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.
Read free book ยซSpace Viking by H. Beam Piper (read an ebook week .TXT) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: H. Beam Piper
Read book online ยซSpace Viking by H. Beam Piper (read an ebook week .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - H. Beam Piper
Then the screenviews had begun coming in. The brief and hopeless fight in the city. He could still see that silly little field gun, it must have been around seventy or eighty millimeter, on a high-wheeled carriage, drawn by six shaggy, bandy-legged beasts. They had gotten it unlimbered and were trying to get it on a target when a rocket from an aircar landed directly under the muzzle. Gun, caisson, crew, even the draft team fifty yards behind, had simply vanished.
Or the little company, some of them women, trying to defend the top of a tall and half-ruinous building with rifles and pistols. One air-cavalryman wiped them all out with his machine guns.
โThey donโt have a chance,โ heโd said, half-sick. โBut they keep on fighting.โ
โYes; stupid of them, isnโt it?โ Harkaman, beside him, had said.
โWhat would you do in their place?โ
โFight. Try to kill as many Space Vikings as I could before they got me. Terro-humans are all stupid like that. Thatโs why weโre human.โ
If the taking of the city had been a massacre, the sack that had followed had been a man-made Hell. He had gone down, along with Harkaman, while the fighting, if it could be so called, was still going on. Harkaman had suggested that the men ought to see him moving about among them; for his own part, he had felt a compulsion to share their guilt.
He and Sir Paytrik Morland had been on foot together in one of the big hollow buildings that had stood since Khepera had been a Member Republic of the Terran Federation. The air was acrid with smoke, powder smoke and the smoke of burning. It was surprising, how much would burn, in this city of concrete and vitrified stone. It was surprising, too, how well-kept everything was, at least on the ground level. These people had taken pride in their city.
They found themselves alone, in a great empty hallway; the noise and horror of the sack had moved away from them, or they from it, and then, when they entered a side hall, they saw a man, one of the locals, squatting on the floor with the body of a woman cradled on his lap. She was dead, half her head had been blown off, but he was clasping her tightly, her blood staining his shirt, and sobbing heartbrokenly. A carbine lay forgotten on the floor beside him.
โPoor devil,โ Morland said, and started forward.
โNo.โ
Trask stopped him with his left hand. With his right, he drew his pistol and shot the man dead. Morland was horrified.
โGreat Satan, Lucas! Why did you do that?โ
โI wish Andray Dunnan had done that for me.โ He thumbed the safety on and holstered the pistol. โNone of this would be happening if he had. How many more happinesses do you think weโve smashed here today? And we donโt even have Dunnanโs excuse of madness.โ
The next morning, with everything of value collected and sent aboard, they had started cross-country for five hundred miles to another city, the first hundred over a countryside asmoke from burning villages Valkanhaynโs men had pillaged the night before. There was no warning; Khepera had lost electricity and radio and telegraph, and the spread of news was at the speed of one of the beasts the locals insisted on calling horses. By midafternoon, they had finished with that city. It had been as bad as the first one.
One thing, it was the center of a considerable cattle country. The cattle were native to the planet, heavy-bodied unicorns the size of a Gram bisonoid or one of the slightly mutated Terran carabaos on Tanith, with long hair like a Terran yak. He had detailed a dozen of the Nemesis ground-fighters who had been vaqueros on his Traskon ranches to collect a score of cows and four likely bulls, with enough fodder to last them on the voyage. The odds were strongly against any of them living to acclimate themselves to Tanith, but if they did, they might prove to be one of the most valuable pieces of loot from Khepera.
The third city was at the forks of a river, like Tradetown on Tanith. Unlike it, this was a real metropolis. They should have gone there first of all. They spent two days systematically pillaging it. The Kheperans carried on considerable river-traffic, with stern-wheel steamboats, and the waterfront was lined with warehouses crammed with every sort of merchandise. Even better, the Kheperans had money, and for the most part it was gold specie, and the bank vaults were full of it.
Unfortunately, the city had been built since the fall of the Federation and the climb up from the barbarism that had followed, and a great deal of it was of wood. Fires started almost at once, and it was almost completely on fire by the end of the second day. It had been visible in the telescopic screen even after they were out of atmosphere, a black smear until the turning planet carried it into darkness and then a lurid glow.
โIt was a filthy business.โ
Harkaman nodded. โRobbery and murder always are. You donโt have to ask me who said that Space Vikings are professional robbers and murderers, but who was it said that he didnโt care how many planets were raided and how many innocents massacred in the Old Federation?โ
โA dead man. Lucas Trask of Traskon.โ
โYou wish, now, that youโd kept Traskon and stayed on Gram?โ
โNo. If I had, Iโd have spent every hour wishing I was doing what Iโm doing now. I can get used to this, I suppose.โ
โI think you will.
Comments (0)