Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, Steven Barnes
Beowulf's Children
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
EARTH BORN
CADMANN WEYLAND: Onetime Colonel of UN Forces; Avalon Security Chief.
MARY ANN (EISENHOWER) WEYLAND: Botanist and Chief Wife of Cadmann Weyland.
SYLVIA (FAULKNER) WEYLAND: Biologist, Cadmann's Second Wife.
ZACK MOSKOWITZ: Governor of the Avalon Colony.
RACHAEL MOSKOWITZ: Colony Psychologist and Zack's only wife.
CARLOS MARTINEZ: Remittance man. Historian, sculptor, and a hero of the Grendel Wars.
JOE SIKES: Engineer: Onetime lover to Mary Ann Eisenhower, and a hero of the Grendel Wars.
HENDRIK SILLS: Pilot. Hero of the Grendel Wars.
CHAKA MUBUTU ("BIG CHAKA"): Biologist.
CAROLYN MCANDREWS: Onetime Administrator and Agronomist. Heroine of the Grendel Wars.
JULIA CHANG HORTHA: Agronomist, nurse, and Minister of the Unitarian-Universalist Fellowship.
STAR BORN
MICKEY WEYLAND: Mine Engineer and Forester; oldest son of Cadmann and Mary Ann Weyland. LINDA WEYLAND-SIKES: Daughter of Cadmann and Mary Ann Weyland, mother of Cadzie Weyland. Married to Joe Sikes.
RUTH MOSKOWITZ: Daughter of Zack and Rachel Moskowitz.
Grendel Scouts
JESSICA WEYLAND: First child of Cadmann and Mary Ann Weyland. JUSTIN FAULKNER: Only surviving child of Sylvia Faulkner and her first husband. Adopted by Cadmann Weyland.
COLEEN MCANDREWS: Older daughter of Carolyn McAndrews.
KATYA MARTINEZ: Acknowledged child of Carlos Martinez.
EVAN CASTENADA: Skeeter pilot.
EDGAR SIKES: Computer specialist; son of Joe Sikes and Sikes's first wife.
Bottle Babies
AARON TRAGON: Unofficial leader of the Star Born.
STU ELLINGTON: Mathematician, skeeter pilot.
CHAKA MUBUTU ("LITTLE CHAKA"): Biologist; adopted son of Big Chaka.
TRISH CHANCE: Bodybuilder.
DERIK CRISP: Hunter, Grendel Scout Supervisor.
TOSHIRO TANAKA: Sensei to the Star Born; karate and yoga instructor.
Grendel Biters
CAREY LOU DAVIDSON
HEATHER MCKENNIE
SHARON MCANDREWS
OTHERS
CASSANDRA: An artificial intelligence.
OLD GRENDEL
LONG MAMA: Not precisely an eel.
TARZAN, ZWEIBACK, and others: Chamels.
COLD ONE: A snow grendel.
THE QUEEN: A lake grendel.
ASIA: A Scribe.
Prologue
CAMPFIRE
"Once upon a long, long time ago, our parents and grandparents left a place called Earth. They traveled across the stars in a ship called Geographic to find paradise. But their paradise turned into a living hell... "
The campfire jetted white flame as it reached a gum pocket in the horsemane log. The flame held for almost a minute, then died back to glowing coals. A cast-iron skillet balanced on firestones sizzled in the embers. A sudden gust momentarily sent sparks toward the misty night sky and the stars frozen overhead.
A dozen wide-eyed youngsters were packed shoulder tight on makeshift seats of logs and stones, huddled expectantly in the dying firelight. They had waited all their lives for this night.
Justin Faulkner's voice growled, caressed, leapt, burned hotter than the ebbing flames. "From the stars they came," he stage-whispered. "Seeking to build homes where no human had ever walked. Avalon was a land untamed, stretching beneath a sky strange to human eyes. A paradise for the taking. These men and women were the best, the smartest and the bravest Earth could offer, two hundred chosen from eight billion people. Our parents. They are the Earth Born. But they didn't know the truth about their new world, a truth that you—" His long sensitive fingers, sculptor's fingers, bunched and stabbed as if each and every child were guilty of unspeakable crimes. "—you Star Born, have never been told... until now. Until this week. Until tonight."
Justin's voice carried the authority and infinite wisdom of all his nineteen years. None of the children was older than thirteen. Now they were youngsters, Grendel Biters. Tonight would be their first step toward becoming Grendel Scouts. At dawn they had left the human settlement called Avalon Town and hiked across the plain, along the Miskatonic River, then up Mucking Great Mountain along the minor tributary called the Amazon. Lunch and dinner were little more than stream water.
Their curious and eager shining eyes were black and brown and blue and jade, carrying genetic gifts from every people of Earth. Their limber young bodies were as perfect as the night stars, their minds filled with dreams more incandescent still. These were the exhausted young inheritors of a world new to Man.
"... the rivers were filled with a fish they called samlon. And they caught the fish, and ate the fish... " Justin slipped a knife from his belt sheath. He poked its point about in the smoking pan, skewing a morsel of sizzling meat. He held it up, worrying the ragged, black-burnt chunk of flesh with his teeth. Then he passed both pan and knife to his right, to a ten-year-old girl with blond, shoulder-length hair.
She bit gingerly at first, then harder to tear a piece loose. The texture resembled tough beef, not at all like fish. She chewed—and the meat bit back. She clawed at her throat, gasping, but managed to pass both pan and knife to her right. A boy dark-skinned as the surrounding night made a choking sound, and whispered "Water... "
Their eyes misted. Some struggled with wretched coughs, but no one moved. The pan circled the campfire until there was nothing left but smoking iron.
"But one night the river which gave life to the colony, brought death. Even now, even here, high up on Mucking Great, if the wind is very quiet, on a night like tonight, you can hear old Misk calling... "
Justin trailed off. With superbly theatrical timing, the wind dwindled to a murmur. There in the distance roared the mighty Miskatonic, rushing past the foot of Mucking Great... or was that only the Amazon?
"The samlon developed legs, and teeth, and a taste for human blood. They became... grendels. They clawed their way from the river, gasped air, and found it good. They moved so fast that other animals looked like statues to them. They slaughtered everything they saw. Our parents fought back, but it was no use. The camp was lost. Cadmann Weyland led the survivors here to his stronghold on Mucking Great, where they made their last stand.
"And there—" Justin's thin finger cast an unsteady shadow toward the irregular chunk of stone called Snailhead Rock. "That was where my father died, torn to pieces by the ravening horde. And there on the verandah is where Phyllis McAndrews was killed, still screaming reports to the orbiting crew of Geographic. And there... " Justin was lost in the story now, beginning to hyperventilate. "... others were caught, torn apart and devoured by frenzied grendels moving faster than eyes can see.
Down there by the cliff edge—" The dark hid it. "—two men waited in a wrecked skeeter while grendels battered the walls in with their heads. And there was where Joe Sikes sent a river of fire flowing down, finally killing the grendels, saving every human life—"
Pause. The wind had picked up. When it lulled there remained no sound save the rushing waters.
"That was a long, long time ago. But sometimes on a night like tonight, if you press your ear to the ground, you can still hear the screams of the dying, as teeth tear their flesh open and devour their vitals. And you can thank the spirits of the dead that there is no longer anything to fear.
"No more monsters, no more grendels... " Justin paused for effect. "But if there are spirits of men, who can say that there are not spirits of monsters as well?"
His audience's young eyes were wide, and still. Their chests hardly moved as they struggled to keep control. The dogs were tethered well away from the campsite, and now, sensing the children's fear, they began to growl and strain at their leashes.