Genesis eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 33 pages of information about Genesis.

Genesis eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 33 pages of information about Genesis.

Varnis, lost in her dream-world, and Dorita, hard-faced and haggard, were the only ones left, beside Kalvar Dard, of the original eight.  But the band had grown, meanwhile, to more than fifteen.  In the rear, in Seldar Glav’s old place, the son of Kalvar Dard and Analea walked.  Like his father, he wore a pistol, for which he had six rounds, and a dagger, and in his hand he carried a stone-headed killing-maul with a three-foot handle which he had made for himself.  The woman who walked beside him and carried his spears was the daughter of Glav and Olva; in a net-bag on her back she carried their infant child.  The first Tareeshan born of Tareeshan parents; Kalvar Dard often looked at his little grandchild during nights in camp and days on the trail, seeing, in that tiny fur-swaddled morsel of humanity, the meaning and purpose of all that he did.  Of the older girls, one or two were already pregnant, now; this tiny threatened beachhead of humanity was expanding, gaining strength.  Long after man had died out on Doorsha and the dying planet itself had become an arid waste, the progeny of this little band would continue to grow and to dominate the younger planet, nearer the sun.  Some day, an even mightier civilization than the one he had left would rise here....

* * * * *

All day the trail had wound upward into the mountains.  Great cliffs loomed above them, and little streams spumed and dashed in rocky gorges below.  All day, the Hairy People had followed, fearful to approach too close, unwilling to allow their enemies to escape.  It had started when they had rushed the camp, at daybreak; they had been beaten off, at cost of almost all the ammunition, and the death of one child.  No sooner had the tribe of Kalvar Dard taken the trail, however, than they had been pressing after them.  Dard had determined to cross the mountains, and had led his people up a game-trail, leading toward the notch of a pass high against the skyline.

The shaggy ape-things seemed to have divined his purpose.  Once or twice, he had seen hairy brown shapes dodging among the rocks and stunted trees to the left.  They were trying to reach the pass ahead of him.  Well, if they did....  He made a quick mental survey of his resources.  His pistol, and his son’s, and Dorita’s, with eight, and six, and seven rounds.  One grenade, and the big demolition bomb, too powerful to be thrown by hand, but which could be set for delayed explosion and dropped over a cliff or left behind to explode among pursuers.  Five steel daggers, and plenty of spears and slings and axes.  Himself, his son and his son’s woman, Dorita, and four or five of the older boys and girls, who would make effective front-line fighters.  And Varnis, who might come out of her private dream-world long enough to give account for herself, and even the tiniest of the walking children could throw stones or light spears.  Yes, they could force the pass, if the Hairy People reached it ahead of them, and then seal it shut with the heavy bomb.  What lay on the other side, he did not know; he wondered how much game there would be, and if there were Hairy People on that side, too.

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Project Gutenberg
Genesis from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.