHEIM,FOUNDER375HudsonStreet,NewYork,NY10014ELIZABETHR.WOLLHEIMSHEILAE.GILBERTPUBLISHERShttp://www.dawbooks.comCopyright©2002byElizabethR.WollheimandSheilaE.Gilbert.Allrightsreserved.JacketartbyG-ForceDesign.Te...

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