• Complain

David Langford - The Spear of the Sun

Here you can read online David Langford - The Spear of the Sun full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 1998, publisher: Dell Magazines, 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.

David Langford The Spear of the Sun

The Spear of the Sun: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "The Spear of the Sun" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

David Langford: author's other books


Who wrote The Spear of the Sun? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

The Spear of the Sun — 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 "The Spear of the Sun" 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.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

The Spear of the Sun

by David Langford

Illustration by Paul Brazier The luxury liner HMS Aquinas sped among the - photo 1

Illustration by Paul Brazier

The luxury liner H.M.S. Aquinas sped among the stars, its great engines devouring distance and defying time. Each porthole offered a lurid glimpse of that colossal pointillist work which God Himself has painted in subtle yet searing star-points upon the black canvas of creation, too vast for any critic ever to step back and see entire. In the main lounge, however, the ships passengers were already jaded by the splendour of the suns and had found a new distraction. For Astron, high celebrant of the newest religion, was weaving dazzling circles of rhetoric around a shabby, blinking priest of the oldest.

Did not a great writer once say that the interstellar spaces are Gods quarantine regulations? I think the blight He had in mind was the blight of men like this, crabbed and joyless celibates who spread their poisoned doctrines of guilt and fear from planet to planet, world after world growing grey with their breath

The crabbed and joyless object of these attentions sipped wine and contrived to look remarkably cheerful. Father Brown was travelling from his parish of Cobhole in England on Old Earth as an emissary to the colony world Pavonia III, where Astron planned to harvest countless converts and (it is to be assumed) decidedly countable cash donations for his Universal Temple of Fire.

For the Church of Fire pays heed to its handmaid Science, and sheds the mouldy baggage of superstition. The living Church of Fire gives respect to the atomic blaze at the heart of every sun, to the divine laws of supersymmetry and chaos theory; the dying church of superstition had nothing to say about either at Vatican III.

The little, pudding-faced priest murmured: We never needed chaos theory to know that the cycles of evil run ever smaller and smaller down the scales of measurement, yet always dreadfully self-similar. But it passed unheeded.

Astron boomed on, remarking that those who obstructed the universal Light would be struck down by the spear of the sun. Indeed he looked every inch the pagan god, with his great height, craggy features and flowing flaxen hair now streaked with silver. A golden sunburst of a ring gleamed on his finger. His acolyte Simon Traill was yet more handsome though less vocal, perhaps a little embarrassed at Astrons taunting. Both wore plain robes of purest white. The group that pressed around consisted chiefly of women; Father Brown noted with interest that red-haired Elizabeth Brayne, whom he knew to be the billionaire heiress of Brayne Interplanetary, pressed closest of all and close in particular to young Traill. She wore the dangerous look of a woman who thinks she knows her own mind.

Damn them, said a voice at Browns ear. Pardon me, Father. But you heard that Astron saying what he thinks of celibacy. He chews women up and spits out the pieces. See Signora Maroni back there with a face like thunder? Shes a bit long in the tooth for Mr. Precious Astron, but for the first two nights of this trip she had something he wanted. Now that somethings in his blasted Temple fund, andWell, perhaps you wouldnt understand.

Oh, stories like this do occasionally crop up in the confessional, said the dumpling-faced priest vaguely, eyeing the dark young man. John Horne was a mining engineer, who until now had talked of nothing but Pavonia IIIs bauxite and the cargo of advanced survey and digging equipment that was travelling out with him. Father Brown knew the generous wrath of simple men, and tried to spread a little calm by enquiring about the space-walk in which several of the passengers had indulged earlier.

Though allowing himself to be diverted for a little time, Horne presently said, Dont you feel a shade hot under the dog-collar when Astron needles you about his Religion of Science and how outdated you are?

Oh yes, science progresses most remarkably, said Father Brown with bumbling enthusiasm. In Sir Isaac Newtons mechanics, you know, it was the three-body problem that didnt have any general solution. Then came Relativity and it was the two-body problem that was troublesome. After that, Quantum Theory found all these complications in the one-body problem, a single particle; and now they tell me that relativistic quantum field theory is stuck at the nobody problem, the vacuum itself. I can hardly wait to hear what tremendous step comes next.

Horne looked at him a little uncertainly.

A silvery chime sounded. Attention, attention. This is the captain speaking. Dinner will be served at six bells. Shortly beforehand there will be a course correction with a temporary boost of acceleration from five-eighths to fifteen-sixteenths g.

I go, said Astron with a kind of stately anger, drawing himself up to his full, impressive height and pulling the deep white cowl of the robe over his head. I go to be alone and meditate over the Sacred Flame. With Traill cowled likewise in his wake, he stalked gigantically from the lounge.

That makes me madder than anything, Horne said gloomily, beginning to amble in the general direction of Elizabeth Brayne. No pipes, no cigarettes, thats an iron ruleand he manages to wangle an eternal flame in his ruddy stateroom. The safety officer would like to kill him.

But it was not the safety officer who came under suspicion when the news raced through the Aquinas like leaves in a mad March wind: that a third lieutenant making final checks before the course change had used a master key and found that great robed figure slumped over the brazier of the Universal Flame, face charred and flowing hair gone to smoke, a scientific seeker who had solved the no-body problem at last.

By a happy chance, ship security had been contracted out to the agency of M. Hercule Flambeau, one-time master criminal and an old friend of Father Brown, who set to in a frenzy of Gallic fervour. Knowing the pudgy little priests power of insight, Flambeau invited him at once to the chamber of death. It was a stark and austere stateroom, distinguished by the wide brazier (its gas flame now extinguished) and the terrible figure that the third lieutenant had dragged from the fire.

He seems to have bent over his wretched flame and prayed, or whatever mumbo-jumbo the cult of Fire uses for prayer, mused Father Brown. Better for him to have looked up and not down, and savoured the stars through that porthole Even the stars look twisted in this accursed place. Might he have died naturally and fallen? That would be ugly enough, but not devilish.

The tall Flambeau drew out a slip of computer paper. My friend, we know to distrust coincidence. The acolyte Traill is nowhere to be found, and the ships records say the nearest airlock has cycled just once, outwards, since Astron left the main lounge an hour ago. Some avenger has made a clean sweep of the Church of Fires mission: one dead in a locked room, one jettisoned. And half the women and all the men out there might have had a potent motive. Were carrying members of rival cults toothe Club of Queer Trades, the Dead Mens Shoes Society, the Ten Teacups, and heaven knows what else. But how in Gods name could any of them get in here?

Dont forget the crabbed priesthood that blights human souls, said the smaller man earnestly. Astron was last seen attacking it with a will, and its representative has an obviously criminal face. Ecce homo. He tapped himself on the chest.

Father Brown, I cannot believe you did this thing.

Well, in confidence, Ill admit to you that I didnt. He bustled curiously about the room, blinking at the oversized bed and peering again through the viewport as though the stars themselves held some elusive clue. Last of all he studied the robed corpses ruined face and pale hands, and shuddered.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «The Spear of the Sun»

Look at similar books to The Spear of the Sun. 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.


Reviews about «The Spear of the Sun»

Discussion, reviews of the book The Spear of the Sun 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.