Robert Silverberg - One-Way Journey
Here you can read online Robert Silverberg - One-Way Journey full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2012, publisher: Subterranean Press, genre: Science fiction. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:
Romance novel
Science fiction
Adventure
Detective
Science
History
Home and family
Prose
Art
Politics
Computer
Non-fiction
Religion
Business
Children
Humor
Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.
- Book:One-Way Journey
- Author:
- Publisher:Subterranean Press
- Genre:
- Year:2012
- ISBN:978-1-59606-507-9
- Rating:3 / 5
- Favourites:Add to favourites
- Your mark:
- 60
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
One-Way Journey: summary, description and annotation
We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "One-Way Journey" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.
One-Way Journey — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work
Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "One-Way Journey" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.
Font size:
Interval:
Bookmark:
One-Way Journey
by Robert Silverberg
Behind the comforting walls of Terra Imports headquarters on Kollidor, commander Leon Warshow was fumbling nervously with the psych reports on his mirror-bright desk. Commander Warshow was thinking about spaceman Matt Falk, and about himself. Commander Warshow was about to react very predictably.
Personnel Lieutenant Krisch had told him the story about Falk an hour before, and Warshow was doing the one thing expected of him: he was waiting for the boy, having sent for him, after a hasty conference with Cullinan, the Magyars saturnine psych officer.
An orderly buzzed and said, Spaceman Falk to see you, sir.
Have him wait a few minutes, Warshow said, speaking too quickly. Ill buzz for him.
It was a tactical delay. Wondering why he, an officer, should be so tense before an interview with an enlisted man, Warshow riffled through the sheaf of records on Matt Falk. Orphaned, 2543Academytwo years commercial service, military contractinjury en route to Kollidor
Appended were comprehensive medical reports on Falks injury, and Dr. Sigstroms okay. Also a disciplinary chart, very favorable, and a jaggle-edged psych contour, good.
Warshow depressed the buzzer. Send in Falk, he said.
The photon beam clicked and the door swung back. Matt Falk entered and faced his commander stonily; Warshow glared back, studying the youngster as if he had never seen him before. Falk was just twenty-five, very tall and very blond, with wide, bunch-muscled shoulders and keen blue eyes. The scar along the left side of his face was almost completely invisible, but not even chemotherapeutic incubation had been able to restore the smooth evenness of the boys jaw. Falks face looked oddly lopsided; the unharmed right jaw sloped easily and handsomely up to the condyle, while the left still bore unseen but definitely present echoes of the boys terrible shipboard accident.
You want me, commander?
Were leaving Kollidor tomorrow, Matt, Warshow said quietly. Lieutenant Krisch tells me you havent returned to ship to pack your gear. Why?
The jaw that had been ruined and rebuilt quivered slightly.
You know, sir. Im not going back to Earth, sir. Im staying herewith Thetona.
There was a frozen silence. Then, with calculated cruelty, Warshow said, Youre really hipped on that flatface, eh?
Maybe so, Falk murmured. That flatface. That gook. What of it? His quiet voice was bitterly defiant.
Warshow tensed. He was trying to do the job delicately, without inflicting further psychopersonal damage on young Falk. To leave a psychotic crewman behind on an alien world was impossiblebut to extract Falk forcibly from the binding webwork of associations that tied him to Kollidor would leave scars not only on crewman but on captain.
Perspiring, Warshow said, Youre an Earthman, Matt. Dont you
Want to go home? No.
The commander grinned feebly. You sound mighty permanent about that, son.
I am, Falk said stiffly. You know why I want to stay here. I am staying here. May I be excused now, sir?
Warshow drummed on the desktop, hesitating for a moment, then nodded. Permission granted, Mr Falk. There was little point in prolonging what he now saw had been a predeterminedly pointless interview.
He waited a few minutes after Falk had left. Then he switched on the communicator. Send in Major Cullinan, please.
The beady-eyed psychman appeared almost instantly. Well?
The boys staying, Warshow said. Complete and singleminded fixation. Go aheadbreak it.
Cullinan shrugged. We may have to leave him here, and thats all there is to it. Have you met the girl?
Kollidorian. Alien. Ugly as sin. Ive seen her picture; he had it over his bunk until he moved out. And we cant leave him here, major.
Cullinan raised one bushy eyebrow quizzically. We can try to bring Falk back, if you insistbut it wont work. Not without crippling him.
Warshow whistled idly, avoiding the psychmans stern gaze. I insist, he said finally. Theres no alternative.
He snatched at the communicator.
Lieutenant Krisch, please. A brief pause, then: Krisch, Warshow. Tell the men that departures been postponed four days. Have Molhaus refigure the orbits. Yes, four days. Four.
Warshow hung up, glanced at the heaped Falk dossier on his desk, and scowled. Psych Officer Cullinan shook his head sadly, rubbing his growing bald spot.
Thats a drastic step, Leon.
I know. But Im not going to leave Falk behind. Warshow rose, eyed Cullinan uneasily, and added, Care to come with me? Im going down into Kollidor City.
What for?
I want to talk with the girl, Warshow said.
Later, in the crazily twisting network of aimless streets that was the alien city, Warshow began to wish he had ordered Cullinan to come with him. As he made his way through the swarms of the placid, ugly, broad-faced Kollidorians, he regretted very much that he had gone alone.
What would he do, he wondered, when he finally did reach the flat where Falk and his Kollidorian girl were living? Warshow wasnt accustomed to handling himself in ground-borne interpersonal situations of this sort. He didnt know what to say to the girl. He thought he could handle Falk.
The relation of commander to crewman is that of parent to child, the Book said. Warshow grinned self-consciously.
He didnt feel very fatherly just nowmore like a Dutch uncle, he thought.
He kept walking. Kollidor City spread out ahead of him like a tangled ball of twine coming unrolled in five directions at once; it seemed to have been laid down almost at random. But Warshow knew the city well. This was his third tour of duty to the Kollidor sector; three times he had brought cargo from Earth, three times waited while his ship was loaded with Kollidorian goods for export.
Overhead, the distant blue-white sun burnt brightly. Kollidor was the thirteenth planet in its system; it swung on a large arc nearly four billion miles from its blazing primary.
Warshow sniffled; it reminded him that he was due for his regular antipollen injection. He was already thoroughly protected, as was his crew, against most forms of alien disease likely to come his way on the trip.
But how do you protect someone like Falk? The commander had no quick answers for that. It wouldnt ordinarily seem necessary to inoculate spacemen against falling in love with bovine alien women, but
Good afternoon, Commander Warshow, a dry voice said suddenly.
Warshow glanced around, surprised and annoyed. The man who stood behind him was tall, thin, with hard, knobby cheekbones protruding grotesquely from parchmentlike chalk-white skin. Warshow recognized the genetic pattern, and the man. He was Domnik Kross, a trader from the quondam Terran colony of Rigel IX.
Hello, Kross, Warshow said sullenly, and halted to let the other catch up.
What brings you to the city, commander? I thought you were getting ready to pack up and flit away.
Werepostponing four days, Warshow said.
Oh? Got any leads worth telling about? Not that I care to
Skip it, Kross. Warshows voice was weary. Weve finished our trading for the season. Youve got a clear field. Now leave me alone, yes?
He started to walk faster, but the Rigelian, smiling bleakly, kept in step with him.
You sound disturbed, commander.
Warshow glanced impatiently at the other, wishing he could unburden himself of the Rigelians company. Im on a mission of top security value, Kross. Are you going to insist on accompanying me?
Thin lips parted slyly in a cold grin. Not at all, Commander Warshow. I simply thought Id be civil and walk with you a way, just to swap the news. After all, if youre leaving in four days were not really rivals any more, and
Font size:
Interval:
Bookmark:
Similar books «One-Way Journey»
Look at similar books to One-Way Journey. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.
Discussion, reviews of the book One-Way Journey and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.