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"Hide and Seek" | |
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Short story by Arthur C. Clarke | |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Science fiction |
Publication | |
Published in | Astounding Science Fiction |
Publisher | Smith & Smith Publications |
Publication date | 1949 |
"Hide and Seek" is a science fiction short story by English writer Arthur C. Clarke, first published in 1949 in the magazine Astounding Science Fiction . It was subsequently published as part of a short story collection in Expedition to Earth in 1953.
The story tells of an incident during an interplanetary war in which a lone human evades a hostile spaceship by landing on the moon Phobos. [1] The similarity to CS Forester's Brown on Resolution has been pointed out, but Clarke said that he had not read Forester's story. Clarke himself pointed to a similarity with the film Murphy's War. [2]
"Hide-and-Seek" uses the story within a story format.
The frame story is told in the first person, set in a future that has interplanetary travel and has recently seen an interplanetary war. The characters are out hunting when one, Kingman, attempts to shoot a squirrel which takes refuge behind the trunk of a tree. This reminds Kingman of an incident which happened to him during the recent war.
Kingman then recounts the story (in the third person) of agent K-15 who was fleeing in a space craft with vital information, pursued by the space cruiser Doradus. K-15 was 12 hours from a rendezvous with a capital ship, but the cruiser was only 6 hours behind him.
To escape K-15 lands on the moon Phobos, sending his craft on broadcasting a message of his plan. He is left alone on the hostile moon to face the oncoming cruiser. However, despite the apparently overwhelming superiority the cruiser had over a man in a spacesuit armed only with a pistol, the story shows the advantage. The cruiser could only manoeuvre with difficulty so close to Phobos, while K-15 could easily outpace it on the ground. Also, despite the cruiser’s firepower, K-15’s gun gave him the advantage over any men (who would be unarmed) that the cruiser might land. At first K-15 tries to keep to the opposite side of the moon, in case the cruiser opens fire on the surface, but later realizes he is better keeping it in sight, just above his horizon. This continues until the arrival of K-15's rendezvous, and the cruiser is forced to flee, where Kingman’s story ends.
Back in the frame story the narrator asks Kingman if he was, in fact, K-15. No, he replies, he wasn’t, and leaves for another shot at the squirrel. It transpires Kingman was commander of Doradus.