Six months had passed since the battle.
The city of the violet dome was rebuilt.
The ashes of the dead had been strewn upon the mossy
plains. The two ships now stood in peace and gazed
at each other across the expanse of moss and grass
that had replaced the cinders left from the fighting.
Another city was being built a few miles away.
Ato had soon recovered from his wounds, and as ship’s
captain had married
Maya and Odin.
So it was over. But Odin and
Maya had asked for Gunnar’s ashes, and had buried
them out there on the plain, beneath a gaunt tree which
was something like a mesquite. Gunnar would have
liked that. Twisted, gnarled, and tough, the
tree spread out its branches above him; and a bird
had built its nest there and sang its old song of
stars and men and time.
The Lorens were a happier people.
One of the first things that the lights had done was
to plunge back into space. Within a few days they
returned, trailing a huge dust-cloud behind them.
It must have been the last salvage from the explosion
that Odin had witnessed back there in space. The
cloud trailed out in one great streamer and slowly
circled the ancient sun. Slowly the spirals came
nearer to the fires. The sun fed. Its old
warmth returning, it smiled at its lone child.
The air of the planet of the Lorens grew warmer and
fresher. The plains seemed to shake themselves
as a new spring returned to enliven the land and take
up its old work of helping life to begat new life.
Out there in empty space, Odin fancied, Death lowered
his scythe and smiled and shrugged his lean shoulders
as he went away to harvest other suns.
Oh, it was a wonderful spring.
The trip was over, but what a haggard few had beached
the boats at the vast edge of space!
The few surviving Brons were happy
now. Those who had been Grim Hagen’s slaves
out of their loyalty to Maya were offered anything
that they wished. However, it turned out that
most of them wanted little except peace and rest.
The families of Brons that survived
were now building their houses above ground although
the Lorens had generously offered them quarters below
the city. The Brons wanted no more of caves or
tunnels. They preferred to live up there on this
world’s surface and take their chances with frost
and flood.
Opal had been beautiful and wonderful.
It had been like living eastward in Eden, but Éden’s
gardens were no more. And perhaps it would be
better to face the elements and meet them head-on
instead of seeking shelter. For time and chance
were working everywhere even in Eden and
as Gunnar had always said, a fighting heart could
carry a man to the last.
The days and the nights were longer
than on earth. The work was long and hard.
But the world of the Lorens was being rebuilt.
And at night, Odin usually set an hour aside to work
on his notes.
At times he talked with Wolden, although
he could never be completely at ease when talking
to a light. Nor could he understand half the things
that Wolden told him. Wolden quoted formulas
on time and space, mass and speed. Odin guessed
that the belt which he had once used so briefly embodied
a No-Time and No-Space factor. But this was beyond
him.
As for Ato, he grew moodier every
day. At last he came to see Maya and Odin one
evening. Sitting by the fire for the
nights there were chilly he talked to them
of his decision.
“It was a great fight,”
he said. “And I will always remember it.
If Nea had lived, I might have felt differently.
But Wolden and the others say that they will not stay
here much longer. I have decided to go with them.
Theirs is a sort of Nirvana, a timeless, dimensionless
existence. Yesterday and tomorrow, near and far,
are one ”
Maya shivered. “It sounds
like a frightening existence. I don’t understand
it at all. It is as though they had become spirits
without dying.”
“Perhaps,” said Ato thoughtfully,
looking into the fire. “You may be right.
But they say it is wonderful to be freed from the shackles
of space and time. You remember the belt, Odin?
Wolden has merely improved upon it. Soon, I think,
I will put on the belt that they brought for me and
go forth with them like Laelaps to invade the night.”
He paused a minute and then added
cautiously, “They have brought two more belts
with them. For you two, if you should decide ”
Maya shivered. Odin laughed,
as he shook his head. “No. I am a man.
Just flesh and blood, Ato. And I choose to stay
here and take the blows of time. To endure to
the end even as my fathers before on earth ”
Maya snuggled against his shoulder
as she nodded her agreement.
Ato smiled. “I thought
so But we will say no more about it.
There is one thing that you may not understand.
Wolden has tried to tell you. But he is a scientist,
and his words are different and difficult to follow.
You and I have fought shoulder to shoulder. Perhaps
I can explain ”
Then he talked for nearly an hour
about the passing of time and how a ship
could circle the universe at the speed of light and
upon returning it might find its home-port nothing
but dust and memories. For while their hearts
were beating once a month out there in space tide after
tide of years had flowed over their homes and their
loved ones.
It was a sad, bewildering speech.
It reduced time to nothing and both Maya
and Odin felt a lump of ice in their throats as Ato
talked.
But even after he had finished, they
shook their heads and clung together. A chill
wind from space seemed to be blowing through the room,
whispering of time’s vagaries, and how space
had different clocks, and how the affairs of men were
swept by time and chance down to a sunless sea.
For the last time Jack Odin and Maya
refused Ato’s offer. Eden was behind him.
Immortality was lost. But Adam and Eve held close
to each other there at the edge of space and
as they left Eden behind an old sad nobility clung
to them. Something brave and beautiful, like the
last leaves of autumn glinting in the setting sun.
The notes that Doctor Jack Odin sent
me are ended. But even as before he wrote a short
letter and added it to the package at the last.
Dear Joe: (he began)
Wolden and Ato have agreed to deliver
this message and the attached notes. Wolden
says that it is a terrible experience to go from
the fourth-dimensional light of his into a time-bound
world. He will not again obligate himself as
a messenger boy.
I promised to let you know how we fared.
And here is the tale, if you can piece it together.
And I suppose you can, for you always liked to
monkey around with words. (From this distance, I would
say that putting words together has been both the
curse and the blessing of your entire life.)
I fear that I cannot understand Ato’s
and Wolden’s talk. But let me put it
this way. We traveled fast and furiously through
space. And all the while, Father Time was
laughing at us. You will remember how Grim
Hagen aged on Aldebaran while we sped after him in
what seemed to be only a few weeks. Well, if we
left in The Nebula now and plunged back to earth
we would arrive there two hundred years from the
day that we took off. And from what I saw of
your civilization at the last, I have no desire to
see it two hundred years later.
Bewildering, isn’t it?
Nea always said that we would have to use
new concepts and develop new mores
if we ever conquered space.
She was right.
Theoretically, you are gone and forgotten
for two centuries. And yet, Wolden assures
me that he can deliver this to you in short order.
Therefore, time does not exist as we know it.
Or is it a river that can be navigated?
Our home is finished. Maya
and I are happy. This is a peaceful
planet. Val’s people
are philosophers. They only fought out of
desperation.
My sword and Gunnar’s are growing
rusty upon the wall. I have a small office
now, and will probably end up as a country doctor.
The two ships are still out there on the plain.
Our children, if they wish, can man them and go
out into space. But as far as we are concerned
we go no more a-hunting.
The notes that I am sending you are fairly
complete. It is nearly midnight and the fire
is burning low. Maya is nodding beside me.
So happy at last parsecs away
and years away I wish my old friend
a hearty fare-thee-well and
It is A tale that
is told.
Best wishes,
Jack Odin, M. D.