Singer from the Sea

Free Singer from the Sea by Sheri S. Tepper

Book: Singer from the Sea by Sheri S. Tepper Read Free Book Online
Authors: Sheri S. Tepper
might simply have a tower room, above it all, where talking was unnecessary. When she imagined her future, Genevieve equipped it with a tower room, one even higher than this, above the clouds,where the night music would sound clearly and she could sing at the top of her lungs without being heard. This dream was slightly confusing, for if she wanted to be separated from humanity’s troubles, why did she read the librarian’s periodicals? It was puzzling.

THREE
The Planet Haven
    D URING THE HUMAN DISPERSION FROM O LD E ARTH, A SUR prising number of habitable worlds were discovered more or less by accident. Haven was a typical example. Te Ma-tawaka Whetu, the largest ship in the Ark Fleet from Old Earth, blew a modulator while transiting a worm hole and was expelled through an unexpected nexus. The ship emerged too near Haven to avoid discovering the planet rather more violently than the crew would have preferred. Te Matawaka Whetu, which had been headed toward another planet in quite another direction, was pulled into a rapidly decaying planetary orbit that ended with the ship crashing into the worldwide ocean where it soon broke up and eventually sank, though not before the crew escape pod was launched along with the Mayday beacon array.
    The site of impact was between two landmasses—the only two landmasses—near an arc-shaped isthmus where the escape pod came to rest with all its emergency supplies intact. Some of the wreckage washed up on the smaller continent to the south, as well as upon a number of islands.
    Even under the press of disaster, the experienced captain had included in the Mayday signal the fact that the planet was habitable but uninhabited. This guaranteed the rescue of the survivors, for any habitable world was worth at least one rescue mission. When the rescuers arrived theyfound the crew safe and well, through they could find no significant remnant of the ship, which was listed as having sunk together with all cargo and the cargo handlers. The planet was subsequently registered for settlement—along with several others that the rescue ship located in the immediate area—and when it was officially surveyed by the Office of Planetary Settlement it was Usted as having two continents connected by the mountainous isthmus, plus some thousands of islands.
    The land area was too small to tempt most investors, though nearby planets discovered by the rescue mission were settíed rather soon: Dephesia by a farming society; Chamis by a group of terraformers; Barlet’s World by a group of militant greens; forested Ares by veterans of the final lebensraum wars among Earth, Luna, Mars, and the Jovian moons that had left all of them uninhabited and uninhabitable. Eventually the exorbitant claim fee for Haven was paid by a small consortium of wealthy men who wished to retire from Urbana-eight, a planetoid which they had much profited from gutting, to something more natural and charming. The group did not care that Haven’s land area was small. They preferred it that way, as it would be more exclusive. Easier, so they said, to keep out the riff-raff.
    As many wealthy world-buyers did, they recruited craftsmen, farmers, and skilled workers of all kinds who were willing to immigrate in return for employment and land. Young, healthy candidates for wifehood were also recruited, and the world, named Haven, was thus furnished with useful citizens and several social classes even prior to occupation.
    Haven, the world, was profoundly wet. Haven, the larger continent, was a great basalt pillar jutting above the worldwide ocean like a titanic tub, its walls feathered with sea birds whose ancestors had escaped from the sinking Ark ship, its rim raised above the reach of the wildest storms. The western half of the continent cupped to hold a huge freshwater puddle filling what was left of the ancient caldera. This lake, soon named Havenpool, was deep and fertile and full of fish, the extensive swamps and miresalong its eastern

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