Anderson, Poul - Saturn Game

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Anderson, Poul - Saturn Game
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The Saturn Game
Poul Anderson
One of the writing problems peculiar to science fiction is that science has a
way of catching up with your imagining. Just as you finish writing a book about
the poor folks who live on the perpetually dark side of Mercury, the damned
Mariner flyby shows that there's no such thing as a dark side. Out the window
with the manuscript (maybe followed by the typewriter and even the writer).
Poul Anderson was one of the dozen or so science fiction writers invited
by the Jet Propulsion Laboratories to witness the first Saturn flyby at their
headquarters in Pasadena. Most of us adjourned to the company cafeteria, getting
out of the way of the working press and overworked scientists, watching the
marvelous pictures come in as we sipped coffee and swapped tales. There was
quite a feeling of suspense, since very little was known about any of the
planet's satellites, so in effect we had a brand-new world being presented to us
every few hours. Poul was the only one actually on the edge of his seat, though;
he said he had just finished a story set on Iapetus. The background was perforce
95 percent imagination, since very little could be deduced about the satellite
from earthbound observation. One clear picture could blow him out of the water.
Fortunately for all of us, the Pioneer cooperated with Poul's imaginings. The
story was "The Saturn Game," and it won the Nebula for best novella of the year.
No one but Poul Anderson could have written this story. That's true in a
literal sense of any story, any author, because even a tired, trite rehash of
boy-meets-girl will show some evidence of having been written by a particular
boy or girl. But "The Saturn Game, " besides being startlingly original in
structure and plot, reveals a combination of special knowledge and special
feeling that amounts to oblique autobiography. Poul is a consummate "hard
science" writer, who not only sports a degree in physics (with honors) but, more
important, reveals in books like Tau Zero that he keeps up with the
fast-changing science. He is also a swashbuckling romantic, with such titles as
Hrolf Kraki's Saga and The Last Viking to his credit. The association with
sword-and-sorcery derring-do percolates over into "real" life: Poul was one of
the founders of the Society for Creative Anachronism, an outfit dedicated to the
re-creation and celebration of medieval life through costumed fairs and
tourneys, usually livened up with a certain amount of barely controlled mayhem
as the participants duel with somewhat blunted weapons.
In the man, these two worlds are well integrated, apparently Poul is a
soft-spoken charmer who wouldn't smite a fly. In the story, well, it's another
story.
If we are to understand what happened, which is vital if we are to avoid
repeated and worse tragedies in the future we must begin by dismissing all
accusations. Nobody was negligent; no action was foolish. For who could have
predicted the eventuality, or recognized its nature, until too late? Rather
should we appreciate the spirit with which those people struggled against
disaster, inward and outward, after they knew. The fact is that thresholds exist
throughout reality, and that things on
their far sides are altogether different from things on their hither sides. The
Chronos crossed more than an abyss, it` crossed a threshold of human experience.
-Francis L. Minamoto, Death:
Under Saturn: A Dissenting View
(Apollo University Communications, Leyburg, Luna, 2057)
I
"The City of Ice is now on my horizon," Kendrick says. Its. towers gleam blue.
"My griffin spreads his wings to glide." Wind whistles among those great,
rainbow-shimmering pinions ' His cloak blows back from his shoulders; the air
strikes through'. his ring-mail and sheathes him in cold. "I lean over and pee
after you." The spear in his left hand counterbalances him. It head flickers
palely with the moonlight that Wayland Smith; hammered into the steel.
"Yes, I see the griffin," Ricia tells him, "high and far, like a comet
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Anderson, Poul - Saturn Game
above the courtyard walls. I run out from under the: portico for a better look.
A guard tries to stop me, grabs my; sleeve, but I tear the spider silk apart and
dash forth into the. open." The elven castle wavers as if its sculptured ice
were turning to smoke. Passionately, she cries, "Is it in truth you, my
darling?"
"Hold, there!" warns Alvarlan from his cave of arcana, ten thousand
leagues away. "I send your mind the message that if the King suspects this is
Sir Kendrick of the Isles,=, he will raise a dragon against him, or spirit you
off beyond any chance of rescue. Go back, Princess of Maranoa. Pretend' you
decide that it is only an eagle. I will cast a belief-spell on your words."
"I stay far aloft," Kendrick says. "Save he use a crying~ stone, the Elf
King will not be aware this beast has a rider.. From here I'll spy out city and
castle." And then-? He knows.
not. He knows simply that he must set her free or die in the quest. How long
will it take him, how many more nights will she lie in the King's embrace?
"I thought you were supposed to spy out Iapetus," Mark Danzig
interrupted.
His dry tone startled the three others into alertness. Jean Broberg
flushed with embarrassment, Colin Scobie with irritation; Luis Garcilaso
shrugged, grinned, and turned his gaze to the pilot console before which he sat
harnessed. For a moment silence filled the cabin, and shadows, and radiance from
the universe.
To help observation, all lights were out except a few dim glows from the
instruments. The sunward ports were lidded. Elsewhere thronged stars, so many
and so brilliant that they well-nigh drowned the blackness which held them. The
Milky Way was a torrent of silver. One port framed Saturn at half phase, dayside
pale gold and rich bands amidst the jewelry of its rings, night side wanly
ashimmer with starlight upon clouds, as big to the sight as Earth over Luna.
Forward was Iapetus. The spacecraft rotated while orbiting the moon, to
maintain a steady optical field. It had crossed the dawn line, presently at the
middle of the inward-facing hemisphere. Thus it had left bare, crater-pocked
land behind it in the dark, and was passing above sunlit glacier country.
Whiteness dazzled, glittered in sparks and shards of color, reached fantastic
shapes heavenward; cirques, crevasses, caverns brimmed with blue.
"1'm sorry," Jean Broberg whispered. "It's too beautiful, unbelievably
beautiful, and . . . almost like the place where our game had brought us. Took
us by surprise-"
"Huh!" Mark Danzig said. "You had a pretty good idea of what to expect,
therefore you made your play go in the direction of something that resembled it.
Don't tell me any different. I've watched these acts for eight years."
Colin Scobie made a savage gesture. Spin and gravity were too slight to
give noticeable weight, and his movement
sent him flying through the air, across the crowded cabin. He checked himself by
a handhold just short of the chemist. "Are you calling Jean a liar?" he growled.
Most times he was cheerful, in a bluff fashion. Perhaps because of that,
he suddenly appeared menacing. He was a big, sandy-haired man in his
mid-thirties; a coverall did not disguise the muscles beneath, and the scowl on
his face brought forth its ruggedness.
"Please!" Broberg exclaimed. "Not a quarrel, Colin."
The geologist glanced back at her. She was slender and fine-featured. At
her age of forty-two, despite longevity treatment, the reddish-brown hair that
fell to her shoulders was becoming streaked with white, and lines were engraved
around large gray eyes.
"Mark is right," she sighed. "We're here to do science, not daydream."
She reached forth to touch Scobie's arm, smiling shyly. "You're still full of
your Kendrick persona, aren't you? Gallant, protective-" She stopped. Her voice
had quickened with more than a hint of Ricia. She covered her lips and flushed
again. A tear broke free and sparkled off on air currents. She forced a laugh.
"But I'm just physicist Broberg, wife of astronomer Tom, mother of Johnnie and
Billy."
Her glance went Saturn ward, as if seeking the ship where her family
waited. She might have spied it, too, as a star that moved among stars by the
solar sail. However, that was now furled, and naked vision could not find even
such huge hulls as Chronos possessed, across millions of kilometers.
Luis Garcilaso asked from his pilot's chair: "What harm if we carry on
our little commedia dell' arte?" His Arizona drawl soothed the ear. "We won't be
landin' for a while yet, and everything's on automatic till then." He was small,
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Anderson, Poul - Saturn Game
swarthy, and deft, still in his twenties.
Danzig twisted his leathery countenance into a frown. At sixty, thanks
to his habits as well as to longevity, he kept springiness in a lank frame; he
could joke about wrinkles and encroaching baldness. In this hour, he set humor
aside.
"Do you mean you don't know what's the matter?" His beak of a nose
pecked at a scanner screen which magnified the moonscape. "Almighty God! That's
a new world we're about to touch down on-tiny, but a world, and strange in ways
we can't guess. Nothing's been here before us except one unmanned flyby and one
unmanned lander that soon quit sending. We can't rely on meters and cameras
alone. We've got to use our eyes and brains."
He addressed Scobie. "You should realize that in your bones, Colin, if
nobody else aboard does. You've worked on Luna as well as on Earth. In spite of
all the settlements, in spite of all the study that's been done, did you never
hit any nasty surprises?"
The burly man had recovered his temper. Into his own voice came a
softness that recalled the serenity of the Idaho mountains from which he hailed.
"True," he admitted. "There's no such thing as having too much information when
you're off Earth, or enough information, for that matter." He paused.
"Nevertheless, timidity can be as dangerous as rashness-not that you're timid,
Mark," he added in haste. "Why, you and Rachel could've been in a nice O'Neill
on a nice pension-"
Danzig relaxed and smiled. "This was a challenge, if I may sound
pompous. Just the same, we want to get home when we're finished here. We should
be in time for the Bar Mitzvah of a great-grandson or two. Which requires
staying alive."
"My point is," Scobie said, "if you let yourself get buffaloed, you may
end up in a worse bind than- Oh, never mind. You're probably right, and we
should not have begun fantasizing. The spectacle sort of grabbed us. It won't
happen again."
Yet when Scobie's eyes looked anew on the glacier, they had not quite
the dispassion of a scientist in them. Nor did Broberg's or Garcilaso's. Danzig
slammed fist into palm. "The game, the damned childish game," he muttered, too
low for
his companions to hear. "Was nothing saner possible for them?"
11
Was nothing saner possible for them? Perhaps not.
If we are to answer the question, we should first review some history.
When early industrial operations in space offered the hope of rescuing
civilization, and Earth, from ruin, then greater knowledge of sister planets,
prior to their development, became a clear necessity. The effort started with
Mars, the least hostile. No natural law forbade sending small manned spacecraft
yonder. What did was the absurdity of using as much fuel. time, and effort as
were required, in order that three or four persons might spend a few days in a
single locality.
Construction of the J. Peter Vajk took longer and cost more, but paid
off when it, virtually a colony, spread its immense solar sail and took a
thousand people to their goal in half a year and in comparative comfort. The
payoff grew overwhelming when they, from orbit, launched Earthward the
beneficiated minerals of Phobos that they did not need for their own purposes.
Those purposes, of course, turned on the truly thorough, long-term study of
Mars. and included landings of auxiliary craft, for ever lengthier stays, all
over the surface.
Sufficient to remind you of this much; no need to detail the triumphs of
the same basic concept throughout the inner Solar System, as far as Jupiter. The
tragedy of the Vladimir became a reason to try again for Mercury, and, in a
left-handed, political way, pushed the Britannic-American consortium into its
Chronos project.
They named the ship better than they knew. Sailing time to Saturn was
eight years.
Not only the scientists must be healthy, lively-minded people. Crewfolk,
technicians, medics, constables, teachers. clergy, entertainers-.every element
of an entire community must be. Each must command more than a single skill, for
emergency backup, and keep those skills alive by regular, tedious rehearsal. The
environment was limited and austere; communication with home was soon a matter
Side 3
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