Space Viking by H. Beam Piper (read an ebook week .TXT) ๐
Description
Initially serialized in Analog magazine between 1962 and 1963, Space Viking takes place after the events of H. Beam Piperโs earlier serialization, The Cosmic Computer. Space Viking is a classic space opera: what begins as an interstellar tale of revenge turns into a swashbuckling adventure yarn, and finally into a meditation on empire-building and galactic governance with direct allusions to our modern history.
This richness of content makes Space Viking a unique read. The reader begins by expecting a lighter sci-fi adventure, and early on the plot delivers; but as events transpire, the reader is deftly drawn away from action scenes and into a more nuanced discussion on governance and human nature.
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- Author: H. Beam Piper
Read book online ยซSpace Viking by H. Beam Piper (read an ebook week .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - H. Beam Piper
The rest of the city seemed to have died of neglect rather than violence. It certainly hadnโt been bombed out. Harkaman thought most of the fighting had been done with subneutron bombs or Omega-ray bombs, that killed the people without damaging the real estate. Or bio-weapons; a man-made plague that had gotten out of control and all but depopulated the planet.
โIt takes an awful lot of people, working together at an awful lot of jobs, to keep a civilization running. Smash the installations and kill the top technicians and scientists, and the masses donโt know how to rebuild and go back to stone hatchets. Kill off enough of the masses and even if the planet and the know-how is left, thereโs nobody to do the work. Iโve seen planets that decivilized both ways. Tanith, I think, is one of the latter.โ
That had been during one of the long after-dinner bull sessions on the way out from Gram. Somebody, one of the noble gentlemen-adventurers who had joined the company after the piracy of the Enterprise and the murder, had asked:
โBut some of them survived. Donโt they know what happened?โ
โโโIn the old times, there were sorcerers. They built the old buildings by wizard arts. Then the sorcerers fought among themselves and went away,โโโ Harkaman said. โThatโs all they know about it.โ
You could make any kind of an explanation out of that.
As the pinnaces pulled and nudged the Nemesis down to her berth, he could see people, far down on the spaceport floor, at work. Either Valkanhayn and Spasso had more men than the size of their ships indicated, or they had gotten a lot of locals to work for them. More than the population of the moribund city, at least as Harkaman remembered it.
There had been about five hundred in all; they lived by mining the old buildings for metal, and trading metalwork for food and textiles and powder and other things made elsewhere. It was accessible only by oxcarts traveling a hundred miles across the plains; it had been built by a contragravity-using people with utter disregard for natural travel and transportation routes.
โI donโt envy the poor buggers,โ Harkaman said, looking down at the antlike figures on the spaceport floor. โBoake Valkanhayn and Garvan Spasso have probably made slaves of the lot of them. If I was really going to put in a base here, I wouldnโt thank that pair for the kind of public-relations work theyโve been doing among the locals.โ
IXThat was just about the situation. Spasso and Valkanhayn and some of their officers met them on the landing stage of the big building in the middle of the spaceport, where they had established quarters. Entering and going down a long hallway, they passed a dozen men and women gathering up rubbish from the floor with shovels and with their hands and putting it into a lifter-skid. Both sexes wore shapeless garments of coarse cloth, like ponchos, and flat-soled sandals. Watching them was another local in a kilt, buskins and a leather jerkin; he wore a short sword on his belt and carried a wickedly thonged whip. He also wore a Space Viking combat helmet, painted with the device of Spassoโs Lamia. He bowed as they approached, putting a hand to his forehead. After they had passed, they could hear him shouting at the others, and the sound of whip-blows.
You make slaves out of people, and some will always be slave-drivers; they will bow to you, and then take it out on the others. Harkamanโs nose was twitching as though he had a bit of rotten fish caught in his mustache.
โWe have about eight hundred of them. There were only three hundred that were any good for work here; we gathered the rest up at villages along the big river,โ Spasso was saying.
โHow do you get food for them?โ Harkaman asked. โOr donโt you bother?โ
โOh, we gather that up all over,โ Valkanhayn told him. โWe send parties out with landing craft. Theyโll let down on a village, run the locals out, gather up whatโs around and bring it here. Once in a while they put up a fight, but the best they have is a few crossbows and some muzzle-loading muskets. When they do, we burn the village and machine-gun everybody we see.โ
โThatโs the stuff,โ Harkaman approved. โIf the cow doesnโt want to be milked, just shoot her. Of course, you donโt get much milk out of her again, butโ โโ
The room to which their hosts guided them was at the far end of the hall. It had probably been a conference room or something of the sort, and originally it had been paneled, but the paneling had long ago vanished. Holes had been dug here and there in the walls, and he remembered having noticed that the door was gone and the metal groove in which it had slid had been pried out.
There was a big table in the middle, and chairs and couches covered with colored spreads. All the furniture was handmade, cunningly pegged together and highly polished. On the walls hung trophies of weaponsโ โthrusting-spears and throwing-spears, crossbows and quarrels, and a number of heavy guns, crude things, but carefully made.
โPick all this stuff up off the locals?โ Harkaman asked.
โYes, we got most of it at a big town down at the forks of the river,โ Valkanhayn said. โWe shook
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