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orbits.

What the ultimate effect on the planets will be, we cannot say as yet. The change thus far is certainly not very great, though a somewhat warmer climate exists now on Earth, and it is a bit cooler on Venus. The long-range difference, however, will be exceedingly interesting.

The Solar System has just passed through an experience which is probably unique in all the history of the mighty nebula of which our sun is an infinitesimal part. The chances that one star, surrounded by a system of planets, should pass within a hundred billion miles of another star, similarly accompanied, was one in billions of billions. That both systems should have been inhabited by intelligent racesβ€”

[Pg. 221]

It is easy to understand why the scientists could not believe Arcot's theory of attack from another sun until they had actually seen those other worlds.

In that war between two solar systems we learned much and lost much. Yet, in all probability we gained more than we lost, for those two new-old planets will mean tremendous things to us. Already scientists are at work in the vast museums and ancient laboratories that are on them, and every day new things are being discovered. We lost many men, but we saved our worlds, and we learned many invaluable secrets from the invaders. In addition, we have but scratched the surface of a science that is at least a thousand million years old!

[Pg. 222]

EPILOGUE

Taj Lamor looked out across the void of space toward a fading point of yellow light. Far in the distance it glowed, and every second moved it many more miles farther from him. They had lost their struggle for life and a new sun, he had thought when he turned back, defeated, from that distant sun. But time had brought new hope.

They had lost many men in that struggle, and their dwindling resources had been strained to the limit, but now there was hope, for a new spirit had been born in their race. They had fought, and lost, but they had gained a spirit of adventure that had been dormant for millions of years.

Below him, in the great dim mass that was their city, he knew that many laboratories were in the full swing of active work. Knowledge and its application were being discovered and rediscovered. New uses were being found for old things, and their daily life was changing. It was again a race awake, rejuvenated by a change!

As the great sea of yellow fire that was that strange sun had faded behind their fleeing ships, leaving their dead planets still circling a dead sun, he had thought their last chance was gone forever. But hope had reawakened, with the birth of new ideas, new ways of doing things.

Tordos Gar had been right! They had lostβ€”but in the losing, they had won!

Taj Lamor shifted his gaze to a blazing point of light, where a titanic sea of flame was burning with a brilliance [Pg. 223]and power that, despite the greater distance, made the remote yellow sun seem pale and dim. The blue-white glow told of a monster star, a star far brighter than the one they had just left. It had become the brightest star in their heavens. On their ancient star charts it was listed as a red giant, named Tongsil-239-e, which meant it was of the fifth magnitude and very distant. But in the long ages that had passed since it was classified, it had become a mighty sunβ€”a star in its prime.

How were they to reach it? It was eight and one half light years away!

Their search for the force that would swing a world from its orbit had at last been successful. The knowledge had come too late to aid them in their fight for the yellow sun, but they might yet use itβ€”they might even tear their planets from their orbits, and drive them as free bodies across the void. It would take ages to make the tripβ€”but long ages had already passed as their dark planet swung through the void. What difference would it make if they were or were not accompanied by a dead star?

True, the star that was now their goal was a double star; their planets could not find orbits about it, but they might remedy thatβ€”they could tear one star free and hurl it into space, making the remaining sun suitable for their use.

But they would escape this dead sun.

CLASSICS OF GREAT SCIENCE-FICTION from ACE BOOKS F-295 (40Β’) THE WORLD OF NULL-A by A. E. van Vogt F-296 (40Β’) GULLIVER OF MARS by Edwin L. Arnold F-304 (40Β’) THE RADIO BEASTS by Ralph Milne Farley F-306 (40Β’) EARTH'S LAST CITADEL by C. L. Moore and Henry Kuttner G-547 (50Β’) THE BLIND SPOT by Austin Hall and H. E. Flint F-312 (40Β’) THE RADIO PLANET by Ralph Milne Farley F-313 (40Β’) A BRAND NEW WORLD by Ray Cummings F-318 (40Β’) THE SPOT OF LIFE by Austin Hall M-119 (45Β’) JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH by Jules Verne F-319 (40Β’) CRASHING SUNS by Edmond Hamilton F-321 (40Β’) MAZA OF THE MOON by Otis Adelbert Kline F-327 (40Β’) THE DARK WORLD by Henry Kuttner F-333 (40Β’) ROGUE QUEEN by L. Sprague de Camp F-343 (40Β’) THE EXILE OF TIME by Ray Cummings F-344 (40Β’) THE WELL OF THE WORLDS by Henry Kuttner Available from Ace Books, Inc. (Dept. M M), 1120 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10036. Send price indicated, plus 5Β’ handling fee. End of Project Gutenberg's The Black Star Passes, by John W Campbell
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