Poul Anderson, New America, "The Queen Of Air And Darkness."
In New America, "To Promote The General Welfare" and "The Queen of Air and Darkness" are separated by a Publisher's Note which begins:
"Here ends the story of High America." (p. 158)
Without
this note, how quickly would we have realized that "The Queen..." is
set on another planet? Immediately, I think. Its opening section
describes a different environment. Although a sunset glow lingers, there
is no day during the northern winter but nevertheless local species
thrive:
flamboyant firethorn trees;
blue steelflowers;
hill-covering rainplant;
dale-growing white kiss-me-never;
iridescent winged flitteries;
a bugling, horned crownbuck;
hellbats.
Above
are two moons, which do not sound like the Rustumite two, an aurora
covering half the sky and the first stars. A long-haired teenage boy and
girl, wearing only garlands, sit on a barrow. He plays a flute while
she sings. Named Mistherd and Shadow-of-a-Dream, respectively, they are
"Outlings" (p. 162), no longer part of human society, and are shortly
joined by a short, claw-footed, feathered, winged, tailed "pook" called
Ayoch who carries a stolen human child.
OK. We are not in Kansas. Or on Rustum.
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