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Larry Niven
A World Out of Time
WHEN HE CAME BACK FROM THE DEAD... HE WISHED HE HADN'T
Jaybee Corbell awoke after more than 200 years as a corpsicle- in someone else's body, and under sentence of instance a
But Corbell picked his time and made his own move. Once he was outbound, where the society that ruled Earth could not reach him, he headed his starship toward the galactic core, where the unimaginable energies of the universe wrenched the fabric of time and space and promised final escape from his captors.
Then he returned to an Earth eons older than the one he'd left... a planet that had 3,000,000 years to develop perils he had never dreamed of- perils that became nightmares that he had to escape... Somehow!
Copyright (c) 1976 by Larry Niven All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form.
Published simultaneously in Canada by Holt, Rinehart and Winston of Canada, Limited.
A somewhat different version of the first chapter of this book appeared in Galaxy magazine, November 1971, as a story entitled "Rammer," copyright (c) 1971 by UPD Publishing Corporation. Other selections from the novel were serialized in Galaxy magazine in 1976, copyright (c) 1976 by UPD Publishing Corporation.
Two verses from "Little Teeny Eyes" have been included with permission from the author, Tom Digby.
Printed in the United States of America To Owen Lock and Judy-Ly
To anyone who owns a first edition of Ringworld: Hang on to that. It's the only version in which the Earth rotates in the wrong direction (Chapter 1).
Chapter ONE: RAMMER
I
Once there was a dead man.
He had been waiting for two hundred years inside a coffin, suitably labeled, whose outer shell held liquid nitrogen. There were frozen clumps of cancer all through his frozen body. He had had it bad.
He was waiting for medical science to find him a cure.
He waited in vain. Most varieties of cancer could be cured now, but no cure existed for the billions of cell walls ruptured by expanding crystals of ice. He had known the risk. He had gambled anyway. Why not? He'd been dying.
The vaults held over a million of these frozen bodies. Why not? They'd been dying.
Later there came a young criminal. His name is forgotten and his crime is secret, but it must have been a terrible one. The State wiped his personality for it.
Afterward he was a dead man: still warm, still breathing, even reasonably healthy-but empty.
The State had use for an empty man.
Corbell woke on a hard table, aching as if he had slept too long in one position. He stared incuriously at a white ceiling. Memories floated up to him of a double-walled coffin, and sleep and pain.
The pain was gone.
He sat up at once.
And flapped his arms wildly for balance. Everything felt wrong. His arms would not swing right. His body was too light. His head bobbed strangely on a thin neck. He reached frantically for the nearest support, which turned out to be a blond young man in a white jumpsuit. Corbell missed his grip; his arms were shorter than he had expected. He toppled on his side, shook his head and sat up more carefully.
His arms. Scrawny, knobby-and not his.
The man in the jumpsuit said, "Are you all right?"
"Yeah," said Corbell. My God, what have they done to me? I thought I was ready for anything, but this- He fought rising panic. His throat was rusty, but that was all right. This was certainly somebody else's body, but it didn't seem to have cancer, either. "What's the date? How long has it been?"
A quick recovery. The checker gave him a plus. "Twenty-one ninety, your dating. You won't have to worry about our dating."
That sounded ominous. Cautiously Corbell postponed the obvious next question: What's happened to me? and asked instead, "Why not?"
"You won't be joining our society."
"No? What, then?"
"Several professions are open to you-a limited choice. If you don't qualify for any of them we'll try someone else."
Corbell sat on the edge of the hard operating table. His body seemed younger, more limber, definitely thi
He asked, "And what happens to me?"
"I've never learned how to answer that question. Call it a problem in metaphysics," said the checker. "Let me detail what's happened to you so far and then you can decide for yourself."
There was an empty man. Still breathing and as healthy as most of society in the year 2190. But empty. The electrical patterns in the brain, the worn paths of nervous reflex, the memories, the person had all been wiped away as penalty for an u
And there was this frozen thing.
"Your newstapers called you people corpsicles," said the blond man. "I never understood what the tapes meant by that."
"It comes from popsicle. Frozen sherbet." Corbell had used the word himself before he became one of them. One of the corpsicles, the frozen dead.
Frozen within a corpsicle's frozen brain were electrical patterns that could be recorded. The process would warm the brain and destroy most of the patterns, but that hardly mattered, because other things must be done too.
Personality was not all in the brain. Memory RNA was concentrated in the brain, but it ran all through the nerves and the blood. In Corbell's case the clumps of cancer had to be cut away. Then the RNA could be leeched Out of what was left. The operation would have left nothing like a human being, Corbell gathered. More like bloody mush.
"What's been done to you is not the kind of thing that can be done twice," the checker told him. "You get one chance and this is it. If you don't work out we'll terminate and try someone else. The vaults are full of corpsicles."
"You mean you'd wipe my personality," Corbell said unsteadily. "But I haven't committed a crime. Don't I have any rights?"
The checker looked stu
"Damn it, I left money to myself!"
"No good." Though the man still smiled, his face was impersonal, remote, Unreachable. A vet smiles reassuringly at a cat due to be fixed. "A dead man can't own property. That was settled in the courts long ago. It wasn't fair to the heirs."
Corbell jerked an unexpectedly bony thumb at his bony chest. "But I'm alive now!"
"Not in law. You can earn your new life. The State will give you a new birth certificate and citizenship if you give the State good reason."
Corbell sat for a moment, absorbing that. Then he got off the table. "Let's get started then. What do you need to know about me?"
"Your name."
"Jerome Branch Corbell."
"Call me Pierce." The checker did not offer to shake hands. Neither did Corbell, perhaps because he sensed the man would not respond, perhaps because they were both noticeably overdue for a bath. "I'm your checker. Do you like people? I'm just asking. We'll test you in detail later."
"I get along with the people around me, but I like my privacy."
The checker frowned. "That narrows it more than you might think. The isolationism you called privacy was-well, a passing fad. We don't have the room for it... or the inclination, either. We can't send you to a colony world-"