The Word for World is Forest

by Ursula K. Le Guin

Don Davidson Character Analysis

Don Davidson is an army captain stationed on World 41, or “New Tahiti.” He’s the enemy of Selver Thele, a native Athshean (or “creechie”), and the owner of Ben, an enslaved Athshean. Davidson, the novella’s central antagonist, believes that creechies are an abomination and hopes to wipe them out, a sentiment he shares with fellow soldiers like Colonel Dongh, even though Davidson’s methods are far more violent. Davidson has a long history with Selver: Davidson killed Selver’s wife, Thele, while raping her, and afterward, Selver attempted to kill Davidson, going against his people’s code of nonviolence. Raj Lyubov broke up the fight, which caused a permanent rift between Davidson and Lyubov, who doesn’t agree with Davidson’s anti-creechie sentiments. Davidson later reencounters Selver when Selver’s people burn Davidson’s camp—but although Selver steals Davidson’s gun, he allows Davidson to escape unharmed. Throughout the novella, Davidson prides himself on his staunch masculinity and his whiteness, frequently demeaning both women and non-white soldiers. His theory is that men aren’t men unless they murder others, and he acts on this code by constantly beating up Athsheans. After the colonists on World 41 agree to peace with the Athsheans, Davidson goes rogue, isolating himself and a handful of (mostly white) men and burning Athshean towns. The Athsheans attack Davidson’s settlement in retaliation, and although Davidson and a few others make it out on helicopter, Davidson’s helicopter crashes and he once again comes face-to-face with Selver. Selver credits Davidson with teaching him how to kill and says that in return, he’ll teach Davidson how not to kill—instead of murdering Davidson, Selver isolates him on an over-logged island. Even as the Athsheans lead Davidson away by force, he imagines that he could hurt them if he wanted, suggesting that his violent feelings toward the Athsheans haven’t changed. In fact, Davidson’s fear of the Athsheans only increases his deep hatred, which suggests that violence and prejudice don’t solve anything—they only cause more of the same.

Don Davidson Quotes in The Word for World is Forest

The The Word for World is Forest quotes below are all either spoken by Don Davidson or refer to Don Davidson. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Violence, War, and Colonization Theme Icon
).

Chapter One Quotes

Get enough humans here, build machines and robots, make farms and cities, and nobody would need the creechies any more. And a good thing too. For this world, New Tahiti, was literally made for men. Cleaned up and cleaned out, the dark forests cut down for open fields of grain, the primeval murk and savagery and ignorance wiped out, it would be a paradise, a real Eden. A better world than worn-out Earth. And it would be his world. For that’s what Don Davidson was, way down deep inside him: a world-tamer. He wasn’t a boastful man, but he knew his own size. It just happened to be the way he was made. He knew what he wanted, and how to get it.

Related Characters: Don Davidson (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

Davidson saw then the telltale tension of the creature’s stance, yet it sprang at him so lithe and oblique that his shot missed, burning an arm or shoulder instead of smack between the eyes. And the creechie was on him, half his size and weight yet knocking him right off balance by its onslaught, for he had been relying on the gun and not expecting attack. The thing’s arms were thin, tough, coarse-furred in his grip, and as he struggled with it, it sang.

He was down on his back, pinned down, disarmed. […] He had never looked up into a creechie’s face from below. Always down, from above. From on top. He tried not to struggle, for at the moment it was wasted effort. Little as they were, they outnumbered him, and Scarface had his gun.

Related Characters: Don Davidson (speaker), Selver Thele
Related Symbols: Davidson’s Gun
Page Number and Citation: 29-30
Explanation and Analysis:

Davidson’s hands were steady now, his body felt appeased, and he knew he wasn’t caught in any dream. He headed back over the Straits, to take the news to Centralville. As he flew he could feel his face relax into its usual calm lines. They couldn’t blame the disaster on him, for he hadn’t even been there. Maybe they’d see that it was significant that the creechies had struck while he was gone, knowing they’d fail if he was there to organize the defense. And there was one good thing that would come out of this. They’d do like they should have done to start with, and clean up the planet for human occupation. Not even Lyubov could stop them from rubbing out the creechies now, not when they heard it was Lyubov’s pet creechie who’d led the massacre! They’d go in for rat-extermination for a while, now; and maybe, just maybe, they’d hand that little job over to him. At that thought he could have smiled.

Related Characters: Don Davidson (speaker), Selver Thele, Raj Lyubov
Page Number and Citation: 32-33
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Two Quotes

No way was clear, no light unbroken, in the forest. Into wind, water, sunlight, starlight, there always entered leaf and branch, bole and root, the shadowy, the complex. Little paths ran under the branches, around the boles, over the roots; they did not go straight, but yielded to every obstacle, devious as nerves. The ground was not dry and solid but damp and rather springy, product of the collaboration of living things with the long, elaborate death of leaves and trees; and from that rich graveyard grew ninety-foot trees, and tiny mushrooms that sprouted in circles half an inch across. The smell of the air was subtle, various, and sweet. The view was never long, unless looking up through the branches you caught sight of the stars. Nothing was pure, dry, arid, plain. Revelation was lacking. There was no seeing everything at once: no certainty.

Related Characters: Selver Thele (speaker), Don Davidson
Page Number and Citation: 35-36
Explanation and Analysis:

“Before this day the thing we had to do was the right thing to do; the way we had to go was the right way and led us home. Where is our home now? For you’ve done what you had to do, and it was not right. You have killed men. I saw them, five years ago, in the Lemgan Valley, where they came in a flying ship; I hid and watched the giants, six of them, and saw them speak, and look at rocks and plants, and cook food. They are men.”

Related Characters: Coro Mena (speaker), Selver Thele, Don Davidson, Thele
Page Number and Citation: 44-45
Explanation and Analysis:

He went out to see what kind of trees they were. They all lay broken and uprooted. He picked up the silvery branch of one and a little blood ran out of the broken end. No, not here, not again, Thele, he said: O Thele, come to me before your death! But she did not come. […] Outside the other door, across the tall room, was the long street of the yumen city Central. Selver had the gun in his belt. If Davidson came, he could shoot him. He waited, just inside the open door, looking out into the sunlight. Davidson came, huge, running so fast that Selver could not keep him in the sights of the gun as he doubled crazily back and forth across the wide street, very fast, always closer. The gun was heavy. Selver fired it but no fire came out of it, and in rage and terror he threw the gun and the dream away.

Related Characters: Selver Thele (speaker), Don Davidson, Thele
Related Symbols: Davidson’s Gun
Page Number and Citation: 48-49
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Three Quotes

Every man alive except the Captain. No wonder pills couldn’t get at the center of his migraine, for it was on an island two hundred miles away two days ago. Over the hills and far away. Ashes, ashes, all fall down. And among the ashes, all his knowledge of the High Intelligence Life Forms of World 41. Dust, rubbish, a mess of false data and fake hypotheses. Nearly five E-years here, and he had believed the Athsheans to be incapable of killing men, his kind or their kind. He had written long papers to explain how and why they couldn’t kill men. All wrong. Dead wrong.

What had he failed to see?

Related Characters: Raj Lyubov (speaker), Don Davidson, Selver Thele
Page Number and Citation: 64-65
Explanation and Analysis:

“No,” said the Cetian. “That’s done with. A colony like this had to believe what passing ships and outdated radio-messages told them. Now you don’t. You can verify. We are going to give you the ansible destined for Prestno. We have League authority to do so. Received, of course, by ansible. Your colony here is in a bad way. Worse than I thought from your reports. Your reports are very incomplete; censorship or stupidity have been at work. Now, however, you’ll have the ansible, and can talk with your Terran Administration; you can ask for orders, so you’ll know how to proceed. Given the profound changes that have been occurring in the organization of the Terran Government since we left there, I should recommend that you do so at once. There is no longer any excuse for acting on outdated orders; for ignorance; for irresponsible autonomy.”

Related Characters: Mr. Or (speaker), Don Davidson
Related Symbols: The Ansible
Page Number and Citation: 80-81
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Four Quotes

That was the gist of all the messages actually, and any fool could tell that that wasn’t the Colonial Administration talking. They couldn’t have changed that much in thirty years. They were practical, realistic men who knew what life was like on frontier planets. It was clear, to anybody who hadn’t gone spla from geoshock, that the ‘ansible’ messages were phonies. They might be planted right in the machine, a whole set of answers to high-probability questions, computer run. The engineers said they could have spotted that; maybe so. In that case the thing did communicate instantaneously with another world. But that world wasn’t Earth. Not by a long long shot!

Related Characters: Don Davidson (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Ansible
Page Number and Citation: 91-92
Explanation and Analysis:

The fact is, the only time a man is really and entirely a man is when he’s just had a woman or just killed another man. That wasn’t original, he’d read it in some old books; but it was true. That was why he liked to imagine scenes like that. Even if the creechies weren’t actually men.

Related Characters: Don Davidson (speaker), Selver Thele, Thele
Page Number and Citation: 96
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Five Quotes

The townsfolk also knew that the 1200 slaves at Centralville had been freed soon after the Smith Camp massacre, and Lyubov agreed with the Colonel that the natives might take the second event to be a result of the first. That gave what Colonel Dongh would call ‘an erroneous impression,’ but it probably wasn’t important. What was important was that the slaves had been freed. Wrongs done could not be righted; but at least they were not still being done. They could start over: the natives without that painful, unanswerable wonder as to why the ‘yumens’ treated men like animals; and he without the burden of explanation and the gnawing of irremediable guilt.

Related Characters: Raj Lyubov (speaker), Colonel Dongh, Don Davidson, Selver Thele
Related Symbols: The Ansible
Page Number and Citation: 106-107
Explanation and Analysis:

And that’s one trouble with the colony, he thought as he lifted the hopper and Tuntar vanished beneath the oaks and the leafless orchards. We haven’t got any old women. No old men either, except Dongh and he’s only about sixty. But old women are different from everybody else, they say what they think. The Athsheans are governed, in so far as they have government, by old women. Intellect to the men, politics to the women, and ethics to the interaction of both: that’s their arrangement. It has charm, and it works—for them. I wish the administration had sent out a couple of grannies along with all those nubile fertile high-breasted young women. Now that girl I had over the other night, she’s really very nice, and nice in bed, she has a kind heart, but my God it’ll be forty years before she’ll say anything to a man…

Related Characters: Raj Lyubov (speaker), Don Davidson, Colonel Dongh
Page Number and Citation: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

And the translator is the god. Selver had brought a new word into the language of his people. He had done a new deed. The word, the deed, murder. Only a god could lead so great a newcomer as Death across the bridge between the worlds.

But had he learned to kill his fellowmen among his own dreams of outrage and bereavement, or from the undreamed-of-actions of the strangers? Was he speaking his own language, or was he speaking Captain Davidson’s? That which seemed to rise from the root of his own suffering and express his own changed being, might in fact be an infection, a foreign plague, which would not make a new people of his race, but would destroy them.

Related Characters: Raj Lyubov (speaker), Selver Thele, Don Davidson, Thele
Page Number and Citation: 124
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Seven Quotes

The raiding party burned up that warren by hand, and then flying back with a couple of his boys he spotted another, less than four kilos from camp. On that one, just to write his signature real clear and plain for everybody to read, he dropped a bomb. Just a firebomb, not a big one, but baby did it make the green fur fly. It left a big hole in the forest, and the edges of the hole were burning.

Of course that was his real weapon when it actually came to setting up massive retaliation. Forest fire. He could set one of these whole islands on fire, with bombs and firejelly dropped from the hopper. Have to wait a month or two, till the rainy season was over. Should he burn King or Smith or Central? King first, maybe, as a little warning, since there were no humans left there. Then Central, if they didn’t get in line.

Related Characters: Don Davidson (speaker), Colonel Dongh
Page Number and Citation: 163-164
Explanation and Analysis:

No sound, no noise at all, until that screech from the guard; then one gunshot; then an explosion—a land mine going up—and another, one after another, and hundreds and hundreds of torches flaring up lit one from another and being thrown and soaring through the black wet air like rockets, and the walls of the stockade coming alive with creechies, pouring in, pouring over, pushing, swarming, thousands of them. It was like an army of rats Davidson had seen once when he was a little kid, in the last Famine, in the streets of Cleveland, Ohio, where he grew up. Something had driven the rats out of their holes and they had come up in daylight, seething up over the wall, a pulsing blanket of fur and eyes and little hands and teeth, and he had yelled for his mom and run like crazy, or was that only a dream he’d had when he was a kid?

Related Characters: Don Davidson (speaker), Selver Thele
Page Number and Citation: 170
Explanation and Analysis:

Something stirred down inside him, something almost like laughter. By God they couldn’t get him down! If his own men betrayed him, and human intelligence couldn’t do any more for him, then he used their own trick against them—played dead like this, and triggered this instinct reflex that kept them from killing anybody who took that position. They just stood around him, muttering at each other. They couldn’t hurt him. It was as if he was a god.

Related Characters: Don Davidson (speaker), Selver Thele, Raj Lyubov
Page Number and Citation: 178
Explanation and Analysis:

“Look, Captain Davidson,” the creechie said in that quiet little voice that made Davidson go dizzy and sick, “we’re both gods, you and I. You’re an insane one, and I’m not sure whether I’m sane or not. But we are gods. There will never be another meeting in the forest like this meeting now between us. We bring each other such gifts as gods bring. You gave me a gift, the killing of one’s kind, murder. Now, as well as I can, I give you my people’s gift, which is not killing. I think we each find each other’s gift heavy to carry. However, you must carry it alone. Your people at Eshsen tell me that if I bring you there, they have to make a judgment on you and kill you, it’s their law to do so. So, wishing to give you life, I can’t take you with the other prisoners to Eshsen; and I can’t leave you to wander in the forest, for you do too much harm. So you’ll be treated like one of us when we go mad. You’ll be taken to Rendlep where nobody lives any more, and left there.”

Related Characters: Selver Thele (speaker), Don Davidson
Page Number and Citation: 180
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Eight Quotes

“Sometimes a god comes,” Selver said. “He brings a new way to do a thing, or a new thing to be done. A new kind of singing, or a new kind of death. He brings this across the bridge between the dream-time and the world-time. When he has done this, it is done. You cannot take things that exist in the world and try to drive them back into the dream, to hold them inside the dream with walls and pretenses. That is insanity. What is, is. There is no use pretending, now, that we do not know how to kill one another.”

Related Characters: Selver Thele (speaker), Mr. Lepennon, Don Davidson
Page Number and Citation: 188-189
Explanation and Analysis:
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Don Davidson Character Timeline in The Word for World is Forest

The timeline below shows where the character Don Davidson appears in The Word for World is Forest. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter One
Violence, War, and Colonization Theme Icon
Gender and Masculinity Theme Icon
When Captain Davidson wakes up, he thinks about two pieces of news, one good and one bad. The... (full context)
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Gender and Masculinity Theme Icon
...apparently means that, on New Tahiti, they need to create farmland around stands of trees.  Davidson finds this silly; nobody has to waste valuable acreage on trees back on Earth. But... (full context)
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Davidson gets out of bed and calls for his creechie, Ben, ordering him to prepare the... (full context)
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Today, Davidson plans to go to Central and see the shipload of women, who will be distributed... (full context)
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Ben is taking forever to bring breakfast, so Davidson yells again. While Ben is old and “dumb even for a creechie,” Davidson knows how... (full context)
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Walking through the camp, Davidson runs into Kees Van Sten, who asks him to stop the loggers from hunting red... (full context)
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Davidson calmly condescends to Kees, saying that it’s fine to report him, but it’s silly to... (full context)
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Kees storms away, and Davidson thinks about deer, which he first saw on New Tahiti—they’re amazing animals, especially compared to... (full context)
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Davidson continues his walk through the logging camp. With their 200 men, they’ve already tamed a... (full context)
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Someone greets Davidson, and he’s a little slow to turn around—this stupid planet makes him daydream. It’s Oknanawi... (full context)
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Ok argues that the creechies too little and it doesn’t work to starve them, but Davidson says that they’re tough and don’t feel pain. Ok should know this, since he and... (full context)
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Davidson senses that Ok won’t hurt creechies due to their small size, so he suggests that... (full context)
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Davidson checks out a hopper from HQ, and the guy on duty tells him to bring... (full context)
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Davidson goes to meet up with a friend (Juju Sereng) at the bar and sees Raj... (full context)
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As Davidson is flying back to camp, he notices that there’s smoke above it. Flying closer, he... (full context)
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Davidson is about to get to the hopper to send out an alarm when he hears... (full context)
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Brandishing a gun, Davidson jumps out and asks who started the fire. The crazy creechie, who has a scar... (full context)
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The creechie jumps at Davidson, dodging Davidson’s gunshot. He then pins Davidson down, grabs his gun, and, bizarrely, begins to... (full context)
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Davidson runs, certain that they can’t kill him; it’s impossible. He jumps into the hopper and... (full context)
Chapter Two
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Anticipating yumen attack, Selver notes that he has a gun he can use to shoot Davidson, who does eventually arrive. But when Selver fires the gun, nothing comes out, and he... (full context)
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Selver enters back into his dream state and imagines himself pinning Davidson down again, this time hitting him with a rock and breaking his teeth. It’s a... (full context)
Chapter Three
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...the Athsheans burned Smith Camp two days ago, an attack that killed 200 men—everyone except Davidson. That’s why Lyubov’s pills can’t reach the center of his migraine to stop it: his... (full context)
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The room continues to fill with personnel, including the colony ecologist (Gosse) and Captain Davidson. The purpose of this meeting is obviously to find out who’s to blame for the... (full context)
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Yung confirms that everyone has heard Davidson’s recorded report on the Smith events, and he invites them to ask Davidson questions. His... (full context)
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...him more confused than ever about what motivated the attack. Mr. Or dryly wonders whether Davidson was including the native people when he said that everyone at Smith was happy, and... (full context)
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...excited by the idea that Lepennon and Or weren’t supposed to be here. He asks Davidson to confirm that one of the natives who attacked him was Selver Thele, who has... (full context)
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Lyubov explains that Selver’s hatred of Davidson might have partially motivated the recent attack at Smith. Athsheans are capable of violence, which... (full context)
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Lyubov asks Davidson if his head was thrown back or to the side, since Davidson might have been... (full context)
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Or asks if Davidson considers the native people human, since he had sex with one. When no one answers... (full context)
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...says yes. Or asks if the natives can last, and Lyubov, who has been observing Davidson with rising panic, interrupts to say no. Dongh speaks first, saying that the natives are... (full context)
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...Athsheans can survive, though he feels humiliated and self-sacrificial now. He can also tell that Davidson is watching him, which makes Lyubov scared: if the colonists are left with just the... (full context)
Chapter Four
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Captain Davidson thinks that everyone who was at the meeting has gone crazy. He can’t believe that... (full context)
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...colony status is “under consideration,” that colonists can’t use firearms, and that they can’t retaliate. Davidson assumes that humanoids have planted these messages, since the men on Earth are more practical... (full context)
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Some people, particularly asiatiforms and “hindi types” are natural traitors, and euraf-descended men like Davidson are natural saviors—that’s just how things are. Davidson is especially annoyed that HQ removed the... (full context)
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...against retaliation, the men at Central have hoppers with guns to defend themselves. It makes Davidson excited to think about dropping “firejelly” and watching the creechies scatter, especially because he associates... (full context)
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...he doesn’t like HQ’s orders. However, he obeys them when they come. Back at HQ, Davidson once saw papers that said that his own IQ was higher than Muhamed’s, but Muhamed... (full context)
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Men at New Java distrust Davidson because he was the only man to survive Smith, but soon they’ll see that he’s... (full context)
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...hates creechies—to an absurd, extra-paranoid degree, actually, but he’s a good man to have around. Davidson doesn’t bother trying to get Muhamed on his side, since Muhamed is militant and doesn’t... (full context)
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When Davidson has convinced a group of trustworthy men of the creechie threat, he takes them to... (full context)
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The men don’t take a female creechie to rape, since they agreed with Davidson that it was perverted. Perversions like homosexuality are normal enough, but it’s better to kill... (full context)
Chapter Five
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...Selver and Thele meet in his hut occasionally, and as Thele was returning one night, Davidson saw her, took her to his hut, and raped her. She died afterwards, either because... (full context)
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...who might eventually stop the Open Colony policy. But he had to save his friend. Davidson kept threatening to kill Selver, so after Selver was better, Lyubov dropped him off with... (full context)
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...to the Athsheans. Is murder part of his language now, or is he just parroting Davidson’s? Murder seems to have emerged naturally from Selver’s own suffering, but it could destroy the... (full context)
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...he’d seen Selver, they’d put Selver on trial, overriding the Colonial Code, and they’d bring Davidson to Central to stand witness. Lyubov can’t allow that. He realizes that he’s already made... (full context)
Chapter Seven
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Davidson has been using Major Muhamed’s tape recorder to make note of everything that’s happened in... (full context)
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...experimenting on them now. Muhamed had recorded all his conversations with Central post-massacre, and when Davidson first heard one particular exchange between Dongh and Muhamed, he destroyed the recording in a... (full context)
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Davidson had no choice but to shoot Muhamed, which was a bummer, but Muhamed never would’ve... (full context)
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On the radio earlier, Juju had told Davidson that he was making it hard for the rest of the humans, since they have... (full context)
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Davidson asked Juju to send Central’s hoppers to him if they were too scared to use... (full context)
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After the rainy season is over, Davidson will bomb whole islands—including Central, if they don’t man up. Later that day, someone on... (full context)
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The creechies don’t do anything about Davidson’s raids, which proves his theory that you just have to be tough with them. Davidson... (full context)
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Two weeks later, the men start to get antsy. Davidson tells Aabi, Temba, and another guy, Post, about his plan to liberate the hoppers. Aabi... (full context)
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Suddenly, one of Davidson’s guards starts screaming, and a gun goes off. Thousands of creechies swarm in, which sets... (full context)
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Davidson asks where Temba is, and Post says that he’s dead. Aabi wants to pilot the... (full context)
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Aabi turns around but can’t find the camp in the dark. Davidson thinks about how he’s the only really strong man here. The fire at New Java... (full context)
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When Davidson comes to, he’s groggy. He can’t find Aabi, and he barely knows where he is.... (full context)
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Davidson sees the light again. He reaches for his gun, then realizes it’s in the hopper.... (full context)
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Someone calls Davidson’s name, and he opens his eyes to see Selver looking at him from above. It’s... (full context)
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Selver tells Davidson that both he and Davidson are gods: Davidson insane, Selver either sane or insane. As... (full context)
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Davidson says that he should have killed Selver back in Central, and Selver agrees that this... (full context)
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Davidson tells Selver to just kill him and quit bragging, and Selver says that he can’t:... (full context)
Chapter Eight
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...a Great Dreamer. Lepennon asks if there have been any killings since the attack on Davidson’s camp at New Java, and Selver says that he didn’t kill Davidson. Lepennon says that’s... (full context)
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...Selver’s mind, saying that he’ll still be there. Selver tells Lepennon that both Lyubov and Davidson will remain here. Maybe after Selver dies, things will go back to normal. But he... (full context)