Resnick, Mike - 43 Antarean Dynasties, The.txt

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THE 43 ANTAREAN DYNASTIES 
 
by Mike Resnick

_To thank the Maker Of All Things for the birth of his first male offspring, the 
Emperor Maloth IV ordered his architects to build a temple that would forever 
dwarf all other buildings on the planet. It was to be made entirely of crystal, 
and the spire- covered roof, which looked like a million glistening spear-points 
aimed at the sun, would be supported by 217 columns, to honor his 217 forebears. 
When struck, each column would sound a musical note that could be heard for 
kilometers, calling the faithful to prayer._ 
_The structure would be known as the Temple of the Honored Sun, for his heir had 
been born exactly at midday, when the sun was highest in the sky. The temple 
took 27 Standard years to complete, and although races from all across the 
galaxy would come to Antares III to marvel at it, Maloth further decreed that no 
aliens or non-believers would ever be allowed to enter it and desecrate its 
sacred corridors with their presence..._ 
#
A man, a woman, and a child emerge from the Temple of the Honored Sun. The woman 
holds a camera to her eye, capturing the same image from a dozen unimaginative 
angles. The child, his lip sparsely covered with hair that is supposed to imply 
maturity, never sees beyond the game he is playing on his pocket computer. The 
man looks around to make sure no one is watching him, grinds out a smokeless 
cigar beneath his heel, and then increases his pace until he joins them. 
They approach me, and I will myself to become one with my surroundings, to 
insinuate myself into the marble walls and stone walkways before they can speak 
to me.
_I am invisible. You cannot see me. You will pass me by._
"Hey, fella -- we're looking for a guide," says the man. "You interested?" 
I stifle a sigh and bow deeply. "I am honored," I say, glad that they do not 
understand the subtleties of Antarean inflection. 
"Wow!" exclaims the woman, aiming her camera at me. "I never saw anything like 
that! It's almost as if you folded your torso in half! Can you do it again?" 
I am reminded of an ancient legend, possibly aprocryphal though I choose to 
believe it. An ambassador who was equally fascinated by the way the Antarean 
body is jointed, once asked Komarith I, the founder of the 38th Dynasty, to bow 
a second time. Komarith merely stared at him without moving until the 
embarrassed ambassador slunk away. He went on to rule for 29 years and was never 
known to bow again. 
It has been a long time since Komarith, almost seven millennia now, and Antares 
and the universe have changed. I bow for the woman while she snaps her 
holographs.
"What's your name?" asks the man. 
"You could not pronounce it," I reply. "When I conduct members of your race, I 
choose the name Hermes." 
"Herman, eh?" 
"Hermes," I correct him. 
"Right. Herman."
The boy finally looks up. "He said Hermes, Dad." 
The man shrugs. "Whatever." He looks at his timepiece. "Well, let's get 
started."
"Yeah," chimes in the child. "They're piping in the game from Roosevelt III this 
afternoon. I've got to get back for it." 
"You can watch sports anytime," says the woman. "This may be your only chance to 
see Antares." 
"I should be so lucky," he mutters, returning his attention to his computer.
I recite my introductory speech almost by rote. "Allow me to welcome you to 
Antares III, and to its capital city of Kalimetra, known throughout the galaxy 
as the City of a Million Spires." 
"I didn't see any million spires when we took the shuttle in from the 
spaceport," says the child, whom I could have sworn was not listening. "A 
thousand or two, maybe." 
"There was a time when there were a million," I explain. "Today only 16,304 
remain. Each is made of quartz or crystal. In late afternoon, when the sun sinks 
low in the sky, they act as a prism for its rays, creating a flood of exotic 
colors that stretches across the thoroughfares of the city. Races have come from 
halfway across the galaxy to experience the effect." 
"Sixteen thousand," murmurs the woman. "I wonder what happened to the rest?" 
#
_No one knew why Antareans found the spires so aesthetically pleasing. They 
towered above the cities, casting their shadows and their shifting colors across 
the landscape. Tall, delicate, exquisite, they reflected a unique grandness of 
vision and sensitivity of spirit. The rulers of Antares III spent almost 38,000 
years constructing their million spires._
_During the Second Invasion, it took the Canphorite armada less than two weeks 
to destroy all but 16,304 of them..._
# 
The woman is still admiring the spires that she can see in the distance. Finally 
she asks who built them, as if they are too beautiful to have been created by 
Antareans. 
"The artisans and craftsmen of my race built everything you will see today," I 
answer. 
"All by yourselves?" 
"Is it so difficult for you to believe?" I ask gently. 
"No," she says defensively. "Of course not. It's just that there's so _much..._" 

"Kalimetra was not created in a day or a year, or even a millennium," I point 
out. "It is the cumulative achievement of 43 Antarean Dynasties." 
"So we're in the 43rd Dynasty now?" she asks.
# 
_It was Zelorean IX who officially declared Kalimetra to be the Eternal City. 
Neither war nor insurrection had ever threatened its stability, and even the 
towering temples of his forefathers gave every promise of lasting for all 
eternity. It was a Golden Age, and he could see no reason why it should not go 
on forever..._ 
#
"The last absolute ruler of the 43rd Dynasty has been dust for almost three 
thousand years," I explain. "Since then we have been governed by a series of 
conquerers, each alien race superceding the last."
"Thank goodness they didn't destroy your buildings," says the woman, turning to 
admire a water fountain, which for some reason appears to her to be a mystical 
alien artifact. She is about to take a holo when the child restrains her.
"It's just a goddamned water bubbler, Ma," he says.
"But it's fascinating," she says. "Imagine what kind of beings used it in ages 
past." 
"Thirsty ones," says the bored child. 
She ignores him and turns back to me. "As I was saying, it must be criminal to 
rob the galaxy of such treasures." 
"Yeah, well _somebody_ destroyed some buildings around here," interjects the 
child, who seems intent on proving someone wrong about something. "Remember the 
hole in the ground we saw over that way?" He points in the direction of the 
Footprint. "Looks like a bomb crater to me."
"You are mistaken," I explain, leading them over to it. "It has always been 
there." 
"It's just a big sinkhole," says the man, totally unimpressed. 
"It is worshipped by my people as the Footprint of God," I explain. "Once, many 
eons ago, Kalimetra was in the throes of a years-long drought. Finally Jorvash, 
our greatest priest, offered his own life if God would bring the rains. God 
replied that it would not rain until He wept again, and we had not yet suffered 
enough to bring forth His tears of compassion. But He promised that He would 
strike a bargain with Jorvash." 
I pause for effect, but the man is lighting another cigar and the child is 
concentrating on his pocket computer. "The next morning Jorvash was found dead 
inside his temple, while God had created this depression with His foot and 
filled it with water. It sustained us until He finally wept again." 
The woman seems flustered. "Um...I hate to ask," she finally says, "but could 
you repeat that story? My recorder wasn't on." 
The man looks uncomfortable. "She's always forgetting to turn the damned thing 
on," he explains, and flips me a coin. "For your trouble." 
# 
_Lobilia was the greatest poet in the history of Antares III. Although he died 
during the 23rd Dynasty, most of his work survived him. But his masterpiece, 
"The Long Night of the Exile" -- the epic of Bagata's Exile and his triumphant 
Return -- was lost forever._ 
_Though he was his race's most famous bard, Lobilia himself was illiterate, 
unable even to write his own name. He created his poetry extemporaneously, 
embellishing upon it with each retelling. He recited his epic just once, and was 
so satisfied with its form that he refused to repeat it for the scribes who were 
waiting for a final version and hadn't written it down._ 
# 
"Thank you," says the woman, deactivating the recorder after I finish. She 
pauses. "Can I buy a book with some more of your quaint folk legends?" 
I decide not to explain the difference between a folk legend and an article of 
belief. "They are for sale in the gift shop of your hotel," I reply.
"You don't have enough books?" mutters the man. 
She glares at him, but says nothing, and I lead them to the Tomb, which always 
impresses visitors. 
"This is the Tomb of Bedorian V, the greatest ruler of the 37th Dynasty," I say. 
"Bedorian was a commoner, a simple farmer who deposed the notorious Maelastri 
XII, himself a mighty warrior who was the last ruler of the 36th Dynasty. It was 
Bedorian who decreed universal education for all Antareans." 
"What did you have before that?"
"Our females were not allowed the privilege of literacy until Bedorian's reign." 

"How did this guy finally die?" asks the man, who doesn't really care but is 
unwilling to let the woman ask all the questions.
"Bedorian was assassinated by one of his followers," I reply. 
"A male, no doubt," says the woman wryly. 
"Before he died," I continue, "he united three warring states without fighting a 
single battle, decreed that all Antareans should use a common language, and 
outlawed the worship of _kreneks_." 
"What are _kreneks_?"
"They are poisonous reptiles. They killed many worshippers in nameless, obscene 
ceremonies before Bedorian IV came to power." 
"Yeah?" says the child, alert a...
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