Child of the Sun: Leigh Brackett SF Boxed Set (Illustrated). Leigh Brackett

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Child of the Sun: Leigh Brackett SF Boxed Set (Illustrated) - Leigh  Brackett


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of the ice—made him glance behind him.

      Stealthy, swift and silent, up the winding ways they came. They had guessed that he had forgotten them in his anxiety. The sword was turned away from them now, and if they could take him from behind, stun him with the chill force of the sceptre-like rods they carried....

      He slashed them with the sword. He saw the flickering beam go down and down the shaft, saw the bodies fall like drops of rain, rebounding here and there from the flying spans and carrying the living with them.

      He thought of the many levels of the city. He thought of all the countless thousands that must inhabit them. He could hold them off in the shaft as long as he wished if he had no other need for the sword. But he knew that as soon as he turned his back they would be upon him again, and if he should once fall....

      He could not spare a moment, or a chance.

      He looked at Ciara, not knowing what to do, and it seemed to him that the sheathing frost had melted, just a little, around her face.

      Desperately, he struck down again at the creatures in the shaft, and then the answer came to him.

      He dropped the sword. The squat, round mechanism was beside him, with its broken crystal wheel. He picked it up.

      It was heavy. It would have been heavy for two men to lift, but Stark was a driven man. Grunting, swaying with the effort, he lifted it and let it fall, out and down.

      Like a thunderbolt it struck among those slender bridges, the spiderweb of icy strands that spanned the shaft. Stark watched it go, and listened to the brittle snapping of the ice, the final crashing of a million shards at the bottom far below.

      He smiled, and turned again to Ciara, picking up the sword.

      * * * * *

      It was hours later. Stark walked across the glowing ice of the valley, toward the cairn. The sword of Ban Cruach hung at his side. He had taken the talisman and replaced it in the boss, and he was himself again.

      Ciara and Balin walked beside him. The color had come back into their faces, but faintly, and they were still weak enough to be glad of Stark's hands to steady them.

      At the foot of the cairn they stopped, and Stark mounted it alone.

      He looked for a long moment into the face of Ban Cruach. Then he took the sword, and carefully turned the rings upon it so that the radiation spread out as it had before, to close the Gates of Death.

      Almost reverently, he replaced the sword in Ban Cruach's hands. Then he turned and went down over the tumbled stones.

      The shimmering darkness brooded still over the distant tower. Underneath the ice, the elfin city still spread downward. The shining ones would rebuild their bridges in the shaft, and go on as they had before, dreaming their cold dreams of ancient power.

      But they would not go out through the Gates of Death. Ban Cruach in his rusty mail was still lord of the pass, the warder of the Norlands.

      Stark said to the others, "Tell the story in Kushat. Tell it through the Norlands, the story of Ban Cruach and why he guards the Gates of Death. Men have forgotten. And they should not forget."

      They went out of the valley then, the two men and the woman. They did not speak again, and the way out through the pass seemed endless.

      Some of Ciara's chieftains met them at the mouth of the pass above Kushat. They had waited there, ashamed to return to the city without her, but not daring to go back into the pass again. They had seen the creatures of the valley, and they were still afraid.

      They gave mounts to the three. They themselves walked behind Ciara, and their heads were low with shame.

      They came into Kushat through the riven gate, and Stark went with Ciara to the King City, where she made Balin follow too.

      "Your sister is there," she said. "I have had her cared for."

      The city was quiet, with the sullen apathy that follows after battle. The men of Mekh cheered Ciara in the streets. She rode proudly, but Stark saw that her face was gaunt and strained.

      He, too, was marked deep by what he had seen and done, beyond the Gates of Death.

      They went up into the castle.

      Thanis took Balin into her arms, and wept. She had lost her first wild fury, and she could look at Ciara now with a restrained hatred that had a tinge almost of admiration.

      "You fought for Kushat," she said, unwillingly, when she had heard the story. "For that, at least, I can thank you."

      She went to Stark then, and looked up at him. "Kushat, and my brother's life...." She kissed him, and there were tears on her lips. But she turned to Ciara with a bitter smile.

      "No one can hold him, any more than the wind can be held. You will learn that."

      She went out then with Balin, and left Stark and Ciara alone, in the chambers of the king.

      * * * * *

      Ciara said, "The little one is very shrewd." She unbuckled the hauberk and let it fall, standing slim in her tunic of black leather, and walked to the tall windows that looked out upon the mountains. She leaned her head wearily against the stone.

      "An evil day, an evil deed. And now I have Kushat to govern, with no reward of power from beyond the Gates of Death. How man can be misled!"

      Stark poured wine from the flagon and brought it to her. She looked at him over the rim of the cup, with a certain wry amusement.

      "The little one is shrewd, and she is right. I don't know that I can be as wise as she.... Will you stay with me, Stark, or will you go?"

      He did not answer at once, and she asked him, "What hunger drives you, Stark? It is not conquest, as it was with me. What are you looking for that you cannot find?"

      He thought back across the years, back to the beginning—to the boy N'Chaka who had once been happy with Old One and little Tika, in the blaze and thunder and bitter frosts of a valley in the Twilight Belt of Mercury. He remembered how all that had ended, under the guns of the miners—the men who were his own kind.

      He shook his head. "I don't know. It doesn't matter." He took her between his two hands, feeling the strength and the splendor of her, and it was oddly difficult to find words.

      "I want to stay, Ciara. Now, this minute, I could promise that I would stay forever. But I know myself. You belong here, you will make Kushat your own. I don't. Someday I will go."

      Ciara nodded. "My neck, also, was not made for chains, and one country was too little to hold me. Very well, Stark. Let it be so."

      She smiled, and let the wine-cup fall.

      Child of the Sun

       Table of Contents

      Eric Falken stood utterly still, staring down at his leashed and helpless hands on the controls of the spaceship Falcon.

      The red lights on his indicator panel showed Hiltonist ships in a three-dimensional half-moon, above, behind, and below him. Pincer jaws, closing fast.

      The animal instinct of escape prodded him, but he couldn't obey. He had fuel enough for one last burst of speed. But there was no way through that ring of ships. Tractor-beams, criss-crossing between them, would net the Falcon like a fish.

      There was no way out ahead, either. Mercury was there, harsh and bitter in the naked blaze of the sun. The ships of Gantry Hilton, President of the Federation of Worlds, inventor of the Psycho-Adjuster, and ruler of men's souls, were herding him down to a landing at the lonely Spaceguard outpost.

      A landing he couldn't dodge. And then....

      For Paul Avery, a choice of death or Happiness. For himself and Sheila Moore, there was no choice. It was death.

      The


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