Synopsis
A broken hyperspace drive strands two couples on a planet officially marked lifeless and uninhabitable. The atmosphere cannot support flame, the soil holds no carbon, and the sky never clears—yet something there is watching.At first it is subtle. A tremor of fear at the controls. Laughter that won’t stop. Desires that flare without warning. Soon the four travelers realize they are not alone and not in control. The invisible inhabitants toy with them as easily as children might prod an anthill, pushing emotions, twisting loyalties, testing limits. Violence nearly erupts. Trust fractures. Every attempt to escape fails before it begins.Blasters accomplish nothing. The ship’s systems remain intact, yet the crew cannot bring themselves to use them. The enemy cannot be shot or grappled with. It exists in a realm beyond muscle and machinery.If they are to leave Sigmaringen IV alive, they must frighten creatures that do not know fear. They must present something so alien to this world that it shatters whatever certainty holds their captors in place. The solution, when it comes, is as fragile as it is brilliant—a spark carried in the hand.Isaac Asimov wrote “The Portable Star” during his prolific early career, when his short fiction regularly appeared in magazines such as Thrilling Wonder Stories, Astounding Science Fiction, and Startling Stories. Long before the Foundation saga became a landmark of the genre, Asimov was already experimenting with speculative science grounded in chemistry and physics. His fascination with planetary environments and technological improvisation is on full display here, as practical knowledge becomes the only weapon available. The story stands as an early example of Asimov’s ability to solve cosmic problems with a single, precise scientific insight.