"Doorsways in the Sand 12" - читать интересную книгу автора (Varley John)

Doorways in the Sand
Chapter 12

Time.
More fragments, pieces, bits . . . Time.
Epiphany in Black & Light, Scenario in Green, Gold, Purple & Gray . . .
There is a man. He is climbing in the dusky daysend air, climbing the high Tower of Cheslerei in a place called Ardel beside a sea with a name he cannot quite pronounce as yet. The sea is as dark as the juice of grapes, bubbling a Chianti and chiaroscuro fermentation of the light of distant stars and the bent rays of Canis Vibesper, its own primary, now but slightly beneath the horizon, rousing another continent, pursued by the breezes that depart the inland fields to weave their courses among the interconnected balconies, towers, walls and walkways of the city, bearing the smells of the warm land toward its older, colder companion. . .
Climbing from hold to green stone on the seaward side of the structure, he has contrived to race with the last of the day as it flees upward, tilts, prepares to jump. In the antic light of evening the top of the Tower of Cheslerei is the last spot touched by the daygold before its departure from the capitol. He has given himself the time from the beginning of sunset to race the final light from bottom to top, to be on hand to take the night as it comes into the last place.
He is racing with shadows now, his own already diffuse about him, his hands darting like fish above the darkness. In the great high places above him the night continues with the minting of stars. Through atmosphere's crystal mask, he glimpses their englossment as he goes. He is panting now, and the spot of gold has diminished. The shadows begin to pass him as he mounts.
But it lingers, that tiny touch of gold on the green. Thinking, perhaps, of another place of green and gold, he moves even faster, pacing his shadow, gaining on it. The light fades for an instant, returns for another.
During that instant, he catches hold of the parapet and heaves himself upward, like a swimmer departing the water.
He draws himself up and stands, turning his head toward the sea, toward the light. Yes . . .
He catches the final fleck of gold that it tosses. For a moment only he stares after it.
He seats himself then on the stone and regards the night's other thousands, as he had never seen them before. For a long while, he watches. . . I know him well, of course.

Portrait of Boy & Dog Romping on the Beach, TickTock and Tempest Past, Fragment- "Fetch, boy! Fetch!"
"Damn it, Ragma! Learn to throw a frisbee properly if you want to play! I'm getting tired of going after it!"
He chuckled. I recovered it and sailed it back. He caught it and threw it, to lose it again in the bushes upshore.
"That's it," I said. "I quit. It's hopeless. You catch fine, but you throw lousy."
I turned and headed back toward the water. A few moments later I heard a scuffing noise and he was at my side.
"We have a game somewhat like that back home," he said. "I was never very good at it there either."
We watched the waves foam in, green to gray, crowding and frothing as they ran.
"Give me a cigarette," Ragma said.
I did, taking one myself also.
"If I tell you what I know you want to know, I will be breaking security," he said.
I said nothing. I had already guessed as much.
"But I am going to tell you anyhow," he went on. "Not details. Just the general picture. I am going to exercise my discretion. It is really pretty much an open secret, and now that your people are beginning to travel to other worlds and entertain visitors from them, you will hear about it sooner or later anyway. I would rather you heard it from a friend. It is a factor you should have in mind to make a better decision on the proposition you have been offered. I think we owe you that much."
"My Cheshire cat . . ." I began.
"Was a Whillowhim," he said, "a representative of one of the most powerful cultures in the galaxy. Competition among the various peoples who make up the total of civilization has always been keen in terms of trade and the exploitation of new worlds. There are great cultures and massive power blocs, and then there are-developing worlds, shall we say?-such as your own, newly arrived at the threshold of the big world. One day your people will probably have membership in our Council, with the right to a voice and a vote. What sort of strength do you think you will wield?"
"Not a whole big hell of a lot," I said.
"And what does one do under such circumstances?"
"Seek alliances, make deals. Look for someone else with common problems and interests."
"You might ally yourself with one of the big power blocs. They would do handsome things for your people in return for your support."
"There would seem a danger of becoming a puppet. Of losing a lot on something like that."
"Perhaps, perhaps not. It is not so simple a thing to foresee. On the other paw, you might throw in with the other smaller groups whose situations are, as you said, similar to you own. There are dangers in that, too, of course, but then the choices are never really this clear-cut. Do you begin to see what I am getting at, though?"
"Possibly. Are there many . . . developing worlds . . . such as my own?"
"Yes," he said. "There is quite a crop of them. New ones keep turning up all the time. A good thing, too-for everybody. We need that diversity-all those viewpoints and unique approaches to the problems life serves up wherever it occurs."
"Am I safe in assuming that a significant number of the younger ones stick together on major issues?"
"You are safe in assuming that."
"Is there a sufficient number to really swing much weight?"
"It is beginning to get to that point."
"I see," I said.
"Yes. Some of the older, more entrenched powers would not mind limiting their force. Curtailing their number is one way to go about it."
"If we had messed up badly with the artifacts, would it have kept us out permanently?"
"Permanently, no. You exist. You are sufficiently developed. You would have to be recognized sooner or later, even if you were blackballed initially. Still, it would be a mark against you, and it would necessarily be later for you then. It would delay things for a long while."
"Did you suspect the Whillowhim all along?"
"I suspected one of the major powers. There have been a number of incidents of this sort-which is why we keep an eye on beginners. In your case, it was easy for them, finding a ready-made situation that might be exploited. Actually, though, I guessed wrong as to who was behind it. I did not really know until that night at the hall when Speicus got his message across and you pursued the Whillowhim. Not that it matters now. If we presented our findings to them and requested an explanation-which we will not do-the Whillowhim would of course simply reply that their agent was not their agent but a private individual of unbalanced nature acting without sanction, and they would regret the inconvenience he had caused. No. Their awareness of failure will be sufficient. We've scotched them here. They know that we are on the job and that you are alert-as your officials now are. I doubt that you will ever be faced with anything this overt in the future."
"I suppose that the next time they will come bearing gifts."
"This is quite likely. But again, your people are now advised. Others will come, too. It should not be so difficult to balance them off against one another."
"So it still comes back to the smoke-filled room. .."