Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Out Now: The NEW Edition Of William Rotsler's PATRON OF THE ARTS!


Digital Parchment Services (distributed by Futures-PastEditions), through it's Strange Particle Press science fiction imprint, and the estate of William Charles Rotsler is extremely pleased to announce the publication of a brand new edition of William Rotsler's Nebula and Hugo finalist novel, Patron Of The Arts. 

This new edition features never before seen content – including a forward by the Nebula winning Dr. Gregory Benford.  The enhanced ebook version is available now – and a premier trade paperback edition will be coming out in January, 2015.

Coming soon, also from the author's estate and Digital Parchment Services, will be William Rotsler's To The Land Of The Electric AngelFar Frontier, a collection of his short stories, and a book of interviews by and about William Rotsler.

"Patron of the Arts gives us a future where art is a major driver in the culture. He envisions new technologies that deepen our arts and alter how we see our world. Rotsler at the top of his form." –Gregory Benford

Brian Thorne was a billionaire. There were only two things he cared about: women and art. And because he could afford it, he paid the world's finest artist to combine the two, to make a work of art of the unforgettable, incomparable Madelon in the new and extraordinary artform: the sensatron. Then Madelon and the artist disappeared – through the sensatron. And all the money in the world could not help Brian Thorne. To solve the secret of the sensatron, he was strictly on his own...

That is how Brian Thorne, billionaire, found himself helpless—caught in a magnificent crystal creation that grew on Mars, and without any resources even if he could get away from the killers who trapped him there. For although they knew he was Brian Thorne, he couldn't prove it. To find Madelon and the sensatron, he had gone to considerable trouble to cover his tracks. Now he wished he had not been so thorough in turning his back on the luxury-lined and very well-guarded life he lived back on Earth. Now, when it was too late! 


"A fine novel!" –Harlan Ellison

Special introductory price $2.99 (regularly $4.99)

ISBN: 9781615085828

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

DIGITAL PARCHMENT SERVICES ANNOUNCES The Republication of Ernest Hogan's Controversial Science Fiction Romp CORTEZ ON JUPITER


DIGITAL PARCHMENT SERVICES ANNOUNCES
The Republication of Ernest Hogan's Controversial Science Fiction Romp
Cortez On Jupiter

"Ernest Hogan is the creator of a Xicano science fiction genre with a crossover readership. …raw creativity." 
–Frank S Lechuga 

Digital Parchment Services through its Strange Particle Press science fiction imprint, and Ernest Hogan, are extremely proud to announce the publication of a brand new trade paperback edition of Hogan's Locus Award finalist science fiction novel, Cortez On Jupiter.  

The enhanced ebook version of Cortez On Jupiter, which contains a new introduction about the writing of this highly controversial novel which introduced Chicano tropes to science fiction, is available now – and a premier trade paperback edition will be coming out in January, 2015.

Hogan, who describes himself as "–a recombocultural Chicano mutant, known for committing outrageous acts of science fiction and other questionable pursuits" has had stories published with great acclaim in publications such as Amazing Stories, Analog, Science Fiction Age, Semiotext(e)SF, and many others.

Cortez On Jupiter will be followed by Ernest Hogan's High AztechTezcatlipoca Blues, and a collection of Ernest Hogan's short stories: Pancho Villa's Flying Circus.

Cortez On Jupiter is the story of a wild young Chicano artist who covers Greater Los Angeles with fantastic graffiti and a beautiful African telepath who opens the door to communications with the deadly Sirens of Jupiter. 

Not since Ayn Rand's Howard Roarke has there been an artist as iconoclastic, as idealistic, and as splendidly spectacular as Pablo Cortez. And look out, he's twice as radical! 

Combining hard science fiction with pyrotechnics worthy of The Stars, My Destination, Ernest Hogan tells the story of the painter who founds the Guerrilla Muralists Of Los Angeles, goes on to make Mankind's first contact with the sentient life-forms of Jupiter. 

It's a roller-coaster ride from vulgarity to the transcendent, as the unforgettable Pablo Cortez struggles, selfishly and selflessly, to expand humanity's consciousness on a journey from the barrio to the stars. 

"Hard SF, satire, adventure, and some very strange humor combine in this intriguing, inventive, and sometimes disconcerting SF story." 
Science Fiction Chronicle

"An alien first contact story featuring a hyperactive, irreverent, and self-absorbed Chicano artist from East LA. Cortez is recruited to make contact with creatures discovered on Jupiter who "speak" in projected images. It's a dangerous assignment; previous attempts to communicate have ended in insanity and death, but Pablo is always up for a little bit of craziness." 
–Michael Lichter, Amazon 

"It grabs you and won't let you go. The best [first novel] I've read in science fiction since Neuromancer."
–Tom Witmore, Locus

"Energetic, fast-paced, funny, and thoroughly enjoyable." 
Analog

"If Hunter S Thompson and Alfred Bester had a Chicano child, it would be this." 
–Dave Hutchinson 

Prepublication price $3.99 - regularly $5.99
ISBN: 9781615085804

Review copies: M.Christian, Digital Parchment Services Publisher m.christian@digitalparchmentservices.com

Digital Parchment Services is a complete ebook and print service for literary estates and literary agents. The founders of Digital Parchment Services are pioneers in digital publishing who have collectively published over 2,500 ebooks and PoD paperbacks since 1998. 


DPS clients include the estates of multiple Hugo winning author William Rotsler, and science fiction legend Jody Scott; authors such as Locus Award finalist Ernest Hogan, Hugo and Nebula nominee Arthur Byron Cover, prize winning mystery author Jerry Oster, psychologist John Tamiazzo, Ph.D., award winning nutritionist Ann Tyndall; and Best of Collections from Fate Magazine and Amazing Stories.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

READ FREE SAMPLE CHAPTERS LARRY MADDOCK'S SF ADVENTURE CLASSIC "SWORD OF LANKOR"

SWORD OF LANKOR
 BY JACK OWEN JARDINE WRITING AS "LARRY MADDOCK"


All rights reserved

Copyright © 1966 Jack Owen Jardine


PROLOGUE

The golden sphere was twice the size of a man's head and floated without apparent support a few inches above the worn cobblestones in the open courtyard of the Temple of Wabbis Ka'arbu, the two-faced God of Battle worshipped throughout most of the planet Lankor. It had appeared about an hour earlier high above its present position and had drifted lazily down through the clouds which enveloped the planet.
The Sphere's arrival had occasioned mixed reactions, for Taveeshe was a practical city as well as a God-fearing community, a bustling seaport and the business hub of the western shore of the continent. News of the Sphere's descent spread quickly along the waterfront, in the merchants' quarter, through the royal palace, in the shops of the city's notorious bazaar and, of course, within the Temple itself.
All manner of people converged quickly upon the Temple courtyard. There was, for instance, the fat merchant Boorill, who had made a small fortune from the sale of religious items, and who saw the possibilities inherent in the Golden Sphere immediately. He dispatched a runner to fetch the chief of the goldsmith's guild. The sooner he got a cost estimate the sooner he could begin taking orders. There was no doubt, Boorill assured himself, that for a reasonable percentage the High Priest would grant the Seal of Ka'arbu as he had done on the jeweled daggers in the past, thereby making them a Boorill exclusive.
Another whose day was appreciably brightened by the Golden Sphere's arrival was a furry, rotund little man from far-off Kendsahr, Gaar by name, Oracle by profession. If his luck were with him he would be kept quite profitably occupied for the next few days interpreting, in guarded verse, the True Meaning of the Visitation. Mentally, he began auditioning an assortment of True Meanings while staring thoughtfully at the Golden Sphere.
Captain Doark Rudn'l of the Royal Taveeshian Guards looked upon the Golden Sphere as a very good omen indeed, arriving as it had upon his birthday. With a ceremonial flourish designed as much to please the young man's vanity and impress the crowd as it was to propitiate the Battle God, he drew his sword and attempted to lay the end of it against the Golden Sphere. It never made contact, but stopped a hand's breadth away. Doark Rudn'l's face became rigid and his muscles twitched convulsively – a moment later the handsome young captain fell over dead.
Drangu, a professional thief who had been covetously eyeing the Golden Sphere for several minutes and plotting how best to make off with it, decided at that instant to abandon the project.
Froi, a priest who served the Battle God, emerged from the Temple and strode thoughtfully up to the curious globe. Curtly, he ordered the body of the dead guardsman removed. Tall and solemn in his blood-red robes, he gazed at the orb for several minutes. Then he sighed deeply, turned and disappeared into the darkness of the Temple.
A sound ran through the crowd, echoing the priest's sigh. A half-grown child tugged at his mother's skirt. "Perhaps it is a sign from Wabbis Ka'arbu," he whispered. She slapped at his hand but the whisper was repeated by a voice nearby, and a moment later it was an expanding echo which rippled through the crowd and, in the space of two days, through the entire kingdom.

CHAPTER ONE: THURON OF ULMEKOOR

Thuron of Ulmekoor hurled the first blue-skinned guardsman against the tavern wall and turned to pluck another from the one-sided battle. Laughter rumbled in his chest as he ploughed once more into the center of the fray. He had been too many days on the Taveeshi, a freighter with no excuse for action. Joyously, he picked up the second man, swung him through the air and slammed him hard against the stone floor.
The other blue-skins were beginning to notice him now. Their vicious reputation had kept the rest of the tavern's patrons at a distance, but to Thuron it was a challenge he could not resist.
It was not his fight, anyway, which made the contest doubly delightful. He had never met the rotund little man from the jungles of Kendsahr who was the focus of the attack, but the sight of eight burly guardsmen ganging up on the lone, unarmed victim was all the excuse he needed.
The Kend screamed in terror as one of the soldiers lunged at him with a gleaming dagger. Thuron reached out, grasped the attacker's wrist with steely fingers and spun the man headfirst into a sturdy post. The dagger clattered to the floor and the fat, furry little Kend lifted his robes and skipped out of range, his magnificently plumed tail floating behind him.
Thuron's taste for adventure was something which had been with him since earliest boyhood, when he had roamed the ice-caves of Ulmekoor to his father's proud delight and his mother's ill-concealed terror. His love of danger was fortunate, for he was not the sort of man whom others will easily allow the sedentary life. Broad of shoulder, mighty of sinew, a full head taller than most of his race, Thuron had learned as a youth that other men expected him to accept every challenge and to excel in the arts of battle. Adventure followed him about like a friendly puppy, a circumstance which he thoroughly enjoyed and without which, indeed, he would have wondered if his life was entirely worthwhile.
There was no need for the Ulmekoorian to wonder now, however, for the guardsmen's wrath was guaranteed to keep him pleasantly occupied for the next several minutes. Five blades glittered in the torchlight as the five remaining blue-skins turned their attention to this tawny stranger who had spoiled their sport.
The Ulmekoorian brought No'ondo'or singing out of its scabbard and braced himself to meet the charge. His eyes flashed, his lips curled back from his teeth and a snarl of defiance boiled deep in his throat. There was a deathly stillness as all eyes watched the stranger who dared defy the Taveeshian guards. Two of them sprang forward, slicing at him with their sharp, two-sided blades. He parried a thrust, ducked under the sword and neatly skewered the first of his opponents, then laid the other flat with a smashing sword-blow against the side of the man's head.
Thuron brandished No'ondo'or above his head. "There's steel enough here for a dozen more of you motherless curs!" he cried.
The remaining three blue-skins darted in, swords glinting wickedly. Thuron edged warily away, the wolfish grin still on his face. From the sidelines, a heavy stool caught him on the shoulder, knocking him momentarily off balance.
One of the three soldiers took advantage of the distraction to leap forward and swing his blade in a murderous arc which drew a line of cold fire along the Ulmekoorian's right arm. Ignoring the pain, Thuron circled the man, luring him away from his comrades. The other patrons scattered in panic as the two swordsmen faced each other, their flashing blades ringing sparks as each parried the other's attack. The tawny giant grinned as he realized the nameless guardsman's skill almost matched his own, but he could not have lived so long had he failed to learn every trick of swordplay ever used on Lankor. Slowly, he forced his opponent back, then with a sudden twist of his wrist disarmed the man and followed through with a vicious thrust which ended the Taveeshian's career forever.
Thuron jerked his weapon free and turned to face his remaining attackers. Instead of the two he had expected, however, there was only one, who presented no problem for he lay crumpled on the floor. The furry Kend knelt beside him, a large metal wine jug in his hands. The little man was methodically beating the unconscious guardsman's head with the jug. "Fort-unashveerr," he panted, his whiskers quivering with rage. "That takes you out of the fight, sloordr."
Noticing Thuron, he scrambled to his feet and bowed deeply. "Command me, sire. My life, my worldly goods, my wits are yours. Command me."
"Then run, brother," chuckled the Ulmekoorian, wiping his blade on the prostrate soldier. "And may the Gods keep you."
"Perhaps we had best both run," the Kend ventured. "One of the motherless sloords slipped out – to get reinforcements, no doubt."
Sheathing his sword, Thuron saluted the little man and sprinted out the side door of the waterfront tavern into the green-lit darkness of Lankorian night. He fled down the street with a long easy lope that covered distance without robbing him of breath. Rounding the first corner he stopped to peer back around the building. There was little chance that more soldiers could have arrived so quickly, but Thuron had learned that caution can lengthen a swordsman's life. As he paused, the fat little Kend, robes held knee-high, dashed around the corner and collided violently with the Ulmekoorian. Thuron grabbed the Kend by his furry scruff and lifted him until they were face to face.
"Look you, brother," he growled, shaking the Kend, "I took leave of you at the tavern. Go your own way."
"I may not, lord," the little man sputtered. "By the laws of Kendsahr, I am yours for a year and a day to do with as your will commands. You have saved my life. I may not leave your side."
The tawny giant swore and shook the Kend until his teeth rattled. "Is that your reason," he demanded, "for flinging the stool at my head?"
"Can I help it if my aim was bad?" squealed the little man. "Believe me, sire, it was a most grievous error. I meant it for the head of one of those sloords." He drooped abjectedly in Thuron's grasp.
The Ulmekoorian roared with laughter and dropped the furry one to the ground. "Whether you belong to me or not is a question we will settle later. Do you know this area?"
Smiling blandly, the Kend smoothed his whiskers. "Lord," he said modestly, "I could make my way through it blindfolded. Whatever you desire, I will help you find."
"Then find a way out of here," Thuron replied.
"Follow me, lord." He scuttled off into the green shadows and Thuron strode easily in his wake.
Overhead, Lankor's largest moon illuminated a patch of the perpetual cloud cover with a dull green glow. Bushes and small trees assumed eerie shapes and buildings loomed sinisterly. If one were easily subject to hysteria and feelings of persecution, it required no effort at all to let the imagination fill the shadows with deadly, soft-padding xat and packs of stealthy, swift-moving sloords. Either species could attack with such ferocity that even a trained swordsman stood little chance of survival against them. Thuron kept his senses sharply alert for possible signs of danger, but the only sounds were the scurrying footfalls of his new companion.
For nearly a quarter of an hour they traveled between dark buildings and along shadow-infested alleys, sticking to the back streets to avoid the busier thoroughfares where they might encounter guardsmen who by now might well have been alerted. Thuron spent a brief moment doubting the Kend and mentally cursing himself and the impulse that had made him follow the rotund one. He had only the Kend's word that they were headed for safety. Still, he seemed to know the way and the Ulmekoorian was a total stranger to the city. Although the tawny giant's senses were alert to all possible dangers, there seemed to be no dangers at all. The streets were quiet, aside from the distant night-sounds found in any city.
Presently, the Kend darted through a gate into an enclosed courtyard and motioned Thuron to follow. He did so warily, one hand on the familiar haft of No'ondo'or. The blade hissed from its scabbard the instant Thuron saw the giant ork which stood in the center of the garden. "Look out!" he cried warningly.
"Do not be alarmed, sire," the Kend replied calmly. "It is only shrubbery, tortured into a likeness of the giant bird." He dusted off a chair with his robe and bowed to Thuron.
"Sit down and rest, sire. We will be safe here. The house belongs to a friend of mine who has been called away on a journey. We can spend the night here if you wish...."
"I'll not spend the night in hiding," Thuron replied curtly, sheathing his sword. "That fits me not at all. Tell me, man from Kendsahr, have you a name"
"It is Gaar, sire. Gaar of the proud family of..."
"Enough!" bellowed the giant. "All I asked was your name, not your history. I am Thuron of Ulmekoor. Why were those guards trying to kill you?"
Gaar's head drooped. "Alas, lord, it was all a misunderstanding. A trifle, really. I am an Oracle by trade but it has not been too lucrative an occupation of late. I've been forced by cruel economic circumstances to turn to conjuring in order to exist. I was – er – performing a few wonders for the guards when they accused me of thievery." Gaar paused and spread his hands in a gesture of bewilderment. "All I did was make some worthless trinkets disappear."
As Thuron watched, Gaar made a flourish with one hand and seemed to pluck a guardsman's ring from midair, "I was going to give it back," he added in an injured tone of voice.
Thuron roared with laughter and slapped the little man on the back. "What else did you make vanish, my honest purloiner?"
Gaar grinned sheepishly and reached inside his robe, producing a jeweled dagger, a bracelet of the Captain's rank and a leather purse that jingled encouragingly. "Souvenirs, sire," he said apologetically.
Thuron hefted the purse thoughtfully. "Since they have no further use for it," he mused, "it will buy us a fine dinner."
He turned as if to go and Gaar became instantly alarmed. "They will be watching for us, Lord Thuron," he warned. "An alarm has most certainly gone out for us."
"Let them watch," Thuron replied, slapping No'ondo'or. "I shall be watching for them, too."
"It would be wiser," Gaar persisted, "to remain out of sight for a few days."
The tawny Ulmekoorian threw back his head and laughed. "If I quivered with fear every time I made an enemy I would spend my life in hiding!" he snorted. "Life is too short for that. Tell me of a fine tavern where one may fill one's belly with good food."
Gaar sighed patiently and pulled at his whiskers. Then he shrugged. "I know an excellent place in the bazaar, lord. The walls are covered with the finest cloths and on them are many weapons – swords, maces, shields and spears. Between them are mounted the heads of the long-toothed ptahr, the striped urreep and the treacherous xat. Also, there are festoons of..."
"Spare me the decorations!" Thuron bellowed impatiently. "How is the food?"
"Plentiful, Lord Thuron. I have dined there many times and can personally vouch for its quality. I am sure you will find it to your liking."
"We will waste no more time here, then. Take me to this place you speak of. But I warn you, Gaar, the food had better be the finest!"
Keeping to the shadows, they hurried towards the center of the city, towards the fabled Taveeshian bazaar where any man with a fat purse could buy whatever he desired, be it animal, vegetable, mineral – or human. In the bazaar, cutthroats, thieves and sailors mingled freely with the high born, and no questions were asked. Color and nationality were ignored in the bazaar. Mercenaries, noblemen, priests and prostitutes were on an equal footing until their money ran out. A high wall with many arches surrounded the area.
Thuron and Gaar approached one of these entrances with senses sharply tuned for danger. It was not uncommon, Gaar whispered, for murderers and assassins to lurk in the shadows of the arches, for the unspoken immunity of the bazaar itself did not extend beyond the wall. Only fools and fugitives, he pointed out, dared venture near the gates alone.
"We have the best of friends with us," Thuron chided, slapping the hilt of No'ondo'or.
"I trust your eyes are as sharp as your sword, sire," the other muttered darkly.
"My eyes and my appetite both. Where is this place you spoke of?"
"Just inside the wall, lord," Gaar assured him.
The street was quiet and the archway seemed deserted as they drew closer. On the other side of the wall a thousand torches pushed back the night, but the archway itself remained in sinister shadow.
A slight noise caused Thuron to reach for his blade, but before he could draw it both he and his small companion were shrouded in a large, weighted net which tangled around them, its impact knocking them off their feet. As they struggled to free themselves they were set upon by a dozen ruffians swinging heavy lengths of chain.
"Aieeee!" squealed the terrified Kend. "I warned you it was dangerous, sire!"
Thuron grabbed the net in both hands as close to the ground as he could reach and jerked upwards just as the first of the attackers came within chain-swinging range. Their feet flew out from under them as the Ulmekoorian's powerful muscles pulled against the heavy mesh. Raising his arms overhead, he put his full weight into throwing the slack he'd gained back in the same direction, so it fell over his enemies.
Gaar had immediately curled into a furry ball so as to present as small a target as possible for the murderous links—now he suddenly felt the edge of the net slide over him. Cautiously, he opened his eyes and saw that indeed he was free, although the mighty Thuron was still enmeshed.
Gaar stood up and was about to scurry for cover when he was seized by an inspiration. He blinked twice, examining the idea for flaws, then bellowed at the top of his squeaky voice:
"Fall back, you fools! Fall back or feel the wrath of Wabbis Ka'arbu!"
The acoustics of the stone archway lent startling authority to the little Kend's voice—the effect of it stopped the attackers in their tracks.
"Wabbis Ka'arbu!" several of them murmured in awe.
"Aye!" shouted Gaar. "You have attacked the Son of the Baffle God himself! Free him at once!"
There were sounds of confusion as the mob untangled itself and Thuron from the net. Then a voice challenged, "What proof have we that this is truly the Son of Wabbis Ka'arbu?"
Thuron, freed at last, quietly unsheathed No'ondo'or and waited in the darkness to see where this amazing conversation would lead.
"Zorm, y'heard the golden ball yourself. He's strong enough, ain't he?"
"And brave enough," another said.
"Maybe we better not, Zorm."
"Bloody cowards!" spat Zorm.
Gaar scuttled through the inky darkness toward the faint glint of Thuron's blade. "Do not interrupt, lord," he whispered. "No one will attack the Son of Wabbis Ka'arbu."
"C'mon out where we can look y'over, Holy One," Zorm taunted.
"Aye," the mob agreed, pressing forward.
Thuron grinned in amusement, too curious now to object. "Into the street it is!" he boomed, his huge voice reverberating in the archway.
The mob of blue-skins, with Thuron and Gaar in its center, moved out of the shadows and into the green glow of the street, the Ulmekoorian towering above his attackers. His face wore an angry scowl and his dark green eyes blazed defiantly.
The ruffians regarded him with mingled fear and skepticism. Quickly, before their leader could undermine the effect, Gaar continued:
"My Master will prove his godhood in the arena tomorrow."
"Then what's he doin' here at this time o' night?" challenged Zorm.
"We were on our way to register for the Battle Games, dolt!" Gaar bellowed.
Zorm bowed mockingly. "Don't let us stop you, Holy One."
"Beware of how you speak to him," Gaar squeaked indignantly. "This is the Chosen One, the one of whom the Golden Sphere has predicted. Know ye that those who disbelieve will die dishonored by the Battle God."
The Kend closed his eyes and began to sway, murmuring under his breath. The murmur grew into a soft chant which increased in volume as the Oracle's voice hit melodic bell tones.
"Oh, Mighty One," he sang, "Oh God of the Two Faces, Mighty Wabbis Ka'arbu, know ye that your Chosen One is being maligned by unbelievers, by infidels. Send us an omen that these fatherless ones will know how noble, how truly Holy is Thy Son."
Thuron's awe was just as great as that of the bandits as the chant rang out loudly, then ceased. The round little body stopped swaying – after a spasmodic jerk it became a rigid. Slowly, Gaar began to speak:
"Born on Lankor, battle bred, His destiny, 'tis truly said,
Will be to wear the victor's robe
As foretold by the golden globe!
Brave men will fall by this man's sword
To prove on Lankor he is Lord!
Forever men will sing his deeds–
This Son of mine, whom battle feeds!"
Thuron, although no judge of such things and admittedly prejudiced in the little man's favor, had to admit the poets of his native Ulmekoor were more to his liking. But Thuron was less concerned with esthetics than with the gratifying effect Gaar's startling performance was having upon the blue-skins. They fell back in awe, shuffling their feet nervously and glancing at each other.
Thuron felt a shiver run up his spine. What manner of man had he rescued, who now rescued him with so fantastic an action as this? True, Gaar had introduced himself as an Oracle, but Thuron had refused until now to take him seriously. Was it a conjuror's deception to distract the attention of his audience, or was the Kend really what he claimed to be? The thundering voice which emanated from the little man was unnerving in the extreme.
Gaar's chant ended and he threw his arms up, swayed and collapsed in a small heap on the cobblestones. Thuron sprang forward. Recoiling from the sudden move, Zorm and his gang took to their heels. As if by magic, the night swallowed them up.
Thuron took no notice. He cradled Gaar gently in his arms and strode purposefully towards the black archway. Inside the bazaar there would be someone to help, perhaps an alchemist who could bring the furry man back to consciousness.
The huge Ulmekoorian had taken no more than three steps, however, when Gaar's eyes flickered and he drew a deep breath. "Put me down, sire!" he squeaked indignantly. "I'm no infant to be carried. Indeed, an Oracle gets used to these seizures. The collapse at the end is naught but a momentary discomfort."
Thuron set him on his feet and the little man combed his ears with his fur-covered hands, stroked his whiskers and arranged his robes. The Ulmekoorian watched the little dandy in amused exasperation, but hunger pangs quickly reminded him of their original purpose.
"Come, my dapper friend," the tawny giant rumbled. "The hour grows late. Zorm and his friends may recover from their fear and return."
The Kend ceased stroking his ears immediately. "We must make haste," he agreed, "before the inn closes." So saying, he scuttled off. Shaking with silent laughter, Thuron followed at an easy pace.
Gaar went straight to the tavern he had described earlier. The Ulmekoorian was duly impressed, for the decorations were exotic, the food excellent and the wines fit for Wabbis Ka'arbu himself. Thuron ate steadily until his hunger had abated, then washed the first two courses down with a goblet of wine as large as a man's fist, wiped his hands on the cloth provided and glowered at Gaar.
"Now, my friend, you may explain a few things to me. I admit that you saved us both from serious injury at the hands of those ruffians, but I still don't understand how you did it. What is this fantastic invention of yours that I am the Son of the Battle God?"
Gaar stared at him, his eyes narrowing. "Where have you been, lord, that you know not of the Golden Sphere?"
"Aboard a ship," Thuron replied. "Traveling from Rahrnhu at the – ah – request of the Rahrn guards." The Ulmekoorian smiled, remembering the events which had led to his hasty departure, and refilled his wineglass. "There was a small disagreement about the reward for my services. Fortunately, I had collected it in advance, for it paid for a most luxurious passage." Thuron chuckled, recalling the expression on the face of the Lord High Commissioner of Rahrnhu. "In fact, the guards even tried to give me an escort to the ship, but I was too fleet for them." He wiped his lips and his eyes twinkled. "I did wave farewell from the rail as we sailed off, though."
Years of practicing his profession had sharpened to a fine edge Gaar's ability to judge character, estimate the degree of a client's gullibility and probe for more meanings than any man would volunteer. Now he scrambled to his feet, assuming an expression of hurt dignity.
"Know you, my Lord Thuron," he said sternly, "Oracles have certain standards, certain ethics. We do not work in the company of thieves. Were it not for the fact that you saved my life..."
"No man calls me thief!" Thuron bellowed, grabbing the front of Gaar's robe and dragging him across the table. "Many things I am but I am no thief! The money I took in Rahrnhu was for services performed for their King. I seek adventure, aye, but I give my full measure of service."
Disgustedly, he flung the Kend from him. Gaar slid across the tabletop, slick with meat drippings and spilled wine, and dropped from sight on the other side. Instantly, the Oracle was on his feet again.
"Forgive me, sire! Mercy!" he pleaded. "I meant no harm, but did not express myself clearly. Never did I think you thief. Oh, my stupid tongue! All I wish, sire, is to serve a man as noble as you."
Thuron's forgiveness was as quick as his rage. He picked up the Kend's overturned wine goblet and refilled it, then handed it to the little man. A waiter arrived with a steaming platter of meat and set it between the two of them. Thuron speared a morsel and popped it into his mouth, grinning all the while at his furry friend.
"You started to explain this Golden Sphere," he said calmly.
Gaar picked bits of food off the front of his robe, smoothed his whiskers and sat down. "My pleasure, Lord Thuron. It is a Golden Sphere – so big – which descended from the heavens and floats at this moment in the courtyard of Wabbis Ka'arbu. Had you been in Taveeshe more than a few hours you certainly would have heard of its arrival, and how after eight days a thin metal tendril grew from it and reached toward the heavens. The city boils with speculation over the message which then came from this mysterious golden orb. Are you sure you have not heard any of this."
"Would I ask if I had?" Thuron demanded irritably.
"No-o-o-o," Gaar allowed, thoughtfully. "At any rate, the next morning the silver tendril went up again. This time the Golden Sphere spoke. I will try to recall the exact words."
Gaar leaned forward and lowered his voice. "'Citizens of Lankor,' it said. 'The voice of Wabbis Ka'arbu commands you. Gather around. It is time to announce the coming of my Son, the Promised One whom my priests await, the Holy One who will bring honor to Lankor, the Mighty One who will defeat all enemies, the Brave One who will triumph over every trial, the Victorious One who will lead the soldiers of Taveeshe in righteous battle to fulfill the Sacred Quest.
"'But hear me well. He knows not that he is the Son of Wabbis Ka'arbu. As a child, courage was in his blood, power in his arms, adventure in his heart. Full grown, he is the mightiest of men. His sword knows no defeat, nor shall it in his lifetime. The Promised One now is ready to learn his true identity, to prove his Godhood, to assume the victor's robe and lead the true believers into battle for the glory of Wabbis Ka'arbu.'"
Thuron licked his lips and put down the remains of a dripping joint of meat, then cleaned his hands on the wiping cloth. "I see," he said slowly. "That is why you name me the Son of the Battle God. You think that I..."
Gaar shrugged his shoulders and twiddled his whiskers. "Perhaps, lord. You well may be. But I sought only to impress the ruffians. The King has guaranteed immunity to all who claim that honor."
"And what was that you said about the Battle Games?" Thuron asked warily.
"The King again. Oh, 'tis true some say the High Priest requested it, but it has been my observation that the two of them are too much at each other's throats, like two cubs in a xat litter, for the King to honor such a request. For this reason I suspect it is the King's doing alone. Either way, the Battle Games were declared to be the quickest way to find the Mighty One. They will take place tomorrow at the Royal Taveeshian Arena. The King has offered to put up all the contestants at the Royal Adamar."
The Ulmekoorian whistled softly. "I have heard that's the finest lodging place in the city."
"Aye," Gaar agreed. "Great honor, much power and considerable wealth will fall to him who wears the victor's robe tomorrow."
A thoughtful silence fell between the two friends. Thuron dipped a chunk of bread in the rich meat juices and carried it skillfully to his mouth. Gaar nibbled daintily on a sweetmeat.
"I came to Taveeshe," Thuron mused, gazing into his wine, "to seek a diverting and perhaps profitable adventure. Where does my luck lead? To a fight not of my own choosing to rescue an ill-favored Oracle from a fate he probably well deserved. I am set upon by cutthroats and, finally, I am proclaimed the Son of Wabbis Ka'arbu! All this within a few hours of my arrival in this city, and before I have even had a chance to fill my belly." The Ulmekoorian grinned and drained the cup. "It seems I need not seek my fortune, brother Gaar. My fortune has gone to much trouble in order to seek me."
"What do you mean, Lord Thuron?"
"This, my friend. By this time tomorrow I shall either be slain – or the most honored mortal in the
kingdom."
Gaar blinked his large golden eyes. "You mean to enter the Battle Games, sire?"
"Why not? Did you not predict it?"
"I meant only to impress the ruffians," Gaar stammered, pulling at the ears set high on his head. "Might not discretion be wiser, my lord?"
Thuron smiled recklessly. "You named me Son of the Battle God, brother. What need have I for discretion? Come, we waste time. Show me to the place where I can register for these games."


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Tuesday, October 21, 2014

READ FREE CHAPTER 1 TIME-TRAVEL CLASSIC [AGENT OF T.E.R.R.A. SERIES] "THE FLYING SAUCER GAMBIT"


AGENT OF T.E.R.R.A. # 1

THE FLYING SAUCER GAMBIT


LARRY MADDOCK

(Jack Owen Jardine)




Webley, Hannibal Fortune, The Agent of T.E.R.R.A., and the characters featured in the series of novels so named are the creations of and copyright by Jack Owen Jardine 1966, 1967, 1969, and the sole property of his heir and daughter Sabra Jardine,

OTHER T.E.R.R.A. STORIES BU LARRY MADDOCK

The Adventures of Webley, Agent of T.E.R.R.A. (prequel)

#0.1 Creatures, Incorporated

#0.2 Alien for Hire

#0.3 When in Doubt


The Adventures of Hannibal Fortune, Agent of T.E.R.R.A.

#1 The Flyng Saucer Gambit

#2 The Golden Goddess Gambit

#3 The Emerald Elephant Gambit

#4 The Time Trap Gambit



CONTENTS


04:34:30

 CHAPTER TWO


 CHAPTER THREE


 CHAPTER FOUR


 CHAPTER FIVE


 CHAPTER SIX


 CHAPTER SEVEN





 CHAPTER NINE





CHAPTER ONE

04:34:30



SOROBIN KIMBALL finished his report and rewound the tape.  "That ought to bring some action," be said to the small monkey curled up in the armchair across the room.  The monkey nodded agreement, blinking owlishly.

"You're not very talkative tonight," Kimball observed.

The monkey shrugged.  Kimball cued the tape, set the playback to ten times record speed and turned the transmitter filaments on.  Transmission would take two minutes and twenty-three seconds, perilously close to the maximum allowed.  But he'd had a lot to report

It was the first time in twenty years that he'd had to fire up the transmitter for more than a six or eight second burst.  He knew the dangers.  If Empire or, more specifically, Drofox Johrgol's branch of the ruthless organization was onto him, one minute would be enough for them to triangulate his position exactly.  It would be far safer to split the report up into six or seven segments and beam one each night to T.E.R.R.A. Control.  But there wasn't time for that.

He and Glarrk had talked it over and decided to take their chances.  Quite possibly Johrgol's boys would be napping, wouldn't have anyone near enough to strike.  It was a calculated risk which both of them were willing to take.

Kimball set the timer.  Figuring the rotation of the earth, the tight beam of his transmission and the distance to its destination, Control would be able to pick him up from 04:32:20 until 04:34:55, at which time the trailing edge of the beam would sweep across their receptors and fan out across the Milky Way.  He looked at the clock.  2:17.

Unhurriedly—for Sorobin Kimball was not a man easily given to excitement—he went to the pantry and built a sandwich of peanut butter, bologna, lettuce and catsup.  "You might as well eat," he remarked to his companion.  "There's nothing much else we can do."

The monkey scampered across the floor and leaped to the edge of the counter, taking a slice of bologna and rolling it into a tight tube, then wrapping a piece of bread around it.  Quietly, both ate.  There was no need for further conversation.

At 04:32:07 they heard the throb of the huge generator, its deep-pitched hum changing rapidly to a whine that soon wafted beyond audible range.

At 04:32:20 a solenoid rammed home and the tape reels began to spin.  Kimball turned off the lights and stepped outside, leaving the door ajar.  The automatic sensors which ringed the small farmhouse would detect Empire activity before he'd be able to see anything, but he looked anyway.

At 04:33:42 a fast-moving light appeared in the southern sky, streaking towards him.  It took exactly fourteen seconds to reach him.  Although he knew it was futile, Kimball whipped out his gun and fired at the hovering craft.

Almost immediately he felt giddy.  Staggering back into the house, he flipped on the lights and aimed at the spinning tapes.  Four shots destroyed the recorder, sending up a shower of ruined tape.  The monkey leaped at his head and sank sharp teeth into his left ear.  Kimball ripped the beast away and shot at it as it scampered to safety behind a large couch.  Three more shots tore huge holes in the couch.  The generator slowed, whining down to audibility.

Now the door burst open and a man in a tight-fitting black suit aimed a silver tube at Kimball.  Snarling, Kimball whirled to meet this new threat, but he was too slow.  A beam of brilliant orange light bathed his body and etched his shadow against the smoldering wall behind him in the split second before Sorobin Kimball turned to vapor.

The black-suited Empire agent holstered his weapon and walked outside to the skimmer which hovered twenty feet from the door.  A ramp yawned open and the man walked inside.

At 04:35:14 the skimmer hurtled away into the Kansas sky.

Inside the farmhouse, the trembling monkey huddled over a tiny crack in the floor, behind the ruined couch.  Gradually his body seemed to deflate, as if it were flowing through the crack—which indeed it was.  Within minutes, the only trace left of the room's former occupants was the silhouette of a man with a gun etched against one wall.


CHAPTER TWO

FANCY MEETING YOU HERE



EARTH LOOKED little different to Hannibal Fortune than it had when he had last seen it almost two hundred years ago.  That had been in the time of Napoleon; Fortune had been half of a Resident Team then, their task to prod the Corsican corporal into becoming the Emperor of France.  Fortune sighed, those had been the days.  Champagne, parties, swordplay, wenches of various talents and temperaments; he wondered if any of their descendants had turned out as insanely wonderful.

It was not part of his assignment to speculate upon the romantic proclivities of Earth's female population, but it would have been entirely out of character for Hannibal Fortune to have done otherwise, even in the most harrowing circumstances.  It was partly because of his customary attention to such extraneous detail and partly despite it that he was rated among Temporal Entropy Restructure and Repair Agency's top half-dozen operatives.  Somehow it contributed to Fortune's fantastic knack for snatching victory out of the ashes of defeat, which had earned him the coveted License to Tamper—for when one is restructuring a timeline, a seemingly extraneous event can often turn into a crucial pivot point.

Never having been a pawn, the handsome, debonair agent was often referred to by those in the Agency's upper echelons as a Bishop or Rook in the mind-staggering chess game between the Federation and Empire.  The mere fact that it was Hannibal Fortune and not some lesser agent who had been assigned to find out what had happened to Sorobin Kimball guaranteed the gambit to be of the highest priority, a mission of great urgency.  The fact that his tour of the Seven Planets had been interrupted by the emergency may have had something to do with his current speculations on the amorous inclinations of Earth's present female population.  Nevertheless, he did not allow it to intrude upon the immediate task at hand, which was to conceal the temporal transporter which had brought him and his partner Webley through time and space to their present location.

The machine was a streamlined model, equipped with all the gadgetry T.E.R.R.A.'s technicians could build into it, including a remote phase-out control which looked remarkably like a mid-20th Century wristwatch.  A time machine no matter how you looked at it, Fortune mused, thumbing the control stem.  The bulky transporter winked out of sight, temporally phased ninety degrees ahead of itself.  That part of it was easy, like pushing a button; getting it back was the tricky part, Hannibal reminded himself.  It was a little like pushing a button that would kill you if you happened to shift your position to the wrong place once you'd pushed it.  The techs had been very specific on that point, putting on the airs of superiority that techs often resort to when in the presence of mere operatives.

"Clever, huh?" Fortune said aloud.

"Astonishing," Webley's bored voice hissed three inches from his left ear.  "Someday they'll teach 'em to think; and the machines will take over completely."

"Ready to start hunting?"

In answer, Webley flowed into a compact ball, dragging his semi-solid other half delicately across the back of Fortune's neck.  Hannibal shifted his stance accordingly, for his partner, although light on his pseudopods, weighed almost fifteen pounds.  It took but a few seconds for the symbiote to reassemble himself, warping his pliant protoplasm into a working semblance of a large bird.  A moment later, without a word of farewell, Webley flapped off into the night.  It was one of his favorite forms, and a good one for reconnaissance.

Fortune, more conventionally constructed, was stuck with the limitations of his man-shape.  He could neither flow, fly nor flit, nor was he telepathic like his partner.  But his dossier at T.E.R.R.A. Control left no doubt that if anyone could find out what had happened to Sorobin Kimball, Hannibal Fortune was the man to do it.  Resourcefully, he found a stump and sat down to wait.

The struggle between Empire and T.E.R.R.A. was an odd chess game, be reflected, with billions of pawns who neither knew nor cared, pawn-fashion, who the real opponents were, and who would have been unable at any rate to comprehend the prize which awaited the winner—a prize more than six hundred years in the future, involving the forty-seven inhabited solar systems in one galaxy.  What man on Earth could conceive of a struggle which involved forty-seven solar systems?  What mere global strategist could imagine that the subjugation of scores of thickly populated planets would depend upon the outcome of his own puny single-planet battles?  What Earthman could seriously contemplate such a holocaust when the potential vaporization of his own insignificant ball of mud was too mind-staggering for him to really take seriously?  It was a concept which often eluded Fortune himself, who had grown to manhood on just such a world.  It was a concept so elusive that most of T.E.R.R.A.'s agents had to content themselves with arbitrary statements of policy and unquestioning obedience to the tactical decisions plotted by the Galactic Federation's master computer.  Only a handful, such as Hannibal Fortune, were Licensed to Tamper.

Sorobin Kimball had not been a member of that select group.  His last message to T.E.R.R.A. Control had concerned Empire intervention in Earth's current war and his discovery of a suspected Empire agent in the U.S. Air Force.  That, combined with his earlier report of a concentration of Empire skimmers—which the natives quaintly dubbed "Flying Saucers"—had prompted Control to cut short Fortune's vacation.  Skimmers, in an observation capacity, had been flitting about Earth's atmosphere for several decades, but never before had there been quite so many of them.  Kimball's assignment had included keeping track of them and staying out of sight.  Now both he and his symbiote, Glarrk, a counterpart of Fortune's Webley, seemed to have disappeared.  As far as Earth-time was concerned, Kimball's last message had been broadcast half an hour ago, although Control had taken two weeks to complete their preparations for Fortune's arrival.  The temporal transporter had taken up the time-slack, so that Hannibal and Co. would have fresh tracks to follow—which was what Webley was doing now.

Within ten minutes Webley was back, a flurry of feathers braking near Fortune's head and settling gently on his shoulder, where he immediately flowed back into his customary yoke-like position.

"Half a mile to the east," the symbiote reported.  "I felt a presence.  I think it's Glarrk, but I'm not sure.  There are no traces of Empire in the area, though."  Fortune was already on his feet, walking toward the faint glow of false dawn.  "What do you mean, you're not sure it's Glarrk?  Didn't you make esper contact?"

"He wouldn't mesh.  Or couldn't.  The presence was very faint."

Hannibal patted his pockets as he walked, checking once more his equipment.  The suit was in the style of 1966, two button, medium lapel, which fit his six-foot frame as if tailored by one of Earth's top clothiers.  Its one significant difference was that it was indestructible, its component pieces having been individually woven to exact size in order, to get around the impossibility of cutting the finished fabric.  Holstered neatly inside the jacket was a small, flat handgun with a charge sufficient for three hundred shots.  Its mechanics were a diabolical refinement of the laser principle.  With their customary thoroughness, the techs: had taught Fortune to take it apart and put it back together again.

In another pocket, nestled a flat, dull-finished case which contained, among other things, three highly specialized cigarettes.  One was merely explosive, the second produced a gas which was guaranteed to provide several minutes of acute discomfort for a roomful of people, and the third contained a tiny transmitting device which would pick up and broadcast anything within an effective thirty-foot radius.  In addition, the case contained a device which would shoot paralyzing narco-pellets with reasonable accuracy and with sufficient force to penetrate normal epidermis up to sixty feet away.  The tech who had engineered this devious toy had been awarded a special T.E.R.R.A. citation for thinking mean.

Built into Fortune's belt was a flexible steel dagger which could be used, when needed, as a burglary tool.  Completing the itinerant arsenal was an expensive looking Florentine gold cigarette lighter with a flame which could kindle cigarettes or, with a minor adjustment, cut through one half inch of tempered steel.  Not knowing precisely what sort of troubles he might encounter, T.E.R.R.A. had equipped him to deal with a variety of possible situations.  In the past, Fortune had found such gimmickry totally superfluous and agreed to carry only those items whose potential usefulness clearly outweighed the trouble of packing them around.

Hannibal Fortune had been one of the first wave of T.E.R.R.A. recruits.  In a sense, Temporal Entropy Restructure and Repair Agency was still a young organization, having been created by secret vote of the Galactic Federation Security Council in 2558.  Its base-time now was the year 2572, which made T.E.R.R.A. only fourteen years old.  Fortune had been with it for twelve of those fourteen years.

The first wave of cadets, including Fortune, had been skimmed from among the top history students of the forty-seven member planets of the Galactic Federation.  T.E.R.R.A. had used the most enticing bait possible to recruit avid history nuts: the opportunity for a man to actually live in his favorite period of history, to see it firsthand.  Fortune had known that a time machine had been invented in 2548, and that by '54 the G.F. had declared it illegal.  He'd never heard of Gregor Malik and the sinister organization called Empire until after T.E.R.R.A. had recruited him.  But now, thanks to the illegal temporal transporter which T.E.R.R.A.'s scientists were continually perfecting, he'd logged some sixty years' experience fighting Empire.  The agent grinned.  Quite an accomplishment in twelve years of service.

But T.E.R.R.A. had accomplished much in its fourteen years, scattering some ten thousand highly skilled Resident Agents among forty-seven planets and along timelines reaching back as far as forty-two centuries, with another ten thousand administrative, technical and clerical workers within the huge artificial planet in the exact center of the galaxy which housed T.E.R.R.A. Control.  It seemed ironic that this sprawling organization had to be formed to protect the universe against the evil ambitions of one man, Gregor Malik, Tyrant of the planet Borius, and his fourteen unscrupulous henchmen.

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