The Left Hand Of Darkness (Hainish Cycle #4) - Ursula K. Le Guin Page 0,53

until the Hainish and the Cetians arrived. And some worlds still weren’t allowed to, for centuries, until the Ekumen established the canons for what I think you here call Open Trade.’ That got a laugh all around, for it was the name of Yegey’s party or faction within the Commensality. ‘Open trade is really what I’m here to try to set up. Trade not only in goods, of course, but in knowledge, technologies, ideas, philosophies, art, medicine, science, theory … I doubt that Gethen would ever do much physical coming-and-going to the other worlds. We are seventeen light-years here from the nearest Ekumenical World, Ollul, a planet of the star you call Asyomse; the farthest is two hundred and fifty light-years away and you cannot even see its star. With the ansible communicator, you could talk with that world as if by radio with the next town. But I doubt you’d ever meet any people from it … The kind of trade I speak of can be highly profitable, but it consists largely of simple communication rather than of transportation. My job here is, really, to find out if you’re willing to communicate with the rest of mankind.’

‘“You,”’ Slose repeated, leaning forward intensely: ‘Does that mean Orgoreyn? or does it mean Gethen as a whole?’

I hesitated a moment, for it was not the question I had expected.

‘Here and now, it means Orgoreyn. But the contract cannot be exclusive. If Sith, or the Island Nations, or Karhide decide to enter the Ekumen, they may. It’s a matter of individual choice each time. Then what generally happens, on a planet as highly developed as Gethen, is that the various anthrotypes or regions or nations end up by establishing a set of representatives to function as co-ordinator on the planet and with the other planets – a local Stability, in our terms. A lot of time is saved by beginning this way; and money, by sharing the expense. If you decided to set up a starship of your own, for instance.’

‘By the milk of Meshe!’ said fat Humery beside me. ‘You want us to go shooting off into the Void? Ugh!’ He wheezed, like the high notes of an accordion, in disgust and amusement.

Gaum spoke: ‘Where is your ship, Mr. Ai?’ He put the question softly, half-smiling, as if it were extremely subtle and he wished the subtlety to be noticed. He was a most extraordinarily handsome human being, by any standards and as either sex, and I couldn’t help staring at him as I answered, and also wondered again what the Sarf was. ‘Why, that’s no secret; it was talked about a good bit on the Karhidish radio. The rocket that landed me on Horden Island is now in the Royal Workshop Foundry in the Artisan School; most of it anyway; I think various experts went off with various bits of it after they’d examined it.’

‘Rocket?’ inquired Humery, for I had used the Orgota word for firecracker.

‘It succinctly describes the method of propulsion of the landingboat, sir.’

Humery wheezed some more. Gaum merely smiled, saying, ‘Then you have no means of returning to … well, wherever you came from?’

‘Oh, yes. I could speak to Ollul by ansible and ask them to send a NAFAL ship to pick me up. It would get here in seventeen years. Or I could radio to the starship that brought me into your solar system. It’s in orbit around your sun now. It would get here in a matter of days.’

The sensation that caused was visible and audible, and even Gaum couldn’t hide his surprise. There was some discrepancy here. This was the one major fact I had kept concealed in Karhide, even from Estraven. If, as I had been given to understand, the Orgota knew about me only what Karhide had chosen to tell them, then this should have been only one among many surprises. But it wasn’t. It was the big one.

‘Where is this ship, sir?’ Yegey demanded.

‘Orbiting the sun, somewhere between Gethen and Kuhurn.’

‘How did you get from it to here?’

‘By the firecracker,’ said old Humery.

‘Precisely. We don’t land an interstellar ship on a populated planet until open communication or alliance is established. So I came in on a little rocket-boat, and landed on Horden Island.’

‘And you can get in touch with the – with the big ship by ordinary radio, Mr. Ai?’ That was Obsle.

‘Yes,’ I omitted mention for the present of my little relay satellite, set into orbit from the rocket; I did

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