Multiples (1983-87) Read online

Page 8

Through the crackle of radio static came the voice of the line boss, directing operations from a bubble-domed helicopter hovering at about four o’clock. “DC-3, who are you?”

  “Carmichael.”

  “We’re trying to contain it on three sides, Carmichael. You work on the east, Limekiln Canyon, down the flank of Porter Ranch Park. Got it?”

  “Got it,” Carmichael said.

  He flew low, less than a thousand feet. That gave him a good view of all the action: sawyers in hard hats and orange shirts chopping burning trees to make them fall toward the fire, bulldozer crews clearing brush ahead of the blaze, shovelers carving firebreaks, helicopters pumping water into isolated tongues of flame. He climbed five hundred feet to avoid a single-engine observer plane, then went up five hundred more to avoid the smoke and air turbulence of the fire itself. From that altitude he had a clear picture of it, running like a bloody gash from west to east, wider at its western end. Just east of the fire’s far tip he saw a circular zone of grassland perhaps a hundred acres in diameter that had already burned out, and precisely at the center of that zone stood something that looked like an aluminum silo, the size of a ten story building, surrounded at a considerable distance by a cordon of military vehicles.

  He felt a wave of dizziness go rocking through his mind. That thing, he realized, had to be the E-T spaceship.

  It had come out of the west in the night, Carmichael thought, floating like a tremendous meteor over Oxnard and Camarillo, sliding toward the western end of the San Fernando Valley, kissing the grass with its exhaust and leaving a trail of flame behind it. And then it had gently set itself down over there and extinguished its own brush-fire in a neat little circle about itself, not caring at all about the blaze it had kindled farther back, and God knows what kind of creatures had come forth from it to inspect Los Angeles. It figured that when the UFOs finally did make a landing out in the open, it would be in L.A. Probably they had chosen it because they had seen it so often on television—didn’t all the stories say that UFO people always monitored our TV transmissions? So they saw L.A. on every other show and they probably figured it was the capital of the world, the perfect place for the first landing. But why, Carmichael wondered, had the bastards needed to pick the height of the fire season to put their ships down here?

  He thought of Cindy again, how fascinated she was by all this UFO and E-T stuff, those books she read, the ideas she had, the way she had looked toward the stars one night when they were camping in Kings Canyon and talked of the beings that must live up there. “I’d love to see them,” she said. “I’d love to get to know them and find out what their heads are like.” Los Angeles was full of nut cases who wanted to ride in flying saucers, or claimed they already had, but it didn’t sound nutty to Carmichael when Cindy talked that way. She had the Angeleno love of the exotic and the bizarre, yes, but he knew that her soul had never been touched by the crazy corruption here, that she was untainted by the prevailing craving for the weird and irrational that made him loathe the place so much. If she turned her imagination toward the stars, it was out of wonder, not out of madness: it was simply part of her nature, that curiosity, that hunger for what lay outside her experience, to embrace the unknowable. He had had no more belief in E-Ts than he did in the tooth fairy, but for her sake he had told her that he hoped she’d get her wish. And now the UFO people were really here. He could imagine her, eyes shining, standing at the edge of that cordon staring at the spaceship. Pity he couldn’t be with her now, feeling all that excitement surging through her, the joy, the wonder, the magic.

  But he had work to do. Swinging the DC-3 back around toward the west, he swooped down as close as he dared to the edge of the fire and hit the release button on his dump lines. Behind him, a great crimson cloud spread out: a slurry of ammonium sulphate and water, thick as paint, with a red dye mixed into it so they could tell which areas had been sprayed. The retardant clung in globs to anything, and would keep it damp for hours.

  Emptying his four 500-gallon tanks quickly, he headed back to Van Nuys to reload. His eyes were throbbing with fatigue and the bitter stink of the wet charred earth below was filtering through every plate of the old plane. It was not quite noon. He had been up all night.

  At the airport they had coffee ready, sandwiches, tacos, burritos. While he was waiting for the ground crew to fill his tanks he went inside to call Cindy again, and again there was no answer at home, none at the studio. He phoned the gallery and the kid who worked there said she hadn’t been in touch all morning.

  “If you hear from her,” Carmichael said, “tell her I’m flying fire control out of Van Nuys on the Chatsworth fire, and I’ll be home as soon as things calm down a little. Tell her I miss her, too. And tell her that if I run into an E-T I’ll give it a big hug for her. You got that? Tell her just that.”

  Across the way in the main hall he saw a crowd gathered around someone carrying a portable television set. Carmichael shouldered his way in just as the announcer was saying, “There has been no sign yet of the occupants of the San Gabriel or Orange County spaceships. But this was the horrifying sight that astounded residents of the Porter Ranch area beheld this morning between nine and ten o’clock.” The screen showed two upright tubular figures that looked like squids walking on the tips of their tentacles, moving cautiously through the parking lot of a shopping center, peering this way and that out of enormous yellow platter-shaped eyes. At least a thousand onlookers were watching them at a wary distance, appearing both repelled and at the same time irresistibly drawn. Now and then the creatures paused to touch their foreheads together in some sort of communion. They moved very daintily, but Carmichael saw that they were taller than the lampposts—twelve feet high, maybe fifteen. Their skins were purplish and leathery-looking, with rows of luminescent orange spots glowing along the sides. The camera zoomed in for a close-up, then jiggled and swerved wildly just as an enormously long elastic tongue sprang from the chest of one of the alien beings and whippped out into the crowd. For an instant the only thing visible on the screen was a view of the sky; then Carmichael saw a shot of a stunned-looking girl of about fourteen, caught around the waist by that long tongue, being hoisted into the air and popped like a collected specimen into a narrow green sack. “Teams of the giant creatures roamed the town for nearly an hour,” the announcer intoned. “It has definitely been confirmed that between twenty and thirty human hostages were captured before they returned to their spacecraft. Meanwhile, firefighting activities desperately continue under Santa Ana conditions in the vicinity of all three landing sites, and—”

  Carmichael shook his head. Los Angeles, he thought. The kind of people that live here, they walk right up and let the E-Ts gobble them like flies. Maybe they think it’s just a movie, and everything will be okay by the last reel. And then he remembered that Cindy was the kind of people who would walk right up to one of these E-Ts. Cindy was the kind of people who lived in Los Angeles, he told himself, except that Cindy was different. Somehow.

  He went outside. The DC-3 was loaded and ready.

  In the forty-five minutes since he had left the fire line, the blaze seemed to have spread noticeably toward the south. This time the line boss had him lay down the retardant from the De Soto Avenue freeway interchange to the northeast corner of Porter Ranch. When he returned to the airport, intending to try phoning Cindy once again, a man in military uniform stopped him as he was crossing the field and said, “You Mike Carmichael, Laurel Canyon?”

  “That’s right.”

  “I’ve got some troublesome news for you. Let’s go inside.”

  “Suppose you tell me here, okay?”

  The officer looked at him strangely. “It’s about your wife,” he said. “Cynthia Carmichael? That’s your wife’s name?”

  “Come on,” Carmichael said.

  “She’s one of the hostages, Mr. Carmichael.”

  His breath went from him as though he had been kicked.

  “Where did it happen?” he demanded. �
��How did they get her?”

  The officer gave him a strange strained smile. “It was the shopping-center lot, Porter Ranch. Maybe you saw some of it on the TV.”

  Carmichael nodded. That girl jerked off her feet by that immense elastic tongue, swept through the air, popped into that green pouch. And Cindy—?

  “You saw the part where the creatures were moving around? And then suddenly they were grabbing people, and everyone was running from them? That was when they got her. She was up front when they began grabbing, and maybe she had a chance to get away but she waited just a little too long. She started to run, I understand, but then she stopped—she looked back at them—she may have called something out to them—and then—well, and then—

  “Then they scooped her up?”

  “I have to tell you that they did.”

  “I see,” Carmichael said stonily.

  “One thing all the witnesses agreed, she didn’t panic, she didn’t scream. She was very brave when those monsters grabbed her. How in God’s name you can be brave when something that size is holding you in mid-air is something I don’t understand, but I have to assure you that those who saw it—”

  “It makes sense to me,” Carmichael said.

  He turned away. He shut his eyes for a moment and took deep, heavy pulls of the hot smoky air.

  It figures, he thought. It makes absolute sense.

  Of course she had gone right out to the landing site. Of course. If there was anyone in Los Angeles who would have wanted to get to them and see them with her own eyes and perhaps try to talk to them and establish some sort of rapport with them, it was Cindy. She wouldn’t have been afraid of them. She had never seemed to be afraid of anything. It wasn’t hard for Carmichael to imagine her in that panicky mob in the parking lot, cool and radiant, staring at the giant aliens, smiling at them right up to the moment they seized her.

  In a way he felt very proud of her. But it terrified him to think that she was in their grasp.

  “She’s on the ship?” he asked. “The one that we have right up back here?”

  “Yes.”

  “Have there been any messages from the hostages? Or from the aliens, for that matter?”

  “I’m not in a position to divulge that information.”

  “Is there any information?”

  “I’m sorry, I’m not at liberty to—”

  “I refuse to believe,” Carmichael said, “that that ship is just sitting there, that nothing at all is being done to make contact with—”

  “A command center has been established, Mr. Carmichael, and certain efforts are under way. That much I can tell you. I can tell you that Washington is involved. But beyond that, at the present point in time—”

  A kid who looked like an Eagle Scout came running up. “Your plane’s all loaded and ready to go, Mike!”

  “Yeah,” Carmichael said. The fire, the fucking fire! He had almost managed to forget about it. Almost. He hesitated a moment, torn between conflicting responsibities. Then he said to the officer, “Look, I’ve got to get back out on the fire line. Can you stay here a little while?”

  “Well—”

  “Maybe half an hour. I have to do a retardant dump. Then I want you to take me over to that spaceship and get me through the cordon, so I can talk to those critters myself. If she’s on that ship, I mean to get her off it.”

  “I don’t see how it would be possible for—”

  “Well, try to see,” Carmichael said. “I’ll meet you right here in half an hour.”

  When he was aloft he noticed right away that the fire was spreading. The wind was even rougher and wilder than before, and now it was blowing hard from the northeast, pushing the flames down toward the edge of Chatsworth. Already some glowing cinders had blown across the city limits and Carmichael saw houses afire to his left, maybe half a dozen of them. There would be more, he knew. In firefighting you come to develop an odd sense of which way the struggle is going, whether you’re gaining on the blaze or the blaze is gaining on you, and that sense told him now that the vast effort that was under way was failing, that the fire was still on the upcurve, that whole neighborhoods were going to be ashes by nightfall.

  He held on tight as the DC-3 entered the fire zone. The fire was sucking air like crazy, now, and the turbulence was astounding: it felt as if a giant’s hand had grabbed the ship by the nose. The line boss’ helicopter was tossing around like a balloon on a string.

  Carmichael called in for orders and was sent over to the southwest side, close by the outermost street of houses. Firefighters with shovels were beating on wisps of flame rising out of people’s gardens down there. The skirts of dead leaves that dangled down the trunks of a row of towering palm trees were blazing. The neighborhood dogs had formed a crazed pack, running desperately back and forth.

  Swooping down to treetop level, Carmichael let go with a red gush of chemicals, swathing everything that looked combustible with the stuff. The shovelers looked up and waved at him, and he dipped his wings to them and headed off to the north, around the western edge of the blaze—it was edging farther to the west too, he saw, leaping up into the high canyons out by the Ventura County line—and then he flew eastward along the Santa Susana foothills until he could see the spaceship once more, standing isolated in its circle of blackened earth. The cordon of military vehicles seemed now to be even larger, what looked like a whole armored division deployed in concentric rings beginning half a mile or so from the ship.

  He stared intently at the alien vessel as though he might be able to see through its shining walls to Cindy within.

  He imagined her sitting at a table, or whatever the aliens used instead of tables, sitting at a table with seven or eight of the huge beings, calmly explaining Earth to them and then asking them to explain their world to her. He was altogether certain that she was safe, that no harm would come to her, that they were not torturing her or dissecting her or sending electric currents through her simply to see how she reacted. Things like that would never happen to Cindy, he knew. The only thing he feared was that they would depart for their home star without releasing her. The terror that that thought generated in him was as powerful as any kind of fear he had ever felt.

  As Carmichael approached the aliens’ landing site he saw the guns of some of the tanks below swiveling around to point at him, and he picked up a radio voice telling him brusquely, “You’re off limits, DC-3. Get back to the fire zone. This is prohibited air space.”

  “Sorry,” Carmichael answered. “No entry intended.”

  But as he started to make his turn he dropped down even lower, so that he could have a good look at the spaceship. If it had portholes, and Cindy was looking out one of those portholes, he wanted her to know that he was nearby. That he was watching, that he was waiting for her to come back. But the ship’s hull was blind-faced, entirely blank.

  —Cindy? Cindy?

  She was always looking for the strange, the mysterious, the unfamiliar, he thought. The people she brought to the house: a Navaho once, a bewildered Turkish tourist, a kid from New York. The music she played, the way she chanted along with it. The incense, the lights, the meditation. “I’m searching,” she liked to say. Trying always to find a route that would take her into something that was wholly outside herself. Trying to become something more than she was. That was how they had fallen in love in the first place, an unlikely couple, she with her beads and sandals, he with his steady no-nonsense view of the world: she had come up to him that day long ago when he was in the record shop in Studio City, and God only knew what he was doing in that part of the world in the first place, and she had asked him something and they had started to talk, and they had talked and talked, talked all night, she wanting to know everything there was to know about him, and when dawn came up they were still together and they had rarely been parted since. He never had really been able to understand what it was that she had wanted him for—the Valley redneck, the aging flyboy—although he felt certain that she wanted
him for something real, that he filled some need for her, as she did for him, which could for lack of a more specific term be called love. She had always been searching for that, too. Who wasn’t? And he knew that she loved him truly and well, though he couldn’t quite see why. “Love is understanding,” she liked to say. “Understanding is loving.” Was she trying to tell the spaceship people about love right this minute? Cindy, Cindy, Cindy—

  Back in Van Nuys a few minutes later, he found that everyone at the airport seemed to know by this time that his wife was one of the hostages. The officer whom Carmichael had asked to wait for him was gone. He was not very surprised by that. He thought for a moment of trying to go over to the ship by himself, to get through the cordon and do something about getting Cindy free, but he realized that that was a dumb idea: the military was in charge and they wouldn’t let him or anybody else get within a mile of that ship, and he’d only get snarled up in stuff with the television interviewers looking for poignant crap about the families of those who had been captured.

  Then the head dispatcher came down to meet him on the field, looking almost about ready to burst with compassion, and in funereal tones told Carmichael that it would be all right if he called it quits for the day and went home to await whatever might happen. But Carmichael shook him off. “I won’t get her back by sitting in the livingroom,” he said. “And this fire isn’t going to go out by itself, either.”

  It took twenty minutes for the ground crew to pump the retardant slurry into the DC-3’s tanks. Carmichael stood to one side, drinking Cokes and watching the planes come and go. People stared at him, and those who knew him waved from a distance, and three or four pilots came over and silently squeezed his arm or rested a hand consolingly on his shoulder. The northern sky was black with soot, shading to gray to east and west. The air was sauna-hot and frighteningly dry: you could set fire to it, Carmichael thought, with a snap of your fingers. Somebody running by said that a new fire had broken out in Pasadena, near the Jet Propulsion Lab, and there was another in Griffith Park. The wind was starting to carry firebrands, then. Dodgers Stadium was burning, someone said. So is Santa Anita Racetrack, said someone else. The whole damned place is going to go, Carmichael thought. And my wife is sitting inside a spaceship from another planet.

 

    The Longest Way Home Read onlineThe Longest Way HomeHawksbill Station Read onlineHawksbill StationA Time of Changes Read onlineA Time of ChangesThis Way to the End Times: Classic Tales of the Apocalypse Read onlineThis Way to the End Times: Classic Tales of the ApocalypseBeyond the Gate of Worlds Read onlineBeyond the Gate of WorldsLord Valentine's Castle Read onlineLord Valentine's CastleThe Man in the Maze Read onlineThe Man in the MazeTales of Majipoor Read onlineTales of MajipoorTime of the Great Freeze Read onlineTime of the Great FreezeThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 3: Something Wild Is Loose: 1969-72 Read onlineThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 3: Something Wild Is Loose: 1969-72Planet of Death Read onlinePlanet of DeathTrips: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume Four Read onlineTrips: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume FourIn the Beginning: Tales From the Pulp Era Read onlineIn the Beginning: Tales From the Pulp EraHot Sky at Midnight Read onlineHot Sky at MidnightValentine Pontifex Read onlineValentine PontifexUp the Line Read onlineUp the LineThorns Read onlineThornsAmanda and the Alien Read onlineAmanda and the AlienStar of Gypsies Read onlineStar of GypsiesNightwings Read onlineNightwingsThe Time Hoppers Read onlineThe Time HoppersBlood on the Mink Read onlineBlood on the MinkDying Inside Read onlineDying InsideThe Last Song of Orpheus Read onlineThe Last Song of OrpheusThe King of Dreams Read onlineThe King of DreamsThe Stochastic Man Read onlineThe Stochastic ManThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume Seven: We Are for the Dark Read onlineThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume Seven: We Are for the DarkThe Millennium Express: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume Nine Read onlineThe Millennium Express: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume NineThe Iron Chancellor Read onlineThe Iron ChancellorLord Prestimion Read onlineLord PrestimionTo Open the Sky Read onlineTo Open the SkyThe World Inside Read onlineThe World InsideChains of the Sea Read onlineChains of the SeaThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume Five: The Palace at Midnight Read onlineThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume Five: The Palace at MidnightPostmark Ganymede Read onlinePostmark GanymedeThe Second Trip Read onlineThe Second TripThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 4: Trips: 1972-73 Read onlineThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 4: Trips: 1972-73Son of Man Read onlineSon of ManTom O'Bedlam Read onlineTom O'BedlamTo the Land of the Living Read onlineTo the Land of the LivingTo Be Continued: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume One Read onlineTo Be Continued: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume OneShadrach in the Furnace Read onlineShadrach in the FurnaceThe Chalice of Death: Three Novels of Mystery in Space Read onlineThe Chalice of Death: Three Novels of Mystery in SpaceThe Queen of Springtime Read onlineThe Queen of SpringtimeTo Be Continued 1953-1958 Read onlineTo Be Continued 1953-1958Legends Read onlineLegendsRoma Eterna Read onlineRoma EternaTo Live Again Read onlineTo Live AgainAt Winter's End Read onlineAt Winter's EndNeedle in a Timestack Read onlineNeedle in a TimestackTo Live Again and the Second Trip: The Complete Novels Read onlineTo Live Again and the Second Trip: The Complete NovelsLord of Darkness Read onlineLord of DarknessThe Mountains of Majipoor Read onlineThe Mountains of MajipoorThe World Outside Read onlineThe World OutsideThe Alien Years Read onlineThe Alien YearsThe Book of Skulls Read onlineThe Book of SkullsThe Face of the Waters Read onlineThe Face of the WatersGilgamesh the King Read onlineGilgamesh the KingThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 6: Multiples: 1983-87 Read onlineThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 6: Multiples: 1983-87The Happy Unfortunate Read onlineThe Happy UnfortunateThree Survived Read onlineThree SurvivedCronos Read onlineCronosTower of Glass Read onlineTower of GlassLegends II Read onlineLegends IIThe Planet Killers Read onlineThe Planet KillersThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 2: To the Dark Star: 1962-69 Read onlineThe Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 2: To the Dark Star: 1962-69Downward to the Earth Read onlineDownward to the EarthLord Valentine's Castle: Book One of the Majipoor Cycle Read onlineLord Valentine's Castle: Book One of the Majipoor CycleHot Times in Magma City, 1990-95 Read onlineHot Times in Magma City, 1990-95Hunt the Space-Witch! Seven Adventures in Time and Space Read onlineHunt the Space-Witch! Seven Adventures in Time and SpaceMajipoor Chronicles Read onlineMajipoor ChroniclesThe Robert Silverberg Science Fiction Megapack(r) Read onlineThe Robert Silverberg Science Fiction Megapack(r)Starman's Quest Read onlineStarman's QuestCar Sinister Read onlineCar SinisterWorlds of Maybe Read onlineWorlds of MaybeFantasy The Best of 2001 Read onlineFantasy The Best of 2001Revolt on Alpha C Read onlineRevolt on Alpha CHomefaring Read onlineHomefaringThe Pardoner's Tale Read onlineThe Pardoner's TaleSailing to Byzantium - Six Novellas Read onlineSailing to Byzantium - Six NovellasThe Chalice of Death Read onlineThe Chalice of DeathSundance Read onlineSundanceA Tip on a Turtle Read onlineA Tip on a TurtleNebula Awards Showcase 2001: The Year's Best SF and Fantasy Chosen by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America Read onlineNebula Awards Showcase 2001: The Year's Best SF and Fantasy Chosen by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of AmericaThe Fangs of the Trees Read onlineThe Fangs of the TreesThe Palace at Midnight: The Collected Work of Robert Silverberg, Volume Five Read onlineThe Palace at Midnight: The Collected Work of Robert Silverberg, Volume FiveThe Millennium Express - 1995-2009 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume Nine Read onlineThe Millennium Express - 1995-2009 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume NineBook of Skulls Read onlineBook of SkullsPassengers Read onlinePassengersSomething Wild is Loose - 1969–72 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume Three Read onlineSomething Wild is Loose - 1969–72 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume ThreeMultiples Read onlineMultiplesStarborne Read onlineStarborneThe Masks of Time Read onlineThe Masks of TimeThe Mountains of Majipoor m-8 Read onlineThe Mountains of Majipoor m-8Multiples (1983-87) Read onlineMultiples (1983-87)Those Who Watch Read onlineThose Who WatchIn the Beginning Read onlineIn the BeginningEarth Is The Strangest Planet Read onlineEarth Is The Strangest PlanetCollision Course Read onlineCollision CourseNeutral Planet Read onlineNeutral PlanetTo the Dark Star - 1962–69 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume Two Read onlineTo the Dark Star - 1962–69 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume TwoMutants Read onlineMutantsSailing to Byzantium Read onlineSailing to ByzantiumWhen We Went to See the End of the World Read onlineWhen We Went to See the End of the WorldRobert Silverberg The Science Fiction Hall Of Fame Volume One, 1929-1964 Read onlineRobert Silverberg The Science Fiction Hall Of Fame Volume One, 1929-1964To Be Continued - 1953–58 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume One Read onlineTo Be Continued - 1953–58 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume OneValentine Pontifex m-3 Read onlineValentine Pontifex m-3Gianni Read onlineGianniMajipoor Chronicles m-2 Read onlineMajipoor Chronicles m-2We Are for the Dark (1987-90) Read onlineWe Are for the Dark (1987-90)Waiting for the Earthquake Read onlineWaiting for the EarthquakeFantasy: The Best of 2001 Read onlineFantasy: The Best of 2001How It Was When the Past Went Away Read onlineHow It Was When the Past Went AwayBeauty in the Night Read onlineBeauty in the NightThe Man Who Never Forgot Read onlineThe Man Who Never ForgotThe Book of Changes m-9 Read onlineThe Book of Changes m-9Lord Valentine's Castle m-1 Read onlineLord Valentine's Castle m-1This Way to the End Times Read onlineThis Way to the End TimesQueen of Springtime Read onlineQueen of SpringtimeLegends-Volume 3 Stories by the Masters of Modern Fantasy Read onlineLegends-Volume 3 Stories by the Masters of Modern FantasyThe Palace at Midnight - 1980–82 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume Five Read onlineThe Palace at Midnight - 1980–82 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume FiveSomething Wild is Loose: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume Three Read onlineSomething Wild is Loose: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume ThreeMultiples - 1983–87 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume Six Read onlineMultiples - 1983–87 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume SixAlaree Read onlineAlareeThree Survived: A Science Fiction Novel Read onlineThree Survived: A Science Fiction NovelDefenders of the Frontier Read onlineDefenders of the FrontierThe New Springtime Read onlineThe New SpringtimeWe Are for the Dark - 1987–90 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume Seven Read onlineWe Are for the Dark - 1987–90 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume SevenThe Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One 1929-1964--The Greatest Science Fiction Stories of All Time Chosen by the Members of the Science Fiction Writers of America Read onlineThe Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One 1929-1964--The Greatest Science Fiction Stories of All Time Chosen by the Members of the Science Fiction Writers of AmericaMaster Of Life And Death Read onlineMaster Of Life And DeathChoke Chain Read onlineChoke ChainSorcerers of Majipoor m-4 Read onlineSorcerers of Majipoor m-4Absolutely Inflexible Read onlineAbsolutely InflexibleTrips - 1962–73 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume Four Read onlineTrips - 1962–73 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume FourHot Times in Magma City - 1990-95 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume Eight Read onlineHot Times in Magma City - 1990-95 - The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume EightFar Horizons Read onlineFar HorizonsThe Queen of Springtime ns-2 Read onlineThe Queen of Springtime ns-2The Seventh Science Fiction Megapack Read onlineThe Seventh Science Fiction MegapackInvaders From Earth Read onlineInvaders From EarthHanosz Prime Goes To Old Earth Read onlineHanosz Prime Goes To Old EarthThe Macauley Circuit Read onlineThe Macauley CircuitScience Fiction: The Best of 2001 Read onlineScience Fiction: The Best of 2001To the Dark Star: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume Two Read onlineTo the Dark Star: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume TwoStochastic Man Read onlineStochastic ManLegends: Stories By The Masters of Modern Fantasy Read onlineLegends: Stories By The Masters of Modern FantasyTo Live Again And The Second Trip Read onlineTo Live Again And The Second TripFlies Read onlineFliesThe Silent Invaders Read onlineThe Silent InvadersShip-Sister, Star-Sister Read onlineShip-Sister, Star-Sister