Anderson, Poul - The Day Of Their Return

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THE DAY OF THEIR RETURN - Poul Anderson
THE DAY OF THEIR RETURN
Poul Anderson
[17 aug 2002—Version 1.0—A #BW Release ]
[08 mar 2003—proofed for #bookz]
I
On the third day he arose, and ascended again to the light.
Dawn gleamed across a sea which had once been an ocean. To north, cliffs lifted blue from the steel gray
of its horizon; and down them went a streak which was the falls, whose thunder beat dim through a
windless cold. The sky stood violet in the west, purple overhead, white in the east where the sun came
climbing. But still the morning star shone there, the planet of the First Chosen.
I am the first of the Second Chosen, Jaan knew: and the voice of those who choose. To be man is to be
radiance.
His nostrils drank air, his muscles exulted. Never had he been this aware. From the brightness of his face
to the grit below his feet, he was real.
—O glory upon glory, said that which within him was Caruith.
—It overwhelms this poor body, said Jaan. I am new to resurrection. Do you not feel yourself a stranger
in chains?
—Six million years have blown by in the night, said Caruith. I remember waves besparkled and a shout
of surf, where now stones lie gaunt beneath us; I remember pride in walls and columns, where ruin
huddles above the mouth of the tomb whence we have come; I remember how clouds walked clad in
rainbows. Before all, I seek to remember—and fail, because the flesh I am cannot bear the fire I was—I
seek to remember the fullness of existence.
Jaan lifted hands to the crown engirdling his brows.—For you, this is a heavy burden, he said.
—No, sang Caruith. I share the opening that it has made for you and your race. I will grow with, you, and
you with me, and they with us, until mankind is not only worthy to be received into Oneness, it will bring
thereunto what is wholly its own. And at last sentience will create God. Now come, let us proclaim it to
the people. He/they went up the mountain toward the Arena. Above them paled Dido, the morning star.
II
East of Windhome the country rolled low for a while, then lifted in the Hesperian Hills. Early summer
had gentled their starkness with leaves. Blue-green, gray-green, here and there the intense green-green of
oak or cedar, purple of rasmin, spread in single trees, bushes, widely spaced groves, across an onyx
tinged red and yellow which was the land's living mantle, fire trava.
A draught blew from sunset. Ivar Frederiksen shivered. Even his gunstock felt cold beneath his hand. The
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THE DAY OF THEIR RETURN - Poul Anderson
sward he lay on had started to curl up for the night, turning into a springy mat. Its daytime odor of flint
and sparks was almost gone. A delphi overarched him: gnarled low trunk, grotto of branches and foliage.
Multitudinous rustlings went through it, like whispers in an unknown tongue. His vision ranged over a
slope bestrewn with shrubs and boulders, to a valley full of shadow. The riverside road was lost in that
dusk, the water a wan gleam. His heart knocked, louder than the sound of the Wildfoss flowing.
Nobody. Will they never come?
A flash caught his eye and breath. An aircraft out of the west?
No. The leaves in their restlessness had confused him. What rose above Hornbeck Ridge was just Creusa.
Laughter snapped forth, a sign of how taut were his nerves. As if to seek companionship, he followed the
moon. It glimmered ever more bright, waxing while it climbed eastward. A pair of wings likewise caught
rays from the hidden sun and shone gold against indigo heaven.
Easy! he tried to scold himself. You're nigh on disminded. What if this will be your first battle? No
excuse. You're ringleader, aren't you?
Though born to the thin dry air of Aeneas, he felt his nasal passages hurt, his tongue leather. He reached
for a canteen. Filled at yonder stream, it gave him a taste of iron.
"Aah—" he began. And then the Imperials were come.
They appeared like that, sudden as a blow. A part of him knew how. Later than awaited, they had been
concealed by twilight and a coppice in his line of sight, until their progress brought them into
unmistakable view. But had none of his followers seen them earlier? The guerrillas covered three
kilometers on both sides of the gorge. This didn't speak well for their readiness.
Otherwise Ivar was caught in a torrent. He didn't know what roared through him, fear, anger, insanity, nor
had he time to wonder. He did observe, in a flicker of amazement, no heroic joy or stern determination.
His body obeyed plans while something wailed, How did I get into this? How do I get out?
He was on his feet. He gave the hunting cry of a spider wolf, and heard it echoed and passed on. He
pulled the hood of his jacket over his head, the nightmask over his face. He snatched his rifle off the
ground and sprang from the shelter of the delphi.
Every sense was fever-brilliant. He saw each coiled blade of the fire trava whereon he ran, felt how it
gave beneath his boots and rebounded, caught a last warmth radiated from a giant rock, drank in the
sweetness of a cedar, brushed the roughness of an oak, could have counted the petals a rasmin spread
above him or measured the speed at which a stand of plume trava folded against the gathering cold—but
that was all on the edge of awareness, as was the play inside of muscles, nerves, blood, lungs, pulse—his
being was aimed at his enemies.
They were human, a platoon of marines, afoot save for the driver of a field gun. It hummed along on a
gravsled, two meters off the road. Though helmeted, the men were in loose order and walked rather than
marched, expecting no trouble on a routine patrol. Most had connected the powerpacks on their shoulders
to the heating threads in their baggy green coveralls.
The infrascope on Ivar's rifle told him that. His eyes told of comrades who rose from bush and leaped
down the hillsides, masked and armed like him. His ears caught raw young voices, war-calls and wordless
yells. Shots crackled. The Aeneans had double the number of their prey, advantage of surprise, will to be
free.
They lacked energy weapons; but a sleet of bullets converged on the artillery piece. Ivar saw its driver
cast from his seat, a red rag. We've got them! He sent a burst himself, then continued his charge, low and
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zigzag. The plan, the need was to break the platoon and carry their equipment into the wilderness.
The cannon descended. Ivar knew, too late: Some kind of dead-man switch. The marines, who had
thrown their bodies flat, got up and sought it. A few lay wounded or slain; the rest reached its shelter.
Blaster bolts flared and boomed, slugthrowers raved. The Aenean closest to Ivar trembled, rolled over
and over, came to a halt and screamed. Screamed. Screamed. His blood on the turf was outrageously
bright, spread impossibly wide.
A new Imperial took the big gun's controls. Lightning flew across the river, which threw its blue-
whiteness back like molten metal. Thunder hammered. Where that beam passed were no more trees or
shrubs or warriors. Smoke roiled above ash.
Blind and deaf, Ivar fell. He clawed at the soil, because he thought the planet was trying to whirl him off.
After a fraction of eternity, the delirium passed. His head still tolled, tatters of light drifted before his
vision, but he could hear, see, almost think.
A daggerbush partly screened him. He had ripped his right sleeve and arm on it, but was otherwise
unhurt. Nearby sprawled a corpse. Entrails spilled forth. The mask hid which friend this had been. How
wrong, how obscene to expose the guts without the face.
Ivar strained through gloom. The enemy had not turned their fieldpiece on this bank of the river. Instead,
they used small arms as precision tools. Against their skill and discipline, the guerrillas were glass tossed
at armor plate.
Guerrillas? We children? And I led us. Ivar fought not to vomit, not to weep.
He must sneak off. Idiot luck, nothing else, had kept him alive and unnoticed. But the marines were
taking prisoners. He saw them bring in several who were lightly injured. Several more, outgunned, raised
their hands.
Nobody keeps a secret from a hypnoprobe.
Virgil slipped beneath an unseen horizon. Night burst forth.
Aeneas rotates in twenty hours, nineteen minutes, and a few seconds. Dawn was not far when Ivar
Frederiksen reached Windhome.
Gray granite walled the ancestral seat of the Firstman of Ilion. It stood near the edge of an ancient cape.
In tiers and scarps, crags and cliffs, thinly brush-grown or naked rock, the continental shelf dropped down
three kilometers to the Antonine Seabed. So did the river, a flash by the castle, a clangor of cataracts.
The portal stood closed, a statement that the occupation troops were considered bandits. Ivar stumbled to
press the scanner plate. Chimes echoed emptily.
Weariness was an ache which rose in his marrow and seeped through bones and flesh till blood ran thick
with it. His knees shook, his jaws clattered. The dried sweat that he could taste and smell on himself
stung the cracks in his lips. Afraid to use roads, he had fled a long and rough way.
He leaned on the high steel door and sucked air through a mummy mouth. A breeze sheathed him in
iciness. Yet somehow he had never been as aware of the beauty of this land, now when it was lost to him.
The sky soared crystalline black, wild with stars. Through the thin air they shone steadily, in diamond
hues; and the Milky Way was a white torrent, and a kindred cloud in the Ula was our sister galaxy spied
across a million and a half light-years. Creusa had set; but slower Lavinia rode aloft in her second quarter.
Light fell argent on hoarfrost.
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Eastward reached fields, meadows, woodlots, bulks that were sleeping farmsteads, and at last the hills.
Ivar's gaze fared west. There the rich bottomlands ran in orchards, plantations, canals night-frozen into
mirrors, the burnished shield of a salt marsh, to the world's rim. He thought he saw lights move. Were
folk abroad already? No, he couldn't make out lamps over such a distance … lanterns on ghost ships,
sailing an ocean that vanished three million years ago …
The portal swung wide. Sergeant Astaff stood behind. In defiance of Imperial decree, his stocky frame
bore Ilian uniform. He had left off hood and mask, though. In the unreal luminance, his head was not
grizzled, it was as white as the words which puffed from him.
"Firstlin' Ivar! Where you been? What's gone on? Your mother's gnawed fear for you this whole past five-
day." The heir to the house lurched by him. Beyond the gateway, the courtyard was crisscrossed with
moon-shadows from towers, battlements, main keep and lesser building. A hound, of the lean heavy-
jawed Hesperian breed, was the only other life in sight. Its claws clicked on flagstones, unnaturally loud.
Astaff pushed a button to close the door. For a time he squinted until he said slowly, "Better give me that
rifle, Firstlin'. I know places where Terrans won't poke."
"Me too," sighed from Ivar.
"Didn't do you a lot o' good, stashed away till you were ready for—whatever you've done—hey?" Astaff
held out his hand.
"Trouble I'm in, it makes no difference if they catch me with this." Ivar took hold of the firearm. "Except
I'd make them pay for me."
Something kindled in the old man. He, like his fathers before him, had served the Firstmen of Ilion for a
lifetime. Nevertheless, or else for that same reason, pain was in his tone. "Why'd you not ask me for
help?"
"You'd have talked me out of it," Ivar said. "You'd have been right," he added.
"What did you try?"
"Ambushin' local patrol. To start stockpilin' weapons. I don't know how many of us escaped. Probably
most didn't."
Astaff regarded him.
Ivar Frederiksen was tall, 185 centimeters, slender save for wide shoulders and the Aenean depth of chest.
Exhaustion weighted down his normal agility and hoarsened the tenor voice. Snub-nosed, square-jawed,
freckled, his face looked still younger than it was; no noticeable beard had grown during the past hours.
His hair, cut short at nape and ears in the nord manner, was yellow, seldom free of a cowlick or a stray
lock across the forehead. Beneath dark brows, his eyes were large and green. Under his jacket he wore the
high-collared shirt, pouched belt, heavy-bladed sheath knife, thick trousers tucked into half-boots, of
ordinary outdoor dress. There was, in truth, little to mark him off from any other upper-class lad of his
planet.
That little was enough.
"What caveheads you were," the sergeant said at last.
A twitch of anger: "We should sit clay-soft for Terrans to mold, fire, and use however they see fit?"
"Well," Astaff replied, "I would've planned my strike better, and drilled longer beforetime."
He took Ivar by the elbow. "You're spent like a cartridge," he said. "Go to my quarters. You remember
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where I bunk, no? Thank Lord, my wife's off visitin' our daughter's family. Grab shower, food, sleep. I've
sentry-go till oh-five-hundred. Can't call substitute without drawin' questions; but nobody'll snuff at you."
Ivar blinked. "What do you mean? My own rooms—"
"Yah!" Astaff snorted. "Go on. Rouse your mother, your kid sister. Get 'em involved. Sure. They'll be
interrogated, you know, soon's Impies've found you were in that broil. They'll be narcoquizzed, or even
'probed, if any reason develops to think they got clue to your whereabouts. That what you want? Okay.
Go bid 'em fond farewell."
Ivar took a backward step, lifted his hands in appeal. "No. I, I, I never thought—"
"Right."
"Of course I'll—What do you have in mind?" Ivar asked humbly.
"Get you off before Impies arrive. Good thing your dad's been whole while in Nova Roma; clear-cut
innocent, and got influence to protect family if Terrans find no sign you were ever here after fight. Hey?
You'll leave soon. Wear servant's livery I'll filch for you, snoutmask like you're sneezewort allergic,
weapon under cloak. Walk like you got hurry-up errand. This is big household; nobody ought to notice
you especially. I'll've found some yeoman who'll take you in, Sam Hedin, Frank Vance, whoever, loyal
and livin' offside. You go there."
"And then?"
Astaff, shrugged. "Who knows? When zoosny's died down, I'll slip your folks word you're alive and
loose. Maybe later your dad can wangle pardon for you. But if Terrans catch you while their dead are
fresh—son, they'll make example. I know Empire. Traveled through it more than once with Admiral
McCormac." As he spoke the name, he saluted. The average Imperial agent who saw would have arrested
him on the spot.
Ivar swallowed and stammered, "I … I can't thank—"
"You're next Firstman of Ilion," the sergeant snapped. "Maybe last hope we got, this side of Elders
returnin'. Now, before somebody comes, haul your butt out of here—and don't forget the rest of you!"
III
Chunderban Desai's previous assignment had been to the delegation which negotiated an end of the
Jihannath crisis. That wasn't the change of pace in his career which it seemed. His Majesty's
administrators must forever be dickering, compromising, feeling their way, balancing conflicts of
individuals, organizations, societies, races, sentient species. The need for skill—quickly to grasp facts,
comprehend a situation, brazen out a bluff when in spite of everything the unknown erupted into one's
calculations—was greatest at the intermediate level of bureaucracy which he had reached. A resident
might deal with a single culture, and have no more to do than keep an eye on affairs. A sector governor
oversaw such vastness that to him it became a set of abstractions. But the various ranks of commissioner
were expected to handle personally large and difficult territories.
Desai had worked in regions that faced Betelgeuse and, across an unclaimed and ill-explored buffer zone,
the Roidhunate of Merseia. Thus he was a natural choice for the special diplomatic team. In his quiet
style, he backstopped the head of it, Lord Advisor Chardon, so well that afterward he received a raise in
grade, and was appointed High Commissioner of the Virgilian System, at the opposite end of the Empire.
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But this was due to an equally natural association of ideas. The mutiny in Sector Alpha Crucis had been
possible because most of the Navy was tied up around Jihannath, where full-scale war looked far too
likely. After Terra nevertheless, brilliantly, put the rebels down, Merseia announced that its wish all along
had been to avoid a major clash and it was prepared to bargain.
When presently the Policy Board looked about for able people to reconstruct Sector Alpha Crucis, Lord
Chardon recommended Desai with an enthusiasm that got him put in charge of Virgil, whose human-
colonized planet Aeneas had been the spearhead of the revolt.
Perhaps that was why Desai often harked back to the Merseians, however remote from him they seemed
these days. In a rare moment of idleness, while he waited in his Nova Roma office for the next visitor, he
remembered his final conversation with Uldwyr.
They had played corresponding roles on behalf of their respective sovereigns, and in a wry way had
become friends. When the protocol had, at weary last, been drawn, the two of them supplemented the dull
official celebration with a dinner of their own.
Desai recalled their private room in a restaurant. The wall animations were poor; but a place which
catered to a variety of sophonts couldn't be expected to understand everybody's art, and the meal was an
inspired combination of human and Merseian dishes.
"Have a refill," Uldwyr invited, and raised a crock of his people's pungent ale.
"No, thank you," Desai said. "I prefer tea. That dessert filled me to the scuppers."
"The what?—Never mind, I seize the idea, if not the idiom." Though each was fluent in the other's
principal language, and their vocal organs were not very different, it was easiest for Desai to speak Anglic
and Uldwyr Eriau. "You've tucked in plenty of food, for certain."
"My particular vice, I fear," Desai smiled. "Besides, more alcohol would muddle me. I haven't your mass
to assimilate it."
"What matter if you get drunk? I plan to. Our job is done." And then Uldwyr added: "For now."
Shocked, Desai stared across the table.
Uldwyr gave him back a quizzical glance. The Merseian's face was almost human, if one overlooked
thick bones and countless details of the flesh. But his finely scaled green skin had no hair whatsoever, he
lacked earflaps, a low serration ran from the top of his skull, down his back to the end of the crocodilian
tail which counterbalanced his big, forward-leaning body. Arms and hands were, again, nearly manlike;
legs and clawed splay feet could have belonged to a biped dinosaur. He wore black, silver-trimmed
military tunic and trousers, colorful emblems of rank and of the Vach Hallen into which he was born. A
blaster hung on his hip.
"What's the matter?" he asked.
"Oh … nothing." In Desai's mind went: He didn't mean it hostilely—hostilely to me as a person—his
remark. He, his whole civilization, minces words less small than we do. Struggle against Terra is just a
fact. The Roidhunate will compromise disputes when expediency dictates, but never the principle that
eventually the Empire must be destroyed. Because we—old, sated, desirous only of maintaining a peace
which lets us pursue our pleasures—we stand in the way of their ambitions for the Race. Lest the balance
of power be upset, we block them, we thwart them, wherever we can; and they seek to undermine us,
grind us down, wear us out. But this is nothing personal. I am Uldwyr's honorable enemy, therefore his
friend. By giving him opposition, I give meaning to his life.
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The other divined his thoughts and uttered the harsh Merseian chuckle. "If you want to pretend tonight
that matters have been settled for aye, do. I'd really rather we both got drunk and traded war songs."
"I am not a man of war," Desai said.
Beneath a shelf of brow ridge, Uldwyr's eyelids expressed skepticism while his mouth grinned. "You
mean you don't like physical violence. It was quite an effective war you waged at the conference table."
He swigged from his tankard. Desai saw that he was already a little tipsy. "I imagine the next phase will
also be quiet," he went on. "Ungloved force hasn't worked too well lately. Starkad, Jihannath—no, I'd
look for us to try something more crafty and long-range. Which ought to suit your Empire, khraich?
You've made a good thing for your Naval Intelligence out of the joint commission on Talwin." Desai,
who knew that, kept silence. "Maybe our turn is coming."
Hating his duty, Desai asked in his most casual voice, "Where?"
"Who knows?" Uldwyr gestured the equivalent of a shrug. "I have no doubt, and neither do you, we've a
swarm of agents in Sector Alpha Crucis, for instance. Besides the recent insurrection, it's close to the
Domain of
Ythri, which has enjoyed better relations with us than with you—" His hand chopped the air. "No, I'm
distressing you, am I not? And with what can only be guesswork. Apologies. See here, if you don't care
for more ale, why not arthberry brandy? I guarantee a first-class drunk and—You may suppose you're a
peaceful fellow, Chunderban, but I know an atom or two about your people, your specific people, I mean.
What's that old, old book I've heard you mention and quote from? Rixway?"
"Rig-Veda," Desai told him.
"You said it includes war chants. Do you know any well enough to put into Anglic? There's a computer
terminal." He pointed to a corner. "You can patch right into our main translator, now that official business
is over. I'd like to hear a bit of your special tradition, Chunderban. So many traditions, works,
mysteries—so tiny a lifespan to taste them—"
It became a memorable evening.
Restless, Desai stirred in his chair.
He was a short man with a dark-brown moon face and a paunch. At fifty-five standard years of age, his
hair remained black but had receded from the top of his head. The full lips were usually curved slightly
upward, which joined the liquid eyes to give him a wistful look. As was his custom, today he wore plain,
loosely fitted white shirt and trousers, on his feet slippers a size large for comfort.
Save for the communication and data-retrieval consoles that occupied one wall, his office was similarly
unpretentious. It did have a spectacular holograph, a view of Mount Gandhi on his home planet,
Ramanujan. But otherwise the pictures were of his wife, their seven children, the families of those four
who were grown and settled on as many different globes. A bookshelf held codices as well as reels; some
were much-used reference works, the rest for refreshment, poetry, history, essays, most of their authors
centuries dust. His desk was less neat than his person.
I shouldn't go taking vacations in the past, he thought. God knows the present needs more of me than I
have to give.
Or does it? Spare me the ultimate madness of ever considering myself indispensable.
Well, but somebody must man this post. He happens to be me.
Must somebody? How much really occurs because of me, how much in spite of or regardless of? How
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much, and what, should occur? God! I dared accept the job of ruling, remaking an entire world—when I
knew nothing more about it than its name, and that simply because it was the planet of Hugh McCormac,
the man who would be Emperor. After two years, what else have I learned?
Ordinarily he could sit quiet, but the Hesperian episode had been too shocking, less in itself than in its
implications. Whatever they were. How could he plan against the effect on these people, once the news
got out, when he, the foreigner, had no intuition of what that effect might be?
He put a cigarette into a long, elaborately carved holder of landwhale ivory. (He thought it was in
atrocious taste, but it had been given him for a birthday present by a ten-year-old daughter who died soon
afterward.) The tobacco was an expensive self-indulgence, grown on Esperance, the closest thing to
Terran he could obtain hereabouts while shipping remained sparse.
The smoke-bite didn't soothe him. He jumped up and prowled. He hadn't yet adapted so fully to the low
gravity of Aeneas, 63 percent standard, that he didn't consciously enjoy movement. The drawback was
the dismal exercises he must go through each morning, if he didn't want to turn completely into lard.
Unfair, that the Aeneans tended to be such excellent physical specimens without effort. No, not really
unfair. On this niggard sphere, few could afford a large panoply of machines; even today, more travel was
on foot or animal back than in vehicles, more work done by hand than by automatons or cybernets. Also,
in earlier periods—the initial colonization, the Troubles, the slow climb back from chaos—death had
winnowed the unfit out of their bloodlines.
Desai halted at the north wall, activated its transparency, and gazed forth across Nova Roma.
Though itself two hundred Terran years old, Imperial House jutted awkwardly from the middle of a city
founded seven centuries ago. Most buildings in this district were at least half that age, and architecture
had varied little through time. In a climate where it seldom rained and never snowed; where the enemies
were drought, cold, hurricane winds, drifting dust, scouring sand; where water for bricks and concrete,
forests for timber, organics for synthesis were rare and precious, one quarried the stone which Aeneas did
have in abundance, and used its colors and textures.
The typical structure was a block, two or three stories tall, topped by a flat deck which was half
garden—the view from above made a charming motley—and half solar-energy collector. Narrow
windows carried shutters ornamented with brass or iron arabesques; the heavy doors were of similar
appearance. In most cases, the gray ashlars bore a veneer of carefully chosen and integrated slabs, marble,
agate, chalcedony, jasper, nephrite, materials more exotic than that; and often there were carvings
besides, friezes, armorial bearings, grotesques; and erosion had mellowed it all, to make the old part of
town one subtle harmony. The wealthier homes, shops, and offices surrounded cloister courts, vitryl-
roofed to conserve heat and water, where statues and plants stood among fishponds and fountains.
The streets were cramped and twisted, riddled with alleys, continually opening on small irrational plazas.
Traffic was thin, mainly pedestrian, otherwise groundcars, trucks, and countryfolk on soft-gaited Aenean
horses or six-legged green stathas (likewise foreign, though Desai couldn't offhand remember where they
had originated). A capital city—population here a third of a million, much the largest—would inevitably
hurt more and recover slower from a war than its hinterland.
He lifted his eyes to look onward. Being to south, the University wasn't visible through this wall. What he
saw was the broad bright sweep of the River Flone, and ancient high-arched bridges across it; beyond, the
Julian Canal, its tributaries, verdant parks along them, barges and pleasure boats upon their surfaces;
farther still, the intricacy of many lesser but newer canals, the upthrust of modern buildings in garish
colors, a tinge of industrial haze—the Web.
However petty by Terran standards, he thought, that youngest section was the seedbed of his hopes: in the
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manufacturing, mercantile, and managerial classes which had arisen during the past few generations,
whose interests lay less with the scholars and squirearchs than with the Imperium and its Pax.
Or can I call on them? he wondered. I've been doing it; but how reliable are they?
A single planet is too big for single me to understand.
Right and left he spied the edge of wilderness. Life lay emerald on either side of the Flone, where it ran
majestically down from the north polar cap. He could see hamlets, manors, water traffic; he knew that the
banks were croplands and pasture. But the belt was only a few kilometers wide.
Elsewhere reared worn yellow cliffs, black basalt ridges, ocherous dunes, on and on beneath a sky almost
purple. Shadows were sharper-edged than on Terra or Ramanujan, for the sun was half again as far away,
its disc shrunken. He knew that now, in summer at a middle latitude, the air was chill; he observed on the
tossing tendrils of a rahab tree in a roof garden how strongly the wind blew. Come sunset, temperatures
would plunge below freezing. And yet Virgil was brighter than Sol, an F7; one could not look near it
without heavy eye protection, and Desai marveled that light-skinned humans had ever settled in lands this
cruelly irradiated.
Well, planets where unarmored men could live at all were none too common; and there had been the lure
of Dido. In the beginning, this was a scientific base, nothing else. No, the second beginning, ages after the
unknown builders of what stood in unknowable ruins …
A world, a history like that; and I am supposed to tame them?
His receptionist said through the intercom, "Aycharaych," pronouncing the lilting diphthongs and guttural
ch's well. It was programmed to mimic languages the instant it heard them. That gratified visitors,
especially nonhumans.
"What?" Desai blinked. The tickler on his desk screened a notation of the appointment. "Oh. Oh, yes." He
popped out of his reverie. That being who arrived on the Llynathawr packet day before yesterday. Wants
a permit to conduct studies. "Send him in, please." (By extending verbal courtesy even to a subunit of a
computer, the High Commissioner helped maintain an amicable atmosphere. Perhaps.) The screen noted
that the newcomer was male, or at any rate referred to himself as such. Planet of origin was listed as Jean-
Baptiste, wherever that might be: doubtless a name bestowed by humans because the autochthons had too
many different ones of their own.
The door retracted while Aycharaych stepped through. Desai caught his breath. He had not expected
someone this impressive.
Or was that the word? Was "disturbing" more accurate? Xenosophonts who resembled humans
occasionally had that effect on the latter; and Aycharaych was more anthropoid than Uldwyr.
One might indeed call him beautiful. He stood tall and thin in a gray robe, broad-chested but wasp-
waisted, a frame that ought to have moved gawkily but instead flowed. The bare feet each had four long
claws, and spurs on the ankles. The hands were six-fingered, tapered, their nails suggestive of talons. The
head arched high and narrow, bearing pointed ears, great rust-red eyes, curved blade of nose, delicate
mouth, pointed chin and sharply angled jaws; Desaii thought of a Byzantine saint. A crest of blue feathers
rose above, and tiny plumes formed eyebrows. Otherwise his skin was wholly smooth across the
prominent bones, a glowing golden color.
After an instant's hesitation, Desai said, "Ah … welcome, Honorable. I hope I can be of service." They
shook hands. Aycharaych's was warmer than his. The palm had a hardness that wasn't calluses. Avian, the
man guessed. Descended from an analog of flightless birds.
file:///G|/rah/Poul%20Anderson%20-%20The%20Day%20Of%20Their%20Return.htm (9 of 108) [2/14/2004 12:43:12 AM]
THE DAY OF THEIR RETURN - Poul Anderson
The other's Anglic was flawless; the musical overtone which his low voice gave sounded not like a
mispronunciation but a perfection. "Thank you, Commissioner. You are kind to see me this promptly. I
realize how busy you must be."
"Won't you be seated?" The chair in front of the desk didn't have to adjust itself much. Desai resumed his
own. "Do you mind if I smoke? Would you care for one?" Aycharaych shook his head to both questions,
and smiled; again Desai thought of antique images, archaic Grecian sculpture. "I'm very interested to
meet you," he said. "I confess your people are new in my experience."
"We are few who travel off our world," Aycharaych replied. "Our sun is in Sector Aldebaran."
Desai nodded. "M-hm." His business had never involved any society in that region. No surprise. The
vaguely bounded, roughly spherical volume over which Terra claimed suzerainty had a diameter of some
400 light-years; it held an estimated four million stars, whereof half were believed to have been visited at
least once; approximately 100,000 planets had formalized relations with the Imperium, but for most of
them it amounted to no more than acknowledgment of subordination and modest taxes, or merely the
obligation to make labor and resources available should the Empire ever have need. In return they got the
Pax; and they had a right to join in spatial commerce, though the majority lacked the capital, or the
industrial base, or the appropriate kind of culture for that—Too big, too big. If a single planet
overwhelms the intellect, what then of our entire microscopic chip of the galaxy, away off toward the
edge of a spiral arm, which we imagine we have begun to be a little acquainted with?
"You are pensive, Commissioner," Aycharaych remarked.
"Did you notice?" Desai laughed. "You've known quite a few humans, then."
"Your race is ubiquitous," Aycharaych answered politely. "And fascinating. That is my heart reason for
coming here."
"Ah … pardon me, I've not had a chance to give your documents a proper review. I know only that you
wish to travel about on Aeneas for scientific purposes."
"Consider me an anthropologist, if you will. My people have hitherto had scant outside contact, but they
anticipate more. My mission for a number of years has been to go to and fro in the Empire, learning the
ways of your species, the most numerous and widespread within those borders, so that we may deal
wisely with you. I have observed a wonderful variety of life-manners, yes, of thinking, feeling, and
perceiving. Your versatility approaches miracle."
"Thank you," said Desai, not altogether comfortably. "I don't believe, myself, we are unique. It merely
happened we were the first into space—in our immediate volume and point in history—and our dominant
civilization of the time happened to be dynamically expansive. So we spread into many different
environments, often isolated, and underwent cultural radiation … or fragmentation." He streamed smoke
from his nose and peered through it. "Can you, alone, hope to discover much about us?"
"I am not the sole wanderer," Aycharaych said. "Besides, a measure of telepathic ability is helpful."
"Eh?" Desai noticed himself switch over to thinking in Hindi. But what was he afraid of? Sensitivity to
neural emissions, talent at interpreting them, was fairly well understood, had been for centuries. Some
species were better at it than others; man was among those that brought forth few good cases, none of
them first-class. Nevertheless, human scientists had studied the phenomenon as they had studied the
wavelengths wherein they were blind …
"You will see the fact mentioned in the data reel concerning me," Aycharaych said. "The staff of Sector
Governor Muratori takes precautions against espionage. When I first approached them about my mission,
file:///G|/rah/Poul%20Anderson%20-%20The%20Day%20Of%20Their%20Return.htm (10 of 108) [2/14/2004 12:43:12 AM]
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THEDAYOFTHEIRRETURN-PoulAndersonTHEDAYOFTHEIRRETURNPoulAnderson[17aug2002—Version1.0—A#BWRelease][08mar2003—proofedfor#bookz]IOnthethirddayhearose,andascendedagaintothelight.Dawngleamedacrossaseawhichhadoncebeenanocean.Tonorth,cliffsliftedbluefromthesteelgrayofitshorizon;anddownthemwentastreakwhich...

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