Glen Cook - Starfishers 1 - Shadowline

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About the Author:
Glen Cook:(Pic by Chaz Boston Baden)
FromThe BSFAN - Balticon 31 Program Book (1997):
Glen Cook was born in New York in 1944. He grew up in northern California and began writing while
in seventh grade. He served in the U. S. Navy, spending time with the Force Recon unit of the 3rd
Marine Recon Battalion. He attended the University of Missouri and the Clarion Writers' Workshop. He
produced his first paid work in 1970.
Glen says, "Unlike most writers, I have not had a succession of strange jobs like chicken plucking and
swamping our health bars. The only full-time employer I've ever had is General Motors." Due to a change
of job location in 1988, Glen's writing decreased in volume. Fortunately, he has recently retired and is
devoting more time to his writing.
The long anticipated release ofBleak Seasons in hisBlack Company series finally occured in 1996. He
is also known for his "Garrett Files" detective/fantasy series, hisDread Empire series, and many others.
Glen's hobbies include stamp collecting, book collecting, and a passing interest in military history. Usually
Glen can be found behind a huckster table at those conventions he attends. So, if you are in the dealer's
room buying one of his books, and the man behind the table asks if you want it signed, chances are you
just met him.
About this book . . .
Shadowline
Starfishers Triology - Book 1
They were the greatest fighting fleet in the universe -- battling betrayal and revenge, and the
terrible fate that awaited them on the edge of the
The Vendetta In Space...
had started centuries before "Mouse" Storm was born... with his grandfather's raid on the planet
Prefactlas, the blood bath that freed the human slaves from their Sangaree masters. But one Sangaree
survived — the young Norbon heir, the man who swore vengeance on the Storm family and their
soldiers, in a carefully mapped plot that would take generations to fulfill.
Now Mouse's father Gneaus must fight for an El Dorado of wealth on the burning half of the planet
Blackworld. As the great private armies of all space clash on the narrow Shadowline that divides inferno
from life-sheltering shade, Gneaus half-brother Michael plays his traitorous games, and a man called
Deeth pulls the deadly strings that threaten to entrap them all — as the Starfishers Trilogy begins.
Book One—ROPE
Who twists the rope that dangles from the gibbet?
One: 3052 AD
Who am I? What am I?
I am the bastard child of the Shadowline. That jagged rift of sun-broiled stone was my third parent.
You cannot begin to understand me, or the Shadowline, without knowing my father. And to know
Gneaus Julius Storm you have to know our family, in all its convolute interpersonal relationships and
history. To know our family . . .
There is no end to this. The ripples spread. And the story, which has the Shadowline and myself at one
end, is an immensely long river. It received the waters of scores of apparently insignificant tributary
events.
Focusing the lens at its narrowest, my father and Cassius (Colonel Walters) were the men who shaped
me most. This is their story. It is also the story of the men whose stamp upon them ultimately shaped their
stamp upon me.
—Masato Igarashi Storm
Two: 3031 AD
Deep in the Fortress of Iron, in the iron gloom of his study, Gneaus Storm slouched in a fat, deep chair.
His chin rested on his chest. His good eye was closed. Long grey hair cascaded down over his tired face.
The flames in the nearest fireplace leapt and swirled in an endless morisco. Light and shadow played out
sinister dramas over priceless carpeting hand-loomed in Old Earth’s ancient Orient. The shades of
might-have-been played tag among the darkwood beams supporting the stone ceiling.
Storm’s study was a stronghold within the greater Fortress. It was the citadel of his soul, the bastion of
his heart. Its walls were lined with shelves of rare editions. A flotilla of tables bore both his collectibles
and papers belonging to his staff. The occasional silent clerk came and went, updating a report before
one of the chairs.
Two Shetland-sized mutant Alsatians prowled the room, sniffing shadows. One rumbled softly deep in
its throat. The hunt for an enemy never ended.
Nor was it ever successful. Storm’s enemies did not hazard his planetoid home.
A black creature of falcon size flapped into the study. It landed clumsily in front of Storm. Papers
scattered, frightening it. An aura of shadow surrounded it momentarily, masking its toy pterodactyl body.
It was a ravenshrike, a nocturnal flying lizard from the swamps of The Broken Wings. Its dark umbra
was a psionically generated form of protective coloration.
The ravenshrike cocked one red night eye at its mate, nesting in a rock fissure behind Storm. It stared at
its master with the other.
Storm did not respond.
The ravenshrike waited.
Gneaus Julius Storm pictured himself as a man on the downhill side of life, coasting toward its end. He
was nearly two hundred years old. The ultimate in medical and rejuvenation technology kept him
physically forty-five, but doctors and machines could do nothing to refresh his spirit.
One finger marked his place in an old holy book. It had fallen shut when he had drifted off. “A time to be
born and a time to die . . . ”
A youth wearing Navy blacks slipped into the room. He was short and slight, and stood as stiff as a
spear. Though he had visited the study countless times, his oriental inscrutability gave way to an
expression of awe.
So many luxuries and treasures, Mouse thought.Are they anything more than Death, hidden
behind a mask of hammered gold?
And of his father he thought,He looks so tired. Why can’t they leave him alone?
They could not. Not while Richard Hawksblood lived. They did not dare. So someday, as all
mercenaries seemed to do, Gneaus Storm would find his last battlefield and his
death-without-resurrection.
Storm’s tired face rose. It remained square-jawed and strong. Grey hair stirred in a vagrant current from
an air vent.
Mouse left quietly, yielding to a moment of deep sadness. His feelings for his father bordered on
reverence. He ached because his father was boxed in and hurting.
He went looking for Colonel Walters.
Storm’s good eye opened. Grey as his hair, it surveyed the heart of his stateless kingdom. He did not
see a golden death mask. He saw a mirror that reflected the secret Storm.
His study contained more than books. One wall boasted a weapons collection, Sumerian bronze
standing beside the latest stressglass multi-purpose infantry small arms. Lighted cabinets contained rare
china, cut crystal, and silver services. Others contained ancient Wedgwood. Still more held a fortune in
old coins within their velvet-lined drawers.
He was intrigued by the ebb and flow of history. He took comfort in surrounding himself with the wrack
it left in passing.
He could not himself escape into yesterday. Time slipped through the fingers like old water.
A gust from the cranky air system riffled papers. The banners overhead stirred with the passage of
ghosts. Some were old. One had followed the Black Prince to Navarette. Another had fallen at the
high-water mark of the charge up Little Round Top. But most represented milemarks in Storm’s own
career.
Six were identical titan-cloth squares hanging all in a line. Upon them a golden hawk struck left to right
down a fall of scarlet raindrops, all on a field of sable. They were dull, unimaginative things compared to
the Plantagenet, yet they celebrated the mountaintop days of Storm’s Iron Legion.
He had wrested them from his own Henry of Trastamara, Richard Hawksblood, and each victory had
given him as little satisfaction as Edward had extracted from Pedro the Cruel.
Richard Hawksblood was the acknowledged master of the mercenary art.
Hawksblood had five Legion banners in a collection of his own. Three times they had fought to a draw.
Storm and Hawksblood were the best of the mercenary captain-kings, the princes of private war the
media called “The Robber Barons of the Thirty-First Century.” For a decade they had been fighting one
another exclusively.
Only Storm and his talented staff could beat Hawksblood. Only Hawksblood had the genius to
withstand the Iron Legion.
Hawksblood had caused Storm’s bleak mood. His Intelligence people said Richard was considering a
commission on Blackworld.
“Let them roast,” he muttered. “I’m tired.”
But he would fight again. If not this time, then the next. Richard would accept a commission. His
potential victim would know that his only chance of salvation was the Iron Legion. He would be a hard
man who had clawed his way to the top among a hard breed. He would be accustomed to using
mercenaries and assassins. He would look for ways to twist Storm’s arm. And he would find them, and
apply them relentlessly.
Storm had been through it all before.
He smelled it coming again.
A personal matter had taken him to Corporation Zone, on Old Earth, last month. He had made the party
rounds, refreshing his contacts. A couple of middle-management types had approached him, plying him
with tenuous hypotheses.
Blackworlders clearly lacked polish. Those apprentice Machiavellis had been obvious and unimpressive,
except in their hardness. But their master? Their employer was Blake Mining and Metals Corporation of
Edgeward City on Blackworld, they told him blandly.
Gneaus Julius Storm was a powerful man. His private army was better trained, motivated, and equipped
than Confederation’s remarkable Marines. But his Iron Legion was not just a band of freebooters. It was
a diversified holding company with minority interests in scores of major corporations. It did not just fight
and live high for a while on its take. Its investments were the long-term security of its people.
The Fortress of Iron stretched tentacles in a thousand directions, though in the world of business and
finance it was not a major power. Its interests could be manipulated by anyone with the money and
desire.
That was one lever the giants used to get their way.
In the past they had manipulated his personal conflicts with Richard Hawkblood, playing to his vanity
and hatred. But he had outgrown his susceptibility to emotional extortion.
“It’ll be something unique this time,” he whispered.
Vainly, he strove to think of a way to outmaneuver someone he did not yet know, someone whose
intentions were not yet clear.
He ignored the flying lizard. It waited patiently, accustomed to his brooding way.
Storm took an ancient clarinet from a case lying beside his chair. He examined the reed, wet it. He
began playing a piece not five men alive could have recognized.
He had come across the sheet music in a junk shop during his Old Earth visit. The title, “Stranger on the
Shore,” had caught his imagination. It fit so well. He felt like a stranger on the shore of time, born a
millennium and a half out of his natural era. He belonged more properly to the age of Knollys and
Hawkwood.
The lonely, haunting melody set his spirit free. Even with his family, with friends, or in crowds, Gneaus
Storm felt set apart, outside. He was comfortable only when sequestered here in his study, surrounded
by the things with which he had constructed a stronghold of the soul.
Yet he could not be without people. He had to have them there, in the Fortress, potentially available, or
he felt even more alone.
His clarinet never left his side. It was a fetish, an amulet with miraculous powers. He treasured it more
than the closest member of his staff. Paired with the other talisman he always bore, an ancient handgun, it
held the long night of the soul at bay.
Gloomy. Young-old. Devoted to the ancient, the rare, the forgotten. Cursed with a power he no longer
wanted. That was a first approximation of Gneaus Julius Storm.
The power was like some mythological cloak that could not be shed. The more he tried to slough it, the
tighter it clung and the heavier it grew. There were just two ways to shed it forever.
Each required a death. One was his own. The other was Richard Hawksblood’s.
Once, Hawksblood’s death had been his life’s goal. A century of futility had passed. It no longer
seemed to matter as much.
Storm’s heaven, if ever he attained it, would be a quiet, scholarly place that had an opening for a
knowledgeable amateur antiquarian.
The ravenshrike spread its wings momentarily.
Three: 3052 AD
Can we understand a man without knowing his enemies? Can we know yin without knowing yang? My
father would say no. He would say if you want to see new vistas of Truth, go question the man who
wants to kill you.
A man lives. When he is young he has more friends than he can count. He ages. The circle narrows. It
turns inward, becoming more closed. We spend our middle and later years doing the same things with the
same few friends. Seldom do we admit new faces to the clique.
But we never stop making enemies.
They are like dragon’s teeth flung wildly about us as we trudge along the paths of our lives. They spring
up everywhere, unwanted, unexpected, sometimes unseen and unknown. Sometimes we make or inherit
them simply by being who or what we are.
My father was an old, old man. He was his father’s son.
His enemies were legion. He never knew how many and who they were.
—Masato Igarashi Storm
Four: 2844 AD
The building was high and huge and greenhouse-hot. The humidity and stench were punishing. The
polarized glassteel roof had been set to allow the maximum passage of sunlight. The air conditioning was
off. The buckets of night earth had not been removed from the breeding stalls.
Norbon w’Deeth leaned on a slick brass rail, scanning the enclosed acres below the observation
platform.
Movable partitions divided the floor into hundreds of tiny cubicles rowed back to back and facing
narrow passageways. Each cubicle contained an attractive female. There were so many of them that their
breathing and little movements kept the air alive with a restless susurrus.
Deeth was frightened but curious. He had not expected the breeding pens to be so huge.
His father’s hand touched his shoulder lightly, withdrew to flutter in his interrogation of his breeding
master. The elder Norbon carried half a conversation with his hands.
“How can they refuse? Rhafu, they’re just animals.”
Deeth’s thoughts echoed his father’s. The Norbon Head could not be wrong. Rhafu had to be mistaken.
Breeding and feeding were the only things that interested animals.
“You don’t understand, sir.” Old Rhafu’s tone betrayed stress. Even Deeth sensed his frustration at his
inability to impress the Norbon with the gravity of the situation. “It’s not entirely that they’re refusing,
either. They’re just not interested. It’s the boars, sir. If it were just the sows the boars would take them
whether or not they were willing.”
Deeth looked up at Rhafu. He was fond of the old man. Rhafu was the kind of man he wished his father
were. He was the old adventurer every boy hoped to become.
The responsibilities of a Family Head left little time for close relationships. Deeth’s father was a remote,
often harried man. He seldom gave his son the attention he craved.
Rhafu was a rogue full of stories about an exciting past. He proudly wore scars won on the human
worlds. And he had time to share his stories with a boy.
Deeth was determined to emulate Rhafu. He would have his own adventures before his father passed the
family into his hands. His raidships would plunder Terra, Toke, and Ulant. He would return with his own
treasury of stories, wealth, and honorable scars.
It was just a daydream. At seven he already knew that heirs-apparent never risked themselves in the
field. Adventures were for younger sons seeking an independent fortune, for daughters unable to make
beneficial alliances, and for possessionless men like Rhafu. His own inescapable fate was to become a
merchant prince like his father, far removed from the more brutal means of accumulating wealth. The only
dangers he would face would be those of inter-Family intrigues over markets, resources, and power.
“Did you try drugs?” his father asked. Deeth yanked himself back to the here and now. He was
supposed to be learning. His father would smack him a good one if his daydreaming became obvious.
“Of course. Brood sows are always drugged. It makes them receptive and keeps their intellection to a
minimum.”
Rhafu was exasperated. His employer had not visited Prefactlas Station for years. Moreover, the man
confessed that he knew nothing about the practical aspects of slave breeding. Fate had brought him here
in the midst of a crisis, and he persisted in asking questions which cast doubt on the competence of the
professionals on the scene.
“We experimented with aphrodisiacs. We didn’t have much luck. We got more response when we
butchered a few boars for not performing, but when we watched them closer we saw they were
withdrawing before ejaculation. Sir, you’re looking in the wrong place for answers. Go poke around
outside the station boundary. The animals wouldn’t refuse if they weren’t under some external influence.”
“Wild ones?” The Norbon shrugged, dismissing the idea. “What about artificial insemination? We don’t
dare get behind. We’ve got contracts to meet.”
This was why the Norbon was in an unreasonable mood. The crisis threatened the growth of the
Norbon profit curve.
Deeth turned back to the pens. Funny. The animals looked so much like Sangaree. But they were filthy.
They stank.
Rhafu said some of the wild ones were different, that they cared for themselves as well as did people.
And the ones the Family kept at home, at the manor, were clean and efficient and indistinguishable from
real people.
He spotted a sow that looked like his cousin Marjo. What would happen if a Sangaree woman got
mixed in with the animals? Could anyone pick her out? Aliens like the Toke and Ulantonid were easy, but
these humans could pass as people.
“Yes. Of course. But we’re not set up to handle it on the necessary scale. We’ve never had to do it.
I’ve had instruments and equipment on order since the trouble started.”
“You haven’t got anything you can make do with?” Deeth’s father sounded peevish. He became irritable
when the business ran rocky. “There’s a fortune in the Osirian orders, and barely time to push them
through the fast-growth labs. Rhafu, I can’t default on a full-spectrum order. I won’t. I refuse.”
Deeth smiled at a dull-eyed sow who was watching him half-curiously. He made a small, barely
understood obscene gesture he had picked up at school.
“Ouch!”
Having disciplined his son, the Norbon turned to Rhafu as though nothing had happened. Deeth rubbed
the sting away. His father abhorred the thought of coupling with livestock. To him that was the ultimate
perversion, though the practice was common. The Sexon Family maintained a harem of specially bred
exotics.
“Thirty units for the first shipment,” Rhafu said thoughtfully. “I think I can manage that. I might damage a
few head forcing it, though.”
“Do what you have to.”
“I hate to injure prime stock, sir. But there’ll be no production otherwise. We’ve had to be alert to
prevent self-induced abortion.”
“That bad? It’s really that bad?” Pained surprise flashed across the usually expressionless features of the
Norbon. “That does it. You have my complete sanction. Do what’s necessary. These contracts are
worth the risk. They’re going to generate follow-ups. The Osirian market is wide open. Fresh.
Untouched. The native princes are total despots. Completely sybaritic and self-indulgent. It’s one of the
human First Expansion worlds gone feral. They’ve devolved socially and technologically to a feudal
level.”
Rhafu nodded. Like most Sangaree with field experience, he had a solid background in human social
and cultural history.
The elder Norbon stared into the pens that were the cornerstone of the Family wealth. “Rhafu, Osiris is
the Norbon Wholar. Help me exploit it the way a Great House should.”
Wholar. That’s the legendary one, Deeth thought.The bonanza. The bottomless pot of gold . The
world so big and wild and rich that it took five Families to exploit it, the world that had made the
consortium Families first among the Sangaree.
Deeth was not sure he wanted an El Dorado for the Norbon. Too much work for him when he became
Head. And he would have to socialize with those snobbish Krimnins and Sexons and Masons. Unless he
could devour the dream and make the Norbon the richest Family of all. Then he would be First Family
Head, could do as he pleased, and would not have to worry about getting along.
“It’s outside trouble, I swear it,” Rhafu said. “Sir, there’s something coming on. Even the trainees in
Isolation are infected. They’ve been complaining all week. Station master tells me it’s the same
everywhere. Agriculture caught some boar pickers trying to fire the sithlac fields.”
“Omens and signs, Rhafu? You’re superstitious? They are the ones who need the supernatural. It’s got
to be their water. Or feed.”
“No. I’ve checked. Complete chemical analysis. Everything is exactly what it should be. I tell you,
something’s happening and they know it. I’ve seen it before, remember. On Copper Island.”
Deeth became interested again. Rhafu had come to the Norbon from the Dathegon, whose station had
been on Copper Island. No one had told him why. “What happened, Rhafu?”
The breeding master glanced at his employer. The Norbon frowned, but nodded.
“Slaves rising, Deeth. Because of sloppy security. The field animals came in contact with wild ones.
Pretty soon they rebelled. Some of us saw it coming. We tried to warn the station master. He wouldn’t
listen. Those of us who survived work for your father now. The Dathegon never recovered.”
“Oh.”
“And you think that could happen here?” Deeth’s father demanded.
“Not necessarily. Our security is better. Our station master served in human space. He knows what the
animals can do when they work together. I’m just telling you what it looks like, hoping you’ll take steps.
We’ll want to hold down our losses.”
Rhafu was full of the curious ambivalence of Sangaree who had served in human space. Individuals and
small groups he called animals. Larger bodies he elevated to slave status. When he mentioned humanity
outside Sangaree dominion he simply called them humans, degrading them very little. His own
discriminations reflected those of his species as to the race they exploited.
“If we let it go much longer we’ll have to slaughter our best stock to stop it.”
“Rhafu,” Deeth asked, “what happened to the animals on Copper Island?”
“The Prefactlas Heads voted plagues.”
“Oh.” Deeth tried not to care about dead animals. Feeling came anyway. He was not old enough to have
hardened. If only they did not look so much like real people . . .
“I’ll think about what you’ve told me, Rhafu.” The Norbon’s hand settled onto Deeth’s shoulder again.
“Department Heads meeting in the morning. We’ll determine a policy then. Come, Deeth.”
They inspected the sithlac in its vast, hermetically sealed greenhouse. The crop was sprouting. In time the
virally infected germ plasm of the grain would be refined to produce stardust, the most addictive and
deadly narcotic ever to plague humankind.
Stardust addicts did not survive long, but while they did they provided their Sangaree suppliers with a
guaranteed income.
Sithlac was the base of wealth for many of the smaller Families. It underpinned the economy of the race.
And it was one of the roots of their belief in the essential animal-ness of humanity. No true sentient would
willingly subject itself to such a degrading, slow, painful form of suicide.
Deeth fidgeted, bored, scarcely hearing his father’s remarks. He was indifferent to the security that a
sound, conservative agricultural program represented. He was too young to comprehend adult needs. He
preferred the risk and romance of a Rhafu-like life to the security of drug production.
Rhafu had not been much older than he was now when he had served as a gunner’s helper during a raid
into the Ulant sphere.
Raiding was the only way possessionless Sangaree had to accumulate the wealth needed to establish a
Family. Financially troubled Families sometimes raided when they needed a quick cash flow. Most
Sangaree heroes and historical figures came out of the raiding.
A conservative, the Norbon possessed no raidships. His transports were lightly armed so his ships’
masters would not be tempted to indulge in free-lance piracy.
The Norbon were a “made” Family. They were solid in pleasure slaves and stardust. That their original
fortune had been made raiding was irrelevant. Money, as it aged, always became more conservative and
respectable.
Deeth reaffirmed his intention of building raiders when he became Head. Everybody was saying that the
human and Ulantonid spheres were going to collide soon. That might mean war. Alien races went to their
guns when living space and resources were at stake. The period of adjustment and accommodation
would be a raidmaster’s godsend.
Norbon w’Deeth, Scourge of the Spaceways, was slammed back to reality by the impact of his father’s
摘要:

AbouttheAuthor: GlenCook:(PicbyChazBostonBaden)FromTheBSFAN-Balticon31ProgramBook(1997):GlenCookwasborninNewYorkin1944.HegrewupinnorthernCaliforniaandbeganwritingwhileinseventhgrade.HeservedintheU.S.Navy,spendingtimewiththeForceReconunitofthe3rdMarineReconBattalion.HeattendedtheUniversityofMissouria...

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