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- Macroscope by Piers Anthony
- Piers Anthony
- Macroscope
- The author wishes to express his appreciation for the kind assistance given in aspects of the research and
- drafting of this novel to Alfred Jacob, Joseph Green, Marion McIntosh and Glen Brock. Without their diligence
- the scope would have been less macro. And special thanks to Marc Edmund Jones for permission to quote from his
- texts on astrology, though the treatment of that subject in this novel should not be taken as in any way
- official or definitive.
- CONTENTS
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 9
- Chapter 10
- CHAPTER 1
- Ivo did not realize at first that he was being followed. A little experimentation verified it, however: where
- Ivo went, so did this stranger.
- He had seen the man, pale, fleshy and sweaty, in a snack shop, and thought nothing of it until repetition
- brought the matter to consciousness. Now it alarmed him.
- Ivo was a slim young man of twenty-five with short black hair, brown eyes and bronzed skin. He could have
- merged without particular notice into the populace of almost any large city of the world. At the moment he was
- trying valiantly to do so—but the pursuer did not relent.
- There was less of this type of thing today than there had been, but Ivo knew that people like himself still
- disappeared mysteriously in certain areas of the nation. So far he had personally experienced nothing worse
- than unexplained price increases at particular restaurants and sudden paucities of accommodations at motels.
- There had been disapproving frowns, of course, and loud remarks, but those hardly counted. He had learned to
- control his fury and even, after a time, to dismiss it.
- But actually to be followed—that prompted more than mere annoyance. It brought an unpleasant sensation to
- his stomach. Ivo did not regard himself as a brave man, and even one experience of this nature made him long
- for the comparatively secure days of the project. That was a decade gone, though, and there could be no return.
- His imagination pictured the stout Caucasian approaching, laying a clammy hand upon his arm, and saying:
- "Mister Archer? Please come with me," and showing momentarily the illegal firearm that translated the feigned
- politeness into flat command. Then a helpless trip to a secluded spot—perhaps a rat-infested
- cellar—where...
- Better to challenge the man immediately, here in the street where citizens congregated. To say to him: "Are you
- following me, sir?" with a significant emphasis on the "sir." And when the man denied it, to walk away,
- temporarily free from molestation. Around the corner, a short hop in a rental car, somewhere, anywhere, so long
- as he lost himself quickly.
- Ivo entered a drugstore and ducked behind the towering displays of trivia, temporizing while he covertly
- watched the man. Would a direct challenge work—or would the bystanders merely stand by, afraid to get
- involved or just plain out of sympathy? Outside the glass he saw a harried white woman with two rambunctious
- little boys, and after her a Negro teenager in tattered tennis shoes, and after him the follower dawdling
- beside the entrance and mopping the sweat from his pallid complexion. A plainclothes policeman? Unlikely; there
- would have been none of this furtiveness.
- The dark suspicion flowered into certainty as his mind dwelt upon it: once this man laid hands upon him, his
- life would never be the same. Life? Worse; within hours Ivo Archer would vanish from the face of the earth,
- never to be—
- He had to face down this enemy.
- "Yes?"
- He looked up, startled. A clerk had approached him, no doubt having observed his aimlessness and become alert
- for shoplifting. Her query was impatient.
- Ivo glanced around guiltily and fixed on the handiest pretext He was beside a rack of sunglasses. "These."
- "Those are feminine glasses," she pointed out.
- "Oh. Well, the—you know."
- She guided him to the masculine rack and he picked out a pair he didn't need and didn't want. He paid a price
- he didn't like and put them on. Now he had no excuse to remain in the store.
- He stepped out—and knew as he did so that he lacked the valor to make his stand. Stubborn he was, in
- depth; courageous, no.
- The surprisingly solid hand extended to touch his arm. Coarse black hairs sprouted from the center links of
- three fingers. "Mr. Archer?" the man inquired. His voice, too, was somewhat coarse, as though there were
- chronic phlegm coating the larynx.
- Ivo stopped, nervously touching the right earpiece of the sunglasses. He was furious at himself but not, now,
- frightened. He did know the difference between reality and his fantasies. He looked at the man, still mildly
- repelled by the facial pallor and the faint odor of perspiration. Fortyish; clothing informal but of good cut,
- the footwear expensive and too new. This man was not a professional shadow—those stiff shoes must be
- chafing.
- "Yes." He tried to affect the tone of a busy person who was bothered by being accosted in such fashion, but
- knew he hadn't brought it off. This was plainly no panhandler.
- "Please come with me."
- It was not in Ivo to be discourteous, even in such a situation; it was a weakness of his. But he had no
- intention of accompanying this stranger anywhere. "Who are you?"
- Now the man became nervous. "I can't tell you that here." But just as Ivo thought he had the advantage, those
- hairy fingers closed upon his forearm. They were cold but not at all flabby. "It's important."
- Ivo's nervousness increased. He touched the useless glasses again, looking away. The long street offered no
- pretext for distraction: merely twin rows of ordinary Georgia houses, indistinguishable from Carolina houses or
- Florida houses, fronted by deteriorating sidewalks and slanted parking spaces. The meters suggested monstrous
- matchsticks stood on end, heads up. Would they explode into fire if the unmitigated glare of the sun continued,
- or did it require the touch of metal, as of a coin? His fingers touched a warm disk in his pocket: a penny.
- Thou shalt not park in the noonday sun...?
- "I'm sorry," he said. "Good day." He drew his arm free and took a step forward. He had done it! He had made the
- break.
- "Swinehood hath no remedy," the stranger whispered.
- Ivo turned about and waited, eyes focused on nothing.
- "My car—this way," the man said, taking his arm again. This time Ivo accompanied him without protest.
- The car was a rental electric floater, no downtown runabout. The hood was as long and wide as that of any
- combustion vehicle: room enough for a ponderous massing of cells. The pressure-curtains were sleekly angled.
- This thing, Ivo judged, could probably do a hundred and fifty miles per hour in the open. His host was
- definitely not local.
- They settled into the front compartment and let the upholstery clamp over chests, abdomens and thighs. The cab
- bubble sealed itself and cold air drafted from the floor vents as the man started the compressor. The vehicle
- lifted on its cushion of air so smoothly that only the fringe turbulence visible outside testified to its
- elevation. It drifted out into traffic, stirring up the dry dust by its propulsion.
- There were angry and envious stares from the pedestrians trapped in the wash. Inches above the pavement and
- impervious to cracks and pebbles, the car eased into the center lane reserved for wheelless traffic.
- "Where are you taking me?" Ivo inquired as the car threaded through the occasional congestion, selecting its
- own route.
- "Kennedy."
- "Brad's there?"
- "No."
- "Who are you?"
- "Harold Groton. Engineer, Space Construction."
- "At Kennedy?"
- "No."
- Irritated, Ivo let it drop. The key phrase Groton had spoken told Ivo all he really needed to know for the
- present, and it was not his style to extract meaningful answers piecemeal.
- The last leg of the journey was routine. The car moved down the interstate under self-control at almost a
- hundred miles an hour, and the flat expanse of marsh and scrub was monotonous.
- Ivo studied his companion discreetly. Groton no longer seemed quite so fleshy or pallid. Somehow it made a
- difference that the man had been sent by Brad. Actually, there had been no reason for his initial aversion.
- Well, yes, there had been—but not a valid reason. Once Ivo had been free of prejudice; he had allowed
- some to creep into his attitudes. That was not good. He, of all people, should know better.
- "That's what you might call coasting on ninety-five," Ivo remarked, glancing at the speedometer after an hour's
- silence.
- Groton's heavy head rotated slowly, brow furrowing. "Interstate 95, yes," he said. "But we're not exactly
- coasting."
- "What I meant was, we're doing ninety-five miles per hour down the Florida coast," Ivo explained, chiding
- himself for a puerile attempt at wit. Groton wasn't stupid; it was the pun that was at fault. He had tried to
- make a friendly overture, perhaps in apology for his initial suspicion, and had bungled it.
- Coasting on ninety-five, he thought, and winced inwardly. About time he learned that that kind of complicated
- punning was not amusing to most people—people past twenty-five or so, anyway. Brad, of course, would have
- picked it up and shot it back redoubled—but Brad was scarcely typical, even in their age group. Ivo
- suddenly felt extremely young.
- "Oh," Groton was saying. "Yes, of course."
- Ivo turned away in the awkward silence and brooded upon the landscape again. They were well below Jacksonville,
- and the slender palmettos were increasingly evident, though still outmassed by the southern pine. A sign
- promoted ST. AUGUSTINE—OLDEST TOWN IN AMERICA—NEXT EXIT EAST. He wished it were possible to travel
- for any distance anywhere without constant commercial importunings, but he knew that industrial and other
- pressures had forced an increasingly liberal interpretation of permissible billboard advertising along the
- interstate system. Motels, gasoline, batteries, restaurants, points of public interest (as defined, mainly, by
- private enterprise)—these had seemed justified originally. But once the precedent had been set, erosion
- had been continuous until public interest was assumed to include even hard liquor, soft hallucinogens and
- intimate feminine hygiene.
- Ahead he spied one of the old-fashioned series signs, clumps of words printed upon each square. He read it
- sleepily:
- WHAT THE CLOUD DOETH
- THE LORD KNOWETH
- THE CLOUD KNOWETH NOT
- Ivo smiled, wondering how this was going to relate to the public service of smoother shaving.
- WHAT THE ARTIST DOETH
- THE LORD KNOWETH
- KNOWETH THE ARTIST NOT?
- He snapped awake. Groton sat stolidly beside him, reading a newspaper. Nothing but brush and gravel and
- occasional plastic containers lined the highway here. That had been no series sign, even in his imagination; it
- was an excerpt from a poem he knew well, by a poet he had studied well.
- Yes, man possessed free-will, unlike the cloud. The artist was responsible for his creation. Predestination did
- not apply to the sentient individual.
- Yet Ivo Archer was traveling to a place he had never seen, obedient to the subtly relayed directive of another
- person. Free-will?
- THIS TOO SHALL PASS, a sign said, a real one this time. He sighed, closed his eyes, and gave in to sleep.
- He woke over water: Groton had assumed manual control and was driving across the bridge toward, presumably, the
- cape. Though Ivo was not enchanted by the mystery surrounding his summons to this place, he could not repress a
- feeling of excitement. If the end of this journey were not the cape, it had to be—
- One of the orbiting space stations?
- They were on State route 50. A sign at the far end of the bridge identified Merritt Island; then, shortly, the
- Kennedy Space Center Industrial Area. This was a neat layout of city blocks with parklike landscaping and
- elegant buildings, the whole reminding him somewhat of a modern university campus.
- "Newest town in America—next exit up," he murmured.
- "Close enough," Groton agreed, again mistaking the reference. "There's a post office here, and a telephone
- exchange, bank, hospital, sewage conversion plant, power station, railroad yard, cafeterias, warehouses, office
- buildings—"
- "Any room for the spacecraft?"
- "No," Groton said seriously. The man seemed impervious to irony. "Fifty thousand people work here daily. The
- vehicles are constructed and assembled elsewhere, and of course the launch pads are safely removed. We're just
- stopping here for the normal red tape—security clearance, physical examination, briefing and so on.
- Necessary evils."
- "I'm healthy, and I can't be much of a security risk because I was born in Philadelphia, raised hydroponically,
- and have no idea what I'm doing here."
- "Want to gamble that you're in condition to withstand ten gravities acceleration? That your system can sustain
- intermittent free-fall without adverse reaction, such as violent nausea? That you're not allergic to—"
- "I never gamble," Ivo said with sudden certainty.
- "As for the security clearance: it isn't what you know now that counts, but how you'll react to what you learn.
- Good intentions and partial information can lead to the most extraordinary—"
- "I get the point. When's liftoff?"
- "Just about six hours from now. The shuttle is already being assembled."
- "Assembled! What happened to the regular one?"
- Groton ignored the question, this time evidently taking sincere uneasiness for humor.
- Four hours and a multitude of tests later they were conducted to the Vehicle Assembly Building, a structure of
- appalling volume. "Largest single building in the world, at the time it was built," Groton said, and Ivo could
- believe it. "We have two of them now. The Saturn launch vehicles are put together here—"
- "Saturn? I thought the Saturn shot took off three years ago."
- Groton paused to look at him, then smiled. "You're thinking of the planet Saturn. You're right; that was an
- instrumented economy mission set up in '77. A one-shot bypass of all four gas giants. It's adjacent to the
- planet Saturn right now, and will terminate at Neptune in six years. The same goes for the concurrent Soviet
- shot, of course."
- "So what's with Saturn here?"
- "The Saturn VI is the name of our vehicle. Its major components are assembled here in an upright position, then
- carried on its mobile launcher to the pad. That enables us to use our facilities efficiently."
- "I see," Ivo said, not seeing, but hesitating to blare out his ignorance again. Why was Groton giving him this
- little lecture-tour, instead of taking him directly to the shuttle?
- Away from the giant gray and black Assembly Building he saw a peculiar structure with caterpillar treads. It
- stood about twenty feet tall and was approximately the size and shape of half a football field. "What's that?"
- "Crawler-transporter. Weighs around six million pounds, travels loaded at a good mile an hour."
- "I like that space-age speed." Then, before the man had another chance to miss the humorous intent: "Where does
- it crawl? What does it transport?"
- "It crawls over the Crawlerway. It transports the Mobile Launcher."
- Ivo refused to give up. "Where does the crawlerway expire? What does the mobilauncher launch?"
- "The pad. Us."
- "Oh."
- A short drive beside the pebbled Crawlerway—a handsome dual track resembling the interstate highway,
- except that its surface was loose—brought them to the Pad: an irregular octagon over half a mile across.
- In its center was an elevated pedestal of steel and concrete with a deep trench running through it. Perched
- upon it, squatting over the trench like a man about a private call, was a platform and tower of metal beams,
- steadying a rocket three hundred fifty feet tall.
- "The Mobile Launcher," Groton said. "With a standard Saturn VI workhorse booster. Rather old design, but
- reliable."
- "And that booster is—"
- "Our shuttle."
- Somehow Ivo had visualized a pint-sized rocket, a space-dinghy built for two. He should have known better.
- The launch vehicle was thirty-three feet in diameter at the base and not much smaller at the top. From a
- distance the clustered thrust-engines—six of them—appeared diminutive, under the bulk of the
- vehicle. They were like bowl-shaped buttons sewn on—but up close he'd discovered that each was the size
- of an igloo. Saturn VI was a monster; Ivo had some inkling of the terrible power leashed within it, since it
- had to be enough to hurl the entire mass into space.
- "This one's a one-stage booster. Nine million pounds of thrust, and it's the most versatile vehicle in the
- program," Groton said as they ascended in the elevator within the launcher-structure. "Used to take three
- stages to achieve orbit, but now it's mostly payload. These freighters are usually unmanned, so we'll be the
- only passengers aboard this time. Nothing to do but relax and enjoy the ride."
- "Who touches the match to it?"
- "Ignition is automatic."
- "Suppose it fizzles?"
- Groton did not reply. The lift stopped, and they traversed the high catwalk leading to the minuscule entrance-
- port near the top of the rocket.
- Ivo looked down. The concrete launch-pad looked precariously small from this elevation, and the abutting
- structures were like so many white dominoes. The great torso of Saturn VI seemed to narrow at the base, with a
- tiny skirt at the ground.
- Ivo found himself gripping the rail, afraid of the narrow height. Groton did not seem to notice.
- "Where are you taking me?" Ivo inquired again as the automatic countdown commenced for takeoff. "Is Brad doing
- research at an orbiting station?"
- "No."
- "The moon?"
- "No."
- "Then where—?"
- "The macroscope."
- Of course! That was where Bradley Carpenter would be!
- But the realization triggered another surge of nervousness. Brad would never have summoned him to such a place
- unless—
- Ignition.
- Ivo thought the rocket would shake itself apart. He thought his eardrums would implode. He thought he was a dry
- bean rattling loose in a tin can... in a tornado.
- Gradually, through the blast of sound and vertigo, he became aware of the meaning and practice of multiple-
- gravity acceleration. Now his vision was of a medieval torture chamber: tremendous weights slowly crushing
- breath and life from the fettered victim. Had he undertaken such stress voluntarily?
- Free-will, where is now thy—
- But he knew that it only hit this level for a few seconds. He hoped he never had occasion to endure the same
- for minutes. His chest was aching as the load upon it reluctantly decreased; his fight for air had not been
- figurative.
- Eventually there was free-fall. Then a bone-bruising jar as the lower segment of the rocket was jettisoned, and
- a resumption of acceleration, this time of bearable force.
- "Hey!" Ivo gasped. "Didn't you say this was a one-stage item? What are we—?"
- "I said a one-stage booster. Not the most economical arrangement to achieve escape-velocity, but reliable.
- Government wanted to standardize on one model, and this was it. Actually, those discarded shells orbit for a
- considerable period; quite a few have become useful workshops in space, and eventually we'll run them all down
- and use the metal for another station. That should make a favorable impression on the taxpayer." Groton seemed
- to have no trouble talking against the acceleration.
- How long would the journey take? He decided not to inquire. The macroscope station was known to be five or six
- light seconds away from Earth—say about a million miles.
- Eventually the second drive terminated and permanent free-fall set in. Groton remained strapped to his couch
- and fell asleep. Ivo took this as a hint that the remainder of the flight would be long and tedious, since they
- had nothing to do but ride. He could not even appreciate the view; the single port overlooked nothing but
- emptiness. He tried to think of it as an evocative withdrawal from Earth, the Ancestral Home, but his
- imagination failed him this time. He dozed.
- He dreamed of childhood: ten years old in the great city of Macon, population three thousand, three hundred and
- twenty-three by the latest census, plus a couple thousand blacks. His brother Clifford was eight and baby
- Gertrude barely two, that summer of '52; he liked them both, but mostly he played Cotton Merchant with his
- friend Charley. They would set up as dealers, buying and selling, tunneling their warehouses from the rich red
- clay sides of the deep gully beside the highway. When the big slow wagons bound for the city passed, he and
- Charley would jump out and grab away handfuls of the cotton to store in the warehouses. If the slaves tending
- the wagons noticed, they never said anything, so long as the piracy was minimal.
- Or picking up hickory nuts for pretend-money or jewelry; or searching for arrowheads, or simply fishing. It was
- fun out of doors. Nature was beautiful even in the winter, but this was summer.
- Sometimes he would wander through the forest, playing his flute, and the neighbors would hear him and just
- shake their heads and smile, and the slaves would nod with the beat.
- Ivo woke as they docked at the macroscope station. Actually, there had been several sleeps and two meals from
- tubes, but the unstructured time left nothing worth remembering. The free-fall state, too, had disoriented his
- perception of the passing hours. His life on Earth seemed at once hours and years distant, another plane of
- reality or memory.
- Still there was no excitement. He knew that a complex chain of maneuvers had been accomplished, and that
- control had been duly shifted from Ground Control to Station Control, possibly with intermediate Controls
- between, as though the rocket were the baton in a relay race. But none of that had been evident to the
- passengers. Even the docking was tame; for all that was visible, they might have been stepping from the subway
- onto the platform back on Earth. Ivo was disappointed; like any tourist, he thought wryly.
- A space officer wearing UN insignia was on hand to check them in and to supervise the unloading of supplies.
- The lightness of Ivo's body attested to his off-planet location; the station's rotation provided "gravity" via
- centrifugal force, and this would be the inner ring, with the smallest actual velocity.
- There was no physical inspection or other clearance; the over-thorough processes at Kennedy sufficed,
- apparently, as well they might. But where was he supposed to go now?
- "Mr. Archer—report to compartment nineteen, starboard, G-norm shell," the officer said abruptly, making
- him feel as though he were being inducted into the navy.
- "That's it," Groton said. "I'll drop you off—or would you rather find your own way?"
- "I would rather find my own way."
- Groton looked at him, surprised, but let him go. "G-norm is level eight," he said.
- "Section eight. Right." But of course Groton didn't get it.
- Ivo dutifully made the traverse, stepping into the lift for the descent to the specified level. The numbers
- indicating the shells blinked to life as he passed them, very much in the manner of the floors of an apartment
- building. He fancied that he could feel his weight increase, and that his feet were heavier than his head,
- specific gravity considered. Did the pull vary that sharply?
- Level Eight ignited its bulb, and he hit the "Stasis" button. The panel slid aside to reveal a compartment even
- more like a subway stop. Two sets of tracks passed the central shaft, and beside them stood several four-
- wheeled carts. He determined from the placement of the sidings that the track on his right was for travel
- forward, in relation to his random orientation, and the one on his left was for motion in the opposite
- direction. Which was Compartment 19?
- He didn't let it worry him. He climbed into a cart and secured himself in the sturdy seat, looking for the
- motor controls. There were none; it was an empty husk, as though it had been jettisoned in orbit. There was a
- simple mechanical brake set against one wheel.
- Ivo shrugged and released the brake. The cart began to move, angling in to intercept the main track, and he
- realized that it was gravity-powered. Evidently the track tilted down, or outward, allowing the carts to roll
- until braked. Beautiful; what better mode of transportation, in a torus where power was probably expensive?
- He saw the numbers now: 96, 95, 94, each no doubt representing an apartment or office. Those on the right were
- marked P, those on his left S. Port and Starboard, presumably. Starboard being right, he must be heading for
- the stern.
- Of a torus? Exactly where were bow and stern in a hollow doughnut spinning in space? He must be halfway around
- it by now, but headed in the proper direction, since the numbers were decreasing.
- Except that the levels were level, while the track was tilted. More precisely, the shells were curved to match
- the onionlike circumference of the station, while the track had a larger arc. An obtuse arc? Thus he was headed
- for the right number—but on the wrong level. Already he was halfway down to the ninth.
- Well, one problem at a time. He had declined Groton's assistance, and now would muddle through in his own
- fashion, as was usually the case. One had to live with the liabilities of one's independence.
- There was a vertical shaft between numbers seventeen and sixteen, and he guided the cart onto the siding by
- judicious manipulation of the brake. The track became elevated here, neatly slowing the vehicle so that only
- minimal braking was necessary.
- He was on the eleventh shell. It occurred to him that what he had actually done was to drift from a tight orbit
- to a looser one, except that he had gained velocity instead of losing it. Or had he? At any rate, he now
- weighed a little more than normal, if his estimate could be relied upon.
- The shaft was bipart: one side up, the other down. Probably the capsules were looped together, counterbalancing
- each other, in the interest of further economy of power. He ascended to the eighth level, then walked along the
- interior mall to apartment Nineteen Starboard.
- The name on the door-panel was BRADLEY CARPENTER, as he had expected. No one else could have prepared the
- particular summons entrusted to Groton. He slid the section aside and stepped in.
- A young man turned at the sound: tall, brown of hair and eye, muscularly handsome. Sharp intelligence animated
- his features. "Ivo!"
- "Brad!" They leaped to embrace each other, punching arms and tousling hair in a fury of reacquaintance, two
- subtly similar adolescents roughhousing companionably. Then both sobered into young adults.
- "God, I'm glad you could make it," Brad said, hooking up a hammock and flopping into it. He indicated another
- for the guest. "Just seeing you brings back my boyhood."
- "How could I help it? You sent your boar oinking after me," Ivo complained cheerfully. It was good to postpone
- the serious ramifications for a while. He set up the hammock and got the swing of it.
- "All part of the trade, swine." Both laughed.
- "But I have one crucially important question—"
- "To wit: which way is Stern?"
- Ivo nodded. "That is the question."
- "I'm surprised at you, den brother. Haven't you learned yet that your stern is behind your stem?"
- "My mind is insufficiently pornographic to make that association."
- "Take your bow. It's inevitable."
- Ivo smiled amiably, realizing that it was his turn to miss a pun of some sort. He would catch on in due course.
- Brad bounced to his feet. "Come on—have to show you the femme. Business before pleasure."
- "Femme?" Ivo followed him into the hall, somewhat bewildered still.
- Brad halted him momentarily outside the girl's room. "She has a certified IQ of one fifty-five. I told her I
- was one sixty, okay?"
- "Is that the proper mentality for liaison?"
- "I'm infatuated with her. What do you expect me to do, humble clay that I am?"
- Ivo shrugged. "Clay with the feet of a god."
- Brad smiled knowingly and touched the bell. In a moment the panel slid aside, inviting entry.
- Here the furnishings were distinctively feminine. Frilly curtains decorated the air-conditioning vents, and the
- walls were pastel pink. Brushes and creams lined the surface of the standard desk, and a mirror hung behind it
- to convert the whole into something like a vanity.
- Here, Ivo thought, was the residence of someone who wanted the entire station to know there was a Lady present.
- Someone who wasn't certain of herself, otherwise?
- How many women were here aboard the macroscope station? What was their status, whatever their official
- capacity? There was something ambivalent about Brad's attitude toward this one.
- She appeared from the adjoining compartment She stood a trifle above medium height, slender of neck, waist,
- ankle; statuesque of hip and bosom. A starlet type, Ivo thought, embarrassed for Brad's superficiality. Her
- hair was shoulder-length and quite red, and her eyes as she looked up were contrastingly blue.
- "Afra, this is Ivo Archer, my old friend from the neighboring project."
- Ivo grinned, feeling awkward for no reason he could say. What was this piece, to him?
- "Ivo, this is Afra Glynn Summerfield."
- She smiled. Sunrise over the marsh.
- Brad went on talking, but Ivo did not hear the words. In a single photographic flash the whole of her had been
- imprinted upon his ambition.
- Afra Glynn Summerfield: prior impressions, prior liaisons—these were nothing. She wore a dress of
- slightly archaic flavor, with silvery highlights, and her shoes were white slippers.
- The lines of her:
- Inward and outward to northward and southward the beach-lines linger and curl.
- As a silver-wrought garment that clings to and follows the firm sweet limbs of a girl.
- Afra: inward and outward, firm sweet limbs, hair the color of the Georgia sunset. Glynn: silver-wrought friend
- of his friend. Summerfield: his fancy lingered and curled.
- Afra Glynn Summerfield: at this glance, beloved of Ivo.
- He had thought himself practical about romance, with disciplined dreams. He had accepted the fact that love was
- not feasible for a person in his unique situation.
- Feasibility had been preempted by reality.
- "Hey, moonstruck—wake up!" Brad exclaimed cheerfully. "She hits everyone like that, the first time. Must
- be that polished-copper hair she flaunts." He turned to Afra. "I'd better get him out of here till he recovers.
- He gets tongue-tied around beautiful girls. See you in an hour, okay?"
- She nodded and breathed him a kiss.
- Ivo trailed him back into the hall, hardly aware. He was shy with girls, but this was of a different magnitude.
- Never before had he been so utterly devastated.
- "Come on. The 'scope will settle your stomach."
- Somehow they were already on the first level. They donned light pressure-suits and entered what Ivo took to be
- an airlock. It was a tall cylinder less than four feet in diameter set pointing toward the center of the
- doughnut, but at an angle, and it terminated in a bubblelike ceiling.
- Brad touched buttons, and the air about them was drawn off and replaced by a yellowish fog. "Now stand firm and
- clench your gloves together, like this," Brad said, demonstrating. "Make sure your balance is good, and hold
- your elbows out, but tense, as though you expect to be hanging from them. Let out half your breath and hold it,
- and don't panic. Okay?" His voice was distorted by the sealed helmets.
- Ivo obeyed, knowing that his friend never gave irrelevant instructions. Brad drew out a transparent tube with a
- filter on one end and poked a tiny sphere into it. He screwed a springy bulb to the filter-end.
- "Pea-shooter," he explained. "I am young at heart." He aimed the tube directly up and squeezed the bulb
- sharply.
- Ivo saw the streak as the shot went up. Then he was launched into space, somersaulting uncontrollably. The
- giant torus of the station careened about him, a faceless mouth, the monster bands of its segment-junctures
- reminding him of the vertical cracks in parched, pursed lips.
- A hand caught his foot and steadied him. "You didn't listen," Brad said reprovingly, straight-faced within the
- bubble-helmet. "I told you to watch your balance." His voice seemed to come from the depths, now conducted only
- via the physical contact between them.
- "I didn't listen," Ivo agreed ruefully. He looked about and found that they were flying toward the center of
- the station: the fifty-foot metallic ball guyed by nylon wires extending to the inner rim of the torus. He and
- Brad were still rotating slowly, some of his motion having been imparted to his friend, but in free-fall this
- was inconvenient rather than distressing. He had to keep adjusting in order to keep his gaze on the
- destination.
- "Don't tell me, let me guess," Ivo said when it was clear that Brad was not going to explain. "You popped
- a—a bubble, and the atmospheric pressure squirted us out. Since your airgun-spacelock is aimed at the
- center—"
- "I see you have recovered a wit or two. Actually, I was showing off a little; that isn't exactly the approved
- technique. Wastes gas and is dangerous for the inexperienced, to name a couple of objections. We're supposed to
- wait for the catapult. Nobody does, of course. Even so, you're wrong about the aim. The tube is tilted to
- compensate for angular momentum; otherwise we'd miss the target every time because of the spin of the torus.
- Apart from all that, your guess was fair."
- "Uh-huh."
- "Now watch your footing as we land." Brad removed his hand, nudging the foot just enough to counter the
- remaining spin and send Ivo slightly ahead, and he fell upright toward the dark surface of the artificial
- planetoid.
- He saw now that the guys were actually light chains. They merely anchored the mass in place, so that arrivals
- and departures such as theirs did not jog it out of alignment. Each hooked to a traveling roller magnetically
- attached, so that the rotation of the doughnut imparted no spin to the ball.
- "This is the macroscope proper?" he inquired before remembering that his voice would not carry through the
- vacuum, now that contact was gone. Obviously it was the 'scope, painstakingly isolated from unwanted motions
- and intrusions. He had no doubt that their approach was being observed, or that it had been cleared well in
- advance.
- The macroscope was the most expensive, important device ever put into space by man. The project had been
- financed and staffed internationally as research in the public interest: meaning that while no single
- government had cared to expend such considerable resources on such a farfetched speculation, none could afford
- to leave the potential benefits entirely to others.
- Compromise had accomplished mighty things. The macroscope was functioning, and each participant was entitled to
- a share of its use proportionate to the investment, and a similar weighted share of all information obtained.
- That was most of what Ivo knew about it; exactly what hours fell to whom was classified information. Much of
- the result was general: details of astronomic research that had the astronomers gaping. The scope, it seemed,
- ground out exceeding fine pictures. Much was concealed from the common man, but the awe this instrument
- nevertheless inspired was universal.
- He thought of it as basically nothing more than a gigantic nose, sniffing out the secrets of the galaxy. It
- still daunted him.
- He landed at last, almost afraid his momentum would jar the machine out of line. Brad came down behind him,
- controlling his spin to land neatly on his feet. Ivo decided he would have to master that technique; his own
- touchdown had been awkward.
- Brad took his hand so that they could communicate readily. "We'll have to wait for admittance. Could be several
- minutes if he's in a taping sequence. Just relax and admire the scenery."
- Ivo did. He peeked cautiously toward the sunside, knowing that Sol was much fiercer here in space than to an
- observer sheathed in Earth's atmosphere.
- A monster rocket floated there, similar to one he remembered.
- "What's a Saturn VI doing here? A complete one, I mean. I thought the booster-stage never got out of orbit."
- "Correct. This one's in orbit."
- "Earth orbit, mister innocent. This is sun orbit, if I'm not totally confused."
- "Oh, it can travel far—if refueled. That's Joseph, our emergency vehicle. Enough power there to blast us
- all to safety in a hurry—if ever necessary. Personally, I'd call space safer than tempestuous, seam-
- splitting Earth. Joseph is actually the tug that nudged the scope into this orbit. Now he's semiretired; no
- point in sending the old gent home empty."
- "Must be quite a lot of oomph when you click your flint under his tail. No gravity—" The thrust, he knew,
- would not change; but here none of it would he counteracted by planetary drag, so the net effect had to be a
- much larger payload or higher velocity.
- "To be sure. We've been tinkering with him on the QT. He still uses hydrogen as the working fluid, but stores
- it solid. But no ignition—combustion in a chemical engine is only a means, not an end. It is the velocity
- of the expelled propellant that counts, you know, rather than the per se heat of the engine, although—"
- "Sorry, Brad. I don't know. If you must get technical—"
- "I can make it simple for you, Ivo. I just can't resist bragging a little, because I was the lucky lad who
- happened to pick the key out of the scope."
- "You're actually getting technology from—"
- Brad moved a finger in their old-time code for caution. That implied that the question had awkward aspects that
- could only be cleared up more privately, which in turn implied that their present conversation might be
- overheard somehow. Perhaps through a pickup in the macroscope housing. And the implications of that—
- Ivo shut up. Cloak and dagger did not thrill him; it brought back the restlessness in his stomach. Too much had
- happened in the past few hours.
- "We've had the basic theory to adapt a gaseous-core atomic reaction to propulsion for years, but the thing is
- fraught with peril. We can mix the working fluid—that's the hydrogen we belch from the tail of the rocket
- to make it go—directly with the fissioning uranium in the chamber. That raises the gas to a temperature
- that makes possible a specific impulse ten times the best we can do with chemical combustion. But it's too hot.
- It melts any containing material we know of. What I discovered was a heat-shielding technique that—well,
- Joseph may look ordinary to you, but he's a Saturn VI in outline only. His engine produces a thrust you'd call
- over ten gravities—and he can keep it up for almost a week before he runs out of hydrogen. He never runs
- out of heat, of course. If you could only appreciate by what factor that outperforms the best Earth has known
- before—"
- "Brad, I am appreciating with fervent fervor. But I'm still a layman. I never had technical training. I'll be
- happy to take your word it can do the job, whatever the job is."
- Speech lapsed. Ivo knew that Brad's feelings were not hurt. They had merely taken the dialogue beyond the
- danger point—its relevance to the macroscope?—so that it was safe to drop it.
- His attention had been on immediate things hitherto, but now he stared beyond the rim of the station, away from
- the uncomfortably brilliant sun, and saw the stars. He found to his surprise that they were familiar.
- Ursa Major—the Big Dipper—was evident, with its dip pointing to Ursa Minor. And just who was Ursa?
- he always asked himself. That was no lady, that was the wife of a bear! he always replied. Draco the Dragon
- curled around the Little Dipper. Following the line the Big Dipper pointed on past the Pole star, he could
- travel at multiple-lightspeed all the way to Aquarius, perpetually chasing Capricornus. The runner was so
- close, but fated never to catch up. Somehow that saddened Ivo; there seemed to be a special, personal tragedy
- in it, though he could not determine why he felt that way.
- The light he perceived at this instant had been generated by many of those stars over a century ago, or even
- much longer. Perhaps one of those brilliancies dated from the time he, as a lad of fourteen, had organized a
- company of some fifty youths like himself, to train with bows and arrows. Thus "Archer"—so fiercely
- patriotic, as the clouds of national dissension gathered, signifying the end of life as he had known it. Yet he
- might as readily have been named for the flute with which he used to serenade the young ladies. "Tutor," when
- he later taught at college, had indeed been corrupted to "tooter" by the students. Or "Plowman," because of the
- passages he liked to quote from Piers Plowman....
- He had been cultured then, polite, affable, dignified, replete with moral refinement. Not quite fifteen, he had
- entered Oglethorpe University at Midway, Georgia, parting his fair hair to the side and brushing it behind the
- ears. He wore good, but not ostentatious, apparel. Already a hint of a stoop to the shoulders, but brisk of
- gait. He had no taste for athletics.
- There were fifty students at the college.
- Music and books were his dearest companions—but those fair young ladies were never quite forgotten.
- Once a student misunderstood him and denounced him as a liar. He struck that person immediately, though he was
- not himself strong. The student drew a knife and stabbed an inch deep into his left side, but he did not
- capitulate. Never was he known as a coward, then.
- "What do you think of Afra?" Brad asked him.
- That name brought him instantly back. What availed past courage, when the present battle was lost? "You're
- serious about her?"
- "Who wouldn't be? You saw her."
- "Brad, she's a hundred and two per cent cauc in the shade!"
- "I'll say! Her DAR pedigree goes back to the Saxon conquest."
- Ivo smiled dutifully. "The project—"
- "The project's over. You know that. We're free citizens now."
- "You can't erase the past. If she knew—"
- Brad looked at him oddly. "I told her there were several projects, related but discrete. That I was a washout
- from the IQ set."
- "A washout!"
- "What would you call an intelligence quotient of one hundred and sixty, when the target was two hundred?"
- "I see. And where did you tell her I was from?"
- "Nothing but the truth, Ivo. That a private foundation gathered together selected stock from every corner of
- the sphere and—"
- "And bred back to the multiracial ancestor they presumed mankind started from. So I'm Paleolithic."
- "Not exactly, Ivo. You see—"
- They were interrupted by the lifting of a panel. Admittance was at hand.
- The interior was a cramped mass of panels, but there was room for several people if they watched their elbows.
- A short tunnel beyond the airlock opened into a roughly spherical compartment. Ivo's first impression was of
- machinery; there were dials and levers everywhere, projecting from every side. He found it hard to orient
- because there was no gravity here and no visual "up." Wherever he planted his feet was ground; the slight
- magnetism that had held him to the outer hull remained effective.
- The technician in charge was already getting into his suit. Brad spoke to him in a foreign language, received a
- curt reply, and said: "Ivo Archer—American." The man nodded politely.
- "You see, it is all very carefully arranged," Brad said as they waited for the man to complete his suit-
- checkout. "Thirty nations have put up the cash for this project, and each is allotted—but you must know
- that. We send in precise reports every day."
- "This is the American Hour?"
- "No. Personnel here don't bother with the official foolishness. This gentleman is not a gentleman—that
- is, not a Gentile. He's an Israeli geologist doing work for Indonesia. Their own geologist is busy on a private
- project."
- "So somebody is paying off a favor?"
- "Right. Indonesia will get the results, and the home state will never know the difference."
- "How is it we can horn in, then?"
- "I preempted the slot for more important work. He understands."
- "Just to show me the macroscope? Brad, you can't—"
- The Israeli held up his glove. "It is quite all right, Mr. Archer," he said. "We do not question Dr.
- Carpenter." He put on the helmet, pressured his suit, and mounted to the airlock. Ivo detected no shock of air
- puffing out; there were no games of that kind here. Probably the man was hauling himself along one of the guy-
- chains, not trusting himself to any drift through the vacuum. That was the kind of sensible procedure Ivo
- preferred.
- Brad settled into a control seat of some kind and began making adjustments with sundry instruments. Ivo tried
- to make some sense out of the battery of dials and lights, but failed; it was far too complicated.
- "Okay, friend, we're alone. No bugs here. I'm in a position to know."
- Once more the nervousness came upon him. This was it. "Why did you summon me?"
- "We need Schn."
- Ivo met this with silence. He had known it.
- "I don't like to do this to you, believe me," Brad said with genuine apology. "But this is crucial. We're in
- bad trouble here, Ivo."
- "Naturally it wasn't my amiable half-witted companionship you missed. Not just to show off your fancy
- technology and your fancy girl."
- Brad looked far more mature when serious, and he was far more serious now than the literal content of his
- speech indicated. "You know I like you, Ivo. You're a damned Puritan at heart, and you're afraid of anything
- that smacks too much of pleasure and what you're doing here in the space age instead of the nineteenth-century
- Confederacy is beyond me to grasp. I still enjoy your company, more than that of Schn, and I wouldn't change
- one jot of your archaic and poetic fancies. But this is—well, it sounds clich, but it is a matter of
- world security. It's frankly over my head. If your freak abilities were enough—"
- "So playing a simple flute has become 'freak,' and—" But he knew what Brad meant, much as he didn't want
- to. "And who is an ignorant lad straining at one twenty-five to proffer advice to model one sixty? Particularly
- when he knows that's a lie for the only one in the project to be adjudged two hundred and—"
- "Come off it, Ivo. You know better than anyone that those figures are meaningless. I tell you with all
- sincerity that the situation is desperate, and Schn is the only one I know with the potential to handle it. I
- have the privilege of calling him when I really need him. Well, it's been twenty years, and I do need him.
- Earth needs him. You have to do it."
- "I'm not just thinking of myself. Brad, once you let the genie out of the bottle—you know what Schn is.
- Your work, your girl—"
- "I may be giving up everything. I know that. I have no choice."
- "Well, I have a choice. You'll darn well have to prove to me that the cure is not worse than the problem."
- "That's why we're here. I'll have to acquaint you with the nature and function of the macroscope first, though,
- before I can make my point. Then—"
- "Keep it simple, now. I can't even read your dials."
- "Right. Basically the macroscope is a monstrous chunk of unique crystal that responds to an aspect of radiation
- unrelated to any man has been able to study before. This amounts to an extremely weak but phenomenally clear
- spatial signal. The built-in computer sifts out the noise and translates the essence into a coordinated image.
- The process is complex, but we wind up with better pictorial definition than is possible through any other
- medium, bar none. That was a major handicap at first."
- "Superior definition is a problem?"
- "I'll demonstrate." Brad applied himself to the ponderous apparatus, donned a helmetlike affair with opaque
- goggles, and cocked his head as though listening. Ivo felt another pang of nervousness, and realized that this
- stemmed from the superficial similarity between the goggles and the sunglasses he had bought when trying to
- avoid Harold Groton. That entire past episode embarrassed him in retrospect; he had acted foolishly. He threw
- off the memory and concentrated on Brad's motions.
- The left hand hovered over a keyboard of buttons resembling those of a computer input. It probably was the
- computer input, Ivo reminded himself. There was a strap over the wrist to prevent the hand from drifting away
- in the absence of gravity; buttons could be awkward to depress without the anchorage of bodily weight. The
- right hand held a kind of ball mounted on a thin rod, rather like an old-fashioned automobile gearshift. As the
- left fingers moved, a large concave surface glowed over Brad's head.
- "I'll cut in the main screen for you," Brad said. "Notice that my fingers control the computer settings; that
- covers direction, range and focus, none of it simple enough for human reflexes to handle. The vagaries of
- planetary motion alone, when that planet is not our own, are complicated to account for, particularly when we
- want to hold a specific focus on its surface."
- "I'm aware of planetary motion." He remembered one of his old pet peeves. "I had to work it out when I wanted
- to criticize the concept of time travel. If a man were granted the miraculous ability to jump forward or
- backward in time, with no other travel, he'd arrive in mid-space or deep underground; because the Earth is
- always moving. It would be like trying to jump off a moving rocket and jump on again."
- "Nevertheless, we do travel in time, with the macroscope," Brad said, smiling.
- "Oh, so you're going back to supervise your grandfather's conception?"
- "Delicacy forbids." Brad's hands flexed. "I'll center on a precoded location: the planet Earth. The computer
- uses the ephemeris to spot all the planets and moons of the solar system exactly, and a good many of the
- asteroids and comets as well. The right-hand knob provides our personal tuning; once the difficult
- compensations have been made, we use this control to jog over several feet at a time, or to gain different
- angles of view. Right now we're orbiting the sun about nine hundred thousand miles from Earth—right next
- door, as interplanetary distances go. Just out far enough to reduce the perturbations of the moon. There."
- The screen was a mass of dull red. "If that's Earth, the political situation has deteriorated since I left,"
- Ivo observed.
- "That is Earth—dead center. Per the coordinates."
- "Center? Literally?"
- "Definition, problem of, remember. Our corrected coordinates nail the heart of the body. The image is on a one-
- to-one ratio."
- "Life size? It can—"
- "The macroscope can penetrate matter, yes. As I told you, this isn't exactly light we're dealing with, though
- the time delay is similar. That's a representation of the incandescent core of our planet as it was five
- seconds ago, muted by automatic visual safeguards and filters, of course. We'll have to drift about four
- thousand miles off that point to hit the surface, which is what most people seem to assume is all the scope
- looks at. Right there, you can appreciate the implications for geology, mining, paleontology—"
- "Paleontology?"
- "Fossils, to you. We've already made some spectacular finds in the course of routine roving. Lifetime's work
- there, for somebody."
- "Hold on! I ain't that ignorant, perfessor. I thought the bones were widely spaced, even in good fossiliferous
- sediments. How can you tell one, when you're in the middle of it, not looking down at it in a display case? You
- certainly couldn't see it as such."
- "Trust me, junior. We do a high-speed canvass at a given level and record it on tape. The machine runs a
- continuous spectroscopic analysis and trips a signal when there's anything we might want. And that's only the
- beginning."
- "A spectroscopic analysis? You said the macroscope didn't use light."
- "It doesn't, exactly, but we do. We keyed it in on samples: every element on the periodic table. Thus we are
- able to translate the incoming impulse into a visual representation, much as any television receiver does. The
- truth is, the macrons are far more specific than light, because they don't diffuse readily or suffer such
- embarrassments as red shift. Spectroscopy is really a superfluous step, but we do it because we're geared to
- record and analyze light, here. Once we retool to orient on the original impulse, our accuracy will multiply a
- hundredfold."
- "It grinds that fine?"
- "That fine, Ivo. We're just beginning to glimpse the potential of this technique. The macroscope is a larger
- step toward universal knowledge than ever atomics were toward universal power."
- "So I have heard. But I'm sort of stupid, as you know. You were about to tell me what makes superior definition
- so difficult to adapt to, even with the computer guidance."
- "So I were. Here is the surface of Earth, fifty feet above sea-level, looking down. Another keyed-in location."
- The screen became a shifting band of color.
- "Let me guess again. Your snoop is stationary, right? And the globe is turning at the equivalent of a thousand
- miles an hour. It's like flying a jet at low altitude near the equator and peering out through the bombsight."
- "For a pacifist, you have violent imagery. But yes, just about. Sometimes over ocean, sometimes land, sometimes
- under mountains that rise above the pickup level. And if we move higher—" He adjusted the controls, and
- the scene jumped into focus.
- "About a mile up," Ivo said. "Makes the scene clear, but too far for intimate inspection. Yes." He watched the
- land sliding by. "Why don't we just see a panel of air? What we have now is a light image, perspective and
- everything."
- "What we see is the retranslation of the macronic image sponsored by visible radiation passing through that
- point in space. Maybe I'd better give you the technical data after all."
- "Uh-uh. Just answer me this: if it's that sharp on planet Earth from five light-seconds, can it also handle
- other planets? Can it look at Jupiter from one mile up, or even Pluto? If it can—"
- The headgear tilted as Brad nodded somberly. "You begin to comprehend what a magnificent tool we have here.
- Yes, we can explore the other planets of our solar system, from one mile above ground level—those that
- have ground—or one inch or anywhere inside. We can also explore similarly the planets of other systems,
- with so little loss of definition that distance can be ignored."
- "Other systems..." This was distinctly more than he had anticipated. "How far—?"
- "Almost anywhere in the galaxy. There is interference from overlapping images near the galactic center that
- complicates things tremendously, I admit, but the evidence is that there is more than enough of interest
- elsewhere to hold us for a few centuries of research."
- Ivo shook his head. "I must be misunderstanding you. As I make it, our Milky Way galaxy is over a hundred and
- ten thousand light-years across, and we're about thirty-five thousand light-years from the center. Are you
- claiming that you can get a life-sized image from ground level of a planet orbiting a star, oh, fifty thousand
- light-years away?"
- "Yes, theoretically."
- "Then that's the key to interstellar exploration—without the need for physical travel. Why drive to the
- show when you can see it on TV?"
- "Precisely. But we are hampered by those mundane practicalities just discussed. We can compensate to a
- considerable extent for rotary and orbital and stellar motions—but not every planet is the sitting duck
- Earth is." He twitched a finger and the fifty-foot elevation resumed, this time motionless. "Properly
- programmed, the computer can direct a traveling focus and follow the dizzy loops of a particular planetary
- locale, as it is doing now, and provide a steady image. It's a pretty fine adjustment, but that's what the
- machinery is for. At least we know the necessary compensations."
- "And you don't know the motions of planets the regular telescopes can't pick up. But you should be able to
- figure them out soon enough from the—"
- "We can't even find those planets, Ivo. It's the old needle-in-haystack problem. Do you have any proper idea
- how many stars and how much dust there is in the galaxy? We can't begin to use our vaunted definition until we
- know exactly where to focus it. It would take us years of educated searching to spot any significant proportion
- of the planets beyond our own system, and there's such a demand for time on this instrument that we can't
- afford to waste it that way."
- "Um. I remember when I dropped a penny in an overgrown lot. I knew where it was, within ten feet, but I had to
- catch a bus in five minutes. Don't think I've ever been so mad and frustrated since!" His fingers felt the coin
- in his pocket again: he had missed the bus but found the penny, and he still had it.
- "Make that penny a bee-bee shot, and that lot the Sahara desert, and instead of a bus, a jet-plane strafing
- you, and you have a suggestion of the picture."
- "Now who's using violent imagery? I'll buy the bee-bee and the desert—but the jet fighter?"
- "I'll get to that pretty soon. That's why we need Schn. Anyway, we'd need thousands of macroscopes to afford
- that type of exploration, and even this one is precariously funded. There's more important research afoot."
- "More important than geology, when the Earth's resources are terminal? Than the secrets of the universe? Than
- questing into space in the hope that somewhere there is intelligent life; than the possible verification that
- we are not unique in the universe, not alone?" He paused, abruptly making a quite different connection. "Brad,
- you don't mean there's political interference?"
- "There is, and it's serious, but I wasn't thinking of that. Sure, we can snoop out military secrets and get the
- dirt on public figures—but we don't. I admit I picked up a dandy shot of a starlet taking a shower once,
- and you'd be surprised what goes on in the average suburban family situation at the right hour. But aside from
- the ethics of it, this is picayune stuff. It would be ridiculous to try to spy on the antics of three billion
- people with this thing, for the same reason we can't try to map the planets of the galaxy. Be like using the H-
- bomb to drive out bedbugs. No, we're thinking big: interstellar communication."
- Ivo felt a cold thrill. "You have made alien contact! How far away are they? What about the time delay? Do
- they—?"
- Brad's smile was bright under the goggles. "Ease off, lad. I didn't say we'd made contact, I said we were
- thinking of it, and we haven't forgotten the time-delay problem for a moment." His hands began to play upon the
- controls. "I have hinted at some of the problems of routine exploration and charting, but we do have techniques
- that are nonroutine. Time delay or no, we have a pretty good notion of the criteria of life as we know it,
- and—well, look."
- The screen became a frame around an alien landscape. In the foreground rose a gnarled treelike trunk of yellow
- hue and grotesque convolution. Behind it were reddish shrubs whose stems resembled twisted noodles dipped in
- glue. The sky was light blue, with several fluffy white clouds, but Ivo was certain this was not Earth. There
- was an alienness about it that both fascinated him and grated upon his sensibilities, though he could not
- honestly identify anything extraordinary apart from the vegetation.
- "All right," he said at last. "What is it?"
- "Planet Johnson, ten light-minutes out from an F8 star about two thousand light-years from us."
- "I mean, what is it that bothers me about it? I know it's alien, but I don't know how I know."
- "Your eye is reacting to the proportions of the vegetation. This is a slightly larger world than ours, and the
- atmosphere is thicker, so the trunk and stems are braced against greater weight and heftier wind-pressure, and
- react differently than would an Earth-plant in a similar situation."
- "So that's how I knew!" he laughed.
- Brad manipulated the controls again and the scene switched. This was a higher view of a grassy plain, though it
- was odd grass, with stalagmites rising randomly from it Low mountains showed in the hazy distance.
- "Earth or alien?" Brad inquired, teasing him.
- "Alien—but I can't tell a thing about the air or gravity, even unconsciously. What is it this time?"
- "Those projections have two shadows."
- Ivo made a gesture of knocking sawdust from his ear.
- "This is Planet Holt. There are some fine specimens of pseudo-mammalian herbivores here, but I'd have to search
- for them and it isn't worth the effort right now. I'd probably lose the image entirely if I took it off
- automatic. This one circles a G3 star five thousand light-years away."
- "So this picture is five thousand years old?"
- "This scene is, yes, since it takes that long for the macronic impulse to reach us. I told you we traveled in
- time, here."
- Brad returned to the controls, but Ivo stopped him. "Hold it, glibtongue! If this planet circles one, count it,
- one star—where does that second shadow come from?"
- "Thought you'd never ask. There is a reflective cliff behind our pickup spot—another typical outcropping
- of Holt's crust."
- "So my subconscious reasoning was spurious after all. How many of these things have you found?"
- "Earthlike planets? Almost a thousand so far."
- "You told me you couldn't locate planets—"
- "Particular planets we can't. But with luck and sound analysis, we get a few. These are only a minuscule
- fraction of those available, and we've probably missed most of the closest ones, but chance plays a dictatorial
- part in such discoveries. Our thousand planets are merely a random selection of the billions we know are
- there."
- "And they all have trees and animals?"
- "Hardly. We only name the important ones. Less than two hundred have any life at all we can recognize, and only
- forty-one of those have land-based animals. Chief specialization seems to be size. I can show you
- monsters—"
- "Maybe next time. I like monsters; I feel a personal affinity for them because they always get the negative
- characterizations in the science fiction reruns. I could romp with them for hours. But to the point: have you
- found intelligence?"
- "Yes. Watch." Brad shifted scenes.
- A tremendous hive appeared. Walls and tunnels were built upon themselves in a mountain, and fluid filled many
- wholly or in part. Strange squidlike creatures splashed and swam and climbed through the maze, disappearing and
- reappearing so thickly that Ivo could not tell whether he ever saw the same individual twice.
- "This is Planet Sung, about ten thousand light-years distant. We have studied it with ferocious intensity the
- past few months, and we don't much like the implications. They are quite alarming, in fact."
- The image was traveling over the planet, showing open water and desert land, with frequent warren-mountains
- inhabited tightly by the semi-aquatic creatures. Ivo was reminded of pictures he had seen of the beaches where
- walruses congregated; no vegetation showed at all. He wondered what the Sung denizens ate.
- "This is intelligence? I haven't seen anything very alarming or even impressive, yet. Just a termite-society
- with very little pasture. Surely they aren't planning to loft a bomb at Earth?" But his scoffing covered what
- was beginning to be a discomforting degree of awe. This was a genuine extraterrestrial planetary species, and
- the very realization of its existence was nearly overwhelming.
- "They hardly care about Earth. Remember, we were in our tedious prehistory at the time we see them now. I have
- no doubt that they are extinct at present."
- The picture framed an individual burrow. Close up, the occupants seemed a lot less like seals or squids. Their
- bodies were fishlike but seemingly clumsy, with heavy fins or flippers at the sides and a trunklike tube
- behind. Two great frog-eyes were mounted on top, pointing mainly backward. The tube appeared to be prehensile,
- like the proboscis of an elephant.
- "This is the closest you have found to civilization? Creatures who live in multiple-story beaver houses and
- splash in puddles?"
- "Don't underestimate them, Ivo. They are technologically advanced. Ahead of us, actually. They've had the
- macroscope for a century."
- Ivo looked harder, but saw only a small domicile with several fat fishlike creatures lolling listlessly in what
- he was sure was tepid water. Now and then one squirted a jet of liquid from its trunk and slid
- backward—or perhaps forward—from the reaction. "Maybe you'd better give me some more background.
- I'm missing something."
- "I'll give you their edited paleontology. We've been into their libraries and museums as well as their
- bedrooms—yes, they have all three, though not like ours—and we have copied some of their animated
- texts. We haven't dubbed in any sound yet—this is still in progress—but I'll provide the running
- commentary." He switched from the live scene to film. "Behold: the species history of the
- proboscoids—'probs' for short—of Sung."
- And Ivo was immersed in it, absorbing picture and commentary as one. He witnessed Sung as it had been millions
- of years in the past: mighty forests of ferns upon the land, and of sponges under the ocean. From that rich
- water came the lungfish types, gulping the moist dense atmosphere, and soon their soft egg-capsules hatched on
- land. Predators broke them open before the sun did, until survival dictated hatching within the body: live
- birth. Even then the tiny newborn were vulnerable, and natural selection brought forth at last the successful
- compromise: the placentile amphibian. This was the stem stock for the class of animal that was to dominate the
- planet. From its fifty-million-year radiation emerged its successor.
- The primitive proboscoid was not an imposing order. Its families swam the shallow oceans by jetting water
- through their snouts, and climbed clumsily upon the shores with their flipper-fins. They were timid; their eyes
- were fixed upon the predators from whom they retreated, not upon their destinations. When they died, they died
- in flight, sometimes in panic, smashing into obstacles and killing themselves needlessly. Yet they were adept
- in motion; the funneled water could be aimed in any direction by a twist of the snout, and in some families it
- was impregnated with a foul-tasting substance that discouraged the pursuer. Their sense of smell sharpened;
- they were always alert to danger.
- One genus retreated to the rocks of the treacherous surf, the area no other mobile creature desired for a
- habitat. The seas varied with the tide, and that tide of two near moons seemed to have a malignant passion. The
- great rounded rocks rolled about, crushing whatever lay beneath and wearing channels into the beach and ocean
- floor, then jumping into new territory as alternate currents converged and clashed. There was safety for
- neither land nor sea creature.
- These probs became complete amphibians, their original breathing apparatus adaptable to either air or water and
- thriving on the combination. They developed the wit to read the shifting currents, to anticipate the tides, and
- to crawl from channel to channel when danger came. When large sea-predators ventured too far within the shoals,
- the probs arranged to divert certain currents and to isolate and perhaps strand the enemy. When land-dwellers
- set foot in the water, they too could be tempted into the traps of nature. Still timorous, the probs developed
- the taste for flesh.
- Then the land uplifted and the shoals passed. It was the time of desperation for the probs, and few survived,
- for they could not compete with the established land and sea creatures in either complete habitat. One species,
- the cleverest, learned to make a home where nature provided none. Unable to run fleetly or swim swiftly or take
- to the air, it employed its still-generalized limbs to excavate trenches at the shoreline and to bring the
- water in. Labyrinths were formed, confusing to predators. Those who did enter found dead ends or narrow
- channels that inhibited progress, while stones were dumped upon them or shafts poked through cross-trenches.
- Later those stones and shafts were adapted to construction, and the age of tools and weapons had come. The
- trunklike appendage, no longer required fully for locomotion, became refined for manipulation; the flippers
- lost what swimming facility they had had and became strong excavators. The brains increased in size.
- Communication of high order became essential. Air, vibrated through the snout, developed into a hornlike
- dialogue.
- The labyrinth, in the course of a hundred thousand years, developed into something like a city.
- Nature heaved again and the city was destroyed—but so were the habitats of many other creatures. The
- probs rebuilt; the less intelligent or adaptable animals perished. The probs lost much of their timidity, and
- their appetite for flesh increased.
- Success brought population pressure, and the attendant demand for more food and more living space. In this
- manner the first colony was organized, instead of the prior lemminglike exoduses to relieve the situation.
- Perhaps the first successful colony was merely the last of the blind departures. It was not clear how
- individuals were selected to go or to stay, but a complete spectrum of builders, hunters and breeders were to
- be found in each party. The first colony settled several hundred miles away from the home grounds, upon another
- shoreline. The second went farther.
- At last the shores of all the continents of the planet were riddled with maze-cities.
- Now there was nothing shy about the probs. Large and sleek, they encroached upon the territories of ancient
- enemies. Organized and clever, they conquered. They brought their habitat with them inland, developing methods
- of pumping and aerating and holding water above the level of the sea. Technology had come upon them.
- Greater and greater ingenuity was required as the terrain became less habitable. Rain fell less frequently, and
- better pumps were developed; edible animal life diminished, and better breeds had to be fostered. The prob
- snout could now be reversed, to grip objects by its suction and move them about, but it was weak; it became
- easier to use this slight strength and great dexterity to build machines, and to let the machines accomplish
- the heavy labors.
- With the conquest of the continents and the continued decimation of the vegetation, animals and minerals there,
- the probs next turned their technology toward really efficient food production. Sea-farms provided meat;
- hydroponics replaced the rest. Their science expanded to meet the new challenges, and reached into the very sky
- and on into space. Yet this required enormous power, and their world was already depleted by the wasteful
- ravagement of centuries past. They sought to colonize another world, just as they had the shores and continents
- of Sung, but could not afford the time and equipment for prolonged and inefficient interstellar travel.
- Yet technology continued, though their world was starving. They developed the macroscope—and shied away
- from its revelations. Their land surface was a mass of watery warrens, their ocean a thoroughly parceled
- plantation. Those who could not afford to pay their debts were butchered; those who could not achieve
- sufficient success in life gained a few years of rich living by selling their bodies in advance for meat. It
- was a fashionable and comfortable mode of suicide, and at present some fifty percent of the individuals
- sublimated their lemming-instinct in this fashion. Yet the birthrate, fostered by competent medicine and the
- basic boredom of life, was such, and the average span of life before termination so long, that the population
- still nudged upward. The irreplaceable resources of the planet plummeted.
- "Why don't they control their population?" Ivo demanded. "They're breeding their way into extinction! Surely
- they can bring their birthrate down readily. They have the equipment for it."
- "Why don't we human beings bring ours down?"
- Ivo thought about that a moment and elected not to answer.
- "I had a dream the other night," Brad said, still wearing the helmet and goggles though he obviously did not
- need to supervise the continuing image. It made him resemble some futuristic visitor from space, in contrast to
- his words. "I was standing on the top of a mountain, admiring the miracles my people had wrought upon the face
- of the Earth and on the structure of neighboring space, and I saw a live prob. It was a male proboscoid, very
- old and large and ugly, and it stood there upon a tremendous mountain of garbage and slag and bones and looked
- at me. Then it flopped down into the sludge of refuse and splashed it in my direction so that I flinched, and
- lifted its trunk and laughed. It laughed through its nose with the sound of a mellow horn, multiphonically, so
- that the melody seemed to come at me from all directions.
- "At first I thought it was amused at my upright, stout-legged stance that we have always assumed was necessary
- for any truly competent creature. Then it seemed that the mirth was directed at my entire species, my world
- itself. The peals of it went on and on, and I realized that it was saying to me, in effect, 'We've been this
- route and now we're gone. It is your turn—and you are too foolish even to learn by our example, that we
- spread out so plainly for you!' And I tried to answer it, to refute it, to stand up for my people, but its
- humor overwhelmed me and I saw that it was already too late."
- "Too late?"
- "Look at the statistics, Ivo. There may have been a quarter of a billion people in the world at the time of the
- birth of Christ. Today there are that many in the United States alone, and it is sparsely populated compared to
- some. The population of the world is increasing at a record rate, and so are its concurrent ills: hunger,
- frustration, crime. If our projections are accurate—and they are probably conservative—we have
- barely one more generation to go before it starts. That means that you and I will be on hand for it—and
- at a vulnerable age."
- "Before what starts? What will we be on hand for, apart from the affluence of the twenty-first century?"
- "The inevitable. You saw it with the probs. And a few glimpses at the ghettos of the world—and some
- entire nations are ghettos—through the macroscope... I tell you, Ivo, things are going on right now that
- are horrifying. Remember Swift's A Modest Proposal?"
- "Look. Brad, I'm not a professor. I don't know what you're getting at."
- "Ivo, I'm not trying to tease you with my erudition. Some statements just aren't comfortable to make too
- baldly. Jonathan Swift wrote, facetiously, of a plan to use the surplus babies of Ireland for food. The irony
- was, he made a pretty good case for it—if you took him literally, as a certain type of person might. He
- suggested that 'a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious, nourishing, and wholesome
- food, whether stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled...' He attributed the information to an American, incidentally,
- and perhaps his tongue wasn't so firmly in his cheek as he would have us believe. He commented that such
- consumption would lessen the population—Ireland being severely crowded at the time—and give the
- poor tenants something of value to sell while lessening the expense of maintaining their families."
- Ivo developed that unpleasantly familiar tingle in limbs and stomach. "Exactly what have you seen?"
- "There is already a going business in the ghettos of certain populous countries. A bounty is paid on each head,
- depending on the size and health of the item. Certain organs are sold black market to hospitals—heart,
- kidneys, lungs and so on—who don't dare inquire too closely into the source. The blood is drained
- entirely and preserved for competitive bidding by institutions in need. The flesh is ground up as hamburger to
- conceal its origin, along with much of the—"
- "Babies?"
- "Human babies. Older bodies are more dangerous to procure, and suffer from too many deficiencies, though there
- is some limited traffic in merchandise of all ages. Most are stolen, but some actually are sold by desperate
- parents. It is cheaper than abortion. The going rate varies from a hundred to a thousand dollars, depending on
- the area. It really does seem to be a better thing for some families than trying to feed another mouth; their
- lives are such that existence is no blessing. But of course they get nothing when their children are stolen."
- "I can't believe that, Brad. Not cannibalism."
- "I have seen it, Ivo. On the macroscope. There was nothing I could do, since no government on Earth will admit
- the problem, and an accusation of this nature would backlash to suppress the use of the scope itself. People
- demand their right for self-delusion, particularly when the truth is ugly. But as I was saying, in another
- generation it will become a legal institution, as it did with the probs. A proposal no longer so modest."
- Ivo kept his eyes on the screen. "I don't see that what happened to the probs has to happen to us. The danger
- exists, sure, okay, but inevitable? Just because they came to it?"
- Brad's fingers moved over the controls. Ivo saw that the section for the macroscope-picture was comparatively
- simple; most of the massed equipment was probably for unrelated adjustments. The scene shifted.
- "You're being subjective," Brad said. "Compare these."
- And the screen showed an angelic humanoid face, feminine and altogether lovely. The eyes were great and golden,
- the mouth small and sweet. Above the still features flowed a coiffure of down, neither hair nor feathers,
- greenish but softly harmonious. Below the face a silken robe covered a slender body, but Ivo could tell from
- its configuration that the gentle curves of the torso were not precisely mammalian. It was as though a human
- woman had evolved into a more sublime personage, freed from the less esthetic biological functions.
- It was a painting; as Brad decreased the magnification the frame came into view, then the columns and arches of
- an elegant setting. A museum, clean and somber, styled by a master architect.
- "Intelligent, civilized, beautiful," Ivo murmured. "But where are the living ones?"
- "There are no living creatures on Planet Mbsleuti. This is a royal tomb, as nearly as we can
- ascertain—one of the few to be buried deeply enough to endure."
- "Endure what?"
- Suddenly the scene was a heaving sea of sludge, breaking against a barren beach. Ivo could almost smell the
- contamination of the smoky atmosphere.
- "Total pollution," Brad said. "Earth, air, water. We have analyzed the content and determined that all of it is
- artificial. They became dependent on their machines for their existence, and could not control the chemical and
- atomic waste products. Want to bet where they got their fresh meat, just before the end? But it only hastened
- their extinction as a species."
- The picture of the royal woman was back, mercifully, but Ivo still saw her devastated world. "Because they
- overextended their resources?" he asked, requiring no answer. "Would not limit themselves until Nature had to
- do it for them?" He shook his head. "How long ago?"
- "Fifteen thousand years."
- "All right," Ivo said defensively. "That's two. Any other technological species on tap?"
- "One more." Brad adjusted again, and a landscape of ruins came into view. After a time a grotesque four-legged
- creature shambled along a pathway between two overgrown mounds of rubble. Matted hair concealed its sensory
- organs, and it walked with its toes curled under—like a gorilla, Ivo thought. It looked sick and hungry.
- "As we make it, civilization collapsed here less than five hundred years before this picture," Brad said.
- "Population reduced from about ten billion individuals to no more than a million, and is declining. There still
- isn't enough to eat, you see, and naturally no medicine. Most surviving plants are diseased themselves...."
- Ivo did not bother to inquire whether the hunched creature was a descendant of the dominant species. Obviously
- it had once been bipedal.
- Of course three samples did not make a conclusive case. They could be three freaks. But, unwillingly, he was
- coming to accept the notion that Man might well be a fourth such freak. Overpopulation, pollution of
- environment, savagery—he refused to believe that it had to proceed to species extinction, but certainly
- it could.
- Yet the sample was atypical, for there were no neolithic-era cultures. Chance would place many more species in
- this stage.
- "It was from the probs I got the heat-shielding technique," Brad said, allowing the subject to shift. He had
- brought the picture back to Sung, their planet. "We're still working on their books and equipment, and we're
- learning a great deal. And if we're lucky, one day we'll discover a really advanced civilization, one that has
- licked this problem of overbreed, and learn how to undo the damage we have done to our own planet. The
- macroscope has the potential to jump our science ahead more in days than it has progressed in centuries
- hitherto."
- "I yield the point. This is major. But—"
- "But why am I wasting time on you, instead of researching for the solutions to the problems of mankind? Because
- something has come up."
- "I gathered as much," Ivo replied with gentle irony. "What has come up?"
- "We're receiving what amounts to commercial broadcasts."
- Ivo choked over the letdown. "You can't even tune out local interference? I thought you operated on a different
- wavelength, or whatever."
- "Alien broadcasts. Artificial signals in the prime macroscopic band."
- Ivo digested this. "So you have made real contact."
- "A one-way contact. We can't send, we can only receive. We know of no way to tame a macron, but obviously some
- species does."
- "So some stellar civilization is sending out free entertainment?" His words sounded ridiculous as he said them,
- but he could think of no better immediate remark.
- "It isn't entertainment. Instructional series. Coded information."
- "And you can't decode it? That's why you need Schn?"
- "We comprehend it. It is designed for ready assimilation, though not in quite the manner we anticipated."
- "You mean, not a dit-dot building up from 2 2 or forming a picture of their stellar system? No, don't go into
- the specifics; it was rhetorical. Is it from a nearby planet? A surrender ultimatum?"
- "It originates about fifteen thousand light-years away, from the direction of the constellation Scorpio. No
- invasion, no ultimatum."
- "But we weren't civilized fifteen thousand years ago. How could they send us a message?"
- "It is spherical radiation. That's another surprise. We assumed that any long-reaching artificial signal would
- be focused, for economy of power. This has to be a Type II technology."
- "I don't—"
- "Type I would be equivalent to ours, or to the probs' level of power control. Type II means they can harness
- the entire radiation output of their star. Type III would match the luminous energy of an entire galaxy. The
- designations have been theoretical—until recently. Presumably this message is intended for all
- macroscope-developing cultures within its range."
- "But—that's deliberate contact between intelligent species! A magnificent breakthrough! Isn't it?"
- "Yes it is," Brad agreed morosely. On the screen, the hulking mound of indolent probs continued its futile
- activity. "Right when we stand most in need of advice from a higher civilization. You can see why all the other
- functions of the macroscope have become incidental. Why should we make a tedious search of space, when we have
- been presented with a programmed text from a culture centuries ahead of us?"
- Ivo kept his eyes on the screen. "The probs had the macroscope, and this program should have been around for at
- least five thousand years then. Why didn't they use it? Or were they in the opposite direction, so it hadn't
- reached them yet?"
- "They received the program. So did the humanoids, we believe. That was part of the trouble."
- "You told me that they stopped using their macroscope, though. That strikes me as learning to read, then
- burning all your books. They should have used the alien instruction and benefited from it, as we should. The
- alternative—or are you saying that we'll wash out if we have to take advice from an elder civilization?"
- "No, we're agreed here at the station that the benefits of a free education are worth the risks. Mankind isn't
- likely to get flabby that way. For one thing, we'd be pursuing all other avenues of knowledge at the same time,
- on our own."
- "What's stopping you then?"
- "The Greek element."
- "The—?"
- "Bearing gifts; beware of."
- "You said the knowledge would not hurt us by itself—and what kind of payment could they demand, after
- fifteen thousand years?"
- "The ultimate. They can destroy us."
- "Brad, I may be a hick, but—"
- "Specifically, our best brains. We have already suffered casualties. That's the crisis."
- Ivo finally turned away from the prob scene. "Same thing happen to them?"
- "Yes. They never solved the problem."
- "What is it—a death-beam that still has punch after ten or fifteen thousand years? Talk about comic
- books—"
- "Yes and no. Our safeguards prevent the relay of any physically dangerous transmission—the computer is
- interposed, remember—but they can't protect our minds from dangerous information."
- "I should hope not! The day we have thought control—"
- "Forget the straw men, Ivo. We do have drug-induced thought control, and have for years. But this—five of
- the true geniuses of Earth are imbeciles, because of the macroscope. Something came through—some type of
- information—that destroyed their minds."
- "You're sure it wasn't something internal? Overwork, nervous breakdown...?"
- "We are sure. The EEG's—I'd better explain that—"
- "You simplified things for me with that pepped-up rocket you call Joseph. You simplified them again describing
- the macroscope. It's like income-tax forms: I don't think I can take another explanation."
- "All right, Ivo. I'll leave the EEG's out of it. Just take my word that though we haven't performed any
- surgery, we know that this alien signal caused a mental degeneration involving physical damage to the brain.
- All this through concept alone. We know the hard way: there are certain thoughts an intelligent mind must not
- think."
- "But you don't know the actual mechanism? Just that the beamed program—I mean, the radiated
- program—delivers stupefaction?"
- "Roughly, yes. It is a progressive thing. You have to follow it step by step, like a lesson in calculus.
- Counting on fingers, arithmetic, general math, algebra, higher math, symbolic logic, and so on, in order.
- Otherwise you lose the thread. You have to assimilate the early portion of the series before you can attempt
- the rest, which makes it resemble an intelligence test. But it's geared so that you can't skip the opening; it
- always hits you in the proper sequence, no matter when you look. It's a stiff examination; it seems to be
- beyond the range of anyone below what we term IQ one fifty, though we don't know yet how much could be
- accomplished by intensive review. A group of workmen viewed it and said they didn't go for such modernistic
- stuff. Our top men, on the other hand, were fascinated by it, and breezed through the entire sequence at a
- single sitting. Right up until the moment they—dropped off."
- "They can't be cured?"
- "We just don't know. The brain of an intelligent man does not necessarily have more cells than that of a moron,
- any more than the muscle of a circus strongman has more than the ninety-seven pound specimen. It all depends on
- the competence of the cells that are there. The cells of the genius have many more synapses—more
- connections between cells. This concept from space seems to have introduced a disruptive factor that acts on
- those extra synapses. That puts it beyond stereotaxic surgery—" Anticipating Ivo's renewed objection to
- the technical language, he broke off and came at it again. "Anyway, it is the expensive watch that gets hurt
- most by being dropped on concrete."
- "Ah, this cheap watch begins to tick. I might look at it and yawn, but if you—"
- "I don't think you'd better view it, Ivo."
- "Anyway, I admit it's a pretty neat roadblock. If you're dumb, you lose; if you're smart, you become dumb."
- "Yes. The question is, what is it hiding? We have to know. Now that we've felt its effect, we can't simply
- ignore it. If an elementary progression visually presented after being filtered through our own computer can do
- this, what other nasty surprises are in store? We can't be certain the danger is confined to the programmed
- broadcast. There may be worse traps lurking elsewhere. That may be why the probs lost their nerve."
- "Worse than imposed idiocy?"
- "Suppose someone came through it, but subtly warped—so that he felt the need to destroy the world. There
- are those at this station who very well might do it, given the proper imperative. Someone like Kovonov—he
- just may be more intelligent than I am, and he's a lot more experienced. The scope could provide him with exact
- information on military secrets, key personnel—or perhaps he could derive some incomprehensible
- weapon...."
- "I finally begin to see your need for Schn."
- Brad removed the headpiece, blinked at Ivo, and nodded. "Will you—?"
- "Sorry, no."
- "You aren't convinced? I can document everything I've told you. We have to have access to the information
- available from space, from this Type II source. We fear that mankind will not bring down its birthrate or
- reduce its population in any other disciplined fashion, or even make sane use of the world's expiring
- resources. The problem is sociological, not physical, and no dictated solution we can presently conceive will
- overcome that barrier. We must go to the material and technology of the stars, before we
- begin—literally—eating ourselves. There is no salvation on Earth. The macroscope
- evidence—you've seen just some of it—is inarguable."
- Ivo remained recalcitrant. "All right—all right! I accept that, for the moment. I'm just not sure yet
- that the situation requires this measure."
- "I don't see how else I can put it, Ivo. Schn is the only one I believe has a chance to handle it. We don't
- dare tune in that band on the macroscope until we clear this up, and if any of it extends into the
- peripheral—"
- "I didn't say no-final. I said no-presently. I don't have enough information, yet. I'd like to take a look at
- those casualties, for one thing. And the mind-blasting series. Then I'll think about it."
- "The casualties, sure. The sequence, no."
- "I have a notion, Brad. How about letting me work it out my own way?"
- Brad sighed, covering his frustration with banter. "You always did, junior. Stubbornest mortal I know. If you
- weren't my only key to Schn—"
- It was no insult. They both knew the reason for that stubbornness.
- CHAPTER 2
- Afra Summerfield was waiting for them at the torus airlock. She spoke to Brad as soon as his helmet came off:
- "Kovonov wants to see you right away."
- Brad turned immediately to Ivo. "That Russian doesn't chat for the joy of it. There's trouble already, probably
- political, probably American, or he wouldn't ask for me. I have to run. You won't object if I dump you on
- Afra?" He was out of his suit and moving away as he spoke.
- Who was this Kovonov who compelled such alacrity?
- Ivo looked at Afra, and found her as stunning as before. She was in a blue coverall, with a matching ribbon
- tying back her hair, the whole almost matching her bright eyes. The astonishing revelations in connection with
- the macroscope had diverted his mind from her for an hour, but now he was smitten with renewed force.
- "Take your time!" he yelled magnanimously, but Brad was already in the elevator. Afra smiled fleetingly,
- showing a dimple and striking another chord upon his fancy.
- Ivo did not believe in love at first sight, ridiculous as it was to remind himself of that now. He did not
- believe in coveting one's neighbors things, either, but Afra overwhelmed him. It was a measure of Brad's
- confidence in himself that he flaunted her so casually, heedless of her impact on other men.
- "I suppose I'd better show you the common room," she said. "He'll look there first for us, when he's free."
- The thought of accompanying her anywhere in any guise excited him. The imponderables of mankind's future
- receded into the background as Afra preempted the foreground. For the moment, her person and her attention
- belonged to him, however casual the connection might be. There was pleasure merely in walking with such a
- beautiful girl, and he hoped the tour would be a long one.
- "Are you going to help us, Ivo?" she inquired, the implied intimacy of her use of his first name sending
- another irrational thrill through him. He felt adolescent.
- "What did Brad tell you about me?" he countered. Her perfume, this close, was the delicate breath of a single
- opening rose.
- She guided him to the elevator, now returned from Brad's hasty use. "Not very much, I must admit. Just that you
- were a friend from one of the projects, and he needed you to get in touch with another friend from another
- project. Shane."
- He had not realized before how small these elevators were. She had to stand very close to him, so that her
- right breast nudged his arm. It's only cloth touching cloth, he thought, but couldn't believe it. "That's
- Schn, with the umlaut over the O. The German word for—"
- "Why of course!" she exclaimed, delighted. Her intake of breath delighted him, too, but for an irrelevant
- reason. "That never occurred to me—and I have spoken German since I was a girl."
- She was still a girl, as he was acutely aware. He felt the need to keep the conversation going. "Do you speak
- any other languages?" Adolescent? Infantile!
- "Oh, yes, of course. Mostly the Indo-European family—Russian, Spanish, French, Persian—but I'm
- working on Arabic and Chinese, the written form of the latter for now, since it covers so many spoken forms.
- The Chinese symbols are based on meaning rather than phonetics, you know, and that presents a different set of
- problems. I feel so parochial when Brad teases me with Melanesian or Basque or an Algonquin dialect. I hope
- you're not another of those fluent linguists—"
- "I flunked Latin in high school."
- She laughed.
- Ivo tried to untangle the physical reaction he experienced from the intellectual content of their conversation,
- afraid of a Freudian slip. "No, I mean it. 'Schn' is the only foreign word I know."
- She studied him with perplexed concern. "Is it a—a mental block? You're good at some things, but not
- at—"
- The elevator ride finally ended, and she disengaged her torso from his. They climbed into a cart. Now it was
- her thigh that distracted him, wedged against his. Could she be unaware of the havoc she wrought along his
- nerve connections—his synapses? "I guess Brad didn't tell you about that. I'm no genius. I am pretty good
- at certain types of reasoning, the way some feeble-minded people can do complex mathematical tricks in their
- heads or play championship chess—but apart from that I'm a pretty ordinary guy with ordinary values. I
- guess you thought I was like Brad, huh?" Fat chance!
- She had the grace to blush. "I guess I did, Ivo. I'm sorry. I heard so much about Schn; then you came—"
- "What did he tell you about Schn?"
- "That would fill a small manual by itself. How did you come to meet him, Ivo?"
- "Schn? I never did meet him, really."
- "But—"
- "You know about the projects? The one he—"
- She looked away, and the loose ponytail flung out momentarily to brush his cheek. Is she a conscious flirt? No,
- she was being natural; he was the one, reacting. "Yes," she said, "Brad told me about that too. How Schn was
- in the—free-love community. Only—"
- "So you see, I did not actually share lodging with him."
- "Yes, I was aware of that. But why are you the only one who knows where to find him?"
- "I'm not. Brad knows. Other members of the project know, though they never talk about it."
- This time her flush was frustration, and he felt the angry flexure in the muscle of her leg. She doesn't like
- to be balked.
- "Brad told me you were the only one who could summon him!"
- "It's an—arrangement we have."
- "Brad knows where Schn is, but won't go for him himself? That doesn't sound like—"
- The journey by rail was over, no tunnel of love. "Brad can't go for him himself. I guess you could call me an
- intermediary, or maybe a personal secretary. An answering service: that's closest Schn simply won't come out
- for anyone unless I handle it. He doesn't involve himself with anything that isn't sufficiently challenging."
- "An alien destroyer that has our whole exploratory thrust stymied—isn't that enough?"
- So she knew what Brad had told him. "I'm not sure. Schn is a genius, you see."
- "So Brad has informed me, many times. An IQ that can't be measured, and completely amoral. But surely this is
- cause!"
- "That's what I'm here to decide."
- They arrived at the common room: a large compartment of almost standard Earth-gravity, with easy chairs and
- several games tables. Ivo wondered what billiards or table-tennis would be like in partial gravity. Beside the
- entrance were several hanging frameworks: games ladders with removable panels. On each panel was a printed
- name.
- "Who's Blank?" he asked, reading the top entry of the first.
- "That's a real name," she said. "Fred Blank, one of the maintenance men. He's the table-tennis champion. I
- don't really think they should—I mean, this room is for the scientists, the PhD's. To relax in."
- "The maintenance men aren't supposed to relax?"
- She looked a little flustered. "There's Fred now, reading that magazine."
- It was a Negro in overalls and unkempt hair. Beside him sat a Caucasian scientist, portly and cheerful. Both
- looked hot; evidently they had just finished playing a game. It seemed to Ivo that Afra was the only one
- disturbed, and that told him something about both her and the other personnel of this station. The scientists
- respected skill wherever they found it; Afra had other definitions. The portly white for the moment probably
- envied Blank his facility with the paddle, without being concerned with such irrelevancies as education.
- In the center of the room stood a pedestal bearing a shining statuette mounted at eye level. Ivo paused next to
- contemplate this honored edifice. It was a toy steam-shovel, of storybook design, with a handsome little scoop.
- The cab was shingled like the top of a country cottage, with a delicately sagging peaked roof and a bright
- half-moon on the door. Within the jawed shovel was a ball like a marble, and so fine was its artistry that he
- could see the accurate outline of the continent of North America etched upon the surface of that little globe.
- The pedestal bore the ornate letters S D P S. "What does it mean?"
- Afra looked embarrassed again. "Brad calls it the 'Platinum Plated Privy,' " she murmured, quiet though no one
- else was close. "It really is. Platinum plated, I mean. He—designed it, and the shop produced it. The men
- seem to appreciate it."
- "But those letters. S D P S. They can't stand for—"
- She colored slightly, and he liked her for that, sensing a common conservatism though their viewpoints in other
- respects differed strongly. "You'll have to ask him." Then she shifted ground. "Here we are talking about
- unimportant things and ignoring you. Where do you come from, Ivo? That is, where did you settle after you left
- your project?"
- "I've been walking around the state of Georgia, mostly. All of us who participated in the project were provided
- with a guaranteed income, at least until we got established. It isn't much, but I don't need much."
- "That's very interesting. I was born in Macon, you know. Georgia is my home state."
- Macon! "I didn't know." But somehow he had known.
- "But what interested you about that state? Do you know someone there?"
- "Something like that." How could he explain ten years of seeming idleness, retracing the various routes of a
- native son?
- She didn't press him. "I should show you the infirmary, too; Brad did mention that. I suppose he wants you to
- be able to describe it accurately to Schn."
- They traveled on. Ivo wondered what was supposed to be so important about the infirmary, but was content to
- wait upon her explanation. He was learning more about her every moment, and positive or negative, he was eager
- for the information.
- "One thing I don't understand," Afra fretted, "is why Schn was in that other project. He should have been with
- Brad."
- "He was hiding. Do you know the parable about the good fish?"
- "The good fish?" Her brow furrowed prettily.
- "The good fish that the fisherman caught in the net and gathered into vessels, while the bad were cast away.
- Matthew XIII:48."
- "Oh. Yes, of course. What is the relevance?"
- "If you were one of the fish in that lake, which kind would you want to be?"
- "A good one, naturally. The whole point of the parable is that the good people shall find favor with God, while
- the bad ones will perish."
- "But what happens, literally, to the good fish?"
- "Why, they are taken to the market and—" She paused. "Well, at least they aren't wasted."
- "While the bad fish continue to swim around the lake, just as they always did, because no fisherman wants them.
- I'd rather be one of them."
- "I suppose so, if you take it that way. But what has that to do with—" She broke off again. "What did
- they do with the geniuses in Brad's project?"
- "Well, I wasn't involved in that. But I would guess Schn wanted to live his own life, unsupervised by the
- experimenters. So he hid where they would never find him. A bad fish."
- "Brad had no trouble. I know he didn't fool them any more than he fooled me. He's a lot more intelligent than
- he says he is."
- Ivo remembered that Brad had represented himself to her as IQ 160. "That so? He always seemed pretty regular to
- me."
- "He's like that. He gets along with anybody, and you really have to get to know him before you realize how deep
- and clever he is. He was the big success of the project—but of course you know that. Even if he does try
- to claim he's stupid compared to Schn. I used to think he made Schn up, just to amuse me; but since this
- crisis—"
- "Yeah. That's the way it was with me too, in a way. But now I sort of have to believe in Schn, much as I might
- prefer to forget all about him, or there isn't much point in hanging around."
- She smiled. "I'd tell you not to feel sorry for yourself, if I didn't so often feel the same way. Nobody likes
- to feel stupid, but around Brad—"
- "Yeah," he said again.
- They entered the infirmary. It carried the usual aseptic odors, the normal aura of spotless depression. "These
- are the—five," she said, bringing him to a row of seated men. "Dr. Johnson, Dr. Smith, Dr. Sung, Dr.
- Mbsleuti and Mr. Holt. All most respected astronomers and cryptologists."
- "Johnson? Holt? Sung? I've heard those names before."
- "Yes, Brad would have mentioned them, if you weren't already familiar with their reputations. The significant
- planets they discovered were named after them. Did Brad explain—?"
- "He showed me some planets. I didn't realize—well, never mind. I know now."
- He looked at the seated men. Dr. Johnson was a saintly-looking man of perhaps sixty, with iron hair and brows
- and deep lines of character about the eves. His gaze was direct and compelling, but fixed, as though he were
- concentrating on some transcendent intangible.
- "Doctor," Ivo said, stepping close. "I admired your planet, with its noodle plants and yellow trees."
- The serene gray eyes refocused. The firm jaw dropped; then, after a second or two, the lips parted. "Huh-huh-
- huh," Johnson said. A trace of spittle overlapped one corner of his mouth.
- "Hello," Afra said distinctly. "Hel-lo."
- Johnson smiled, not closing his mouth. A waft of ordure touched them.
- "That's what he's trying to say," Afra explained. "Hello. He was always courteous." She sniffed. "Oh-oh.
- Nurse!"
- A young man in white appeared, a male nurse. "I'll take care of it, Miss Summerfield," he said. "Perhaps you'd
- better leave now."
- "Yes." She led the way out of the infirmary. "They don't have much control," she said. "We're trying to
- reeducate them, but there hasn't been enough time yet to know how far they can recover. It's a terrible thing
- that happened to them, and we still don't—"
- Brad was coming swiftly down the hall. "Crisis," he said, joining them. "There's an American senator coming, an
- ornery one. Someone leaked the mind-destroyer to him, and he means to investigate."
- "Is that bad?" Ivo asked.
- "Considering that we haven't released the information yet to anyone beyond the station, yes," Brad said. "Don't
- be fooled by our candor with you, Ivo. This is super-secret stuff. We've been fudging reports from all five
- victims, just to keep up appearances while we try to break this impasse. Until we crack it, no one leaves this
- station—no one who knows, I mean."
- "What about that man who brought me? Groton?"
- "He can keep his mouth shut. But all he knew, then, was that I needed you, where to find you, and what to say
- to you once he got you alone."
- That explained the stalking. Groton hadn't wanted to make contact in the crowd, though he had finally had to.
- "But don't misjudge him," Afra said. "Harold and Beatryx are very warm people."
- Did that mean Groton was married? Ivo had not pictured that. It proved again how far off first impressions
- could be.
- "Here's the situation," Brad said, bringing them to his room. "Senator Borland is on his way. He's class-A
- trouble. Borland is a first-termer, but he's on the make already for national publicity, and he's ruthless. He
- isn't stupid; in fact, there's a distinct possibility he's smart enough to get hooked by the destroyer
- sequence. It's certain he'll demand to see the show, and there will be merry hell if we try to fob off a
- substitute."
- "But you can't show him the destroyer!" Afra exclaimed, alarmed.
- "We can't hold it from him, if he's determined—and he is. He knows he's on to something big, and he means
- to make worldwide headlines before he finishes with us. Kovonov put it to me straight: Borland is American, so
- he's my baby. I have to neutralize him somehow until we can crack this thing open and get it under control, or
- the whole feculent mess will erupt."
- "When's he due?" Ivo asked.
- "Six hours from now. We only got the hint when he embarked, and it took until now to pin down his purpose. He's
- a real old-fashioned loudmouth, but he can keep a secret when it pays him to and he's no political amateur.
- He's obviously had this in mind for some time, and now he's coming to milk us for that vote-getting publicity."
- "Why not tell him the truth, then? If he's that savvy, he should be willing to do something constructive for
- his votes, instead of—"
- "The truth without the solution would wreck us—and put Borland on his party's next Presidential ticket.
- He isn't interested in our welfare, or in the future of space exploration. He'd be delighted to take credit for
- pulling America out of the macroscope."
- "But the other countries of the world would keep it going, wouldn't they? Isn't it under nominal UN control?"
- "More than nominal. They might indeed—in which case we'd become a has-been power in a hurry, as other
- breakthroughs like my heat-shield are achieved. America can't possibly match the alien science we know is
- there, once it becomes available. Or—the macroscope project might founder, frightened off by talk of a
- death-ray from space. The average populace has a profound distrust of advanced space science, perhaps because
- it doesn't match the old, space-opera conception. People might accept the notion of astronauts plunging into
- space fearlessly in rockets, but the ramifications of relativistic cosmology and quantum physics—"
- "How about just giving the senator what he wants—a gander at the sequence, if it comes to that?"
- "What would it settle? Either it would pass him by, in which case he'd have 'proof' that we were killing off
- world-famous scientists by less exotic means than claimed—an international conspiracy, naturally—or
- it would bite him. Then we'd have five scientists and a U.S. senator to explain."
- Ivo shrugged. "I guess you're stuck, then."
- "Our only chance is to crack the case before he gets here. For that we need Schn even more urgently."
- "There isn't time to fetch him from Earth now," Afra pointed out.
- Brad did not reply.
- "I'm not sure Schn would help, anyway," Ivo said. "He might not care about America, or the macroscope."
- "What does he care about?" Afra demanded.
- Brad cut off any reply. "Let's take a break. We're acting as though no one else in the station is concerned."
- Afra started to protest, but he put his ringer to her lips and forced her to subside. Ivo could see that she
- accepted from Brad what she would have taken from no other person. On the face of it, her objection was
- reasonable. Brad had dropped a bomb in their laps with a six-hour fuse, then called intermission as though the
- matter was of indifferent concern. How could this spirited creature know that Brad had already done his utmost
- to summon the cavalry, or that the break he recommended was hardly the nonchalance it appeared? Yet she trusted
- him.
- Oh, to have a girl like that...
- The "break" was in the form of a rather elegant dinner with the Grotons. Ivo had assumed that Harold Groton was
- an ad hoc emissary, and had to revise his impression of the man once again. Brad's social taste was always
- good.
- Beatryx, Harold's wife, was a plumpish, smiling woman somewhere in her forties, light-haired and light-eyed but
- probably never lovely in the physical sense. Their apartment was quite neat in an unobtrusive manner, as though
- the housekeeper cared more for convenience than for appearance, in contrast to the tale told by Afra's habitat.
- Ivo had the impression of stepping into an Earth-building, and thought he might glimpse a street or yard if he
- looked out a window. If he could find a window.
- He found something better. The Grotons were situated at the edge of the torus, where the white-walls would be
- on a tire. The station was oriented broadside to the sun, so that one wall continuously faced the light and the
- other remained in shadow. This was the dark side. There was a large port looking directly out into the spatial
- night.
- "It varies with the season," Brad said, noting the direction of his attention. "The station is a planet,
- technically, and does have an annual cycle. It rotates to provide weight for the personnel, and that rotation
- gives it gyroscopic stability. It maintains its orientation in an absolute sense while revolving about the sun,
- so its day becomes sidereal. Three months from now that view will be twilight, and in six it will be full noon,
- and they'll have to block it off with hefty filters."
- Ivo looked out at the uncannily steady stars of this arctic night. "They're moving!" he exclaimed, then felt
- foolish. Of course they seemed to be moving; the torus was spinning, so that the heaven as viewed from this
- window rolled over in a complete circle every few minutes as though tacked to a cosmic hub. They were the same
- stars and constellations he had seen from the macroscope housing, but this porthole vantage changed his
- perspective entirely. It was, literally, a dizzying sight.
- They all were smiling. "It's hard to believe they're exploding outward, those stars," he said somewhat lamely.
- "Most of the ones you see aren't," Afra said. "They're members of our own Milky Way galaxy, a comparatively
- steady unit. Even the other galaxies of our local group are maintaining their positions pretty well."
- Ivo realized that he had stepped from one inanity into a worse one. But Beatryx, coincidentally, came to his
- rescue. "Oh," she inquired. "I thought every galaxy was flying away from every other one at terrible speed.
- Because of that big argument."
- "The so-called big bang," Brad said, without smiling this time. "You are right, Tryx. Groups of galaxies are
- moving apart, or at least appear to be from our lookout. But this should be a temporary state, and the reversal
- may already be in process, since our universe is finite and falls within the calculated gravitational radius. A
- few more years of observation with the macroscope, and we'll have a better idea. Assuming we can get around the
- galactic interference limitation."
- "Reversal?" Beatryx was worried. "Do you mean everything will start flying together?"
- "Afraid so. It will be quite crowded, by and by."
- "Oh," she said, distressed.
- "Yes, five or six billion years from now things may really be hopping."
- Brad was teasing her, a little cruelly Ivo thought, and it was his own turn to come to the rescue. "What's this
- galactic interference? You're not talking about the—"
- "No, not about the destroyer. This is less blatant. Within the galaxy the scope of the macroscope is
- absolute—but we can't seem to get any meaningful images from other galaxies. No natural ones, that is.
- Nothing but a confused jumble that fades in and out. So our assorted telescopes are still superior for the
- million and billion light-year range."
- "The Big Eye and the Big Ear are better for long distance than the Big Nose," Ivo observed.
- "We're confident that advances in the state-of-the-art will bring the macroscope up to snuff, however."
- "Meanwhile, I suppose you can make do with the local galaxy," Ivo said. "With a hundred billion or more stars
- to sniff in three or four dimensions."
- "And every planet and speck of dust, given time," Brad agreed. "We can see them all, virtually—assuming
- we get the scopes and manpower to look."
- "Four dimensions?" Beatryx again.
- "Space-time continuum," Brad said. "Or, in human terms, our old problem of travel-time. The farther away the
- star we're looking at, the older it is, because of the time it takes our macrons to get here. This doesn't
- matter much when we snoop Earth, because the delay is only five seconds. The entire diameter of our solar
- system is only a matter of light-hours. But Alpha Centauri is four years away, and an intriguing monster like
- Betelgeuse—'Beetle-juice' to cognoscenti—is three hundred. That civilized species on Sung, the
- probs, that I showed Ivo today is ten thousand years away. So our galactic map, the moment we made it, would be
- out of date by a variable factor ranging up to seventy thousand years. Unless we recognize that added dimension
- of time, we're hopelessly fouled up."
- "Oh."
- "If we had some form of instantaneous travel—and that isn't in the cards, in this framework of
- reality—we'd still have the darndest time visiting that Sung civilization, presuming that it existed
- today," Brad continued. "We'd have to assume that our instant system was posted on universal rest, and that's
- trouble right there. Our galaxy is moving and spinning at a considerable rate. A star thirty thousand light-
- years distant would be nowhere near our mapped coordinates—even if they were entirely accurate by our
- present frame of reference."
- "Why not orient on the galaxy, then?" Ivo asked. "The stars are pretty stable relative to each other inside it,
- aren't they?"
- "Too easy, Ivo. That implies that the galactic rotation can be ignored, and it can't. You jump thirty thousand
- light-years toward galactic center and you carry a sizable energy surplus with you. Angular momentum must be
- conserved. It's like the Coriolis force, or Ferrel's Law on Earth. You—"
- "If I may," Harold Groton said, interrupting him politely. "I have been this route myself. Ivo, did you ever
- whirl a noisemaker at the end of a string?"
- "No, but I know what you mean."
- "And you know what happens when you pull it short?"
- "Buzzes around twice as fast."
- "That's what happens when you pull in toward the center of the whirling galaxy."
- "If we had instantaneous transport," Brad said. "But the problem is academic, so I suppose it doesn't matter if
- our maps are outdated before we can make them up."
- The meal was done, and Ivo realized that he had enjoyed it without paying any attention to what it was.
- Chocolate cake for dessert, and—
- "Come on, Bradley," Groton said. "Relax your top-heavy mind with a sprout." And light wine, and—
- Brad laughed. "You never give up. Why don't you take on Ivo?"
- Groton obligingly turned to Ivo. "Are you familiar with the game?"
- "And mashed potatoes—" Ivo said, then blushed as they glanced at him in concert. He had to stop letting
- his thoughts run away with him! "Uh, the game. I guess not, since I don't know what you're talking about."
- Afra was looking restless again, and now Ivo was also beginning to wonder. Brad knew he wasn't going to have
- Schn for the coming crisis with officialdom. Why did he persist in this party-game banter? It was costing
- crucial time. Brad should be setting things up to divert the senator and postpone disaster.
- Still, what could any of them do, but play along? Brad's mind operated far more subtly than most people
- suspected, and he never gave up on a problem.
- Groton brought out a sheet of paper and two pencils. "Sprouts is an intellectual game that has had an
- underground popularity with scientists for a number of years. There are several variants, but we'll stick to
- the original one this time; it's still the best." He put three dots on the paper. "The rules are simple. All
- you do is connect the dots. Here, I'll take the first turn." He drew a line between two dots, then added a new
- dot in the center of that line. "One new spot each time, you see. Now you connect any two, or loop around and
- join one to itself, and add a spot to your line. You can't cross a line or a spot, or join a spot that already
- has three lines connected to it. The new ones formed on the lines actually have two connections already made,
- you see."
- "Seems pretty simple to me. How is the winner determined?"
- "The winner is the one who moves last, before the spots run out. Since two are used up and only one added, each
- turn, there is a definite limit."
- Ivo studied the paper. "That's no game," he protested. "The first player has a forced win."
- Brad and Afra laughed together. "Nabbed you that time, Harold, you old conniver," Brad said.
- "I'll be happy to play second," Groton said mildly. "Suppose we start with a simple two-dot game, to get the
- feel of it?"
- "That's a win for the second player."
- Groton glanced at him speculatively. "You sure you never played this game before?"
- "It's not a game. There's no element of chance or skill."
- "Very well. You open a three-spot game, and I'll take my luck with that nonexistent chance or skill."
- Ivo shrugged. He marked a triangle of dots
- and drew a line between the top and the left, adding a spot to the center.
- Groton connected the center spot to the isolated one.
- Ivo made a loop over the top of the figure.
- Groton shrugged and added to it.
- Two more moves put an eye inside and a base below.
- Ivo finished it off with an arc across the bottom, leaving Groton with two points but no way to connect them,
- since one was inside and the other outside.
- "Now," Groton said, "how about trying it for higher stakes? Say, five or six spots?"
- "Five is the first player's win, six—" he paused for a moment—"six is the second's. It's still no
- game."
- "How can you know that?"
- Brad broke in. "Ivo's special that way. He knows—and he can beat us all at sprouts, right now, I'm sure."
- "Even Kovonov?"
- "Could be."
- Groton shook his head dubiously. "I'll believe that when I see it."
- Ivo looked up and caught Afra looking at him intently. "Sorry," he said awkwardly. "I thought I explained about
- that. It's nothing. Just a trick of reasoning. I've had it as long as I can remember."
- "You interest me," Groton said. "Would you mind telling me when you were born?"
- "Don't do it, Ivo!" Brad said. "You'll be giving away all your life secrets."
- "He will not!" Afra cried. "Why be ridiculous?"
- Ivo looked at each of them, trying not to linger too long on Afra's face, so lovely in its animation. "Have I
- missed something?" Again? he added internally.
- "Harold is an astrologer," Brad explained. "Give him your birthday to the nearest minute and he will draw up a
- horoscope that really has your number."
- Groton looked complacently pained. "Astrology is a hobby of mine. You may consider it a parlor game, but I'll
- stand by its validity when properly applied."
- Ivo regretted his involvement in this dialogue, not because he was at all concerned with the subject but
- because he saw that he was being used to tease the man. He could not decide that he liked Groton, but cruelty,
- even this mild, was not in his nature. Brad sometimes seemed to be insensitive to the foibles of those less
- intelligent than he. "March 29th, 1955," he said.
- Groton noted it on a little pad. "Do you happen to know the exact time?"
- "Yes. I saw it on the record, once. 6:20 a.m."
- Groton noted that too. "And I believe you mentioned that you were born in Philadelphia. Pennsylvania or
- Mississippi?"
- Ivo tried to remember when he could have mentioned such a fact. "Pennsylvania. Does it make a difference?"
- "Everything makes a difference. I could explain if you're interested."
- "Let's not make this a classroom session," Afra said impatiently. Ivo could see that there were parameters of
- insensitivity about her, too; or perhaps it was merely impulsive emotion. She was like a race-horse, fretful,
- impatient to be moving, and unappreciative of the more devious concerns of others.
- Why had Brad desired a race-horse?
- Why did Ivo?
- "Interesting figure of speech," Groton said, seemingly unperturbed. "Astrology might well be taught in the
- classroom. I wish I had been exposed to it a dozen years earlier."
- "I don't understand," Afra said with measured frustration, "how a competent engineer like you can take up with
- a common superstition like that. I mean, really—!"
- "Didn't you teach in the classroom once, Harold?" Beatryx inquired, breaking in so gently that it took Ivo a
- moment to realize that she was intercepting a developing argument. Afra and Groton must have been through a
- similar dialogue before, and the good wife knew the signs. Ivo could read them himself: the stolid man replying
- seriously to facetious questions, never losing his temper, while the excitable girl worked herself into a
- frenzy. Perhaps Groton defended astrology merely because it was ludicrous, subtly or not-so-subtly baiting her.
- Had he been sympathizing with the wrong person? Afra was beautiful and brilliant, but her temperament betrayed
- her. She might actually be at a disadvantage in this type of encounter.
- No—Brad would have broken up any such contest. Groton had said something, and Afra had pounced on it,
- while his mind drifted, and now somehow Groton was launched into a narration of his teaching experience. This
- had, it developed, predated his marriage to Beatryx. Ivo listened, finding to his surprise that he was
- interested. There was much more to Groton than he had thought.
- "...volunteered. I suppose quite a number of professional people were as nave as I was. But the company I
- worked for then—remember, this was back in '67 or '68—had no sympathy with the striking teachers,
- and offered time off with full pay for any employee who was willing to give it a try. And of course the
- temporary salary from the school system was extra. So a number of us engineers set out to show the dissident
- teachers that we valued a functioning school system, even if they didn't, and that we were ready and able to
- preserve it, no matter how long they threw their collective tantrum. After all, we were as qualified as they
- were, since we all had BA's, MA's or doctorates in our field, and plenty of practical experience too. That's
- the way it looked to me at the age of twenty-seven, at any rate."
- He paused, and Afra did not break in with any irate remark this time. She was interested too. Beatryx had
- succeeded in pacifying things.
- Twenty-seven. Two years older than Ivo was now. He could picture himself in that situation readily enough,
- however, assigned to fill in at a school where about half the regular teachers were out on their illegal
- strike. Technically, it was a mass resignation subject to withdrawal upon satisfaction... a transparent veil.
- He dressed in a careful suit, trying to appear composed though his pulse raced with stage fright at the coming
- confrontation with a juvenile audience. Would he remember what to say? Would he be able to present clearly what
- was so well-defined in his own mind? It was so important that the material be properly covered.
- This particular high school had not been able to keep all the classes going, and some of the lower grades were
- home, but there seemed to be kids everywhere. Boys were running down the halls and screaming, throwing books on
- the floor and collecting in noisy huddles: there seemed to be nobody with the authority to bring order. As Ivo
- waited with the other volunteers for briefing and specific assignments he observed some pretty heavy petting
- going on in a doorway, but the passing teachers ignored it. He had forgotten how mature, physically, sixteen-
- and seventeen-year-old girls were. Two boys broke out in a fight directly in sight of the principal's office;
- the harried executive simply stuck his head out. yelled "Break it up!" and glared until they ran off. The
- lovers were also startled out of their preoccupation, and sidled to a more distant doorway before resuming
- their courtship. Otherwise, chaos reigned.
- His classroom was at the end of a wing, in the technical section. He was lucky, as it turned out: he was "in
- his field." Some of the engineers from his company found themselves trying to teach English or History, and one
- even wound up babysitting a Spanish class. The kids kept jabbering Spanish at him, and laughing, and he
- couldn't tell whether it was legitimate drill or dirty jokes at his expense. Ivo was to feel queasy, later,
- just thinking about that; it was like nakedness on a stage.
- He stood before thirty-five senior engineering students. They were, in that quiet before the storm, reasonably
- orderly, watching him intently. What should his first words be? How should he break the ice?
- No problem: he called the roll. The principal had made that tediously clear. They could put up with a few
- firecrackers and water balloons in the halls, but they could not omit that roll. It seemed that the state paid
- so much per head per day in class, and the school mustn't miss a head. Still, it did help control the
- situation. A kid running up and down the halls or necking in a corner did not get credit for attendance unless
- he got into his classroom in a hurry. So rollcall was not as stupid as it seemed at first.
- Easier said than done. He did not know those boys by sight, and had to take their word when they answered to
- the names he laboriously pronounced. There was increasing merriment that he thought stemmed from his errors in
- pronunciation—until two answered at once on "Brown" and he realized that they were covering for an absent
- student.
- He remembered, with relief, the seating chart. He could check them that way... as soon as each boy was seated
- where he belonged. "All right, engineers—you know where you sit. Move. From now on, I want every one of
- you in the proper place."
- "My place is home!" one quipped, and the rest joined in with a too-boisterous laughter.
- His next task was to discover where they stood in engineering, so that he could start teaching meaningfully. It
- was a general course, mostly electronics, and the textbook was good except that it was sadly out of date. He
- would have to extrapolate from it, filling in the advances of the past decade, or the training would be almost
- useless.
- One of the boys casually took out a cigarette and lit it.
- Ivo snapped to classroom awareness. "Hey! You—" he looked at the seating chart—"Boonton. What are
- you doing?"
- "Smoking," the boy replied, as though surprised at the challenge.
- "Isn't there a school rule against student smoking?"
- "It's permitted for seniors in the technical wing, sir."
- Ivo looked about, suspecting that the boy was lying. Others in the class were covering smirks. They were trying
- the substitute out, as he had been warned they would.
- This was the time for toughness. The principal had put it plainly to the group of volunteers: "Either the
- instructor rules the students or the students rule the instructor. If you're weak, they will know it. Put your
- foot down. The whole authority of the public school system stands behind you. Most of our kids are good kids,
- but they need to be governed firmly. Don't let the few bad apples take over."
- Platitudes galore, he had thought at the time—was it only an hour ago?—but probably good advice.
- Now was the time to apply it. He affected a boldness he did not feel and laid down the local law.
- "I don't care what the technical-wing rules are for what grades. I will not permit the fire hazard of smoking
- in my classroom. Put that weed away immediately."
- Then they all were on him. "What do you mean?"
- "Mister Hoover lets us smoke!"
- "How do you expect us to concentrate?"
- "Cheeze!"
- Ivo hesitated, suddenly unsure. He did not want to be a martinet. "All right, Boonton. You may smoke in
- class—" there was a spontaneous cheer—"if you can show me a note from the principal approving it."
- Silence.
- Then the boy jumped up. "I'll go see him right now! He'll tell you it's okay!"
- Ivo let him go. He spent the rest of the period trying to pin down how much the boys knew about engineering of
- any type and how far into the text they had progressed. It was hard, taking over a functioning class from
- another teacher, and he could see that much effort would inevitably be wasted in the changeover, simply because
- of the differing styles of the two men.
- Boonton never came back. Ivo didn't have time to be concerned with that. Probably the principal had been busy.
- The bell rang for the end of the period, and he realized that he had really accomplished nothing. All he had
- done was call the roll and argue about smoking and try to find some place to start. As they cleared out and the
- next bunch came in, he remembered that he hadn't even given them a homework assignment. What a beginning!
- The room was a mess. Balls of paper littered the floor, chairs were scattered, assorted slop was on the desks
- and strands of colored wire lay in odd places. And here he had to do it all over again with a new class!
- Somehow he made it. But that afternoon he received a note from the principal, suggesting that he try to settle
- his problem in class instead of aggravating the students and involving the front office. That was how he
- learned that Boonton had simply gone home for the day with a story about being prejudicially kicked out of
- class by a temporary teacher. His mother had called the principal in a fury, and the reprimand was being duly
- relayed to the concerned teacher.
- Ivo reread the note, appalled. No one had bothered to check his version of it. It appeared that any student
- could make any charge against any teacher—and be believed without question.
- There were limits. He went to the principal's office at the beginning of his daily free-period, but the man was
- too busy to see him. Finally he settled down in the teachers' lounge and wrote a report covering the situation.
- That neatly used up the time he had planned to use for reviewing the lessons for the following day, but at
- least it would settle the matter.
- "Ha!" Afra said.
- Ivo was jolted back to reality: this was Harold Groton's experience, not his own.
- "I was dead tired the end of that first day," Groton continued. "As nearly as I could tell, I had cleaned up
- enough debris and mispronounced enough names to last me for a normal year—but I hadn't taught anybody any
- engineering. And to top it all off, I received three calls at my home from irate parents complaining about my
- mistreatment of their hard-working angels. The last one was at one a.m. I think that was when I really began to
- understand what it meant to be a teacher.
- "The next day was worse. The word was out that I could be taken. Everyone seemed to know that I'd had trouble
- with the office, and the students were determined to run me down. They talked out of turn, they slept in class,
- they looked at comic books; I couldn't make all of them pay attention all the time. I saw that few of them
- cared about the subject or had any real thought for the future, and the ones who needed instruction most were
- the ones who refused even to listen when it was offered. They drew pictures of girls and hotrods in their
- notebooks, and there was always some obscene word on one of the blackboards. I'd erase it, not making an issue
- of it—as I'd been advised—but another would be there again next period. There'd be an anonymous
- noise while I was talking—a clicking or a harmonica note or something similar—and it would stop the
- moment I did. I couldn't ignore it because every time it happened the whole class got out of control and became
- noisy, and I couldn't pin it down either. And the thing was, they knew as well as I did what would happen if I
- cracked down on anyone and sent him to the principal's office for discipline. I'd get spoken to, not the
- student, for letting things get out of control. It was my responsibility.
- "Hell," Groton said, "is a roomful of rebellious juveniles—and a pusillanimous administration. I was
- committed, and I refused to quit—but I became obsessed with the progress of the negotiations between the
- state authority and the FEA."
- "FEA?" Ivo asked.
- "Florida Education Association. That was the teachers' group, and they still may be, for all I know. I really
- came to appreciate their stand. I never worked so hard in my life, in the face of such abuse. Oh. the
- newspapers were full of editorials! 'Wonderful Volunteers Filling In For Errant Teachers,' 'Nobody Cares About
- Our Innocent Children,' 'Governor Unavailable For Comment' and so on. But I was in a position, as I had not
- been before, to comprehend the truth. The boys were a lot less innocent than the editorialists! I was a
- scab—a strikebreaker—and while I think there may have been some better way to protest, the teachers
- certainly had compelling arguments on their side.
- "The extra pay had seemed nice at first, like so much lagniappe. It enhanced my normal gross by a good fifty
- percent. But it wasn't worth it! For one thing, my time was never my own; I was grading papers every night and
- trying to do something about the ones with identical mistakes—pretty sure sign of cheating, but not
- proof—and preparing for the next day's sessions. I had trouble sleeping. I kept seeing those vulpine
- young faces peering at me, waiting for any slip, eager for my attention to wander so that they could sling
- another spitwad at the windowpane. And I realized that their regular teacher had to do this all the
- time—for no more pay than that fifty percent!
- "But the worst shock came at the end. The teacher walkout collapsed after a couple of weeks, and most of them
- came back to fill their old places. I went back to my own job with voluminous relief. It was the weight of the
- world off my shoulders! But I paid one more visit to that school, after things were settled, because I wanted
- to meet the man I had replaced. I wanted to apologize to him for my ignorance and interference, and
- congratulate him for being a better man than I was. The education had been mine, really, and I had learned a
- lot of respect for him, knowing how good a job he had done under such conditions. I had seen his books and
- records, and knew he was a very fine engineer, too; he was right up to date, even if the texts he had to use
- weren't.
- "But he wasn't there. His classes had been redistributed among other teachers. The school board had refused to
- hire him back. It turned out that he was an officer of the FEA, and one of the organizers of the walkout. So
- the board had its revenge on him and those like him, even though they were among the best teachers in the
- system. The mediocre teachers they kept; those were not 'troublemakers' who insisted on pushing for school
- improvements. I learned that this was happening all over the state, and I knew that the educational system
- there was never going to be the same again. They had brutally purged their most dedicated men and women, the
- ones who cared the most, rather than admit that the teachers' complaints were valid."
- "Why didn't they pay their teachers more?" Ivo asked. "Buy better texts, and so on? Why did they let so many
- other states forge ahead where it counted?"
- "The state was in a financial bind at the time. If they had allocated more for the teachers, they would have
- had to do the same for the other neglected professions—the police, the social workers, even migrant
- labor. That would have meant an increase in taxes—"
- "Oh."
- "Or a closing of tax loopholes," Brad added. "And that would have been even worse for the special interests in
- power at the time."
- Ivo had a sudden vision of the proboscoids of planet Sung, abusing their resources into extinction. This is how
- it happens, he thought. Public apathy led to control by the special interests and unscrupulous individuals, and
- the trend was disastrous.
- Had Brad known that the conversation would take this turn? Was this his way of showing Ivo that the tide had to
- be turned at this last frontier, the frontier of space? Senator Borland, representing the reactionary power
- of—
- Groton smiled. "I'm sorry; I didn't mean to run on like that. I don't usually—"
- "You never told me, dear," Beatryx said. "Nobody likes to advertise his mistakes. That's why I tried to forget
- what my 'teaching' really was. It still gets to me, when I think about it—that hellish two weeks—it
- seemed like several months. It was a long time before I felt really settled again. Before I could forget that
- terrible insecurity of responsibility without authority, of degradation at the hands of the precious youth of
- our country, of the bitterness at unworkable and unfair policies and useless effort."
- Yet he had not done anything about it himself, Ivo thought. How could mankind turn about, when even those who
- were shocked by the visible carnage merely retreated from it?
- "At least I know better now," Groton said. "Now that I have Beatryx. And I stay out of 'causes.' Maybe I just
- had to get the mistaken idealism out of my system before settling down."
- Oh.
- Brad took Ivo to the confrontation. Afra was busy elsewhere, and he tried to keep his mind off her.
- Senator Borland reminded him, shockingly, of the catatonic Dr. Johnson Afra had introduced him to in the
- infirmary. Borland's manner dissipated that initial impression in a hurry, however; he was younger and far more
- forceful than the scientist could ever have been. Ivo tried not to think of him automatically as the enemy.
- Borland had probably had nothing to do with the closing of schools and suppression of teachers.
- It was amazing that one so young as Brad should be trusted to deal with such a man. But Brad was—Brad.
- The Senator arrived with his personal secretary: a noisy young man who could only be properly described as a
- "flunky." The flunky did the talking, speaking of Borland always in the third person as though he were not
- present, while Borland himself looked alertly about as though not concerned with the dialogue.
- "You!" the flunky cried imperiously, spying Brad. "You're American, right? The Senator wants to talk to you."
- Brad approached slowly. Ivo could tell he was repressing irritation; he was hardly one to be ordered about
- abruptly.
- The flunky consulted his clipboard. "You're Bradley Carpenter, right? Boy genius from Kennedy Tech, right? The
- Senator wants to know what you're pulling here."
- "Astronomy," Brad said. There was a small stir among the assembled personnel of the station, and one big man
- with the Soviet insignia on his lapel smiled, not hesitant to show his contempt of the capitalist hierarchy.
- The West Europeans kept straight faces, though one had to cough. Borland had no power over them, but there were
- courtesies to maintain.
- "Stargazing. Uh-huh," the flunky remarked. "The Senator means to put a stop to needless and wasteful expense.
- Do you have any idea how much of the taxpayer's hard-earned money you've squandered here in the past year?"
- "Yes," Brad replied.
- "The Senator means to get to the bottom of this foolishness. This—" There was a doubletake. "What?"
- "None."
- "None what?"
- "None squandered. You seem to assume that the purpose of research is the production of tangible commodities.
- The research is not in error; your definitions are."
- Borland swung around to cover Brad. He touched one finger to his subordinate's arm and the youth froze. "Hold
- on there, lad. Suppose you prove that statement. What's so special about your telescope, makes it worth this
- many billion dollars? Just give me the tourist-class rundown, now."
- "It isn't a telescope."
- "The Senator didn't ask you what it wasn't!"
- Ivo could tell by the silence that even the non-English-speaking personnel present were waiting to see the
- gadfly get swatted. Brad's obscure humor was not the only trait friends had come to appreciate.
- They were disappointed this time. Brad did go into the elementary lecture reserved for visiting dignitaries.
- After a moment Ivo realized why: Brad was swatting for the gad, not the gadfly.
- "According to Newton's theory of gravitation, every object in the universe attracts every other object with a
- force directly proportional to their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between
- them. Currently we prefer to think of gravity as the physical manifestation of the curvature of space in the
- presence of matter. That is—"
- "What about the telescope?" the flunky demanded. "The Senator doesn't have the time for irrelevant—"
- Borland touched him on the arm again. It was like lifting the needle from a record.
- "That is," Brad continued, having taken advantage of the break to move to one of the blackboards, and now
- erasing the complex "sprouts" diagram there, "we might visualize space as a taut elastic fabric, and the masses
- in our universe as assorted objects resting upon it. The heavier objects naturally depress the surface more."
- He drew a sagging line with a circle in its center, then added a smaller circle. Ivo tried to imagine how a
- sprouts game might achieve such a configuration, but his talent did not help him there.
- "This is the way the depression of space in the vicinity of our sun might affect the Earth, making due
- allowances for the two-dimensionality of our representation," Brad said. "As you can see, the small object will
- have a tendency to roll in toward the large, unless it should spin around it fast enough for centrifugal force
- to counteract the effect. But of course the Earth creates its own depression, and objects near it will be
- similarly attracted unless they establish orbits.
- "The universe as a whole, therefore, is both curved and immensely complicated, since there are no real limits
- to any depression, large or small. No actual 'force' is necessary to explain the effects we experience in the
- presence of matter, apart from the basic nature of the situation. The gravitic interactions are everywhere,
- however, ripple upon ripple, and with constantly changing values. Any question so far?"
- "GTR," Borland said.
- "General Theory of Relativity, yes. Our concern is with these interactions." Brad marked a place on the
- diagram, between the sun and Earth, but nearer the latter so that it crested the wave. "We find that the
- peculiar stress of overlapping depressions—fields of gravity, if you will—creates a faint but
- unique turbulence, particularly at points in space where two or more fields are of equivalent potency. You
- might liken it to the sonic boom, where a physical object impinges the domain of sound, or Cerenkov radiation.
- It is, like the Cerenkov, a form of light—or rather, a subtle harmonic imprinted upon light passing
- through the turbulence. This aspect of light was not understood or even measurable until very recently; our
- technology was not sophisticated enough to detect such perturbations, let alone analyze their nature."
- Borland held up his hand as though in a classroom, reminding Ivo again of Groton's experience. Now the spitwads
- were political. "Now a question, if you please. You tell me a beam of light passes through this gravity
- turbulence between two objects in space, and gets kinked a bit. But the way I figure it, there's hardly a
- cubbyhole in the cosmos that doesn't have gravitational equivalence of some sort; there are just too many
- stars, too many specks of dust, all with their little fields crossing into infinity. Your beam of light should
- have a thousand kinks, and kinks on kinks, if it travels any distance. So how do you figure which is which?
- Seems to me you're better off just taking your light as is, through a regular telescope; that's uncluttered, at
- least."
- It occurred to Ivo with a little shock that a very sharp mind lurked behind the senatorial faade.
- "This is true, ordinarily," Brad admitted carefully. "The 'kinks' our instrument detects are crowded. But while
- raw light is superior both for short work and long range, definition suffers in the intermediate range of say,
- one light-minute to a hundred thousand light-years. The macronic imposition, in contrast, is, for reasons we
- have yet to understand, more durable. We find the macrons in a beam emanating from a thousand light-years away
- to be almost as distinct as those from our own sun's field. The same is true for virtually any galactic
- distance. As our range increases—"
- "I'm with you. You can shout down the hall, but you need a phone for the next city, even if it sounds tinny,
- and it works the same for the next continent. Now that term you used—macron—that sounds like a
- thing, not a quality."
- "Yes. Our nomenclature is vague because our comprehension is vague. We appear to be dealing also with the
- particle aspect of light, more than with the wave, and perhaps with particles of gravitation. That may be the
- reason the effect appears to be independent of the square-cube law."
- "Mate a photon to a gravitron and breed a macron," Borland remarked. "Damn interesting. I can see the
- implications of such interaction between light and gravity, untrained as I am in quantum mechanics." Untrained
- but hardly ignorant, Ivo thought. "So you either get all your macron, or none of it," the Senator continued
- after a pause. "But how can you get pictures of objects on or inside a planet, where there is no light?"
- "The turbulence is removed from the source of the field, since it is equivalence that counts. Even an object in
- a planet has mass of its own, and its field interacts with that of the planet and of neighboring objects. At
- some point there will be an interaction that occurs in light—and some of the resultant macrons will reach
- us, however far away we are. It is only necessary for our receiver and equipment to be sufficiently sensitive.
- A computer stage is required for the initial rectification, and another to sort out and classify the myriad
- fragmentary images obtained. It is not a simple process. But once complete—"
- "You are able, with your macroscope, to inspect any point in space—or on Earth?"
- Brad nodded.
- "I observed your emblem."
- "We do not use it that way," Brad said shortly.
- Ivo realized that they were talking about the platinum-plated shovel: the S D P S. Who could fathom its meaning
- by guesswork? Evidently the Senator understood the initials well enough. Perhaps he had prior information? He
- sounded less and less amateurish to Ivo. Had Brad met his match?
- "Naturally not," Borland was saying. "Certain persons might not take kindly to such observation. Some might
- even feel so strong a need to protect their privacy that they would institute stringent measures. Do you follow
- me?"
- "Yes," Brad said, his tone showing his disgust. The gad had not been swatted yet, though the gadfly had merged
- with the background.
- "No you don't. Have you ever lived in one of facing tenements? Your window opening to a courtyard of windows?"
- "No."
- "You missed a good education, lad." Borland looked around. "Anybody else?"
- The scientists of the station stood awkwardly.
- "In a tenement," he repeated softly. "Anybody."
- A brown hand went up from the doorway. It was Fred Blank, of the maintenance department, also table-tennis
- champion. His signal was tentative, as though he didn't like calling attention to himself at such a gathering.
- Borland faced him. "Ever use the glasses?"
- Blank looked sullen.
- "Or maybe a cheap telescope?" Borland persisted. "Yeah, you know what I mean. Ten, twenty, maybe a hundred
- windows, depending on your location, and maybe half with no shades. Who wastes dough on shades, on nigger
- wages? Some girls don't know they're putting on a show. Some don't care. Some figure it's good for business.
- Same for some men. And family fights are fair game for capacity audience." He returned to Brad. "You know how
- you cure a scoper?"
- "I'd call the police."
- Borland wheeled to point at Blank. "That right, soul brother?"
- Blank shook his head no. He was, reluctantly, smiling now.
- "Yeah, you know." Borland had assumed complete control of the dialogue. "You was there, Kilroy. You had the
- education. Calling cop ain't in the book."
- The scientists of the station stood mute, except for those translating for their companions. Borland was
- showing them all up for impractical theoreticians.
- "Now you begin to follow, maybe. To put it in highbrow for you: mass voyeurism is a typical consequence of the
- cybernetic revolution, and you aren't going to curb it by invoking prerevolution methods. Back in the old days
- when we were nomads scrunching in tents, anybody poke his snoot in your door uninvited, you bash it in with
- your horny fist. The agricultural revolution changed all that, made cities possible—and cities are by
- definition crowded. The industrial revolution, maybe five thousand years later, made it ten times worse,
- because then every Joe had the wherewithal to poke into his neighbor's business with impunity. The cybernetic
- revolution really tied it, because then that average Joe had the wherewithal and the time to pry—and
- nobody pays for a canned show when there's a live one free.
- "Now we've got the superscope, and we can diddle in our stellar neighbor's business, as though our own weren't
- enough. Now how do you figure a smart ET who likes his privacy is going to stop you from peeking—when
- there's maybe a fifteen-thousand-year time-delay?"
- The station personnel looked at each other in dismay. Obvious—yet none of them had thought of it! A mind-
- destroying logic-chain that wiped out the peeping tom, wherever and whenever he might be. The most direct and
- realistic answer to snooping.
- Borland waited for the babel of translation and discussion to die away. The men who had studied him with veiled
- contempt showed respect now, and the Russian had stopped smiling. "Now, comrades, suppose we forget about
- preconceptions and tackle the main problem. I know most of your governments better than you do—yes, even
- yours, Ivan—because that is my profession. Politics. I also know something of human nature—the
- reality, not the theory—and thereby it figures I know something too of alien nature. You're in trouble
- here, and so am I in certain respects you wouldn't care about. Why don't we forget our differences, pool our
- resources, and find out what we can come up with? Maybe we can help each other a little."
- Men looked at each other over the renewed murmur of the translations. Tentative smiles broke out. "Maybe we
- can, Senator," Brad allowed.
- Borland spoke to his helper. "Go hold a preliminary press conference, kid. Tell 'em what the Senator means to
- do—but stay well clear of the facts. Irritate 'em if they get nosy. You know the routine." The flunky
- left without a word.
- "Li'l wonder, ain't he?" Borland remarked. "Took me years to find a foil like that. Now where's this tape?"
- "Tape?"
- "Lad, my reconnaissance is not that clumsy. The recording you have of the destroyer. The one that clouds men's
- minds, ha-ha-ha. The Shadow knows."
- "It isn't a tape, or even a recording," Brad said. "We can't record it—at least, what we take down
- doesn't have the effect. The—meaning doesn't register."
- "But you can pipe it in here live, right? No sense inspecting a dead virus. We want to know what makes it kick.
- It only comes in on one station, right? And it's continuous; you can tune it in any time?"
- "One segment of the macroscopic band, yes. The center segment, where reception is strongest. The one we could
- use most effectively—if we could only tune the destroyer out."
- Brad showed the Senator to a smaller projection room. Most of the scientists and personnel dispersed, satisfied
- that the situation was coming under control. Afra appeared in blouse and skirt, making even plain clothing look
- elegant. Ivo tagged along, forgotten for the moment.
- "This is where we set it up," Brad explained tersely. "It amounts to a computer output, with the main signal
- processed at the receiver. There are electronic safeguards to guarantee that none of the effects penetrate
- beyond this room. This device is dangerous."
- "A program," Borland said musingly. "A mousetrap in a harem. But why make up a show like that, instead of
- simply lobbing a detonator into the sun?"
- "Evidently the originator isn't against all life," Brad said. "This is selective. It only hits the space-
- traveling, macroscope-building species like ourselves. The snoopers. So long as we keep our development below a
- certain level, we're safe."
- "My sentiments too. That the kind of safety you care for?"
- "No."
- "Let's run it through again. I put out a theory, just to show you how it could be, but I'm not putting my money
- on it yet. GIGO, you know. Garbage In, Garbage Out. Maybe my notion is the right one, but let's eliminate the
- others first. Like that song: 'Oh why don't I work like other men do? How the hell can I work when the skies
- are so blue? Hallelujah, I'm a bum!' Feed that to a minister and he'll tell you it's profane. Should be 'how
- the heck,' the church-approved euphemism. Try it on a professor and he'll tell you it's agrammatical: should be
- 'as other men do.' But a worker will tell you the whole thing's been censored. Should be 'how the hell can I
- work when there's no work to do!' Us lowbrows get to the root, sometimes. Not always. You figure they're afraid
- of the competition from some smart-aleck new species?"
- "Fifteen thousand years late? And if we had a light-speed drive, which we never will, it would still take us
- another fifteen millennia to reach them. We can't even reply to their 'message' sooner than that. So it's
- really a delay of thirty thousand years. And I don't see how they could be sure we'd be ready to receive or
- reply in that time."
- "Could be a long-term broadcast. For all we know, it's been going on a million years," Borland said. "Just
- waiting for us to catch up. Maybe time is slower for them? Like fifteen thousand years being a week or so,
- their way?"
- "Not when the broadcast is on our time scheme. We haven't had to adjust to it at all. If they lived that
- slowly, we'd have a cycle running a thousand years, instead of a few minutes."
- "Maybe. You figure they're crazy with hate for any intelligent race, any time?"
- "Xenophobia? It's possible. But again, that time-delay makes it doubtful. How can you hate something that won't
- exist for tens of millennia?"
- "An alien might. His mind—if he has one—might work in a different way than mine."
- "Still, there are conceded to be certain criteria for intelligence. It isn't reasonable—"
- "Stop being reasonable. That's a mistake. Try being philosophical."
- Brad looked at him. "What philosophy do you have in mind, Senator?"
- "I mean philosophy in its practical sense, of course. You can be reasonable as hell and still be a damned fool,
- and that's your problem. You figure your Scientific Method is the best technique you have for working things
- out, right? I tell you no."
- "Observe the facts, set up a hypothesis that accounts for them all, use it to predict other facts, check them
- out, and revise or scrap the original hypothesis if the new evidence doesn't fit properly. I find it workable.
- Do Aristotle, Kant or Marx have a better overall system?"
- "Yes. The primary concern of philosophy is not truth. It is meaning. The destroyer is not a truth-crisis, it is
- a meaning-crisis. You don't begin with assumptions and piece them together according to the rules of
- mathematics; you question their implications, and you question your questions, until nothing at all is certain.
- Then, maybe, you are getting close to meaning."
- Brad frowned. "That make sense to you two?"
- "No," Afra said.
- "Yes," Ivo said.
- "It doesn't have to make sense to you, so long as it opens your mind. This isn't any game of chess we're
- playing; we don't even know the rules. All we know for sure is that we're losing—and maybe we'd better
- start by questioning that. So this thing wipes out intelligence. Is that bad?"
- "Cosmologically speaking, perhaps not," Brad said. "But the local effect is uncomfortable. It would be easier
- to live with it if it erased our least intelligent, rather than—"
- Borland frowned. "You're talking about IQ type brains? 'Intelligence Quotient defined as Mental Age divided by
- Chronological Age times 100'?"
- "We think so. Of course we can't be certain that a numerical IQ score reflects anything more than the subject's
- ability to score on IQ tests, so we may be misinterpreting the nature of the destroyer's thrust. A numerical
- score omits what may be the more important factors of personality, originality and character, and even when
- detail scores are identical—"
- "It is no sure sign that the capabilities or performance of the people are identical," Borland finished. "I
- know the book, and I am aware of the shortcomings of the system. I remember the flap fifteen or twenty years
- ago about 'creativity,' and I remember the vogue for joining high-IQ clubs. When I want a good man, I stay well
- clear of the self-professed egghead. I can tell just by looking at faces who's a sucker for the club syndrome."
- Borland peered at faces. He pointed a gnarled finger at Afra. "You!"
- She jumped guiltily. "You belong, right?" he said. Without waiting for her startled nod of agreement he moved
- on. "You—no," he said to Brad. "That big Russky who just left—no." He looked at Ivo. "They wouldn't
- let you in." He returned to Brad. "But IQ is the only practical guide we have to the generalized potential of
- large numbers of people, so we have to use it until we have something better. Let's just define it as the
- ability to learn, and say that a person with IQ one twenty is probably smarter overall than his brother with IQ
- one hundred. It's only a convenience so we can get down to the important stuff. OK?"
- Brad laughed. "Oll Korrect, Senator. Apply your philosophy."
- "Now you tell me this signal is nonlinguistic, so anybody can follow it, but it has a cutoff point. You have to
- be pretty smart, by one definition or another, for it to hit you. Does it hit the smarty sooner than the
- marginal one, or is it like the macrons: you get it or you don't?"
- "It seems to hit the brighter minds sooner. Intelligence is such an elusive quality that we can't be sure,
- but—"
- "Right. So let's run this through in some kind of order. You have an IQ of two fifteen—"
- "What?" Afra demanded, shocked.
- "That isn't—"
- "I know. I know, I know," Borland said. "Figures don't mean anything, but if they did they still wouldn't apply
- to you, because you're smarter than the Joe who tries to test you. But remember we're talking convenience, not
- fact. No, I haven't seen your data-sheet; I do my own interpolation. If the figures did register for you,
- that's about the way it would read, right?"
- Brad did not deny it, and Afra did not look at him. Ivo knew what she was thinking. She had supposed he might
- be 175 or 180, still somewhere within range of her own score. Scores would be very important to her. Suddenly
- she knew he was as far above her as she was above the average person—and the average, to her, was almost
- unbearably dull.
- "So chances are that of this group, you would be the first to be hit by it," Borland said. "So let's put you at
- the head of the table. Now I'm comparatively stupid—at least, about fifty points below your figure, and
- that's a military secret, by the way, 'cause brains are a nonsurvival trait in the Senate—and your girl
- here runs about ten points below that. This lad—"
- "About one twenty-five," Ivo said. "But it's unbalanced. I have—"
- "There went another military secret," Brad muttered. "I don't think Mr. Archer should—"
- "I insist on taking my place in your theoretic lineup," Ivo said seriously.
- "Good. You're here, and it's a nice gradient, so might as well use you," Borland said. "Now let's bring in
- someone who sits at one hundred even to round it out."
- "There's nobody on the station—" Afra began.
- "Ask Beatryx," Brad murmured.
- "Ask—!"
- "It is no insult to be average, intellectually," Brad told her gently. "The rest of us are freaks,
- statistically." Afra flushed and went out.
- "High-tempered filly there," Borland observed. "Technical secretary?"
- "More—until two minutes ago."
- "Let's get with it. You can activate that relay right now, right?"
- "You seem to be assuming that we're really going to watch it."
- "Lose your nerve, son? You knew it was coming. Step outside and leave me with it."
- "Senator, there's no way to demonstrate the destroyer to you without destroying you. You'd be committing mental
- suicide."
- Borland squinted at him. "Say I see it and survive it. Say I assimilate what the aliens are trying to hide.
- Where would that put me, locally?"
- "Either stupid enough for a chairmanship, or—"
- Ivo understood the pause. The Senator was hardly stupid. If he should survive the destroyer with a whole mind,
- he might have at his command the secrets of the universe, literally. He could become the most powerful man on
- Earth. He was the type of individual willing to gamble total loss against the prospect of total victory.
- He was serious. This was what he had come for. He would view the destroyer. And Brad could not allow him to
- make that gamble alone. The Senator's victory might well be more costly to Earth than his defeat—unless
- Brad could solve the destroyer first.
- Borland's gaze was fierce. "You want it the hard way, junior?"
- "Congressional subpoena?" Brad shrugged. "No, we'll undertake this suicide pact now, together."
- "Do it, lad."
- Brad glanced at Ivo, saw that he wasn't leaving, and slapped a button under the table. The television screen
- that filled the far wall burst into color. All three rotated to face it.
- Ivo, astonished at the suddenness of the decision and action, realized then how neatly they had done it. The
- three of them constituted a bracket, to honor that pretext, and Brad would not have wanted either woman to take
- the risk. Afra would never have excluded herself voluntarily, had she known what was brewing.
- Shape appeared, subtle, twisting, tortuous, changing. A large sphere of red—he could tell by the shading
- that it represented a sphere, in spite of the two-dimensionality of the image—and a small blue dot. The
- dot expanded into a sphere in its own right, lighter blue, and overlapped the other. The segment of impingement
- took on a purple compromise.
- Ivo's intuition caught on. His freak ability attuned to this display as readily as it had to the game of
- sprouts. This was an animated introduction to sets, leading into Boolean Algebra, with color as an additional
- tool. Through set theory it was possible to introduce a beginner to mathematics, logic, electronics and all
- other fields of knowledge—without the intervention of a specific language. Language itself could be
- effectively analyzed by this means. One riddle solved; the aliens had the means to communicate.
- The colors flexed, expanded, overlapped, changed shapes and intensities and number and patterns in a fashion
- that to an ordinary person might seem random... but was not. There was logic in that patterning, above and
- beyond the logic of the medium. It was an alien logic, but absolutely rational once its terms were accepted.
- Rapidly, inevitably, the postulates integrated into an astonishingly meaningful whole. The very significance of
- existence was—
- Ivo's intuition leaped ahead, anticipating the denouement. The meaning was coming at him, striking with
- transcendent force.
- He knew immediately that the sequence should be stopped. He tried to stand, to cry out, but his motor reflexes
- were paralyzed. He could not even close his eyes.
- He did the next best thing: he threw them out of focus. The writhing image lost definition and its hold upon
- him weakened. Gradually his eyelids muscled down; then he was able to turn his head away.
- His entire upper torso dropped on the table. He was too weak to act.
- The program ground to its inevitable conclusion. He was aware of it, though he did not watch. There was no
- sound in the room.
- The door burst open. "Brad!" Afra cried, distracted. "You didn't wait!"
- Ivo was jarred out of his trance. Strength returned. He lurched to his feet, finding his balance. He lumbered
- along the table, reaching for the button Brad had touched. He scratched under the surface, his fingers
- uncoordinated, trying to make it work, and finally the image cut off.
- Afra unfroze in stages. She had been hooked already by the destroyer, just entering its second cycle, but had
- not been exposed to more than a few seconds of it. There had not been time for her mind to go.
- Others were crowding into the room, intent on the seated men. Now Ivo allowed himself to look at his friend.
- Bradley Carpenter sat silently, oblivious to Afra's fevered ministrations. His eyes gazed without animation and
- his jaw was slack and moist. Already the station doctor was shaking his head negatively.
- The Senator was slumped farther down the table. The doctor went to him next and performed an intimate check.
- "He's dead," he said.
- CHAPTER 3
- A persistent rapping at the door brought Ivo out of an uncomfortable sleep. He was not used to the hammock, and
- the shock of what had happened was too fresh and raw. He had not forgotten that he occupied the apartment of a
- man whose mind was virtually dead; he felt like an intruder.
- He righted himself and stumbled across the compartment. He crashed open the sliding door, rubbing his eyes.
- Afra stood there, lovely in bathrobe and slippers. Her sunburst hair was tied under a nebulous kerchief, up and
- back in the manner of a busy housewife, and she wore no makeup, but to Ivo she was dazzling.
- Her blue gaze smote him. "Special delivery," she said without humor. "Telegram." She held out an envelope.
- Ivo accepted it, then became abruptly aware of his condition. He was standing before this beautiful girl in
- sleep-rumpled jockey shorts. "I—thanks. Must change."
- She put her hand against the door, preventing closure. "Is it yours?"
- He looked at the address. It was a stylized representation of an arrow. Nothing else.
- "Now that just might signify entropy," she said, stepping forward and so forcing him to jump back. "Time's
- Arrow, as it were. But I remembered that your first name, Ivo, is a variant of the Teutonic Ivon, meaning a
- military archer. And your last name—"
- "Yeah, I guess so," he said, ill at ease. If only he had something on!
- "The feminine form would be Yvonne," she continued blithely, pushing him back another step. "Names always
- derive from something interesting. Mine means 'A greeter of people"—Teutonic, again."
- He looked at her more carefully, suspicious of this brightness. Neither her voice nor her expression betrayed
- it at this moment, but he knew she was crazy with grief for Brad. Her eyes were shadowed and there was a mild
- odor of perspiration about her. Was she afraid to be alone, or did Brad's room have a perverse attraction for
- her?
- "But I suppose you'd better read it, just to be sure," she said. "I found it beside the teletyper. The operator
- was asleep—very bad form, you know—so I took it...."
- She was disturbed, all right. She must have been pacing from area to area, talking with anyone, grasping at any
- pretext to distract her attention from the horror in her memory. She cared nothing about Ivo Archer or his
- clothing; for the narrow present, the telegram was necessarily tantalizing.
- He opened it while she whirled about the room, touching her hands to Brad's things but not moving them. She
- glanced eagerly toward the message.
- One word jumped out at him. Ivo crumpled the paper angrily.
- "What are you doing! We're not even sure it's yours!"
- "It's mine."
- "What does it say? You can't just—"
- "I don't know what it says. Just that it means trouble."
- "At least let me—"
- "Sure," he said, too curtly, and flipped the ball of paper at her. "I have to dress."
- She was oblivious to the hint. She spread out the sheet and concentrated on it while he turned his back and
- climbed hastily into trousers and shirt.
- "Why—this is polyglot!" she exclaimed. "I thought you said you couldn't—"
- "I can't."
- She glided to the little table and set down the message. "Who would send you a note like this? It's
- fascinating!"
- "It's trouble," he repeated. He came over to look at it again, actually only wanting to be near her.
- The printing was plain enough: SURULLINEN XPACT SCHON AG I ENCAJE.
- There was no signature.
- "What a mishmash!" she said, producing a pencil. "I'm not sure I can put it all together, but I know it means
- something. If only Brad—"
- She dropped her head, realizing, and he saw the dry sobs shake her shoulders. Then she lifted her face
- determinedly and refocused on the message. Ivo stood by, doing nothing, longing for the right only to touch her
- in comfort—and feeling guilty for that desire. What a girl she was!
- "Schn—that's German, of course. It—" She stopped again. "Schn! Brad's friend from the project!
- You were supposed to take this to Brad for translation."
- "Could be." He wondered whether he should have destroyed the note instead of letting her have it. She didn't
- come close to Brad in intelligence, but she was not exactly slow.
- "Schn—he's the one who—if anybody can—"
- Ivo grimaced behind his face, knowing that she was grasping at straws and would soon realize it. Even Schn
- could hardly regenerate his friend's damaged brain tissue. That had to be accomplished internally, and such
- healing did not take place in the higher animals.
- "I must know what it says. Then we can answer it...." She bent to the task with renewed vigor. The kerchief
- bobbed as her head nodded. "That last word—ENCAJE—that's Spanish for 'lace.' And the next to
- last—I—could be English. It would be just like Brad to slip in a 'straight' term, and I understand
- Schn is even worse that way." She filled in the English equivalents beneath the printed terms while Ivo
- watched, intrigued in spite of himself. He had never envied the geniuses their polylingual facility, but
- working on the message vicariously through Afra's ability he could imagine himself caught up in the excitement
- of the chase. A search for a word could be as exciting as a manhunt, in the proper circumstance, he decided.
- Even though he already knew the outcome.
- "XPACT—that's no Romance-language word, or Germanic," she murmured. "Or Finno-Ugric... of course! It's in
- the Slavic group. Russian... no—well, it's related. Let's see." She rewrote the word in more exotic
- script.
- She looked up, her blue eyes startlingly intense. Ivo wondered how it was that he had never appreciated the
- luster of such color before he had met her. "Acorn, I make it. Does that make sense?"
- Ivo shrugged.
- "And SURULLINEN—that's Finnish for 'sad.' One word left... I think it's Turkish... 'mesh,' perhaps." She
- sat back and read it off: "Sad acorns, beautiful mesh I lace.' "
- Ivo chuckled, and she made a fleeting smile. "But that 'lace' is a noun," she said, "so we don't have it yet.
- No verb in it—it can't be a sentence—not as we think of it. And that 'I' doesn't really
- fit—aha! That could be the Polish 'and.' 'Beautiful mesh and lace' contrasted with the miserable acorns."
- She worried it some more, tongue appearing and disappearing between even white teeth.
- What if she solved it? he wondered. Should he tell her the truth now, try to explain? That didn't seem wise.
- He saw her enthusiasm for the problem and decided to leave it with her a little longer.
- "Gloomy oak, lovely plait and lace," she said at last. "Something in that vein. I can't take the words any
- farther, and I don't know where to begin interpretation. God, I'm tired! Why would he go to the trouble of
- sending such a message to you?"
- "Glooms of the live-oaks, beautiful-braided and woven." Ivo said.
- She was on it immediately. "It does mean something to you. A line of poetry?"
- "Yes." She was too sharp; he had said too much.
- "A work you're both familiar with? Something you can quote from? Something that suggests the course you should
- follow?"
- "Yes." He knew she was about to ask which poet or which poem, and he was not ready to tell. She would identify
- it anyway, or... or what kind of persuasion would she turn on him?
- "Now I can rest," she said. She shuffled to the hammock and flopped upon it, her knees brought up to one side,
- letting her slippers droop and fall to the floor.
- She had forgotten where she was—or didn't care. Perhaps, he thought with unreasonable jealousy, she was
- used to sleeping here. In Brad's room.
- He looked at her, at the soft hair breaking free of the twisted kerchief, at the slender arm falling over the
- edge of the hammock and swaying as it rocked; at the embraceable shape of her curled body, the smooth white
- knees exposed, the firm round ankles and small feet. He felt ashamed for his yearnings.
- Afra was the epitome of the feminine adorable, by Ivo's present definition. It did not matter that the
- definition followed the fact, rather than the other way around. He had schooled himself not to resent more
- alert intelligence than his own, but also not to expect it in the girl he might marry. Not to require supreme
- beauty, not to dwell on small character defects... a hundred little cautions, in the interests of probability
- and practicality. He was not an extraordinary man, apart from that one unique aspect that negated any purpose
- he might have had in life, and it was not to be anticipated that he would win an extraordinary woman. Any
- woman, really.
- He knew now that he had disastrously underrated his susceptibility to sheer physical beauty. He had loved Afra
- the moment he saw her, before he knew anything fundamental about her. Vanquished, he could only hope for
- compassionate terms.
- "I thought nothing could hurt me again," she murmured sleepily into the small pillow-cushion, "after I lost my
- father. But now Brad—almost the same way, really...."
- Ivo did not speak, knowing that no reply was wanted. She was oblivious to him, her mind encapsulated within an
- isolated episode juggled to the surface by misery. The news surprised him, however; there had been no prior
- hint of tragedy in her background. Her father must have died, or lost his sanity suddenly, so that she spoke of
- him only under extreme stress. Now it had happened to Brad. He made a mental note never to mention the subject
- of parents to her.
- "And he told me how to—I can't remember—something else about Schn...."
- Suddenly it had become relevant to himself. "He" had to mean Brad. What had Brad told her about Schn? Ivo
- listened tensely, but she had drifted into silence. Her eyes were closed, tears on the lashes.
- Brad's girl....
- Ivo let himself out, leaving because it hurt him to watch her. He grieved for Brad too, but it was not the
- same.
- He made his way to the infirmary.
- Six figures occupied the chairs. It was as though they never moved from them, for this was station night.
- "Hello, Dr. Johnson," he murmured as he passed. The patriarch stared past him. "Hello, Dr. Smith. Dr. Sung. Mr.
- Holt. Dr. Carpenter."
- The male nurse appeared, yawning. "What do you want?"
- Ivo continued to watch Bradley Carpenter, mercifully asleep. Merciful for the observer, for his friend no
- longer had the intellect to care what had happened to him.
- Why had Brad done it, knowing the penalty he would pay? It had been an act of suicide; he could have fended off
- the Senator's demand, had he chosen to. A subpoena would have entailed substantial publicity, but would still
- have been a far smaller evil. This death was more horrible because it was partial. The mind was gone,
- lobotomized, while the flaccid body remained, a lifetime burden to society and torment to those who had known
- and loved Brad in his entirety.
- "Oh—you were his Earthside friend," the nurse said, recognizing him. "Too bad."
- Brad woke. The lax features quivered; the eyes fought into focus. The lips pursed loosely. Almost, some
- animation came into the face.
- "Sh-sh-sh..." Brad said.
- The nurse placed a reassuring hand upon his shoulder. "It's all right, Dr. Carpenter. All right. Relax. Relax."
- Aside, to Ivo: "It isn't good to work them up. They may be capable of some regeneration of personality, if the
- condition isn't aggravated. We just don't know yet, and can't take any chances. You understand. You'd better
- go."
- Brad's eyes fixed with difficulty on Ivo. "Sh-sh—"
- "Schn," Ivo said.
- The straining body relaxed.
- The nurse's brow wrinkled. "What did you say?"
- "It's German," Ivo explained unhelpfully.
- "He was trying to—that's astonishing! It's only been a few hours since—"
- "It meant a lot to him."
- Brad was asleep again, his ultimate accomplished. "The others couldn't even try for several days," the nurse
- said. "He can't have been hit as bad. Maybe he'll recover!"
- "Maybe." Ivo walked away, sure that the hope was futile. Only a transcendent effort, perhaps the only one he
- would ever be capable of, had brought forth that word, or that attempt at the word. It was clear now, in awful
- retrospect: Brad had sacrificed himself in an effort to force the summoning of Schn. He had been that certain
- that only Schn could nullify the destroyer and handle the problem of the macroscope.
- It had been for nothing. How could he introduce Schn to this tremendous source of knowledge and
- power—knowing how much worse the world would be, if Schn's amoral omnipotence replaced the Senator's
- ambition? He could not do it.
- He met Groton in the hallway near the common room. "Ivo," the man said, stopping him. "I know this is a bad
- time for you, but there is some information I need."
- "No worse than any other time." The truth was that he was relieved for some pretext to take his mind off the
- present disaster. He knew now that Groton was not an obtuse engineer; the man had important feelings about
- important things, as the school-teaching narration had shown. It was always dangerous to be guided by
- prejudice, as he saw himself to have been guided at his first meeting with Groton. "What kind of information? I
- don't know much."
- "I've been working on your horoscope—couldn't sleep right now—and, well, it would help if you could
- describe certain crises in your life."
- So Groton, too, felt it. Every person had his own ways of reacting to stress. No doubt astrology was as good a
- diversion as any.
- "Like this crisis? I'm not objective yet." Did he really want to contribute further to this exercise? Still,
- what he had just reminded himself about prejudice should hold for this too. The fact that Ivo Archer found
- astrology unworthy of serious consideration did not mean that discourtesy was justified; Harold Groton
- obviously was sincere. There were stranger hobbies.
- "I was thinking of your past experience. Perhaps during your childhood something happened that changed your
- life—"
- "I thought your charts told you all that, from the birth date." Or was that an unkind remark?
- "Not exactly. It is better to obtain corroborative experience. Then we can understand the signals more
- precisely. Astrology is a highly confirmatory science. We apply the scientific method, really."
- "And some philosophy?" Ivo inquired, thinking of the Senator's remarks in that connection.
- "Of course. So if you—"
- They entered Groton's apartment. Ivo could smell breakfast cooking and knew that Beatryx was at work. It made
- him feel obscurely homesick; nobody ever took institutionalized food if they could help it, though that served
- in the station was exceptionally good.
- "I had no childhood," he said.
- "You mean the project. A controlled situation, certainly, and perhaps undistinctive. But after you left—"
- Ivo remembered the turning point. Perhaps it had begun, if it could be said to have had a beginning, the day he
- was twenty-three. February third, 1865. The day he admitted to himself that he had consumption.
- Point Lookout, Maryland—as horrible a place as any he could imagine. Surely this was Hell, and Major
- Brady the devil. Twenty acres of barren land surrounded by palisades. The prisoners were Southern White; many
- of the guards were Black. The Negroes took pleasure insulting and torturing any people they chose, but the cold
- of winter was worse yet. There was not enough food, clothing or sanitation, and no medical facilities for the
- prisoners. The water was foul. The only shelter was the collection of A-tents and Bell-tents. They slept on the
- bare, damp ground, denied both planks and straw for bedding, and no wood was permitted inside the compound for
- any fire. Objection of any nature to these conditions brought infamous retaliatory measures and further
- reduction of the scant rations.
- He shared a tent with a dozen men. While the crowding provided a certain blessed amount of bodily warmth, it
- also spread disease at a savage rate. Diarrhea, dysentery, typhoid fever, scurvy and the itch... fifteen to
- twenty men died every day. And now he could no longer deny the tubercular coughing and the wastage of his own
- body. He realized he was dying.
- Had it been only four years ago that the great state of Georgia voted secession from the Union? He had not at
- first been a secessionist, but the vote had been held at Milledgeville, only two miles from where he eked out
- his living by tutoring. The sentiment, like disease, had been highly contagious; even the clergy were
- belligerently patriotic. The afflatus of war was breathed upon them all. Somehow he had become convinced of his
- ability to whip at least five Yankees, singlehanded; indeed, any stalwart Georgian could!
- Now he looked about him at the human desolation of Point Lookout. "What fools we were!" he whispered. The
- conceit of an individual was ridiculous because it was powerless, but the conceit of a whole people was a
- terrible thing.
- Flushed with patriotic illusion, he had volunteered to fight. He, whose only skill was musical!
- It had not all been hard. He remembered fondly the time he, a bedraggled soldier, had passed beneath the
- windows where a local Philharmonic Club was rehearsing. He had taken out his flute and played there in the
- street—and the orchestra ceased rehearsal, listened, and arranged to grant him honorary freedom of the
- town!
- During furlough there had been concerts with friends, and of course the ladies! He was always in love, and
- never ashamed to win fair hearts by the music of his flute.
- He had smuggled that flute into the prison camp, and its music now was one of the few comforts he had. It had
- been the one thing he refused to part with, when the Lucy was captured in the Gulf Stream, running the Yankee
- blockade. He, as Signal Officer, had refused to declare himself to be an Englishman, preferring capture to a
- dishonorable escape.
- Today he was dying of that decision, as his nation was dying of the Union armies. Somehow, until today, he had
- had hope. Was not God just?
- Harold Groton was waiting for his answer. What could he tell the man?
- "It's very hard to define. I came near death when I was twenty-three. Is that what you want?"
- "If it affected you deeply, yes. Some people nearly die and are hardly concerned, while others are profoundly
- moved by an innocent remark. It isn't the event so much as its personal importance to you."
- "It is important to me. I was sick and in—prison. Some friends—put up bail. On the ship
- home—"
- "You weren't in America?"
- "Not exactly. The ship I was on was frozen in the ice for three days on the way to City Port, Virginia."
- Groton refrained from commenting.
- Was it worth the effort to make the man understand? For the sake of accurate data for the pseudo-science of
- astrology? Ivo remained distracted by his grief, and could not bring himself to care.
- Three days icebound, early March, 1865. He and the other repatriated prisoners huddled in the hull, shuddering
- with the cold. The end for him was very near.
- Another prisoner practiced on the flute. A little girl, daughter of a passenger above, heard it and marveled at
- the melody. "If you think I'm good, you should hear that other fellow play!" the man told her. "But he's not
- going to last long, in this cold."
- She reported the episode to her mother. "I know only one person that skilled with the flute," the woman said.
- "An old friend of mine. Surely he could not be here!"
- But she investigated, nagged by the possibility—and found him there in the hold, wrapped in an old soiled
- quilt, eyes staring, wasted body subject to spasms of pain. She knew her friend.
- It was so crowded in the hold that they had to pass him over the heads of the other prisoners to get him out.
- She plied him with brandy, but he was too far gone to swallow.
- She warmed him and ministered to him, she and her little girl. By midnight he revived somewhat. She presented
- him with his flute—the best medicine!—and weakly he began to play.
- The prisoners below yelled for joy as they heard the sound of it. He was going to recover!
- "That act of friendship—I think that was the turning point," Ivo said. "I surely would have died,
- otherwise."
- Groton shook his head. "It is a strange story you tell, Ivo. But as I said, its validity lies chiefly in its
- importance to you, not in the overt details. I'll apply it to my researches."
- Ivo, nervous again, declined to share breakfast with the Grotons and found his way to the mess hall. He was not
- very hungry.
- It was still early, by the station's day, when he finished, and he continued to be restless. Was Afra still
- sleeping in his—Brad's—room? Should he go back yet?
- He stopped off at the latrine—and realized suddenly that every toilet faced in the same direction. The
- arrangement was such that when a person sat, he had to face the "forward" orientation of the torus.
- "When you take your inevitable bow, your stern is sternward." he said aloud, finally appreciating Brad's
- pun—a pun inflicted upon the nomenclature of the entire station.
- He blinked, feeling his eyes moisten with the pathos. Bradley Carpenter, PhD in assorted space technologies at
- age twenty-two—straining with all that remained of his mind at twenty-five to utter one German word....
- Brad—pride of the nameless project the participants had mischievously dubbed "The Pecker Experiment." It
- had been patterned after, or at least inspired by, a much better known effort antedating it by twenty years:
- The Peckham Experiment. But if the good doctors of Peckham had suspected what sinister offshoots their well-
- meant research would spawn, they might have had severe misgivings.
- A certain British medical group, as Ivo understood it, had set out in the nineteen thirties to ascertain the
- nature of health. It had seemed to them that the medical profession's attention to illness was mistaken; how
- much better it would be to take the steps necessary to preserve health, so that tedious and only partially
- effective remedial measures became unnecessary. A regular, complete physical checkup for everyone, the basic
- unit of attention being not the individual but the family. But would the average family respond favorably to
- such a service?
- The center established in Peckham in 1935 soon demonstrated that they would. For several years many of the
- families within a radius of a mile had participated, enjoying a sensation of well-being they had never known
- before. Astonishingly, the records showed that ninety percent of the participants—presumed to be a
- representative cross-section of the nation—were not in good health at the time of application. The
- "normal" person was an ill person.
- What might group life be like if ninety percent were healthy? The Peckham Experiment had offered only
- tantalizing glimpses. The Second World War, that trauma of the sick society, had cut it short. A postwar
- reorganization had expired for lack of financial backing, and the bold experiment was over.
- But not forgotten. It was a topic for informed conjecture for many years thereafter. Certain persons studied
- the implications of the experiment and drew forth an intriguing supposition. If the average person were sick,
- and "normal" were in fact subnormal, so that he never comprehended his true physical potential—what of
- his mental potential? Could it be that health and proper upbringing might convert the average into superior,
- and the superior into genius?
- What benefits might derive from genius cultured artificially? What would industry pay for employees of
- guaranteed IQ? How might the nation benefit? Just how high was the limit?
- Certain private interests decided to speculate. Money appeared, and preliminary researches commenced. What
- might be the elements of a suitable upbringing for genius-on-tap? What was the best stock for production? As
- beef, not contented cows, was the object of ranching, so IQ, not conventionality, was to be the object of this
- project.
- Studies performed in the interim since Peckham suggested astonishing facts. Heredity was vital, yes—but
- so was environment, in ways more devious and wonderful than suspected before. Health was essential—but so
- was education. The basic theory and practice of conventional schooling was long overdue for revolution.
- Item: The expectation of the supervisor affected the performance of the subject. Thus American "self-fulfilling
- prophecies" resulted in lower grades for Negro and Indian schoolchildren, higher grades for Whites of prominent
- families—regardless of merit by objective standards.
- Item: There was no correlation between school performance and life achievement. There was no practical
- advantage in additional years of schooling or the possession of diplomas apart from the self-fulfilling
- prophecy of society.
- Item: Whatever was useful in the current eight-year introductory scholastic curriculum could be effectively
- mastered by a normal twelve-year-old child in four months—who would pick up most of it without formal
- instruction.
- Item: The true "creative" child tended to be skeptical, independent, assertive, and had a wide range of
- interests: a natural maker of waves. He was, by normal definition, not a "good" student.
- Item: In the human child, the brain achieved eighty percent of its adult weight by the age of three years,
- compared to a body weight of twenty percent. Any retardation occurring in this period became permanent.
- Item: Creatures—of any species—raised in the dark developed no rods and cones in the eyes, and thus
- were blind for life. Creatures—of any species—raised in a restrictive, nonstimulating environment
- never developed their full "normal" mental or emotional capacities, and thus were dull for life. Physical
- infection, malnutrition, and sensory and cultural deprivation actually created inferior specimens.
- Item: It was theoretically possible to raise the IQ of the average child by thirty points or more—merely
- by providing suitable equipment and information and permitting free rein for normal initiative. The child, thus
- encouraged, would fulfill a greater proportion of his natural potential—a fulfillment denied to his
- contemporaries.
- Thus the project. All over the world, money was spent lavishly to locate potential genius stock and fatten it
- into complete health and vigor, that it might produce outstanding offspring. The offcolor nickname stemmed from
- conjecture how this had been accomplished. Virile, intelligent men of every race mated to women not their
- spouses, women at the peak of health, both parties paid liberally for their service. Tour of duty perhaps two
- years; illness, hunger or reproductive laxity frowned upon.
- The babies had never known their biological parents. They had been removed from their various locales of
- production and committed to the maximum-security grounds of the project, there to be subjected to the most
- healthful and stimulating environment envisioned by man. Their individual families were replaced by something
- better: the group family. The adult staff, male and female, was trained to withhold nothing from any child
- except freedom to leave the project, and never to interfere needlessly in juvenile matters.
- The results, as the years progressed, were generally disappointing. After phenomenal early growth, the average
- project child settled into bright but not exceptional mentality, and became, relative to expectations,
- moderately talented. It was as though this vast effort had succeeded largely in accelerating the rate of
- growth, but not the ultimate achievement. The children spread out in the normal bell-shaped curve, centered on
- IQ 125—a result that would have been predicated on heredity alone, without the benefit of the improved
- environment. Only one true genius showed up on the tests, though there were a number of very intelligent
- children too—and as many who were average (IQ 100) or slightly below.
- Officially, then, the project was a failure. Something evidently had been overlooked. There would be no
- assembly-line genius to market. The financial backing dwindled. After fifteen years it had to be disbanded and
- the subjects set free.
- The officials had not known about Schn.
- A group of men were seated in the common room, silent and somber. They looked up as he approached, their faces
- impassive.
- "Please—a private meeting," one said.
- "Sorry." Ivo passed quickly to the far door, not wanting to intrude. The "night" shift was barely over; why had
- they gathered at this time, almost surreptitiously? What were they doing, so privately? None of his business.
- Harold Groton was coming down the hall from the other direction, full from his own breakfast. "There's some
- kind of meeting," Ivo advised him. "Exclusive. I ran afoul of it already, in the common room."
- "I know. I was just—" Groton paused, catching at Ivo's arm. "By God! I just realized—you saw the
- destroyer and survived!"
- "I fell below its critical limit, it would seem."
- "Afra says you know someone important—someone who can untangle this mess."
- "Afra says too much." Ivo jerked his arm away, fed up with irrelevancies.
- "That trick with the game—the intuitive calculation. Was Brad serious? Can you win every time?"
- "Yes, if it's the right type, and if I have the choice of openings." What was he getting at? A Senator was
- dead, six other minds had been blasted by an alien destruction signal, and organizational chaos was incipient.
- Yet Groton, who had seemed yesterday to have some depth of feeling, concerned himself first with astrology and
- then with a superficial game!
- "Come on—I'll yield my slot to you."
- "What are you talking about?"
- "No time to explain. We're late already." Groton pulled him back toward the common room.
- Ivo shrugged and went along.
- The still figures looked up again as they entered. Some were women, he saw now; he had not looked carefully
- before. "This is Ivo," Groton said. "He was Dr. Carpenter's friend. Therefore he has the privilege, and I am
- giving him my seat in the tourney."
- Tourney?
- The others exchanged glances and shrugs. They did not appear pleased, but Groton evidently had the right of it.
- "I can't stay," Groton said to him. "There's no kibitzing. Play seriously. Good luck." He was gone.
- Ivo looked about. There were eight men and two women, of diverse nationalities. He recognized among them the
- big Russian who had smiled disdainfully at the Senator, and Fred Blank, ubiquitous maintenance man. This was
- not, then, an astronomy discussion, though the ranking scientists of the station appeared to be represented.
- Three tables had been set end to end to form one long narrow panel. Upon it was a collection of colored
- crayons.
- They arranged themselves at this counter, five on a side, facing each other in pairs. There was no chair for
- Ivo.
- He stood there awkwardly, until one man rose and guided him to a separate table placed against the wall. It was
- the Russian who evidently recognized him, too. He planted Ivo before a chair facing toward the wall.
- The meaning of two firmly spoken directives in Russian was clear. Ivo sat down and kept quiet.
- The Russian nodded and returned to the main table.
- There was a rustle of movement, then silence. Ivo stared at the wall—which was, he realized with a shock,
- covered with graffiti in many languages—and waited.
- His imagination began percolating.
- This? Having failed at science, the leaders of this space-borne project were turning to magic. They were a
- cabal holding a sance, a black mass, a conjuration... and all they had lacked, until this moment, was an
- innocent lamb for the blood sacrifice. The nether god had to be propitiated. First the secret rites had to be
- performed, the voodoo chanting, the knife ritually honed....
- A few minutes passed. A stir commenced. Chairs shifted. Ivo's back prickled. The sacrificial blade—
- Someone approached his table.
- —lifted high by the muscular priest—
- And touched his shoulder.
- Ivo stood up, and the man took his place.
- The others had resettled themselves. One seat was now empty. Ivo marched over and took it.
- Opposite him was the older of the two women, and between them were red and blue crayons. That was all.
- Down the length of the table the four other pairs sat, each with similar apparatus. In uncanny silence, hands
- selected crayons, made obscure markings on the glossy surface of the table.
- The woman facing him picked up the blue crayon and carefully printed eight dots on the counter in a rough
- heart-outline:
- Ivo glanced at this in perplexity, not knowing what was expected of him. He looked sidelong at the couple's
- paper to the left—and caught on.
- They were playing sprouts!
- He had, with typical perspicacity, missed the obvious. Groton had even mentioned the game as he dragged him to
- the common room.
- He reached for the other crayon, but the woman set her hand on his, preventing him from lifting it. Apparently
- she had selected the color as well as the number of dots. He let go, and she handed him the blue.
- It was his opening move, then. He had to play the eight-spot game of sprouts with this woman—was she
- South American? He'd know if she spoke—and defeat her. Groton said so.
- He concentrated, trying to figure the forced win, but could not be certain. There were too many complex
- interrelationships, and too much depended upon the confluence of opposing lines of strategy.
- He decided to keep it simple until the outcome was fathomable. The probability was that he would see the
- correct strategy before she could. He connected the southward-pointing dots, bisecting the heart, and placed
- the new spot in the center.
- She recovered the crayon and made a butterfly-shape looping from the top, encircling the two highest dots. She
- placed the new one in the crevice.
- Idle play, or artistry? Did it matter? Ivo decided that it did not, and proceeded with an asymmetric offshoot.
- The woman continued without objection, and he knew that it was all right. These games were not being judged on
- esthetics. Soon he was able to determine the win, and played through to it without difficulty.
- The others finished about the time he did, and again there was the shuffle as all stood up, wiped away the
- evidence, and moved one step around the table. The travel was clockwise; the woman he had defeated went out to
- the supernumerary chair and sat there, while the spare man came to occupy Ivo's last seat. Now this was clear,
- too: with five facing five and one to carry, each rotation brought about new combinations that would not repeat
- until each person had played every other.
- It was indeed a tourney.
- His next opponent was a venerable gentleman bearing the emblem of Nove-Congo. Ivo judged him to be of Bantu
- stock with a strong Alpine admixture; the skin was an intermediate brown, the body stocky but lacking the
- Caucasoid hairiness. The turbulent history of his country was reflected in his genetic heritage, and Ivo felt
- sympathy. Ivo was himself a controlled conglomeration of Mongoloid, Negroid and Caucasoid, as had been every
- member of the project, and he felt that the purebreds were lacking in something. But he had obtained his
- chromosomes the easy way, and had lived protected and pampered. This man could have been conceived only in
- misfortune, amidst violent antipathies against miscegenation; perhaps he was the child of rape. Yet he had won
- his way to the foremost circle of modern technology, and that too spoke eloquently about him.
- The NoCon picked up the blue crayon and planted nine dots upon the board—and to Ivo it seemed as though
- they formed a crude map of his nation. Conscious, unconscious, or strictly in the eye of the beholder?
- Irrelevant. Ivo played, this time observing that the players on the opposite side of the table invariably
- selected color and dot-pattern. Those on his side had choice of moves—and sometimes declined to make the
- opening one. As in football: one side chose the field, the other had the initiative. He would get to set up the
- spots once he progressed to the proper side.
- He noted also that no game began with less than six spots; these people were aware of the extent of the
- advantage accruing to the person with the choice of moves, in the lower ranges. In the higher numbers, skill
- really did become the dominant factor, since nobody could anticipate or execute the forced win.
- He won again without undue difficulty. These people, skilled as they might be in other types of endeavor, and
- practiced as they might be at sprouts, nevertheless lacked his own intuitive analytic faculty. Probably any of
- them could outperform him in almost any field—except this one. A billiards tournament, or table-tennis...
- but this happened to be sprouts, a game of semimathematical analysis. He was able to determine the winning
- strategy several moves before they could, and to have the victory in hand before they were aware. The real test
- of his skill was in determining the win, rather than in the play.
- Groton had known of his power in this respect; that he had, in effect, an unfair advantage. Why had Groton
- chosen to send him into this contest? What was there to be won, that had to be won this way?
- Should he arrange to lose?
- No. It was not in him to throw a contest, any contest, for any reason. He could decline the prize, but he had
- to do his best in the competition.
- The third encounter was with the Russian. The man picked up the red crayon and made seven dots.
- Ivo strained, but could not quite pin down the automatic win. Seven was just beyond his intuitive competence.
- The opening move seemed wrong, however, so he declined it, brushing away the proffered crayon as though it were
- a tip refused.
- The Russian nodded and accepted the onus. They played, and very shortly Ivo lined it up and established his
- winning mode.
- The Russian paused instead of playing, after the key move, hairy brow wrinkled. "Misre?" he inquired. It was
- the first word spoken since the games had begun.
- Ivo shrugged, wondering why the man did not make his play. Was he conceding already?
- The Russian touched the shoulder of the woman next to him. She was, Ivo perceived, a younger person, perhaps no
- more than thirty-five, and the pride of her femininity was still about her. She was classic Mongoloid: stocky,
- flattish face, almond eyes, coarse straight hair and very small hands. She probably had come from Fringe-China,
- and was in her way as definitive a specimen as Afra was in hers. He was as closely related to this woman as to
- Afra: about one-third overlap of race.
- The Russian asked Ivo something, when the woman's attention had been gained. Then, again: "Misre."
- "He inquires whether you understand that it is misre," she said softly to Ivo. "The red—to avoid the
- last move."
- To play to lose! That was the significance of the color. Red, naturally, for the deficit game. He had
- missed—yet again!—the obvious, while concentrating upon the subtle. And he had already forced the
- win—for the Russian, unless the man should make a mistake. That, in view of this interchange, seemed
- unlikely.
- He had made an error—in not acquainting himself with the complete rules of play. He should have
- questioned the purpose of the second color. It was as valid a mistake as a misplay on the board.
- "I understand," he said.
- That was it. They finished the play, and he lost.
- Fred Blank was next, also picking up the red crayon. Ivo defeated him.
- No one kept official score. Apparently it was up to the individual. By the time Ivo completed the circuit, he
- had nine victories, one defeat.
- The group dispersed, the entertainment over. There was no celebration, no awarding of any prize. He could not
- believe that what he observed was all of it, but hoped to learn the truth from Groton very shortly.
- Ivo headed for the door, wondering whether Afra could still be sleeping—there. This entire "night" had a
- surrealistic flavor; nothing was quite as he expected, though he had thought he had no expectations.
- Once more there was a hand at his shoulder. He paused to look down at the woman who had translated for him.
- "You—you are one loss only," she said.
- He nodded.
- "And so with Dr. Kovonov." She gestured, and he observed the Russian still seated at the table. Everyone else
- was gone.
- "A playoff? What's the prize?"
- She left without answering, and there was nothing to do but rejoin Dr. Kovonov. Now, at last, it came to him:
- this was the man behind the scene, mentioned so often. The important Russian who compelled even Brad's
- intellectual respect.
- Did this weird tourney connect with Brad's rush meeting with this man, yesterday? Had they agreed then that
- Brad should watch the destroyer with Senator Borland? Did Kovonov know Ivo's own secret, the power he had over
- Schn? He doubted that last; he just couldn't imagine that Brad would have told anyone that. Unless
- Afra—no! Still, this man appeared to be the most tangible source of information about Brad's action. And
- he spoke no English!
- Kovonov picked up the red crayon and made seven dots, just as he had before. Ivo smiled; the good doctor really
- wanted to win this one!
- This time, familiar with the rules, Ivo played flawlessly and had the victory, misre.
- The Russian did not move or change expression. Ivo erased the design and picked up the blue marker, looking
- askance. A nod. He set down fifteen spots.
- Kovonov smiled and took the crayon. The play was on.
- The strategy was fiendishly complex, and his opponent dwelt a long time on each move. Ivo felt the strain as
- his peculiar talent wrestled with the problem and was baffled. He realized that Kovonov's greater experience
- was telling. Having plunged in well over the level of the sure guide of his instinct, Ivo knew that he was not
- a good player at all. If Kovonov fathomed the game before he did, his talent in the later stage would not avail
- him; it would only inform him when to concede. The situation was so complex that he might find himself in the
- losing position even if he did fathom it first; the proper strategy could guide the Russian to victory without
- complete analysis.
- Twenty minutes passed. Kovonov's broad forehead was damp and his dark hair seemed to erect itself stiffly. Ivo
- was nervous, too, having no idea where he stood in the game, or whether he really wanted to win. Something very
- serious was at stake; something Kovonov might well be more competent to possess. The prize might not be a
- physical one at all.
- Why should he let victory or loss concern him? Groton wanted him to win—but Groton hardly knew the truth.
- There were so many far more important matters to worry about, yet he was taking this foolish tournament as
- seriously as he ever had taken anything. What did the sprouts championship of this station matter, when his
- closest friend was a vegetable? So victory would place his name at the top of the sprout-ladder; would that
- make everything worthwhile?
- Then the state of the game clarified: he saw that he could win. Three moves later the Russian reluctantly
- conceded, and it was over.
- Kovonov stood up and walked regretfully over to the statuette ensconced in the middle of the room. Two out of
- three was it, Ivo decided. Carefully the man lifted the gilded steam-shovel from its pedestal—Ivo could
- see that it was very heavy, for its size—and brought it to the table.
- This was the prize? "What does it mean?" he asked, pointing to the letters on the pedestal, S D P S. He could
- think of no other comment to make.
- He had not expected an answer, in the circumstances, but he received one. "Sooper Dooper Pooper Scooper,"
- Kovonov said with Russian accent, and smiled evilly. Then he, too, left, and Ivo remained to stare at this
- final evidence of Brad's subterranean humor.
- A platinum-plated steam-shovel, including the crescent moon symbol, with a world in its mouth. Exactly the type
- of image Brad would fashion. A friendly insult to the station with the day's most powerful nose.
- So they had had a tourney in Brad's memory, and the winner inherited the icon. Its value was undoubtedly very
- high, monetarily and symbolically—but did he really want it?
- Ivo tucked it under his arm somewhat awkwardly—it was heavy—and marched back to his room. He was
- afraid the gesture might be misunderstood, if he returned it to its pedestal.
- Afra woke as he entered, instantly alert. "What are you doing with that?" she demanded. She was, of course,
- still in night clothing, and she had forgotten to replace her slippers. It was quite a contrast to her usual
- precision of dress, but her beauty powered through all obstacles.
- "I guess I won it."
- "You guess you won it!" There was pink polish on her toenails.
- "I entered this contest, and it was the prize. Should I put it back?"
- "Shut up and let me think." She recovered her slippers, dusted off her feet, jammed on the footwear. She paced
- around the room as a man would pace, taking wide strides and swinging into the turns abruptly. The motions,
- however, did unmanly things to her body.
- Ivo watched, still supporting the S D P S. He discovered that he liked Afra angry, too. She had torn off the
- kerchief, and her bright hair swirled as she spun. Absolutely refined Caucasian, Northwest European, no
- admixtures... her torso a marvelous sight as thighs braked, arms accelerated, midriff flexed to avoid some
- structure. Definitely not for the polyglot creature that was what she would perceive him to be. Georgia born...
- She halted, hair, breasts and slippers stabilizing in unison. "All right. It's not all right, but all right!
- We'll have to make the best of it. Go fetch Harold—he put you up to this, I'm sure of it—and bring
- him to my room pronto. No, leave that thing here. Go—on."
- Ivo set down the statuette and retreated before her urgency. He had intended to consult with Groton first; what
- had brought him back here with the S D P S?
- Whom was he fooling? He knew what had brought him back.
- "You did it!" Groton exclaimed when Ivo told him. "You took the Scooper!"
- "I did it, yes. Now Afra's furious. She wants to see you in her room. Pronto, she says."
- "Right. Smart girl, that. We're going to be busy as hell." Ivo had not heard Groton speak that colloquially
- before, and he took it as another indication of strain. The afflatus of war, he thought ironically, was
- breathed upon them all. History repeated itself, as ever. The Senator, in death, had destroyed the macroscope,
- and all that it might accomplish for the benefit of mankind.
- Groton raised his voice. "Beatryx!"
- "Yes, dear," came the quick answer.
- "Get into your suit and stand by the tube; we'll be ferrying some stuff out in a hurry." Without waiting for
- her acknowledgment, he drew Ivo back into the hall. "God, I'm glad you did it," he said. "They have the screws
- into us, and this is the only way."
- "You've left me behind. What are you talking about?"
- "No time," Groton said.
- Ivo shrugged once more and followed.
- Afra was already in her own suit, the transparent helmet flopping at her back. "Change, Ivo," she snapped.
- "Better stick with him, Harold; he's slow on the uptake."
- "I ask again: what is this all about?" Ivo said as Groton hurried him into his space suit. "Why did you have me
- enter that tourney, and why is Afra so upset about it? Has the whole station lost its mind?" The afflatus
- of—
- "It's that dead senator," Groton said, as though that clarified everything. "Borland is very important in
- politics, and we're taking the rap for assassinating him. That flunky of his got on the teletype before we knew
- it and screamed murder—exactly that. That wipes us out."
- "Well, of course there would be an investigation. But he demanded to see the destroyer, and he had been warned.
- The evidence should be clear enough."
- Groton stopped for a moment. "You are out of touch! Don't you know the situation here?"
- "Just that the macroscope is under nominal UN auspices, as are all the projects beyond Earth-orbit. Brad told
- me about the formula for time and financing—" Actually, he could understand why a thing like the
- destroyer could result in the dismantling of the macroscope, particularly when scandal of this nature
- developed. But he wanted to hear Groton's explanation, because that might finally clarify this other business
- with the tourney and the S D P S.
- Groton finished dressing Ivo, then turned to his own suit. In succinct bursts between motions he delivered the
- political reality, as seen by one who had not talked with the Senator directly. Ivo found this parallel
- viewpoint intriguing.
- Senator Borland (Groton said) was no ordinary man. His connections were potent, not so much in America as in
- the UN. There were many influential personages behind him, and not a small amount of cash. His boast that he
- knew the governments of the station's member-countries (that remark had orbited the personnel rapidly!) better
- than did their own nationals had not been empty; he was a sophisticated parlayer of influence on an
- international scale. He would do such-and-such, if in such-and-such a position, and the figures behind the
- thrones and presidencies knew what and how. It was to China's interest that he achieve greater influence in the
- American farming scheme, for the potential of trading in grain remained; it was to Russia's interest that he
- make the automotive-exports standards committee, for it regulated other machinery than cars, ranging from
- precision ball-bearings to theodolites; to South Africa's interest that he establish private liaison with
- BlaPow, Inc.
- Borland was all things to all peoples—but he was good at it. A promoter could accomplish a great deal, if
- sophisticated enough. He had already shown that he could and would deliver the goods while making political hay
- doing it. He had the connections, he had the charisma; somehow private meetings with him made public converts.
- Ivo, remembering the Borland-Carpenter dialogue, understood that. Ivo himself was such a convert.
- The death of such a man (Groton continued) was bound to mean real trouble, whatever the circumstances. Too many
- projects were balancing in the air, and the demise of the juggler meant that many would crash. Pledges could no
- longer be honored, repercussions no longer stymied.
- The macroscope was the major UN effort. More international interests were crucially involved there than in any
- other area. Borland surely had seen its potential, and had acted to make it his own. It represented a ready way
- to make good on all his commitments, while benefiting the world as a whole. And perhaps he had intended to do
- just that, for altruistic reasons. (Ivo had not expected this tack.) Perhaps his ambition had gone beyond
- power, since he was in a position to appreciate how desperately the world needed help. Perhaps the answer to
- the ruin forecast by the Sung planet's example had been Borland: someone to organize a more practical
- application of the immense knowledge available. Who could say for sure, now?
- But Borland had died, and in the worst possible manner. He had not trusted hearsay evidence; he had not really
- believed that the destroyer could bring him down. So he had called its bluff—and lost. The UN would
- believe that the station personnel had murdered him, perhaps by tricking him into confrontation with that
- killer from space.
- Trouble? As the international eggs began to fall and splatter, the need would grow very strong for an
- international scapegoat. The seeming cause of crisis: the macroscope.
- Now they were both suited and Ivo had still not discovered what they were going about so urgently.
- Afra was at the storeroom, moving things about with apparent abandon in the fractional gravity. Ivo spied
- crates of drugs, spices, grains, bandages and cheese, as well as cylinders of oxygen and liquid nutrient.
- "What's your blood type?" she demanded of him.
- "O-positive." What could he do, but answer?
- She selected a canister and dumped it near the door. Ivo looked at it: CONDENSED BLOOD O-POSITIVE. There was
- more technical description, but he averted his eyes, feeling unpleasantly giddy. Presumably there were ways to
- adjust for the myriad other factors involved in the matching of blood safely. What made her think he would need
- this?
- The storeroom supervisor sat at his desk, head drooping forward as though he were asleep. "Shouldn't he be
- checking this stuff out?" Ivo inquired.
- "I fed him a mickey," Afra said. "Or were you being facetious?"
- Ivo did not know how to answer that, so didn't try. There was so much he didn't know about this situation!
- Afra turned to Groton. "I'll shape this up here and move it with the powercart. You get the personal junk
- assembled. Better make it one box each, limit."
- "What do you need?" Groton asked Ivo.
- So many unanswered questions, but he had to do the answering! "If you mean what do I take with me when I leave
- this place, nothing. I have my flute with me."
- "I forgot—you're already suited," Afra said. "I'll select some clothing for you; more efficient that
- way." She turned to Groton. "Better fetch Joseph."
- Ivo started. "Joseph! Isn't that the souped-up rocket?"
- "Right," Groton agreed. "Come on."
- He and Ivo jetted across to the huge rocket much as Brad had demonstrated the first trip to the macroscope
- proper, except for the necessary change in course this time. Spurts from a cylinder of hydrogen peroxide took
- care of the propulsion.
- Joseph's hull was like a planetoid, seeming much vaster than it was, since there were no nearby objects to
- contrast for size. Ivo managed to land on his feet, having gained from his prior experience, and the magnetic
- shoe-bands took hold so that he could walk. They marched to the control compartment airlock and knocked.
- The interior was larger than that of the shuttle. Joseph had been gutted and rebuilt, so that the layout was
- like nothing Ivo had seen in space. Evidently the atomic equipment occupied less volume than had the chemical
- fuel before it, so that one of the monster internal tanks could be used for living space. He could almost
- imagine that he was in a futuristic submarine.
- In a manner of thinking, this was a futuristic sub.
- "Course correction," Groton said to the attendant. "Can you hitch this baby up to the scope?"
- "Sure, in a couple of days," the man said amicably.
- "This is an emergency. Two hours."
- "I can move it there, but I can't hitch it up in that time. Take a trained crew of twenty men to do that."
- Groton rolled his eyes. "Ouch! Well, you move it over and I'll do what I can. Ivo, better jet back to the scope
- and tell Afra, while I check with Kovonov. This is going to be sticky."
- The attendant held up a hand. "I don't know what you're talking about, naturally—but don't you think
- you'd better see Miss Summerfield?"
- "No. Ivo doesn't—" Groton stopped. "Damn, yes. It has to be that way. Ivo, go tell Kovonov what we need.
- Then join us there. Don't waste any time."
- Ivo hung on to his patience. "Exactly what are you doing? Why do you want to hitch Joseph to the macroscope?"
- "To correct the scope's course, as I explained."
- "What's the matter with its present course? It's attached to the station, after all."
- "We think it is about to fall into the sun."
- "That's ridiculous! It's in orbit! And the station—"
- The attendant smiled. "It might as well fall. The UN will destroy it anyway."
- "So you see, we need that crew immediately. Tell Kovonov."
- Ivo saw that they weren't going to give him a legitimate explanation. Angrily, he snapped his helmet to and
- left the compartment.
- Kovonov's office was a niche in a heavy-gravity shell. It struck Ivo that this was an effective way to keep
- visits brief; anyone who stayed too long would fatigue rapidly. Momentary weight-increase could be put up with,
- but a steady diet of it was distinctly unpleasant. He wondered how the host endured it.
- Kovonov looked up from a book set in what Ivo assumed to be Russian type. He did not speak.
- The language barrier! "Groton says we need a crew of twenty men to stop the macroscope from falling into the
- sun," Ivo said, knowing that the Russian could not understand a word.
- Kovonov listened gravely, then touched two switches. Ivo heard his own words played back: they had been
- recorded. Another voice rattled off incomprehensible syllables: the translation.
- Kovonov nodded.
- "Can you tell me what this is all about? I don't—"
- The hand came up to silence him. Kovonov switched off the machine without obtaining the translation and brought
- out a small blackboard and two colored pieces of chalk. He made three blue dots.
- What was this fascination with sprouts? The scientists of this station acted as though a simple game were more
- important than life or death. Did Kovonov seriously mean to ignore his question and rechallenge for the
- championship?
- But it was not a contest this time. Kovonov filled in the connections himself without offering the chalk to
- Ivo. He was setting up a three-spot demonstration game of no particular complexity. The series went seven
- moves:
- The result reminded Ivo of a shovel. "But it isn't finished," he said. "There's a free spot at either end."
- Kovonov turned the panel over without erasing it and set up three dots more nearly in line, this time in red.
- He played through in the same fashion as before. This game, when halted, looked more like a telescope.
- He handed the board to Ivo.
- Obviously the designs were significant, rather than the games from which they were derived. The shovel on one
- side, telescope on the other. They were topologically equivalent, Ivo's talent informed him; one could be
- distorted into the other without the erasure or crossing of any of the lines. They were, in fact, the same
- game, played in the same fashion. A three-spot sprout effort brought to one step from conclusion.
- Kovonov was trying to tell him something.
- Then he had it. The shovel, the scope—the same, linked by the sprouts. By extension, the steam-shovel and
- the macroscope. He had entered the sprouts tourney—
- And won the macroscope!
- Senator Borland's death spelled the end of the project, by whatever line of reasoning one approached it. This
- was a culmination none of the participating scientists or other personnel desired. There was no internal
- rivalry in this connection; nationality had been superseded by a higher calling. There appeared to be no way to
- reverse the ponderous, political, UN decision.
- Unless someone took away the macroscope, and thus preserved it from harm. Kovonov had obviously intended to win
- this privilege—until Ivo had defeated him in the runoff. Now the onus was his own.
- It would mean banishment from Earth, of course. Such a colossal theft—
- Ivo knew he was going to do it. They were right: the macroscope was far too valuable to abolish, or even to
- entrust to political whim. The presence of the destroyer, far from arguing against the macroscope, pointed up
- the extreme necessity of further study. Mankind could not turn isolationist; that was the way of the
- proboscoids.
- The knowledge of the universe (the galaxy, at least) lay within man's reach, if not his grasp. It was a
- knowledge man had to have, however shortsighted the local politicians. Ivo had the ability to use the
- macroscope, since he had demonstrated his ability to survive the destroyer. He did not have to fear ambush and
- mindlessness in the main band. He also had contact—potential contact—with the person who could make
- the most of that knowledge: Schn. Perhaps this was the real reason Brad had summoned him. Not to crack the
- destroyer; to make use of the knowledge behind it, once cracked.
- Except that he did not intend to involve Schn. This was something he would undertake by himself—no
- matter how lonely a task it was. He had won the right. At least he would have the macroscope for company, and
- would be able to watch the events of Earth. If the political situation changed, he would know it, and could
- bring home the instrument.
- Kovonov was waiting patiently for his chain of thought to finish. Ivo erased the blackboard, both sides, and
- set it down. He stood up and gravely offered his hand to the Russian. Perhaps, of the two of them, the Russian
- had the more difficult task, for the UN investigation would not be kind. Heads, figuratively and possibly
- literally, would roll.
- In a gesture as grave as Ivo's, Kovonov took that hand.
- CHAPTER 4
- The crew was already at work; Kovonov's terse instruction had evidently been sufficient. It was amazing how
- much could be accomplished on an unofficial basis. Nobody had to admit to complicity in the theft, and he was
- sure the UN would have an impossibly difficult time making a case against anyone staying behind. How would
- they, for example, prove that the storeroom attendant had knowingly accepted Afra's doped offering?
- On the other hand, that same theft might solve the UN problem. If they intended to close down the
- macroscope—well, that had already been accomplished for them. There could be a great public hue, but
- minor private sorrow.
- How extravagantly his conjecture fluctuated! One moment he was sure disaster stalked the station personnel; the
- next, that all was well. But he would not need to conjecture. He could watch the whole show on the macroscope!
- The rocket's snout fitted into a matching cavity in the bottom of the scope's housing, so that docking was
- possible without fouling the guy lines. He was sure that depression had not been there before; the crew must
- have removed the covering plates. Probably it was crowded inside, too, with that metal intruding, but it was a
- neat travel arrangement.
- The assembled package resembled a massive mushroom, with stubby rootlets and a relatively small spherical head.
- The fifty-foot diameter of the macroscope housing bulged beyond the thirty-three-foot-thick rocket, but was
- smaller in overall volume. Even so, it hardly seemed large enough to hold the complex equipment
- necessary—but of course the computers were miniaturized, using laser memory and other remarkable
- techniques. Presumably the unit would take off at right angles to the doughnut, breaking the ties, then
- maneuver to head in the right direction.
- What was the right direction? He had no idea. Space was vast... yet where could Joseph go, where could he hide,
- where the telescopes of Earth could not locate him, the missiles seek him out? The immense honor of the task
- seemed to have less desirable ramifications.
- Ivo drifted across to the scene of activity. Men were still busy, but the task appeared to be virtually
- complete. No one paid attention to him—a deliberate and necessary slight, he realized. He could
- anticipate the coming dialogue:
- UN: What happened to the macroscope? PERSONNEL: We didn't see anything. Must've been that new fellow, the one
- Dr. Carpenter brought in. We were just shaping it up for a shift in orbit—
- And Dr. Carpenter would not be in condition to answer questions.
- As a matter of fact, their investigation into the circumstances surrounding Senator Borland's demise would run
- into the same blank end. Only two people had shared the experience that killed him; one was absent in mind, the
- other would be absent in body. Perhaps the alien signal was to blame for both? Kovonov would remark upon the
- strangeness of the thief's prior actions: barging into an innocent recreational session, removing the station
- emblem from its pedestal, poking around the premises. There would be the recording of his voice, as he intruded
- into the Russian's study: expressing confusion. Obviously that terrible session with the destroyer had killed
- one, stupefied the second, and thrown the third into a borderline aberration that prompted him to abscond with
- the scope.
- It was not the place in history Ivo would have selected for himself, but it was necessary. The macroscope had
- to be saved from the UN repercussion, and it was better that a person like Ivo Archer bear the onus than one
- like Dr. Kovonov. Even through the language barrier, Ivo had come to appreciate the qualities of the man.
- He landed on the head of the mushroom and made his way to the lock. No workmen, coincidentally, were facing in
- his direction. The coincidence held for the several minutes it took him to reach the lock and figure out its
- mode of operation. It seemed it could be opened from the outside, with the proper tool—and such a tool
- had been forgotten nearby. It was stuck to the metal hull, held there by its magnetism. An insertion, a twist;
- the mechanism clicked over, and the lock came open with no wasteful outrush of air. He climbed inside and shut
- himself in.
- Groton was waiting for him. "Everything clear? We want to be ready to move as soon as the crew finishes. I
- don't know how rapidly the UN ship will get here."
- "They seem to be finished outside, if that's what you mean."
- Groton put on earphones. "Ivo's here," he said into the intercom. "Give us two minutes to strap down, then cut
- loose, girls."
- Ivo could not hear the reply, but he had been reassured of one thing: Afra was coming along. He had known she
- had to come, yet doubted it too. To go to space with her...
- They tied down on either side of the mighty nose cone that transfixed the center compartment. There was a port
- set in its side for direct admission to Joseph, but this remained sealed.
- The framework shuddered; then they were smitten by the power of the atomic rocket. At triple-gravity
- acceleration, the macroscope tore free of its moorings.
- Five grueling minutes later the drive cut off and they were in blessed free-fall again. "We're on our way,"
- Groton said soberly. "Let's confer with the pilot." He unstrapped and jostled around to the hatch in the nose
- of Joseph.
- It opened, and a helmeted figure emerged, clumsy and drifting upward (according to Ivo's orientation) in the
- confined absence of gravity. Groton held on to the deck with his toes hooked into a handhold and offered a
- steadying arm. It was Beatryx.
- A second figure floated through: Afra. "I think we'd better put him in here," she said. "He doesn't need to
- move about...."
- "Him?" Ivo asked.
- She trained those beautiful eyes upon him: "Brad. I couldn't leave him behind, of course."
- Paradise lost! Yet with the keen disappointment came the relief of something else as well: guilt. The dead man
- was here to look after his own.
- And Brad had been Ivo's friend, too.
- They got the limp body set up in a nook formed by outthrusts of inscrutable equipment. Ivo, entering Joseph,
- found stacked, tied crates: the plentiful supplies whose loading Afra had supervised. They seemed to have
- planned this theft carefully.
- The immediate chores accomplished, they clung to handholds (the magnetic shoes had been discarded with the
- suits) and stared at each other. Carefully planned? It seemed that no one had looked beyond this point. The
- break had been made, almost incredibly; what next?
- Afra stepped into the breach. "Obviously we have two objectives: keep clear of the UN, and pick up Schn. We
- should be able to do the first as long as we keep moving away from Earth—but we can't accomplish the
- second without coming in close to Earth. That's our problem."
- "That's assuming Schn is on Earth," Groton said.
- Afra closed on Ivo. "Is Schn on Earth?"
- "No."
- "Wonderful! We'll have much less trouble reaching him in space, though it won't be easy even so. The moon
- station wouldn't really be much of an improvement, but one of the asteroid units... Where is he?"
- "I am not free to tell you."
- Afra's mercurial temper showed. "Now look, Ivo. We have gone to a good deal of trouble, not to mention
- banishment, to make it possible for you to summon Schn and bring him to the macroscope. You can't
- simply—"
- "Excuse me," Groton said. "We know Ivo isn't trying to be obstructive. Let's give him a chance to explain what
- he means."
- Ivo found this approach no more acceptable than the other. "I can't explain. Schn isn't—well, I'm just
- not certain yet that we need him."
- Afra became deadly quiet. "You mean you won't bring him?"
- "I guess that's what I mean."
- Her righteous wrath magnified. "And all by yourself you're going to hide Joseph and operate the macroscope and
- get medical help for—"
- This time it was Beatryx who broke in. "I think I have a letter for someone," she said. "I found it in the
- chute, but everything was in such a hurry—"
- Groton took it from her. "Could be an unofficial farewell from someone." He looked at the address. "An arrow?"
- "An arrow!" Afra was suddenly interested. "That's from Schn!"
- Ivo took it and opened it, not happily. It was obvious that Schn was at least partially aware of recent
- events, and that surely meant trouble.
- The paper within contained no words, just a diagram. The others clustered around to look at it.
- "A pitchfork," Beatryx said, concerned because she had delivered the message. "What does it mean?"
- "I hesitate to point this out—" Groton began.
- "Let me think!" Afra said. "I've been through this before. Schn doesn't like to communicate directly for some
- reason, but what he has to say is bound to be important." She took the paper and floated off by herself,
- concentrating.
- Groton produced his notebook and wrote something down. "Schn must know where we are and what we're doing," he
- said. "Could this be a hint where to find him?"
- "It isn't that easy," Ivo said.
- "Neptune!" Afra exclaimed. "That's the symbol for Neptune!"
- "God of the sea—and more," Groton said, holding out his paper. Upon it, Ivo saw now, was the word
- NEPTUNE. Groton had known, waiting only for Afra's confirmation.
- "The planet," she said. "That's the trident. All the planets have their symbols. Mars is the spear and shield
- of the god of war; Venus is the goddess's hand-mirror. So this is Neptune."
- "Your interpretation is interesting," Groton said, privately amused about something. "But remember, those
- symbols do have other connotations."
- "Male and female, of course," Afra said. "But Neptune is unmistakable."
- Groton did not push the matter, but Ivo was sure he had been driving at something else.
- "Even Earth?" Beatryx inquired, catching up to an earlier comment.
- "That's an upside-down Venus symbol. I don't remember them all, but I am sure of Neptune."
- Groton was still entertained. "I agree. It is Neptune. But I repeat: is this to be taken as an indication of
- location, or is it something more subtle?"
- "Isn't Neptune very far away?" Beatryx asked.
- "Ridiculous!" Afra said hotly, ignoring the other woman. "No ship has gone there yet."
- "Not to mention the problem of delivering the letter here," Groton added.
- "Something is wrong. We have misread the signal."
- "I wonder," Groton said. "What was that earlier contact you mentioned that you had with Schn? Was it like
- this?"
- "No. It—" She turned abruptly to Ivo. "What poem? Which poet?"
- Thus, in delayed fashion, she had come at it. He had foolishly told her that the earlier message represented a
- line of poetry with which he was familiar, and she had not forgotten. Could he stave off her assault?
- "American. It was just Schn's way of telling me that he knew what was up. Of telling you actually, since I
- couldn't read it."
- "That much was obvious. Name the poet and piece."
- "I don't see that that is relevant to—"
- "An American poet, you said. Prominent?"
- "Yes, but—"
- "Born what century? Seventeenth?"
- "No. Why do you—"
- "Eighteenth?"
- "No." She would not be denied.
- "Nineteenth?"
- "Yes, but—"
- "Whitman?"
- "No."
- "Frost? Sandburg?"
- "No."
- "But male?"
- "Yes."
- "Eliot? Pound? Archibald MacLeish?"
- "No." He remained helpless before her intensity.
- "Ransom? Wallace Stevens? Cummings? Hart Crane?"
- "I hate to break in," Groton said, "but we do have more pressing—"
- She pointed her manicured finger at Ivo. "Vachel Lindsay!"
- "The UN may be on our tail," Groton said. "If we don't make our decision soon, we could lose it by default."
- "All right!" she snapped, returning to him. "First, reconnaissance. We have to know whether there is pursuit
- yet, and of what type, so we can take evasive action. Once we're safe, we can start running down Schn. I'm
- convinced our sprout-winner here is hiding something important. Once we get that, we'll have a better notion
- what Schn is doing, and where."
- "I appreciate your ruthlessness," Groton said dryly. "Where do we go from here?"
- Ivo was immensely relieved to have the subject change. Afra was correct: he was hiding something important.
- "How will we know where the UN is? Don't we have to keep radio silence, or something?"
- She only glanced disparagingly at him. How else, he realized then, but with the macroscope itself?
- "Trying to run down a single ship with this equipment is like aiming the atomic cannon at no-see-em gnats,"
- Groton observed.
- "The torus will know," Afra said. "We'll have to watch it—the teletype, maybe, to monitor incoming
- messages. Or we can simply blast off now in any direction and outrun whatever pursuit forms."
- "Not," Groton said succinctly, "a robot."
- She straightened, startled. "All right. I'll get on the scope. We'd better know the worst."
- "Can you stay off the haunted frequency?"
- "Calculated risk. With practice—"
- "With practice like that, we'll have two casualties aboard to clean up."
- Ivo recalled the loss of intestinal control of the victims and realized how hard such a notion would strike a
- finicky girl like Afra. "I seem to be immune," he said. "At least, I can avoid it successfully. And I did win
- the privilege. If you will show me how to operate the controls—"
- This time Afra seemed relieved. "I'll instruct you. I'll have to operate blind, but it should work. Here, I'll
- turn off the main screen; you use the helmet."
- And she set him up in the control chair and fastened the equipment upon him, placing the heavy goggles over his
- eyes. Ivo wished there were more than sheer practicality in the operation, but knew there was not; it was more
- efficient for her to do these things for him than to direct him through it, this first time.
- "Your left hand controls the computer directives. Here, I'll put you on the ten-key complex." Her hand took his
- and carried it to a buttoned surface like that of an adding machine. This was not the same control he had seen
- Brad employ, he was sure. Alternate inputs? A junior set for the novice? The goggles cut off all outside
- vision, so he, not she, was "blind."
- "We have a number of important locations precoded," she continued. "You should memorize them, if you're going
- to do this regularly, but right now I'll give them to you. These will place you on Earth, the Luna bases, any
- of the artificial satellites or the macroscope station—the torus." She spieled off numbers, and he
- obediently pressed the buttons. Twice he miskeyed and had to start over; the third time she placed her hand
- over his and depressed his fingers for him in the proper order and places. Her digits were soft and cool and
- firm—as he imagined the rest of her body to be.
- Light flared into his eyes. He was a hundred yards from the torus, looking down at it from sunside, blinded by
- the reflection from its metal plates.
- "The next coding is for semimanual control," she said. "You can't possibly keep the celestial motions aligned,
- but you can override portions of the computer's automatic correction and drift a little." She directed him
- through the necessary numeric instruction. "Now you can apply your right hand. Drive it as you would a
- car—but remember it is three-dimensional." He felt the mounted ball, its surface actually sandpaper-rough
- for perfect traction. "Tilt for direction of motion, twist for orientation. Be careful—this is where the
- destroyer sometimes intrudes. You have to stick to fringe reception—which is more than adequate, at this
- range. Now set your drift toward the torus; don't worry, you'll pass right through the walls. You'll have to
- practice a bit to get it down...."
- Ivo tilted and twisted—and was rewarded by a dizzying tailspin in which the intolerable blaze of Sol
- scorched across his eyeballs every three seconds.
- "Not so much!" she cautioned after the fact. It was a lesson that would not have to be repeated.
- He reduced his efforts and began to slide toward the station, twitching the direction of his gaze to cover it
- properly. The computer, he thought, must perform a tremendous task, for surely a completely different flow of
- macrons would be required for each change in direction—yet the transition was smooth. Probably at
- distances of many light-years such versatility diminished, until a view from the far side of the galaxy would
- be one direction only, take it or leave it.
- It was beginning to work for him, and it gave him a feeling of power.
- There was an odor.
- "No, that's my job," Afra said, calling out to someone else. "You keep practicing, Ivo; I think you have the
- general idea. Try to work your way inside. I'll be back in a moment."
- The smell and the sound told him: nature had summoned Brad, and Afra had a job of cleaning up and changing to
- do. He had to admit she had grit.
- He thought of the right-hand control as a flute, and though there was no particular resemblance, control was
- suddenly easier. Now he could draw on his other talent, that peculiar digital dexterity and sense of tone
- musicians possessed. He shot through the wall of the torus, schooling himself not to wince, and stopped within
- the first hall. He reoriented, and was sure he was maintaining spatial stability, but the hall was tilting over
- steadily. He corrected—and lost it again.
- Then he realized: the station was spinning, of course! He had to compensate not only for its motions in space,
- but for its internal rotation. He had to perform, in effect, a continuing spiral, matching velocities with
- whatever portion of the station he chose to view. An intricate adjustment, indeed!
- He mastered it, driving his viewpoint around as though it were a racing car upon a treacherous track. Then he
- oriented for a "walk" along the hall. A twist superimposed upon the other adjustments, and he was facing the
- way he wanted; a tilt, and he was trotting down the hall toward Kovonov's office.
- The Russian was playing solitary sprouts. "If only I could talk to you, Kov!" Ivo exclaimed. "Just to ask you
- where that UN ship is, if there is one...."
- "In Russian?" He jumped, but of course Kovonov had not spoken. Afra was back, her tone deceptively sweet.
- Ivo felt the slow flush move up his face to the goggles and knew she was seeing it also, but he kept a steady
- image of the office. There had to be some way to make contact, and he was sure Kovonov was the key. The man had
- been too knowledgeable, too familiar with the necessary problems—perhaps because he had rehearsed this
- voyage himself. If anyone could communicate, across this barrier so much greater than that of language—
- He concentrated on the board before the Russian. A vital message had been communicated through this board not
- so long ago, and perhaps another waited. Meanwhile, this was practice of another sort, since he had discovered
- in the course of his adjustments that size, too, could be directly controlled. Such adaptations would
- necessarily become more and more precise as the range increased, in future forays, and he felt he ought to have
- it down pat. This fine-tuning became an art; it was hardly accident that his musical ability was telling.
- "What are you doing?" Afra demanded.
- Ivo stifled an irritable reply. Surely she realized how delicate—
- "Reexamining the portents, you might say," Groton said, and Ivo realized with relief that Afra's question had
- been directed at the older man.
- "Your damned astrology tomes!" she exclaimed. "Your wife brought texts on art and music, but you had to
- bring—"
- "Better than the pretty clothing you packed," Groton replied, his tone showing his unperturbed smile. But the
- argument was on. Tension had to seek its sublimations.
- And control came. Smoothly Ivo brought the focus down upon the sprouts-board, keeping it clear, magnifying the
- picture, until the dotted lines and loops loomed enormously across his field of vision. He centered on a single
- dot, making it swell up as though it were a planet. The illusion captured him, as illusions did; he was coming
- in for a landing, spaceship balanced. Time for the braking rockets....
- "Doesn't it seem just the merest trifle ridiculous to twiddle with squiggles on paper while there is so much of
- importance going on?" Afra inquired, and again Ivo had to confine a guilty start.
- "I would prefer to call it the interpretation of the nuances of a horoscope," Groton said calmly. He was better
- equipped, temperamentally, to fence with her than Ivo was. Beatryx must have gone back to the supply
- compartment, since she was not present to break this up. "I hardly consider it ridiculous to explore our
- situation and resources with the best instruments available. There is, as you point out, much of importance
- going on."
- "Are you seriously trying to equate the use of the macroscope with your occult hobby?"
- "I do not consider astrology to be in any sense 'occult,' if by that term you mean to imply anything fantastic
- or magical or unscientific. In the sense that both are tools of immense complexity and potency, yes, I would
- equate astrology with the macroscope."
- "Let me get this quite straight. You make a representation of the constellations—only those within the
- narrow belt of the zodiac, ignoring the rest of the sky—and planets—those of Sol's system
- exclusively—as they appear in Earth's sky at the moment of a person's birth... and from that mishmash you
- claim to be able to predict his entire life including accidents and acts of God, so that you can tell
- him—for a suitable fee—to watch out for trouble on a given day or to invest in a certain
- stock—and yet you claim there is nothing supernatural or at least unethical about this procedure?"
- "What you describe is undoubtedly supernatural and possibly of dubious ethics, but it isn't astrology. You are
- attributing erroneous claims to this science, then blaming it because it does not and can not make good on
- them."
- "Exactly what is your definition of astrology, then?"
- "I can hardly define it in a sentence, Afra."
- "Try." Did she think she had him?
- "The doctrine of Microcosm and Macrocosm—that is, the concept of the individual as the cosmos in
- miniature, while the greater universe is total man in his real being."
- The dot-planet broke up into swirls and blobs. He was too close; the resolution of the chalk was not that fine.
- Soon he would have to center on one section of it, then on a subsection, and so on into the microcosm....
- Doctrine of microcosm....
- "A microscope!" he said, finding it excruciatingly funny. For the macroscope was, in this case, a microscope.
- An astonishingly versatile instrument. Could it be that each dot in a game of sprouts had its own gravitic aura
- that set up macronic ripples for him to pick up? Talk of sensitivity!
- "What?" Afra sounded angry.
- Oops. "Nothing." Carefully, he reversed the action, and the scattered chalk coalesced. Now he was taking off
- from the planet, watching it reform into a distant dot that became a mere point of light against the black
- background of space. The other lines appeared, marking constellations of the night sky. Could Groton analyze
- them astrologically?
- "All right," Afra said. "Score one for you. You put me off again. But this time I'm not going to let you slip
- out of an honest discussion. I want to have your specific rationale for this foolishness."
- Nothing like handing him loaded dice, Ivo thought wryly—but he, too, was curious.
- "Well, it is evident that there are certain objects in the universe," Groton said gamely, "and that they are in
- constant motion, relative to Earth and to each other. That's one reason we require the assistance of a computer
- to orient the macroscope. These masses, and their respective movements, interrelate considerably. That is, the
- sun carries its family of planets along with it and forces them into particular orbits, while the planets
- affect their satellites and even distort the orbits of other planets."
- "That is not precisely the way modern theory describes the situation, but for the sake of argument we'll accept
- it. So granted. The Solar system interacts." She sounded impatient, eager for the kill.
- "Similarly, there are a number of human beings and other creatures on the Earth, and they relate to each other
- and interact in an almost impenetrably complex pattern. We merely draw a parallel to the apparent motions of
- the—"
- "Now we come to it. Mars makes men warlike?"
- "No! There is no causal connection. In astrology the Earth is considered to be the center of the universe, and
- the individual's place of birth is the center of his chart. This is not at all contrary to astronomy,
- incidentally; it is just a modification of viewpoint, for our convenience."
- Just as, Ivo thought, he was now performing all kinds of clever manipulations to make his macroscopic viewpoint
- stable. It would be impossible to accomplish anything if he tried to orient on galactic or even Solar "rest."
- The center of the universe had to be where the observer was.
- He was now paying more attention to the dialogue than to the semiautomatic refinements of macroscopic control,
- but was jolted back to business. His image was gone! Had he lost touch?
- No—Kovonov had merely removed the board. How easy to forget reality, to become involved, to begin to
- believe in one's fancies, and to see the monster hand of the image as the hand of God, drawing away the
- firmament. He had to guard against personification; it could unhinge him.
- He adjusted the image so as to watch Kovonov, life-sized. The man looked about almost furtively, then drew from
- his desk drawer a card. He set this on the table.
- There was print on it. Skillfully now, Ivo centered on that print, clarified it, read it. It was not Russian!
- S D P S
- A message for him! Kovonov was trying to communicate!
- After a minute the Russian put the card away and replaced the board. He resumed his sprouts doodling.
- Could that be all? Where was the rest of it?
- "So you claim the positions of the planets in the sky at the moment of my birth determine my fate, despite
- anything I might have to say about it."
- "By no means. I merely want you to concede the possibility of a relation between the configuration of the
- heavens at any particular moment and that of human affairs. It doesn't have to be a causal relation, or even a
- consistent one. Just a relation."
- "You bastard," she said without rancor, "you've got me halfway into your camp already."
- Bastard? Ivo thought. Was this the innocent girl who had blushed so delicately at the very mention of S D P S?
- He certainly was seeing another side of her now.
- "Of course there's a relation!" she continued irately. "There's a relation between a grain of sand at the
- bottom of the Indian Ocean and my grandfather's gold tooth. But it is hardly significant—and if it were,
- what proof do you have that your astrology can clarify it, when science can not?"
- "Astrology is a science. It is built upon the scientific method and endures by it. The discipline is as
- rigorous as any you can name."
- "Geometry."
- "All right. How do you 'prove' the basic theorems of geometry?"
- "Such as A = BH, for a triangle? You're the engineer. There must be a dozen ways to—"
- "One will suffice. You're thinking of making constructs and demonstrating that your One-times-Base-times-Height
- figure is the sum of congruent pairs of right-angle triangles, or something like that, correct? But how do you
- prove congruence? Don't tell me angle-side-angle or side-side-side; I want to know how, in the ultimate
- definition, you prove your proofs. What is your true basis?"
- "Well, you can't have a strictly geometrical proof for the initial theorem, of course. You have to start with
- one assumption, then build logically from that. So we assume that if one angle between two measured sides is
- fixed, the entire triangle is fixed. It works perfectly consistently."
- "But what if it's wrong?"
- "It isn't wrong. You can measure triangles full-time for a lifetime, and you'll never find an exception."
- "Suppose I transfer side-angle-side from a flat surface to a torus?"
- She almost spluttered. "You have to match surfaces. You know that."
- It seemed to Ivo that Groton had just scored another point, but for some reason the man didn't follow it up.
- "So experience is your guideline, then," Groton said.
- "Yes."
- "That's the basis for astrology, too."
- "Experience? That the position of Mars determines man's fate?"
- "That the zodiacal configuration at a person's birth indicates certain things about his circumstance and
- personality. Astrologers have been making observations and refining their techniques for many
- centuries—it is one of the most ancient of disciplines—until today the science is as close to
- accuracy as it has ever been. There is still much to learn, just as there is about geometry, but it is
- experience and not guesswork that modifies our application. I do not claim that the stars or planets determine
- your fate; I do suggest that your life is circumscribed by complex factors and influences, in much the same way
- as the motions of the planets and stars are circumscribed, and that the complex of your life and the complex of
- the universe may run in a parallel course. Astrology attempts to draw useful parallels between these two
- admittedly diverse areas, since what is obscure in one realm may be apparent in the other. In this way it may
- be possible to clarify aspects of your life that may not otherwise be properly understood. The one
- correspondence we can fix with any degree of certainty is the moment of birth, so we must use that as the
- starting point for the individual—but that is all it is. A starting point, just as your side-angle-side
- measurement is a possible starting point for the entire science of geometry. The difference is that astrology
- does not attempt to determine facts, since these are things you may ascertain for yourself. It reveals nothing
- that is hidden. Instead it facilitates the measure and judgment of what is actually encountered in experience."
- Ivo remembered the Senator's distinction between truth and meaning in philosophy.
- "That sounds closer to psychology than astronomy," Afra said.
- "It should. The relation between astronomy and astrology is entirely superficial. We depend upon the
- astronomers for measurements of planetary motions and such, but after that we part company. The metaphysical
- opinions of astronomers have no bearing on astrology; these gentlemen are simply not competent in that area,
- however competent they may be in their own field, that I admit they have mastered with a skill they have not
- even thought of applying to astrology. A good astrologer doesn't need a telescope; he does need a sound grasp
- of practical psychology."
- Ivo had been watching Kovonov all this time, but there had been no other sign. It was time to get advice. "I
- hate to interrupt," he said, "but I seem to be stalled."
- Afra came over. "I'm sorry. I let fantasy distract me and forgot all about you. What is it?"
- Ivo described what had taken place in the torus.
- "Obviously he is referring to the statuette," she said.
- It was amazing how stupid she could make him feel, how quickly. He dollied the image through the wall and down
- the hall to the common room.
- The S D P S was gone, of course, but the pedestal remained. Upon it was a sheet of paper. An anonymous message,
- he realized, that could implicate no one. It was printed in teletype caps:
- CRAFT ALERTED. PROCEEDING FROM MOONBASE THIS DATE 1300 TORUS TIME. ARMED. ACCELERATE WHEN ADVISED. URGENT.
- "Oh, God, they are on our tail!" Afra snapped. "And here I've been wasting precious time on—"
- "Armed?"
- "That means a ship-mounted laser. Supposed to be top secret, but we all knew about it."
- "So there has been some poop-scooping."
- "In self-defense. Space is supposed to be free of weapons, and the UN enforces that—but Brad was
- suspicious of a UN-sponsored industrial complex on the moon. Ruinously inefficient location, with all supplies
- ferried up from Earth. So we peeked. Presumably it's for good use—to keep the peace—but the UN is
- building a fleet that is very like an incipient armada. That space-borne laser is dangerous at indefinite
- range—as we may discover first-hand if we don't behave."
- "Why don't they burn us now, then? They must have us spotted."
- "Because they want to preserve the macroscope. You can be sure that if they officially dismantle it, there will
- be an unofficial remantling. An insidious group has obtained control of the UN space arm, or will obtain it;
- again, we only know because we... scooped. A fleet of ships and the macroscope—that's about as real as
- power gets. That could have been what Borland was really investigating. He had the nose for that sort of
- thing."
- "And they would want to keep their laser secret," Groton put in. "If they use it, everyone will know, and that
- will be sticky."
- "And because the only equipment precise enough to aim a beam that narrow accurately for that range is right
- here with us," Afra said. "They'll have to get pretty close before they can be sure of us with one burst,
- particularly if we're maneuvering."
- Ivo was fazed by such political reality. "Why don't they just broadcast an ultimatum to us?"
- "And admit to the world that somebody has snitched the macroscope from under their nose? They can certainly
- keep that secret if we can. Can you maintain contact with the station under acceleration?"
- "You mean, if we take off and... if there's a computer setting for it," Ivo said. "Doesn't it keep track of any
- changes in our location, and compensate?"
- "Naturally. It's been doing it right along while you practiced. Otherwise every one of the coded locations
- would be off by the distance we are from the torus. But under actual acceleration there would be drift because
- of the change in our orientation. Is your hand steady enough to compensate?"
- "I can try," Ivo said.
- She strapped him down while he held the focus. "We'll have to employ intermittent bursts, and change our own
- orientation erratically," she said. "That way they won't ever be quite sure where we're going."
- "Where are we going?" Groton inquired.
- "Neptune," Ivo said, but it wasn't funny.
- "What's two billion, eight hundred million miles among friends?" Afra said, and that wasn't funny either. Ivo
- was sure it would be years before they could get to such a planet on an economy orbit. The 1977 probe of the
- four gas giants, after all, was still less than halfway out.
- "We may be able to fool them for a little while—a few hours, say—but will it change the end?" Ivo
- asked her.
- "No. Unless we undertake sustained acceleration, the advantage is with them. They have to catch up eventually."
- Ivo still had the focus on the printed warning in the station common room. "Oh-oh," he said. "Somebody is
- changing the sign."
- A technician, seeming to move carelessly, picked up the first sheet with a gloved hand and deposited another.
- Ivo read it off:
- ROBOT BEING FITTED. ACCELERATE IMMEDIATELY. URGENT.
- "I'll get on it," Groton said. "One G until we think of something better." Ivo heard him scrambling through the
- lock.
- "Why can't we set course for—well, Neptune, since it's vacant and far out—and keep clear of them
- that way? It might take a little time, but at least we'd be safe until we could figure out something better."
- "You're right," Afra said sourly. "At a million miles per hour, direct route, we could make it within four
- months. At a steady one-gravity acceleration we could achieve that velocity in, oh, half a day. We have
- supplies for the five of us for a good year."
- Weight hit them as Groton cut in the drive. They were on their way—somewhere.
- Ivo, still on the scope, lost the focus, but was able to bring it back by diligent corrective twists. The
- computer was on the job, holding to the coded location, but it didn't care what way up the picture was, and it
- was evident that the loaded weight of the ship threw the calculations off a trifle. The computer was not using
- the macroscope; it was judging by thrust and vector to estimate the changes and corroborating by telescopic
- observations. Trace corrections were necessary.
- "What's wrong with that idea, then?" he asked, trying not to sound plaintive.
- "First, that robot can take more acceleration than we can, since it has no fallible human flesh to hinder it.
- It would catch us enroute if the regular ship didn't. Second, we might get a little hungry, if we did get away,
- after that year."
- "Oh." That stupid feeling was threatening to become chronic. "Couldn't we, er, grow some more food? Refine
- natural resources or sprout whole grain—I saw bags of—"
- "On Neptune?"
- He didn't press the point. "We could come back within the year. The situation could change in that time.
- Politically."
- "I suppose it could, and we could. That leaves only the problem of outrunning the robot ship."
- "Oh." He kept forgetting that. "Wait a minute! I thought Joseph was a special vehicle. An atomic heat-shield,
- or something. Brad told me—"
- "We are traveling in verbal circles," she said. "Joseph can probably deliver enough thrust to fire us off, even
- burdened with the weight of the macroscope housing, at a sustained ten gravities. No problem there. The robot
- would run out of chemical fuel in a hurry trying to match that."
- "How long would it take to reach Neptune at ten G's?"
- She was silent a moment, and he knew she was working it out with a slide rule. This, at least, was one problem
- she couldn't do quickly in her head or answer from memory, and he refrained from reminding her that he could.
- "Assuming turnover at mid-point for deceleration, with constant impetus, top velocity of thirteen thousand, two
- hundred miles per second—ouch! That's one fourteenth light-speed!—we could make the trip in just
- five days."
- "Why not?" he asked, satisfied.
- "No reason worthy of mention. Of course, we'd all be dead long before we arrived, if that's any disadvantage."
- "Dead?"
- "Did you fancy surviving at a sustained ten G's?"
- Ivo thought about weighing over three quarters of a ton for five days without letup. Power, he decided, was not
- everything. And of course he should have known that; she had already stated that problem, though it hadn't sunk
- in before. He'd been thinking minutes, not days, for that acceleration.
- "You have too many nays for my yeas," he told her. "Suppose we take off at a steady one G in the general
- direction of Neptune. How long will it take that UN cruiser to catch us?"
- "That depends. The manned one is our immediate problem. If it orients immediately and projects for
- interception, it could rendezvous within two days. If it takes a more conservative approach, to economize on
- fuel and allow for our possible maneuvering, it would take longer. Since they'll know fuel is not a problem for
- us, the latter course is more likely. They wouldn't want to damage the macroscope. They would try to keep us
- occupied until the robot was functional, which might be several more days."
- "How would they know about our drive? I thought that was Brad's private project."
- "Nothing is that private—not from the organization footing the bill. But spectroscopic analysis of our
- drive emission would remove any doubts they might harbor. That would make them more cautious about closing with
- us, but it wouldn't stall them very long. They'd be even more determined to capture us intact, for the sake of
- that heat-shield." She paused. "We might bluff them a while, though. We'll be heading into the sun, and if we
- threatened to lock suicidally on that—"
- "But Neptune is farther out than we are. We'd be headed away from the sun."
- "Not when Neptune's in conjunction."
- "Conjunction?"
- "The opposite side of the sun from Earth."
- "I thought that was opposition."
- "Brother!" she said in exasperation. Then: "Exactly what, if anything, were you thinking of using those two or
- more days of freedom for?"
- He refrained from making a cute answer. "The macroscope."
- "I had the distinct impression you were already occupied in some such capacity. One does live and learn."
- "I meant the programmed aspect"
- "Oh." It was her turn to feel stupid. It set her back only momentarily. "It seems to me that our problem is
- fairly well defined. We can't expect to outmaneuver or outrun the UN pair of ships, nor are we in a position to
- build any fancy equipment to discommode them. Surely you don't expect to adapt the mind-destroyer impulse as a
- personal weapon?"
- "No. But I'm convinced there is galactic information on that channel, if only we could get past the barrier. No
- one has ever looked beyond that opening sequence." Was there anything beyond, he wondered abruptly, or did it
- merely repeat endlessly?
- "No," she said, her voice subdued. He knew she was thinking of Brad again. "Ivo—do you really think you
- should—touch that?"
- It was the first genuinely personal concern she had shown for him, and he valued it immensely, "It doesn't hurt
- me. We already know that."
- "It hasn't hurt you—yet. What possible thing could you learn worth the risk?"
- "I don't know." That was the irony of it. He had no evidence there was anything to find. "But if there is any
- help for us, that's where it has to be. They—the galactics, whatever they are—must be hiding
- something. Otherwise why have such a program at all? They can't really be trying to destroy us, because this is
- a self-damping thing. I mean, a little of it warns you off, just as it did for the probs. But the
- discouragement would really be more effective if there were no signal at all. The signal itself is proof there
- is something to look for. It is tantalizing. It's as though—well, interference." He hoped.
- "Interference!" she said, seeing it. "To prevent someone else's program from getting through!"
- "That's the way I figure it. Must be something pretty valuable, to warrant all that trouble."
- "Yes. But it could be something philosophic or long-range. We need an immediate remedy. Something impossible,
- like an inertial nullifier or instantaneous transport—and that simply isn't going to happen."
- "I thought I'd give it a try."
- Thus they oriented on Neptune, economy route. It was as good a long-range destination as any. As the vessel
- turned and began its steady drive toward the sun—actually a cometlike ellipse that would carry it within
- the orbit of Mercury and out again into space—Ivo gave it his try. He did not need to be concerned about
- the irregular shifts and pauses in acceleration (designed to confuse the pursuit) because the destroyer was
- everywhere, always in focus.
- No, the alien signal was not difficult to locate. He knew its frequency—or, more aptly, its
- quality—and it was easier to drift into it than to avoid it. But he felt the perspiration on his body as
- he aligned the great receptor and allowed the pattern to develop. It was death he was toying with: the
- potential death of his mind, and perhaps with it, his body.
- It came: the same devastating series whose terminus abolished intellect. The pictures built rapidly into
- symbolic concepts, the concepts into meaning....
- Why did it always hit in sequence? Even if it were a recorded, endlessly repeating program, one would expect to
- pick it up randomly, beginning in the middle or at the end as often as at the introduction. How could it act on
- the recipient in the ordered manner it did, no matter when he peeked?
- He broke the contact with a convulsion of the fingers that threw him far into the static of fringe reception
- and waited a few seconds. Then he approached again.
- The sequence picked up at the beginning, but not as it had been before. This was even faster, spinning through
- constructions at the maximum rate he could assimilate them. It was as though it were a review of familiar
- material—as indeed it was.
- Startled, he broke again, glad that at least his prior experience had given him the strength to cut it off in
- mid-showing. Could it be adjusted to him, personally? A signal fifteen thousand years in the transition? The
- notion was ridiculous!
- He reconnected—and the review was so swift as to be perfunctory. Then, as he reached the point at which
- he had cut it off the first time, it slowed, and a more sedate series resumed. This was, however, still faster
- than the version he had seen at the station.
- Once more he broke, alarmed by the implication as much as by the deadly series. This was not, could not be a
- recording in any normal sense. It was more like a—a programmed text. A series of lessons embodying their
- own feedback so that the pupil could constantly check himself and rethink his errors. Inanimate, yet governed
- by the capability of the student. Such a text was the closest approach of the printed word to an animate
- teacher, just as a programmed machine-instructor approached sentience without consciousness. It was the
- student's burgeoning comprehension of the material that animated the machine or text and gave the illusion of
- awareness.
- Strange that this had not occurred to him before! Yet it was implicit in the groundwork for the program. One
- had to comprehend the distinction between—
- What a mind-expanding thing this was! Already the concepts of the program were spilling over into his human
- framework. The concepts were real, they were relevant, to himself and to the universe. Philosophy,
- psychology—even astrology were assuming new significance for him, as he fitted their postulates into his
- increasing comprehension.
- "Afra," he said, closing his eyes to the fascinating sequence.
- She was there. "Yes, Ivo."
- "Is it possible to—to say something in such a way that it—that all possible—"
- "That it applies to many situations?" she suggested, trying to help him.
- "No. To all situations. I mean, so it is true no matter how you use it. True for a person, true for a rock,
- true for a smell, true for an idea—"
- "Figuratively, perhaps. 'Good' might apply to all of these, or 'unusual.' But those are subjective
- values—"
- "Yes! Involving the student. But objective too, so that everyone agrees. Everyone who understands."
- "I'm not sure I follow you, Ivo. It is impossible to have complete agreement while retaining individuality. The
- two are contradictory."
- "Not—personality. In learning framework. In comprehension. So anyone who understands—this—can
- understand anything. By applying the guidelines. A—a programmed mind, I think."
- "That almost sounds like the Unified Field Theory extended to cover psychology."
- "I don't know. What does—"
- "Albert Einstein's lifework. He spent his last twenty-five years trying to reduce the physical laws of the
- universe to a unified formulation. In this way gravity, magnetism and atomic interactions could all be derived
- as special cases of the basic statement. The practical applications of such a system would be immense."
- "So that the theorems of one could be adapted to any other?"
- "I believe so, if you thought of it that way."
- "Like adapting astronomy to human psychology? And to music and art and love?"
- "I really don't—" Once more the pause that portended trouble. "Are you taking up Harold's line?"
- "I don't know. Whatever it is, the macroscope has it."
- "The Unified Field? Are you sure?"
- "The whole thing. The set of concepts that apply to our entire experience, whoever or whatever we are."
- She pondered before answering. "That might be the key to the universe, Ivo."
- "No. It's the mind-destroyer concept. I don't quite follow it all yet, but a few more runthroughs—"
- "Stop!" she cried. "Stay away from that!"
- Was the anguish in her voice for him, or for the fate of the macroscope if he should fail? "I don't mean that
- I'll ride it to the... end. Just far enough to—"
- "Just far enough to get hooked. Find some other way. Circle around it. Leapfrog it."
- "I can't. I have to comprehend before I can go on. Otherwise I won't be able to apply those advanced concepts."
- "Advanced con—Mindlessness!"
- "I see it now. Things our species has never dreamed of. Concepts that supersede our realities. But I have to
- nullify this—this destructive aspect first, or I can never move on."
- "Ivo, you can't control a fire by cooking yourself in it. You have to handle it remotely, never actually
- touching. The—the others tried to bathe in it—"
- "I don't think the information has to destroy. It's many-faceted. If I can come at the right angle—"
- "Ivo," she said persuasively, and her voice gave him adolescent shivers. "Ivo, did you have to comprehend the
- mathematical theory of the sprouts game before you could win the tournament?"
- "No. That's—I just see the right course a step at a time, like a road through a forest, and I win. I
- don't know anything about the math, really."
- "Then why do you feel you have to comprehend the destroyer? Isn't it enough to know what to avoid and to pass
- it by, a step at a time? Think of it as a bad move, Ivo. A tantalizing but losing strategy. Skip it and go on
- to the next."
- He thought about it. "I suppose I could do that."
- "Just hold off the comprehension. Blind yourself to the fire. Shield your mind so that you can get beyond it."
- "Yes, I think I can. But everything I pick up on that basis—it will be like wiring a radio together from
- a diagram, without knowing anything about its principle of operation. Connect Lead A to Terminal B. It isn't
- true knowledge."
- "Not many of us have true knowledge, Ivo. One of the things about civilization is that it is far too complex
- for every person to master every trade. We must skim the surface of things, we must turn dials, we must
- memorize procedures without thinking—we exist upon derivatives, yet it is enough. We have to accept the
- fact that none of us will ever or can ever grasp more than a tiny fraction of the knowledge and nature of our
- culture. It isn't necessary to comprehend—just to accept."
- Again he marveled. Was this the sharp-tongued woman who had so recently bickered sarcastically with Groton?
- Which facet reflected the essence of her?
- But all he said was: "Schn could comprehend."
- "You resent him, I know—just as I sometimes resented Brad. But such feelings are pointless. Each of us
- has to accept his place in the scheme of life, or the entire structure will collapse. Each of us has to be like
- Sandburg's nail."
- "Whose nail?"
- "The great nail that holds the skyscraper together. It seems a lowly task, but it is just as important as that
- of the pinnacle."
- "So I'm as important as Schn?"
- "Of course, Ivo."
- "Even though Schn might bring Brad back, while I certainly can't?"
- There was no sound from her, and he was immediately sorry he had said it.
- After what seemed like a very long time she spoke. "I'm sorry. I was mouthing platitudes. I'm not as objective
- as my preachments."
- He had liked the platitude better than the fact. "I'll—I think I can get some of the information.
- Whatever it is. Without understanding it. I'll try, anyway."
- "Thank you, Ivo."
- But she made him take a break then, while she saw about changing Brad's soiled clothing again and feeding him:
- with a spoon, as with a baby. "I can do that," Beatryx offered, but Afra would not give up the task.
- Then the four of them ate: cold concentrates from the supplies. It was a somber occasion, since no one expected
- any real breakthrough via the macroscope and Brad's presence morbidly illustrated the danger in trying. The
- flight from the torus had been a spectacular gesture, but unrealistic. How could they physically escape from
- physical pursuit, however much theory they might attain? Their equipment could do it, but not their frail
- bodies.
- Ivo, rested, took up the goggles and controls once more. He knew he had some exceedingly intricate maneuvering
- to do, because the mind-destroyer was a monstrous sun drawing him into its inferno. He had to approach it, and
- skirt it, and travel beyond—without getting burned.
- In much the same fashion, the group of them had to approach and skirt the sun, on the way to Neptune, while
- avoiding the opposite menace of the UN pursuit. Another common denominator.
- The symbolic patterns formed, leaping through the deadly sequence. Now if only he could follow their import
- without committing himself to the full denouement—
- If he could only, somehow, find a way to survive a sustained ten gravities acceleration, so that they could
- outrun the robot—
- To obtain the answer without absorbing the meaning. To use the voltage without being electrocuted. To remain
- selectively ignorant. To draw the honey without getting stung.
- Again and again he broke the contact, feeling too great a comprehension. The progression was so logical! Every
- step widened his horizons, prepared him for the one ahead, and induced a savage taste for completion. It was a
- siren call, luring him in though he knew it was disaster... Yet he was gaining on it, developing, if not an
- immunity, a resistive callus in his brain. Each approach brought him farther without plumbing the uncontrolled
- depths. The trick was to keep control of his own reception, to keep it braked, not let the alien program take
- over entirely. He was becoming automatically blind to key portions, building a barrier—
- And it had him. The immense gravity of that conceptual body caught him before he could break again and drew him
- into itself irresistibly. He knew too much! He had skirted too close, become too familiar, so that his slower
- intelligence had overcome the cognitive inhibition. He could not draw back from the pyre of that denouement.
- Down, unable anymore to resist...
- And the universe exploded.
- That act of friendship had been enough: he survived, when he would have died. It was as though he had passed
- through purgatory and been exonerated after almost succumbing; his vision of Hell was behind him.
- Though not at all well, he left the ship and set off for home on foot. It was a long walk from the Virginia
- coast to Macon, Georgia. He arrived March 15, 1865, to spend three months convalescing from St. Anthony's.
- Fire.
- And in that time of personal recovery from the physical misery of headaches, vomiting, chills and fever, his
- emotions suffered blows as well. Macon fell to the Union army under General Wilson on April 20, and too soon
- thereafter President Jefferson Davis himself was taken in the same vicinity. Hope dwindled and expired; the war
- was lost.
- Gussie Lamar, the girl he loved, married a wealthy older man. True, Ginna Hankins remained, but somehow his
- passion for her had abated. The seemingly carefree days of youth were gone; the war had done for youth.
- He wrote poetry through the pain in his joints, and knew even as he applied it tediously to paper that it was
- not good to express his distress in such fashion. Poetry, like music, reflected beauty, and with his hot
- reddened skin and swollen and blistered flesh he could feel little affinity for beauty. Unable to work
- constructively, he boarded for a time at Wesleyan College.
- He recovered—but not completely. The consumption had taken hold upon his lung and ravaged it, never to
- let go entirely. It tightened its cruel grip when he attempted to tutor again, forcing him to give that up
- also, though he was desperately in need of the money. At last he joined his brother as bookkeeper at the
- Exchange Hotel, and gained a satisfactory if mundane livelihood.
- Reconstruction was upon the land. Unjust laws and corrupt government fomented civic stagnation. Law had largely
- broken down. The phenomenal expectations of a nation had degenerated into apathy and despair.
- Yet gradually his personal fortune improved. The New York literary weekly, Round Table, printed some of his
- poetry and encouraged him, giving him literary success of a sort. And in the spring of 1867 the Rev. R. J.
- Scott, editor of Scott's Monthly, checked into the hotel. This was an opportunity not to be allowed to pass
- unchallenged.
- Scott liked the manuscript.
- Yet it was his brother Clifford who actually succeeded as a novelist. The publisher that rejected his own novel
- brought out Clifford's Thorn Fruit in 1867. That was a wonderful thing, and he was glad for his
- brother—but how he longed for some similar success!
- He refused, as ever, to give up. Despite his health, he journeyed to New York, where a wealthy cousin provided
- help. He searched the city for a publisher.
- His novel reflected his burning desire to say it all, to convey the whole of his mind and ideal to the reader.
- It was a kind of spiritual autobiography... and no one was interested.
- Finally he subsidized its publication himself, though he could ill afford the expense. It was the only way.
- He met another long-time friend, Mary Day, and that which had not bloomed before did so now.
- On December 19, 1867, they were married.
- CHAPTER 5
- Gentle hands steadied his head and wiped his face with a wonderfully cool sponge. A woman's touch, and it was
- good; he could imagine nothing so sure, so comforting.
- For a moment he savored the attention, dreaming of recovery from devastation, of marriage. Then he opened his
- eyes.
- It was Beatryx. "He's awake," she murmured.
- The others seemed to materialize as she spoke. He saw Harold Groton's anxious, homely face, and Afra's careful
- glance of assessment.
- "No, I'm not brain-burned," he said.
- "Thank God!" Afra said.
- "What happened?" Groton asked at the same time.
- "Now don't go jumping on him like that," Beatryx chided them. "He needs a chance to rest. His forehead is hot."
- And she brushed his face expertly with the sponge again.
- Her analysis might be simplistic, he thought, but his forehead was hot, and he was tired with a fatigue that
- extended deep into the psyche. Gratefully, he fell asleep.
- Hours later he was ready to talk to them. "How close is the UN ship?"
- "The optic spots the manned one about a day behind us," Groton said. "We don't have more than twenty-five hours
- before it comes within effective laser range."
- Ivo remembered. The laser itself could reach them anywhere in near-space, but could not be properly aimed
- unless coordinated by an instrument as precise as the macroscope. So it became essentially a short-range
- weapon, against a maneuvering target, good only for a few thousand miles. "Good. I mean, I think that gives us
- enough time."
- "You—you have the solution?" The dawning of hope on Afra's face was a blessed thing to watch.
- "Solution?" he repeated, finding it unreasonably funny. "Yes. Something very like it. But first I'll have to
- explain what happened."
- "Ivo, I don't want to rush you," Groton said, "but if we don't get away from that UN ship soon—"
- "I'm sorry, but I do have to explain first. There is some danger, and if I—well, one of you would have to
- take over the scope."
- "Suddenly I get your message," Groton said. "What did happen? Afra came screaming to us about the mind-
- destroyer, and we were afraid—anyway, I'm certainly glad it wasn't so. But you certainly were out of it
- for a while."
- "No—I was in it. I was fighting to protect myself against the destroyer by—well, no need to go into
- that just now. I almost had it, but I—slipped, mentally, and got drawn in too close. I thought that was
- the end, and I couldn't even resist, but I was lucky. I still had orbital velocity, and it spun me through the
- corona and out the other side."
- "I don't see—"
- "I do, Harold," Afra said. "Think of it as an analogy. A planetoid plunging into the sun. The important thing
- is that he skirted the destroyer and only got stunned for a while."
- "Yes, physically. Not mentally, if that makes sense. And beyond it—I guess you'd call it the galactic
- society."
- "You saw who sent the killer signal?" Groton.
- "No. That's a separate channel, if that's the word. It's all done in concept, but one is superimposed upon
- another, and you have to learn to separate them. Once you isolate the destroyer, the rest is all there for the
- taking."
- "Other concepts?" Afra.
- "Other programs. They're like radio stations, only all on the same band, and all using similar symbolic
- languages. You have to fasten on a particular trademark, otherwise only the strongest comes through, and that's
- the destroyer."
- "I follow." Groton. "It's like five people all talking at once, and it's all a jumble except for the loudest
- voice, unless you pay attention to just one. Then the others seem to tune out, though you can still hear them."
- "That's it. Only there are more than five, and you really have to concentrate. But you can pick up any one you
- want, once you get the feel for it."
- "How many are there?" Afra.
- "I don't know. I think it's several thousand. It's hard to judge."
- They looked at him.
- "One for each civilized species, you see."
- "Several thousand stations?" Afra, still hardly crediting it. "Whatever do they broadcast?"
- "Information. Science, philosophy, economics, art—anything they can put into the universal symbology.
- Everything anybody knows—it's all there for the taking. An educational library."
- "But why?" Afra. "What do they get out of it, when nobody can pick it up?"
- "I'm not clear yet on the dating system, but my impression is that most of these predate the destroyer. At
- least, they don't mention it, and they're from very far away. The other side of the galaxy. So if it took
- fifteen thousand years for the destroyer to reach us, these others are taking twenty thousand, or fifty
- thousand. Maybe the local ones shut down when the destroyer started up, but we won't know for thousands of
- years."
- "That bothers me too." Afra. "Thousands of years before any other species receives their broadcasts, even if
- the destroyer is not considered. Far too long for any meaningful exchange between cultures."
- "Even millions of years." Ivo. He was still organizing the enormous amount of information he had acquired.
- "They're all carefully identified. As I said, I don't follow the time/place coordinates exactly, though I think
- I'll nail that down next time; but the framework is such that some have to be that far. One, anyway; I
- discovered it because it was different from the others. Smoother—I don't know how to put it, but there
- was something impressive about it. Like caviar in the middle of fish eggs—"
- "Millions of years!" Afra, still balking at the notion. "That would have to be an extragalactic source, and the
- macroscope doesn't reach—"
- Ivo shrugged. "Maybe the rules are different, for broadcasts. As I make it, that's one of the most important
- stations, for our purposes anyway, and it is about three million light-years away. That's the main one I
- listened to. It—but I guess I said that."
- "I removed the helmet and goggles the moment you passed out," Afra said as though debating with him. "How much
- did you have time for?"
- "Time isn't a factor. Not in reception, anyway. Not for survey. It's—relative. Like light, only—"
- "Ah," Groton said, not appalled at the concepts as Afra seemed to be. "The analogy I used earlier. Light
- approaches the observer at the same velocity by his observation, no matter how fast or in what direction he is
- moving relative to the light source. Michelson-Morely—"
- "Something like that. I absorbed a lot in one jolt, then had to sort it out afterwards. I'll have to go in
- again to get the details, but at least I know what I'm looking for."
- "What are you looking for?" Afra asked. "Is there something that will help us right now?"
- "Yes. Apparently it's a common problem. Surviving strong acceleration, I mean. This extragalactic station has
- it all spelled out, but it's pretty complicated."
- "I still don't see why," Afra said petulantly. She was less impressive when frustrated, becoming almost
- childlike. "It doesn't make sense to send out a program when you know you'll be dead long before it can be
- answered. Three million years! The entire culture, even the memory of the species must be gone by now!"
- "That's why," Ivo said. "The memory isn't gone, because everyone who picks up the program will know immediately
- how great that species was. It's like publishing a book—even paying for it yourself, vanity publishing.
- If it's a good book, if the author really has something to say, people will read it and like it and remember
- him for years after he is dead."
- "Or making a popular record," Groton agreed. "When it is recorded is much less important than how much it moves
- the listener."
- "But there'll never be any feedback!" Afra protested.
- "It isn't for feedback. Not that kind. These civilizations are publishing for posterity. They don't need to
- worry about greatness in their own time or stellar system; they know what they have. But greatness for the
- ages, measured against the competition of the universe—that's something that only the broadcasting can
- achieve for them. It's their way of proving that they have not evolved in vain. They have left the universe
- richer than they found it."
- "I suppose that's possible," she said dubiously.
- "Maybe you have to be an artist at heart to feel it," Ivo said. "I'd like nothing better than to leave a
- monument like that after me. Knowledge—what better way can you imagine than that?"
- "I'm no artist," Groton said, "but I feel it. Sometimes I am sick at heart, to think that when I pass from this
- existence no one besides my immediate acquaintances will miss me. That I will die without having made my mark."
- Ivo nodded agreement.
- "Whatever for?" Beatryx asked, sounding a little like Afra. "There is nothing wrong with your life, and you
- don't need friends after you're gone."
- "Must be a sexual difference, too," Groton remarked, not put out. "Every so often my wife pops up with
- something I never suspected she'd say. I wonder, in this case, whether it is because men are generally the
- active ones, while women are passive? A woman doesn't feel the need to do anything." Both women glared at him.
- "Whatever it is, it extends to culture too," Ivo said. The joint distaff gaze turned on him. "The space-
- cultures," he explained quickly. "At least, the ones that advertise. It's as impressive a display as I have
- ever dreamed of."
- "But can it get us away from that UN laser?" Afra's mind never seemed to stray far from practicalities.
- "Yes. Several stations carry high-acceleration adaptors. But the intergalactic program has the only one we can
- use now. We don't have facilities for the others."
- "One is enough," Afra said.
- "But it's rough. It's biological."
- "Suspended animation? I suppose if we were frozen or immersed in protective fluid—"
- "We don't have a proper freezer, or refrigerated storage tanks," Groton said. "We can't just hand bodies out
- the airlock for presto stasis. And who would bring us all out of it, when the time came? Though I suppose I
- could adapt a timer, or set the computer to tap the first shoulder."
- "No freezing, no tanks," Ivo said. "No fancy equipment. All it takes is a little time and a clean basin."
- Afra looked at him suspiciously, but did not comment.
- "What are you going to do—melt us down?" Groton.
- "Yes."
- "That was intended to be humorous, son."
- "It's still the truth. We'll all have to melt down into protoplasm. In that state we can survive about as much
- acceleration as Joseph can deliver, for as long as we need. You see, the trouble with our present bodies is
- that we have a skeletal structure, and functioning organs, and all kinds of processes that can be fouled up by
- a simple gravitic overload. In a stable situation there is no substitute for our present form, of course: I'm
- not denigrating it. But as protoplasm we are almost invulnerable, because there isn't any substantial structure
- beyond the molecular, or at least beyond the cellular. Liquid can take almost anything."
- "Except pouring or splashing or boiling or polluting," Afra said distastefully.
- "Methinks the cure is worse than the UN," Groton mumbled. "I don't frankly fancy myself as a bowl of cream or
- soft pudding."
- "I said it was rough. But the technique is guaranteed."
- "By a culture three million years defunct?" Afra asked.
- "I'm not sure it's dead, or that far away. It might be one million—or six."
- "That makes me feel ever so much better!"
- "Well, I guess it's take it or leave it," Ivo said. "I'll have to show it to you in the macroscope, then you
- can decide. That's the only way you can be keyed in to the technique. I can't explain it."
- "Now we have to brave the destroyer too," Afra said. "All in a day's work, I suppose."
- "Hold on here," Groton said. "Are you serious? About us dissolving into jelly? I just can't quite buy that,
- fogyish as I may be."
- "I'm serious. Its advantage over the other processes is that it eliminates complicated equipment. Any creature
- can do it, once shown how, and guided by the program. All you need is a secure container for the fluid, so it
- doesn't leak away or get contaminated, as Afra pointed out. Otherwise, it's completely biologic."
- "Very neat, I admit," Afra said tightly. "How about a demonstration?"
- "I'll be happy to run through it for you. But I think you should learn the tuning-in technique first, just in
- case. I mean, how to find the station and avoid the destroyer."
- "If it doesn't work, we hardly need the information!" Afra pointed out.
- "Exactly how are we going to get around the destroyer impulse," Groton asked. "Individually or en masse?"
- "I—know the route, now. I can lead you to the station one at a time, and bypass the destroyer, if you let
- me—do the driving. I can't explain how, but I know I can do it."
- Groton and Afra both shook their heads, not trusting it. They might differ on astrology, but they had lived
- with the knowledge of the destroyer longer than he had, and shared a deep distrust of it.
- "I will go with you," Beatryx said suddenly. "I know you can do it, Ivo."
- "No!" Groton exclaimed immediately.
- Beatryx looked at him, unfazed. "But I'm not in danger from it, am I? If I get caught it won't touch me; and if
- I don't, it will prove Ivo knows the way."
- Groton and Afra exchanged helpless glances. She was right, and showed a common sense that shamed them
- both—but a surprising courage underlay it.
- Brad had said something about a normal IQ being no dishonor. Brad had known.
- Groton looked tense and uncomfortable as Beatryx donned a duplicate helmet and set of goggles, but he didn't
- interfere. It was evident to Ivo that mild as Beatryx was, when she put her foot down, it was down to stay.
- He took her in, sliding delicately around the destroyer with less of the prior horror and finishing at the
- surface of the galactic stream of communications.
- "Oh, Ivo," she exclaimed, her voice passing back into the physical world and making a V-turn to reach him down
- his azimuth. "I see it, I see it! Like a giant rainbow stretching across all the stars. What a wonderful
- thing!"
- And he guided her down, seeking the particular perfume, the essential music, on through the splendor of
- meaning/color, to the series of concepts that spoke of the very substance of life.
- The patterns of import opened up, similar at first to those of the destroyer, but subtly divergent and far more
- sophisticated. Instead of reaching into a hammer-force totality, these delved into a specific refinement of
- knowledge—a subsection of the tremendous display of information available through this single broadcast.
- Ivo knew the way, and he took her in as though walking hand in hand down the hall of a mighty university,
- selecting that lone aspect of education that offered immediate physical salvation.
- "But the other doors!" she cried, near/distant. "So many marvelous—"
- He too regretted that they could not spend an eternity within this macronic citadel of information. This might
- be merely one of a hundred thousand broadcasts available—the number began to suggest itself as he grasped
- more nearly the scope of the broadcast range—yet it might have in itself another hundred thousand
- subchambers of learning. University? It was an intergalactic educational complex of almost incomprehensible
- vastness. Yet they, in their grossly material imperatives, had to restrict themselves to the tiniest fragment,
- ignoring all the rest. They were hardly worthy.
- The microcosm of biophysical chemistry: and it was as though they stood within a vat of protoplasm, able to
- experience its qualities while remaining apart from its reality. Vaguely spherical, it pulsed with its multiple
- internal processes, held together by a sandwichlike plasma membrane. It seemed at first to be a simple bag of
- proteins, carbohydrates, lipids and metal ions, the whole with a neutral pH. But it was more than that, and
- more than physical.
- "What is it?" she asked, bewildered.
- "Model of a single cell," he said. "We have to become acquainted with this basic unit of life, because—"
- But she retreated in confusion, unable to follow the technical explanation. He was hardly able to provide it,
- anyway, ignorant as he knew himself to be in the face of the immense store assembled. "See, there's the
- nucleus," he said instead.
- That seemed to satisfy her. She contemplated the semisolid mass of it, this major organelle floating and
- pulsing in the center of the cell. It was as though it were the brain of the organism, containing as it did the
- vital chromosomes embedded in a cushiony protective matrix. From the nuclear wall depended the endoplasmic
- reticulum—a vast complex of membranes extending throughout the cell. This could be likened to the
- skeleton and nervous system of an animal, providing some support and compartmentation of the whole and
- transmitting nervous impulses from the nucleus. Tiny ribosomes studding its walls labored to synthesize the
- proteins essential to the organism's well-being.
- "It's—alive," she said, coming at it in simpler terms.
- It was alive. It had an apparatus called the Golgi complex that produced specialized secretions needed by the
- cell and synthesized large carbohydrates. It breathed by means of the mitochondrion organelle. It fought
- disease by using circulating lysosomes—balls of digestive enzymes that attacked and broke down invaders.
- Every function necessary for survival was manifested within this living entity.
- "This is what we have to preserve," Ivo explained. "The body as we think of it can disappear, but the
- functioning cells—of which this is typical—must remain. They must not die; their chromosomes must
- not be damaged."
- "Yes," she agreed, understanding the essence if not the detail. "I will remember."
- Carefully, then, they withdrew from the model. Back they went, up out of the broadcast, the university, holding
- these concepts like a double handful of champagne, inhaling them, recalling them, back to mundane existence.
- They removed the receptors and looked about. Afra and Groton were standing there anxiously.
- "There's so much to know!" Beatryx informed them happily.
- The rest was comparatively routine. He took Groton, then Afra, and finally even Brad. Mind was not actually
- necessary for this familiarization, and could even be a liability because of the lurking menace of the
- destroyer. Brad, at least, had no more to fear from that.
- "It is a kind of mutual contract," Ivo explained at some point. "It isn't just a matter of you seeing it; it
- has to see you. Not the cell-model; that's only a visual aid. The program. So it is able to key in on your
- cells, your body and your mind for the—transformation, once you understand and agree. You have to agree;
- you have to want it, or at least be acquiescent. So it can set up an individual program. This is like a
- delicate surgical operation, and it is the surgeon." It occurred to him that he was using a lot of simile in
- his discussion of the macroscosm—but there were no direct terms for it. As the universe was greater than
- the solar system, so the universal knowledge was greater than man's terminology.
- "Three million years old," Afra said. "I can imagine a human doctor, or an alien one, or even a robot. But a
- beam of pseudo-light...!"
- "Do any of you think you can maneuver around the destroyer now? This familiarization has to be done within a
- few hours of the process, each time."
- "No," Afra returned bluntly. "I am afraid of that thing. It—had me when it—got Brad. I can't fight
- it because it appeals to my intelligence. With you, just now, I closed my eyes, figuratively, until we reached
- the—cell. I refused to comprehend, and I don't know the route."
- Which was, evidently, the way it had to be, for her. She could comprehend the destroyer, so was vulnerable to
- it.
- "I felt the danger," Groton said, "but I didn't grasp it fully. It was like standing at the brink of a
- waterfall a thousand feet high, feeling the spume and hearing the thunder and smelling the smashing water, but
- not touching the falls itself. I suppose I am safely below the limit. I believe I could find the way around it,
- now that you have shown me—if I had to. I would much rather not have to, though."
- So Groton too had to resort to simile.
- "It was beautiful," Beatryx said. "Like poetry and music—but I could never go there by myself. All those
- rainbow threads—"
- And Beatryx.
- "One is enough." Afra asserted herself again. "Next problem: do we trust the procedure? How can we be sure it
- won't dissolve us and leave us puddled forever? I appreciate the experience and the review of cellular
- structure, but I'd like to see a complete cycle before I entrust my tender flesh to it."
- "It could be a more subtle version of the destroyer," Groton said. "Second-line defense."
- "I don't believe it. This predates the destroyer. All those programs do, but this is so far ahead
- that—well, three million years. And everything I've seen has been positive, not negative." Ivo had a
- sudden thought. "I wonder whether the destroyer-species is trying to make its mark by undoing the work of all
- the others? It can't compete positively, so it—"
- "Dog in the manger?" Afra said. "Maybe. Maybe not. Evil I could easily believe, but that would simply be
- nasty."
- Groton was using the optical system again. "I have a metallic reflection. That UN ship is right on course. We'd
- better act soon or resign ourselves to capture. How long does a melting cycle take?"
- "Not long for the breakdown, as I understand it," Ivo said. "But the reconstitution—several hours, at
- least, and it can't start for at least a day, for some reason. So it could be a couple of days for the complete
- cycle."
- "There goes our margin," Afra said. "If we test it and it works, it will be too late for anyone else to use it.
- If we don't test, we may be committing a particularly grisly form of suicide."
- "We could start someone on the cycle," Groton said. "If it means death, that should be apparent very soon. The
- smell—"
- "All right!" Afra.
- "But if everything appears to be in order—"
- "All right. A test-cycle, halfway. Who?"
- "I said I was willing to—" Ivo began.
- "Better you go last," she said. "It's your show. If it bombs out, you should take the consequences."
- "Afra, that isn't very kind," Beatryx objected. The negative comment was obviously an effort for her. "We're
- not in a kind situation, dearie."
- Groton left the telescope assembly and faced Afra. "I'm glad you see it that way. We do have the obvious choice
- for the testing cycle."
- She understood him immediately. "No! Not Brad!"
- "If the process works, he must undertake it sooner or later unless we leave him behind. If it doesn't, what
- kind of a life does he have to lose? It is not, as you pointed out, a kind situation."
- Afra looked at Brad. He was sitting up with his hair boyishly tousled, a day's shadow on his face, and saliva
- dribbling down his chin. His trousers were dark where he had wet them again. He was watching something, half-
- smiling, but his eyes did not move about.
- "Let me handle it," Afra said soberly. "No one else. I'll—tell you how it comes out."
- Ivo explained in detail what would be necessary. Groton retired to the underbody of Joseph for some work with
- the power saw, and brought forth the required basin. They set everything up and left her with Brad. The three
- of them retreated again into Joseph. No one spoke.
- There was a short silence. Then Afra screamed—but as Groton went to look, she cried out to be left alone,
- and he yielded. Faintly they could hear her sobbing, but nothing else.
- No one dared conjecture. Ivo pictured Brad slumping down into an amorphous puddle, first the feet, then the
- legs, then the torso and finally the handsome head. Had she screamed when the face submerged? Tense and silent,
- they waited.
- Half an hour later she summoned them. She was pale and her eyes were open too wide, but her voice was
- desperately calm. "It works," she said.
- Brad's clothing was folded neatly on his former chair. Near it was a covered coffinlike container. There was no
- other sign of what had passed.
- But Afra was very uneasy. "Let's assume it works—the complete cycle. That we come through it and emerge
- exactly as we are now, to all appearances. I still can't accept it intellectually—no, I mean emotionally.
- How do we know we have survived it? That the same person comes out of it that goes in?"
- "I'll know if I'm the same," Ivo said defensively.
- "But will you, Ivo? You may look the same, sound the same—but how do we know you are the same? Not
- another person of identical configuration?"
- Ivo shrugged. "I'd know it. I'd know if anything were different."
- She concentrated on him with that disarming intensity. She was loveliest when expressing emotion. "Would you?
- Or would you only think you hadn't changed? How could you be sure you weren't an impostor, using Ivo's body and
- mind and experience?"
- "What else is there? If I have Ivo's physique and personality, I'm Ivo, aren't I?"
- "No! You could be an identical twin—a congruent copy—a different individual. A different self."
- "What's different about it?"
- "What's different about any two people, or any two apples or pencils or planets? If they coexist, they're
- discrete individuals."
- "But I'm not coexisting with anybody else. Any other me, I mean. How can I be different?"
- "Your soul could be different!"
- "Oh-oh," Groton said.
- "How else can you term it?" Afra flared at him.
- "I'm not trying to bring religion into it—though that might not be a bad idea—I'm just asking how
- we can verify the price we pay for this wonder from a foreign galaxy. How can we measure self, when physique
- and mind are suspect? I don't want to be replaced by a twin that looks and thinks like me; I don't care how
- good the facsimile is, if it isn't me."
- Ivo wondered more urgently just what she had seen happen to Brad. She had been profoundly shaken, and now was
- clutching at theoretical, philosophical objections.
- "It happens I've thought along similar lines," Groton said. "I used to question whether the person who woke up
- in the morning was the same as the one who had gone to bed at night. Whether the identity changed a little with
- each change in composition—each new bite of food, each act of elimination. I finally concluded that
- people do change, all the time—and that it doesn't matter."
- "Doesn't matter!"
- "The important thing is that we perform our functions while we exist," he said. "That we live each day as it
- comes, and don't regret it. If a new person lives the next day, he is responsible. He is guided by his
- configurations, and his successors after him, and it is not right or wrong so much as predestined."
- "Astrology again?" she inquired disdainfully.
- "One day you may come to have a better opinion of it, Afra," he said mildly.
- She sniffed, astonishing Ivo—he had not thought the mannerism could be executed naturally.
- He also wondered whether the fervor of her reactions against Groton's ideas indicated a lurking suspicion that
- there might be something to them after all.
- "At any rate," Groton continued, "it seems we must either undertake this process, or submit to the approaching
- UN party. Perhaps the question is whether we prefer to escape in alternate guise, or to surrender in our own."
- "You," Afra said, "are a fourteen-carat casuist."
- "What are we going to do?" Ivo asked.
- "All right. Since I object the most, I'll go first. But I want some subjective reassurance. I've seen it; you
- haven't. Once you witness it, you'll know what I'm talking about. I don't care what's foreordained; I want to
- believe I'm me."
- Groton kept a straight face. "No one else can do it for you."
- "Yes they can. I want someone else to believe I'm me, too."
- "Does it matter what we think?"
- "It does."
- "Feedback," Ivo said.
- Unexpectedly, she flashed him a smile. Then she unbuttoned her blouse.
- The three watched, hesitating to comment. Afra stripped methodically, completely, and without affectation. She
- stood before them, a splendid figure of a woman in her prime. "I want—to be handled."
- "Confirmation by tactile perception—very important," Groton said, not mocking her; but he did not move.
- "I don't understand," Beatryx said, seemingly more put out by this display than the men were.
- "I want you—all of you—to handle me," Afra explained as though she were giving instructions in
- storing groceries. Her voice was normal but a flush was developing upon cheek and neck and spreading
- attractively downward. "So that afterwards you will know me as well as you can, not just by sight or sound."
- She smiled fleetingly. "Or temper. So that you can tell whether it is the same girl, outside. When you watch me
- melt down, you'll never believe I'm whole again, unless you prove it with all your senses. And if you don't
- believe, how can I?"
- "I couldn't tell one girl from another, by touch," Ivo objected, feeling his own face heating.
- "Do it," Groton muttered.
- "Me?"
- Groton nodded.
- Ivo stood up, far more embarrassed than Afra appeared to be. He walked jerkily toward her. He raised one hand
- and stopped, overcome by uncertainty. Almost, he wished the drive would fail; anything to break this up.
- "Pretend you're a doctor," Beatryx suggested sympathetically—but there was an overtone that hinted at
- hysteria. This must go, he thought, entirely against her grain.
- And what of his own grain? Brad had called him prudish. Brad, again, had known.
- "No!" Afra said in reply to Beatryx. "No impersonal examination. That's pointless. Do whatever you have to do
- to know who I am."
- "I already have some idea." Ivo was aware that he was now blushing visibly—a phenomenon that very seldom
- appeared in him, since his complexion was dark. Before he met Afra, he corrected himself. The suffusion of his
- features fed upon itself, summoning more blood; this, too. was feedback. He was embarrassed because he was
- embarrassed. Could Afra have any inkling how he felt about her?
- "This is as hard for me as for you," she said. "I don't like acting like a whore. I just don't see any other
- practical way. Here." She caught his hand and jammed it against her midriff.
- Ivo remained frozen, shocked as much by her words as her action. It had been, by his dubious reckoning, less
- than forty-eight hours since their first meeting, and hardly more than that since this entire adventure had
- dropped on him. His hand, half-closed, rested against her warm, smooth, gently-heaving abdomen.
- "She is trying to preserve her identity," Groton said helpfully. "But it isn't an entirely physical thing. She
- requires an experience—emotional, sexual, spiritual—the words are hardly important."
- "Sexual?" The inane query was out before he could halt it.
- "Not stimulation in the erotic sense," Groton replied carefully. "It is possible to copulate without any
- genuine involvement, after all. Rather, a shared sensation. Your actions and reactions are an important part of
- it, for they deepen its relevance. When you interact with intimacy, you accomplish something meaningful. She
- does not exist alone; she needs an audience. Otherwise, like the unread book or the unheard symphony, she is
- unrealized. Move her, be moved by her; make an experience whose significance will not easily fade. React!"
- Afra nodded quickly, and the motion sent a tremor through her flesh and his. "Yes, yes—I think you
- understand it better than I do," she said, speaking to Groton.
- "Merely your way of publishing for posterity," he said. "I knew male and female weren't that different."
- Surprised, she nodded again, and Ivo felt her diaphragm tighten. Still he stood there, unable to initiate this
- high-minded inspection, averting his eyes uncomfortably. His hand, so dark in contrast to her pale flesh, felt
- dead, encysted in plastic, immovable and incredibly clumsy.
- "Ivo," she said, "It's my life, my self. I am afraid—I admit it, I announce it, I brag of it. I need this
- reassurance, and I think you will need it too, once we get into this, this cycle. So humor me, but do it. You
- don't have to like it."
- "I'm afraid I would like it," he blurted. There was something more fundamental than vanity involved. Ivo
- grasped that now, but it did not help him. He did not imagine security in handling, and he doubted Groton did,
- for all his explanations. Women, more than men, were made for such caresses. Publishing a book made sense;
- this—
- "Where are you afraid to touch me?" Afra demanded, nervous and impatient. "The UN won't hold off forever." She
- grabbed at his hand again and lifted it in both of hers forcing his fingers to uncurl. "Here?" She plastered
- his right palm against her left breast.
- He had been wrong about the insensitivity of that extremity. Hot/cold shocks ran up his arm and exploded in his
- consciousness, making him dizzy. React? How could he help it!
- "Here?" she demanded again, and rubbed his fingers against the firm lower crease of her left buttock... Ivo
- snatched his hand away. His entire body was shaking. He felt ridiculous, yet excited.
- "Praise God for navet," Afra remarked, not unkindly. "I'm not making passes at you, Ivo. I just have to prove
- to you that I mean it. There can't be any prudery for this. Now go ahead, please. There isn't much time."
- She had accomplished her purpose. After the intimacy of the contacts she had forced upon him, hesitancy was
- ridiculous. He started at her head, running his fingers over her forehead, her cheeks, her nose, her closed
- eyelids, stroking her delicate lips, cupping her chin. There were two faint freckles on her neck near the right
- ear. He combed through her loose hair with splayed fingers, getting the texture of it, finding it more
- substantial than he had anticipated, more resilient. He circled her sleek white neck and pinched her earlobes
- gently between thumb and forefinger.
- "Bite it, taste it," she said quietly.
- He brushed his lips to her ear. He knew her and loved her—guiltily.
- He closed his eyes and ran his hands down one arm and then the other, feeling the smooth outlines of bone and
- flesh and sinew and skin, while she stood submissively. It was like a dream—more than a dream, for she
- was fair in every part and in every physical respect. The tonus of her moderate musculature was good; the
- curves and planes were without tactile blemish. Her fingers were slender and finely molded; the hollows around
- her collarbones perfectly sculptured. Only in her armpits was there roughness: the stubble of hair shaved clean
- a few days before, growing back already. This reminder that she was not an animated statue shook him again; he
- was handling her.
- Her breasts were heavy but not as large as they had seemed by eye, nor did the nipples project so
- much—until he touched them. Internal texture of the breast was not consistent; pressure showed up the
- clumped masses of the mammary glands beneath. Men, he thought, had been so fascinated with this distinguishing
- mark of the female that they had identified the species through it: mammalian. Yet the feature typical of
- it—not the species, he remembered now, the class—the most typical feature was hair. The mammals
- were hairy-bodied. Even whales had some pubic hair....
- Eyes still closed, he brought his errant mind back to business. To the sides the breasts faded into lightly
- covered ribs, that in turn dropped off into a much wider space above the hips than he had suspected. Her back
- was almost flat, mounded by the shoulder blades on either side, ridged by the backbone down the center. The
- ribs angled up in front to disappear somewhere near the solar plexus.
- Her buttocks as his hands experienced them were astonishingly generous, the soft flesh overlapping onto hip and
- thigh. In front, the stomach and abdomen were rounded, projecting more than he expected, and the hips were so
- wide he had to open his eyes to verify his location.
- Afra's eyes were closed; she was not watching him or reacting to his increasingly personal explorations in any
- overt way. He did not know whether that pleased him or disturbed him.
- Her hips and buttocks were normal, considering the sex and general health of the subject. He had been judging
- by his own anatomy, and his slowly traveling hands had magnified her dimensions unrealistically. He closed his
- eyes again, kneeled and continued.
- He touched her pubic hair and passed over it lightly, finding no more reason to probe within it than he had to
- feel the insides of her ears, nose or mouth. Her legs were braced somewhat apart; he ran his hands down the
- insides of her thighs, up again and around to the projections of the glutei maximi behind. Then down over the
- large muscles of the legs, under greater tension than those of the arms or rear, and to the knees, far more
- esthetic than his own.
- The calves were tighter yet, and as he squeezed them he could feel their shifting as trace corrections of
- balance were made. The ankles were narrow, the tendons flexing through them and over the tops of the feet. Her
- arches were good, the toes small but strong. As he traversed this final portion of her, one great toe flexed
- upward, a parting salute—and abruptly his diminishing embarrassment re-surged.
- He had indeed been handling a live woman.
- "Do you know me now?" she inquired, eyes open.
- Do I know a goddess? "Yes," he said, uncertain whether it was truth or untruth.
- Dazed, Ivo returned to his place and watched Groton go over her in much the same fashion. He felt like a voyeur
- and suppressed it; he felt a crude jealousy and suppressed that. Afra belonged to neither man, and this
- experience meant nothing, except in whatever intangible way she chose to take it.
- Then Beatryx reviewed her, and this embarrassed him once more. For a man to handle a woman—that was
- provocative but in the natural course. For a woman to handle a woman—
- He was still reacting foolishly. He would have to learn to divorce his instincts from current necessities, as
- the others had. Perhaps the time would come when he could clap his hand upon Afra's cleft without...
- He was glad no one was watching him, for he was sure he was reddening brilliantly.
- Afra's inspection was over. She, still naked, glanced inquiringly at Beatryx. Was the other woman going to
- undertake a similar ordeal?
- Beatryx looked calmly at her husband.
- Groton smiled. "With all due respect for these proceedings," he said, "I believe I will know my wife in
- whatever guise she may manifest herself. Trust her to me."
- Beatryx returned the smile. "I should hope so, dear."
- Ivo was glad Beatryx had not undertaken similar handling. He imagined himself passing his hands over her body
- as he had for Afra, and recoiled. She was older, and she was married, and this did seem to make a difference. A
- married woman should not be touched by other men.
- He tried to turn it off, but his mind proceeded against his will, fascinated by the morbid. He saw his fingers
- touch the flesh of the older woman, finding it flabby and rough in comparison, unattractive. How was a woman of
- that age to compete with such as Afra? Age, intelligence, appearance—as washerwoman to a princess. The
- exploration of Afra was the guilt of forbidden fruit; of Beatryx, merely aversion.
- Yet this was a dire wrong to Beatryx, even in fancy, for he knew already that she had qualities of compassion
- and courage that Afra lacked. He was judging by sex appeal—his own possibly juvenile standards,
- too—and that negated the evidence of experience and intellect.
- How much better to feel guilt for lusting after a woman than to feel it for failing to lust!
- He came alert with a start. The preliminaries were over and they were ready for the supreme commitment.
- Afra lay within her basin, and the others stood by while Ivo positioned the projector directly overhead. This
- was nothing more than the large macroscope screen; once a person had been primed—that is, introduced to
- the broadcast—the existence of a certain situation and frame of mind triggered a beam of light
- originating within the alien channel. This bypassed the computer; it was direct contact with intergalactic
- science.
- Groton had somehow produced five man-sized containers. Ivo suspected that they were pirated chemical tanks
- sliced lengthwise. Afra, in hers, was lying in several inches of clear sterile water, spread out so that the
- beam could catch an entire side at once. That was all they had to do.
- Was it a horrible demolition he aimed at her? How could he be sure that this was not after all another
- destroyer, as Groton had suggested; more subtle than the first, set to catch the few who circumvented the
- first?
- Afra looked up at him. "You believed in it before."
- So he had. Why was it suddenly so chancy when she was the one? Because he loved her and would survive to
- witness his mistake?
- "It takes a couple of minutes to warm up," Afra said. "Stand back."
- Numbly, Ivo obeyed. He wished he could think of some appropriate remark to make, but he had never felt so
- stupid. He was afraid, too, as he had not been before.
- Inevitably the seconds passed. He could not stop them. "Joseph!" he exclaimed. "Who will pilot it,
- while—?"
- "Eight hours from now the macroscope computer will jump the engine to a full ten G's acceleration and modify
- our course accordingly," Groton said. "We have taken care of the programming. What did you think we were doing
- while you slept?"
- So the others had committed themselves to Neptune even before he—
- A flash; the projector came on. A thin yellow light bathed Afra's body, making it oddly sharp; the flesh tones
- stood out deeper than in life, the hair brighter, the irises, as the eyes dropped closed, a clearer blue. It
- was as though some famous painter had enhanced the predominant hues.
- He knew that this was only the surface manifestation. It was the cell that counted, that the beam was seeking
- out and rendering individualistic. The bulk of the radiation was invisible, acting within her substance,
- setting up unusual relations, breaking down lifelong bonds. A change was beginning—one unlike any
- experienced by the human form before.
- Except for Brad...
- The epidermis—the outermost layer of the skin—dissolved. The reddish tones of the dermis
- intensified as subcutaneous fat departed, and out of the flowing protoplasm rose the intricate venous network,
- all over her body. Arms, legs, torso—it was a though she had donned a loosely knit blue leotard that was
- now falling apart.
- Ivo looked at Afra's face, but saw it relaxed. She was unconscious, and had probably been knocked out by the
- first impact of the radiation. He was glad of that.
- The skin was melting from her head, too. Body hair had gone immediately, leaving her nude and bald. Now there
- was a great blue branching tube descending from her forehead. It hooked into the streaming eye, crossed the
- cheek, and finally disappeared under the jaw muscle on its way to the throat. Whitish nerves splayed across the
- side of her face from the region of the ear, weaving between and through brownish muscles, and almost under the
- ear-hole was a tapioca mass of something he couldn't identify. Into his mind came the word "parotid," but it
- meant nothing to him. Upon the dome of the skull bright arteries interwove with veins and nerves, making a
- tripartite river gathering toward the ear.
- Already these superficial networks were eroding under the beam from space, merging with the runoff from the
- liquefying muscular structures. The cartilage of the nose was coming into sight and, gruesomely, the naked
- eyeballs. Ivo turned his gaze aside, afraid of being sick, and concentrated on the legs and feet.
- These were hardly more comforting. Skin, surface nerves and veins had gone together with much of the
- avoirdupois, but tendons and arteries remained, and the bulk of the great limb muscles. Slowly these
- diminished, and in the front of the lower leg the bone appeared, a lighter-colored island rising from the
- runoff. Above it the patella—the kneecap—already floated free, and it fell with a slow splash into
- the burgeoning fluid in the trough. Below, the incredibly long, thin foot-bones showed, loosening as the
- connecting ligaments yielded.
- Individually, the phalanges folded and toppled, toe-bones no more, and lay scattered in the rising sea of
- protoplasm. The original water Afra had lain in was no longer visible at all; the meltoff covered it. The
- little bones were slow to dissolve completely, and he wondered whether the process would ever finish. Perhaps
- the action would continue after the beam desisted, the liquid eating away at the pockets of resistance for
- hours and even days. That would be one compelling reason for the minimum time limit; the reconstitution could
- not safely proceed until all components had been processed and made available to the organism.
- At last the skeletal outline lay bare, half-submerged in brown liquor.
- Now Ivo half-understood Afra's need for tactile confirmation. She had watched this process, had seen the
- complete demolition of physique. He had to agree: after such an experience, nothing less than extreme evidence
- would convince him that Afra had survived such demolition. It had become an emotional, rather than
- intellectual, matter.
- Even if he manipulated every portion of her anatomy, he would retain the mind's-eye image of—this.
- Yet he would have to survive it himself, before he could verify it in anyone else. Would a pseudo-Ivo pass
- approval on a pseudo-Afra, both agreeing that all five red eyes were exactly as they had been before, and then
- the entire party settling down to a wholesome meal of astrology-on-rye?
- He looked about, feeling as though an enormous period had elapsed but knowing it to have been a few minutes
- only. Groton and Beatryx were watching too, neither seeming particularly robust. They, like him, had become
- morbidly impressed with the significance of this process, and neither reacted to his movement.
- This was like the destroyer, he thought. It was repulsive, yet the eye riveted to it.
- Ivo followed the direction of Groton's absorption and discovered that it was the head, or perhaps the throat or
- thorax. The progression here had continued alarmingly. The skull was bare of flesh and vein, the ears and nose
- were gone; eye-sockets were empty; teeth bulged loosely from bare jawbones, gaunt in the absence of cheek or
- gums. If the brain itself had been affected yet, this was not apparent behind the enclosure of the fissured
- skull.
- But it was the neck that appalled. Here the dissolution had been more selective. It was the first evidence he
- had that this was not merely a melting of flesh as the conveniences of surface and hardness dictated. Fat and
- muscle and tendon were largely absent, but the internal jugular vein remained beside the large red carotid,
- servicing the brain. The small offshoots of both had been sealed over, so that they were now direct tubes. What
- modification of the alien program had dictated this astonishing precaution?
- Either the distant civilization had anticipated human physique and function to an impossible extent, or the
- program was of such versatility and sophistication that it automatically adapted to any living system. Already
- it had reduced the solid portion of Afra's bodily mass by half, without killing her. This was surgery beyond
- man's capacity, performed without physical contact—yet it was only an incidental portion of galactic or
- intergalactic knowledge.
- Ivo had not allowed himself to realize how complex an organism the human body was in detail. He had thought of
- it melting as an ingot of steel might melt in a blastfurnace; as ice cream might dissolve in sunlight; as a bar
- of soap might liquefy in a basin of warm water. Ridiculous! He understood now that long before the bones of the
- legs surrendered their calcium, the brain would die—unless precisely protected. The velocity and order of
- the process were critical, if life as it had been were to be preserved.
- The great spiral-banded trachea also remained intact, and air continued to pass through it. The pipe terminated
- at what had been the larynx, now a funnel opening upward. His gaze followed it back down to the thoracic
- cavity, still enclosed by the circling ribs. Though Afra's breasts were long since gone along with all other
- superficial processes, the important muscles of her chest were present and functioning, maintaining the
- circulation of air within. He could tell by the pulsing of the adjacent arteries that the heart continued its
- operations, too.
- The melting seemed to have halted at this stage, in this region, and he did not see how it could resume safely.
- The hands, arms and shoulders were deteriorating bones, all flesh taken; the head and neck had been stripped of
- expendable appurtenances. If the chest muscle went, the lungs would stop and the brain would drown, deprived of
- its oxygen; if the brain went, the remainder of the body would cease to function and would suffer damage before
- the slow melting could complete the job. The system had to function as a unit until there was no unit to
- function—a paradox.
- Beatryx was staring at the abdomen, her hand unconsciously clutching at her own. Ivo looked there—and
- regretted it.
- The reproductive system, like the sensory organs, had been among the earliest to go. The abdominal cavity was
- open, pelvic musculature absent, the guts exposed. Ivo could not have told from what he saw to which sex the
- carcass belonged. Above the bleakly jutting hip-bones the action was well advanced: bladder and uterus melted,
- large and small intestine puddled along with the digestive refuse within them. Only the two large kidneys
- remained, and their arterial and venous connectors, their wastes evidently dissolving as they formed. Stomach,
- liver, spleen, pancreas, duodenum—all of it flowed away into the common sewer, leaving the vertebrae
- bare.
- Had these remains ever been a person? This mass of eroding bones immersed in a deepening pond of sludge?
- It was not over. Unsupported, the skull canted, causing all three observers to jump, and from its hollow
- earhole and empty lower eye-socket the gray-white fluid, trickled heavily. Ivo realized that the optic nerves
- had left their tunnels through the solid bone, and now the brain itself was dissolving. First the frontal
- lobes? Or one hemisphere only?
- Simultaneously there was a breakthrough in the chest cavity. The membranes lining the ribcage on the right had
- let go and run off; the lung collapsed, so that there was air under the bones. The muscles on that side melted,
- showing those ribs, and underneath them the hollow section remaining. Within this beat the heart, centered
- rather than situated to the left as he had thought, still pumping the red blood up the huge aortic artery
- toward brain and kidneys, and the blue blood up the pulmonary artery to the lungs for oxygenation. Similarly
- massive veins brought it back from its travels, now considerably circumscribed. Lymph nodes dotted the area,
- and tiny vessels enclosed the heart itself, and the nerve trunk remained leading into the skull. That, apart
- from the bones and minimal tissue, was all.
- Had this been the splendid body he had explored with his two quivering hands, so long ago? Was this the
- physical object whose makeup compelled his fascination?
- The kidneys went; the second lung collapsed; the heart beat momentarily longer, then ceased. If death were the
- destined conclusion of this chain, it had come at last.
- Yet the process continued. The last muscles fell, the heart sagged and opened, the blood ran out as protoplasm.
- The skeleton lay amidst its liquid flesh, defunct.
- The beam from the projector shut off.
- Ivo looked at the other two. They looked at him. No one spoke.
- Again the common thought: had they conspired unwittingly to commit a gruesome murder, and had they now
- accomplished it?
- Fifteen minutes passed, and the slow action did not halt. The ridged vertebrae hung loose within their
- settings; the ribs sagged. Wherever the dull fluid touched, it dissolved, though it would be long before the
- skull and hip-bones finally disappeared.
- As the fluid became still, light from the chamber struck the surface and refracted through the forming layers,
- some of it reflecting back eerily. It was as though a ghost flickered where the girt had been.
- Groton stood up unsteadily. He walked to the long basin, bent over, and placed its cover upon it, cutting off
- the reflection-spirit. Carefully he pulled it over to the side, set it beside the prior melt, and anchored it
- securely to the deck. He had removed it only a few feet, since the compartment was small, but it seemed to Ivo
- like a tremendous distance. It was amazing how far one could adapt to the space available, so that cubic yards
- became as great, subjectively, as cubic rods.
- Groton drew the second—actually, third—basin into position. Silently he undressed, casting his
- clothing absently on the pile left by Afra. He lay down.
- Beatryx turned away.
- This time Ivo timed it by his watch: twenty-four minutes until the beam desisted. Another skeleton lay within
- its vat. Beatryx had not looked at all.
- Again they waited. Two murders?
- Ivo moved the remains, discovering that the container slid readily. He was irrationally fearful of slopping
- some of the juice over the side. He sighed in silent relief as he set the cover, though it was light and did
- not actually seal the basin. Air had to enter, or it would quickly become a coffin. He found the snaps Groton
- had fashioned to connect to the floor-plugs. This was the kind of detail an engineer would think of; Ivo
- certainly had not. Of course, free-fall or jerky acceleration would throw the protoplasm out to splatter over
- the equipment—but Afra and Groton would have anticipated this also, and accounted for it in the
- programming. Probably the engines would never cut off at all; Joseph would perform a turnabout under 10-G
- acceleration and commence 10-G deceleration without affecting its contents enough for any slopping.
- Ivo positioned the next basin.
- "No!" Beatryx cried, near hysteria. She had seemed calm, but obviously this type of experience had brought her
- to her breaking point. He could not blame her.
- He waited, and after a few minutes she spoke again, still facing away. "I'm afraid."
- "So am I." It was the total truth.
- That seemed to encourage her. "I have to go next. I didn't know it would be like this. I wouldn't be able to do
- it myself. And I have to."
- "Yes." What else could he say?
- "He has his charts," she said, meaning her husband. "When he gets bothered, he just settles down for a few
- hours with his diagrams and figures and houses and planets, and he works it all out and finally he's satisfied.
- But I never understood all that. I don't have anything."
- Now he did not dare even to agree with her.
- "He told me," she said quickly, "I don't know what it means but I remember it—he told me that when I was
- thirty-seven my progressed midheaven would square with Neptune."
- "Neptune!"
- "And he said my progressed ascendant would be opposite Neptune, and my progressed Mercury opposite Neptune. And
- he said Neptune was the planet of obligation—I think that's what it was. And—"
- "And we're going to Neptune," Ivo finished for her. "I don't know what all those terms mean either, but it
- sounds as though you have to—progress to Neptune." Could it mean anything, or was it sheer coincidence?
- "I'm thirty-seven now," she said.
- Ivo had an inspiration. "It must mean you'll get there safely!"
- Still she didn't move.
- Finally Ivo, sensing what was needed, went and led her to the basin and carefully removed the clothing she had
- so carefully preserved until this moment, while she stood listlessly. He could never, prior to the past few
- hours, have conceived of himself performing such an action. Undressing an older woman! What secrets remained
- for her to hide?
- He steadied her as she got down, then he stood up to move away.
- "Hold my hand, Ivo."
- He knelt just beyond the field of the beam and took her hand, trusting that its melting could catch up later.
- The beam came on. She relaxed, unconscious, but he stayed where he was. The skin melted away from her arm up to
- just beyond the elbow; forearm, wrist and the hand he held remained whole.
- Suddenly it came to him that the hand could die, stripped of its supplying mechanisms. He had to return it to
- the field before he disrupted everything.
- His own hand lost sensation as it entered the field, and hers slipped down. He withdrew hastily, alarmed. A
- film of slick moisture already covered the exposed portion, and feeling did not return. Stupid! Did he think he
- was playing a game of tag with the alien signal?
- He went to sit upon the edge of the last basin, holding the hand above it so that any moisture that dropped
- would fall inside. The nerves were out for the duration, that was evident; but there did not appear to be any
- further erosion. He had lost hair follicles and a scraping of skin: not serious.
- What would happen if a person were only partially exposed? Could a limb be painlessly amputated and preserved
- in such fashion, in case of injury? He was sure it could. This, perhaps, had been the original purpose of the
- technique. There might even be instructions somewhere concerning the regeneration of such a limb. How little he
- knew about the process he had invoked!
- Morbidly he watched Beatryx's intestines come exposed. The light seemed to eat through the packed convolutions
- while it worried at the muscular bladder below them. What, indeed—what possible secrets could a woman
- have to hide, after the literal depth of her had been thus probed and vanquished? What physical act could
- approach the devastating intimacy of this association? There was her uterus, there the open channel of her
- vagina, there her anus and colon, seen from the inside in surgical cutaway. How was she different from Afra
- now?
- How was anyone different from anyone else, in this ultimate reckoning?
- And he had been embarrassed to touch Afra's body! He was glad now that at least one woman had insisted on it.
- The memory of the feel of that firm whole flesh was about the only comfort he had now, knowing that that flesh
- was whole no more.
- God! (both prayer and expletive)—was the salvation offered by the macroscope worth it?
- The beam ceased, startling him. Beatryx was done.
- He realized that he was alone. He had only to wait a few more hours, and the UN ship would fetch him in, and
- the adventure would be over. He would not have to take the terrible risk the others had taken; he could be
- sure, at least, of life.
- He was not honestly tempted. The others had not yielded to their fears; indeed, they had trusted him so far as
- to undertake this bizarre transformation before him, risking horrible extinction for the sake of the mission.
- His mission. That was the stuff of heroes. That was the stuff he meant to prove to himself. He, Ivo—not
- the grandiose Schn he had been summoned to summon.
- And it was, he realized now, the only way he could follow Afra. If the UN caught them now, the macroscope would
- be taken away, and the vats of protoplasm would, in the course of months, gradually deteriorate. A year was
- about the limit, for shelf-life, as he understood it. After that, reconstitution could become ugly.
- He stripped awkwardly, because of his unconscious hand. He moved Beatryx beside her husband and covered her and
- tied her down. He positioned his own bath and climbed in.
- Then he climbed out quickly, remembering something. The clothing of four people lay scattered recklessly. It
- could be dangerous when the rocket maneuvered. He bundled it all together, separating out coins and pens and
- wallets and keys and pins and women's purses and placing them in separate storage bins.
- He looked at the worn old penny he had saved so long, memento of a foolishly missed bus. He also still had the
- unused bus token. Suppose one of those were to drift loose during maneuvers, and drop into someone's vat of
- jelly? Ouch!
- He climbed in a second time. He would remain beneath the beam, of course, and it would come on again at any
- time after the minimum period had elapsed, provided that conditions were appropriate. That meant, in this case,
- normal gravity.
- How could it tell what 1-G was, Earth definition? Too late to worry about that now!
- Ready or not, he thought, not even frightened any more. Ready or not, here I—
- Could experience be inherited? Lysenko, the Russian scientist of yore, had argued that it could. His theory of
- environment above heredity had seemingly been discredited by his own malfeasance and the winds of political
- change—but later researches had thrown the issue open again.
- The alien beam melted down functional flesh and reduced it to quiescent cells that required little nourishment,
- surviving during their estivation largely upon their internal nutrient resources. The reconstitution would re-
- create the original individual—along with all his memories. All of it had to be in the cell—the
- lifetime of experience as well as the physical form. Only if that experience, right down to the most evanescent
- flicker of thought, were recorded in the chromosomes, the genes, or somewhere in the nucleus, of every tiny
- cell of the body—only thus could the complete physique and personality be restored.
- The alien presentation said it could be done. The alien intellect was in a position to know.
- Unless the flesh of Earthly creatures were not quite typical of that of the rest of the planetary species in
- the universe....
- "Put up or shut up!" Ivo thought somewhere—before, after, during?—and waited for his answer.
- What a joke if the alien were mistaken!
- Here I—
- Swimming through a thick warm sea, an ocean of blood, smooth, delicious, eternal.
- Here—
- Climbing on the cruel heavy land, a continent of bone, hot, chill, transient.
- How to speak without a lung? To think, without a brain?
- A jumble of sensation: curiosity, terror, hunger, passion, satiation, lethargy.
- An eon passing.
- "...come." Ivo opened his eyes.
- He was lying in the container, uncovered, bathed in lukewarm water. He felt fine. Even his hand was whole
- again.
- He sat up, shook himself dry, and donned his clothing. Then he brought over the next coffin, able to tell by
- its weight and his own that gravity was 1-G, and removed the cover.
- Inside was an attractive, vaguely layered semifluid. No bones showed. He withdrew.
- The beam came on, illuminating the jellylike substance. The protoplasm quivered, but nothing obvious happened
- at first.
- Patience, he told himself. It worked before.
- Gradually a speck developed within its translucent upper layer; a mote, a tiny eye, a nucleus. It drifted
- about; it expanded into a marble, a golf-ball. It opened into a flexing cup that sucked in liquid and spewed it
- out through the same opening, propelling it cautiously through the medium. The walls of it became muscular,
- until it resembled an animate womb perpetually searching for an occupant. Then the spout folded over, sealed
- across the center, and became two: an intake and an outgo. The fluid funneled through more efficiently, and the
- creature grew.
- It lengthened, and ridges along its side developed into fins, and one hole gravitated to the nether area.
- Patches manifested near the front and became true eyes, and it was a fish.
- The fins thickened; the body became stout, less streamlined. The fish gulped air through an ugly, horrendously-
- toothed mouth and heaved its snout momentarily out of the fluid, taking in a bubble of air. It continued to
- grow, and its head came into the air to stay. Its near eye fixed on Ivo disconcertingly. Now it was almost
- reptilian, with a substantial fleshy tail in place of the flukes, and claws on well-articulated feet. The mouth
- opened to show the teeth again, fewer than before, but still too many. It was large; its mass took up half the
- fluid at this stage.
- Then it shrank to the size of a rodent, casting off flesh in a quick reliquefication. Hair sprouted where
- scales had been, and the teeth became differentiated. Ratlike, it peered at him, switching its thin tail.
- It grew again, as though a suppressant had been eliminated. It developed powerful limbs, heavy fur, a large
- head. The snout receded, the eyes came forward, the ears flattened onto the sides of the head. The limbs
- lengthened and began to shed their hair; the tail shriveled; the forehead swelled.
- It was beginning to resemble a man.
- Rather, a woman: multiple teats assembled into two, traveling up along the belly to the chest. The hairy face
- became clear, the muscular limbs slim. The pelvis broadened, the midsection shrank. The hair of the head
- reached down; the breasts swelled invitingly.
- Goddess of fertility, she lay upon her back and contemplated him through half-lidded eyes.
- Age set in. Her middle plumpened; her fine mammaries lost their resiliency; her face became round.
- The beam cut off.
- "Is it over, Ivo?"
- He started, ashamed to be caught staring. "Yes."
- He turned his back upon Beatryx so that she could dress in privacy. The reconstitution had not been as alarming
- as the dissolution, but it had had its moments. Worst was his impression of awareness throughout. The entire
- evolution of the species recapitulated in—
- He checked the time.
- —four hours. It had seemed like four minutes.
- "I will fix lunch," she said. That was how he knew that she did not want to watch any other reconstitutions.
- Groton revived next, and this time Ivo knew it was four hours. Finally Afra, and it seemed like eight.
- "Check me," she said immediately. She had not forgotten.
- The two men handled her in turn, hardly embarrassed this time around, and pronounced her real. "Yes," she said.
- "I was sure I was." The transformation was a subjective success.
- Nothing was said about Brad. By mutual unspoken consent they let him remain as he was, in suspended animation
- or storage. What point reviving him now?
- CHAPTER 6
- They sped toward Neptune, a scant two million miles distant. Ivo needed no instrument to contemplate its
- grandeur. From this point in space the planet had an apparent diameter twice that of Luna as seen from Earth,
- or a full degree. It was a great-banded disk of green speckled with dots and slashes, as though a godlike
- entity had played a careless game of sprouts upon its surface.
- They were in free-fall, with Brad's container sealed and aerated by an electric pump.
- "Dull," Afra murmured facetiously. "Just a minor gas-giant nobody would miss."
- Dull? Ivo appreciated the irony, for he had never seen a more impressive object. As he concentrated he was able
- to discern more detail: the comparatively bright, yellowish equatorial belt, blue-gray bands enclosing it above
- and below, mottled green "temperate" sections merging into the black poles—a rather attractive effect.
- Earth, compared to this, was a bleak white nonentity. Neptune's spots were concentrated in the central zone and
- were mostly dark brown or black, and he almost thought they moved, though he had no objective evidence. A
- single dark blue oval showed near the horizon in what he thought of as the northern hemisphere. The planet was
- not visibly oblate, yet his eye filled in what he thought was there. He imagined a celestial pair of hands
- compressing the planet so that its midriff bulged, the belt taut.
- Now he studied the surrounding "sky." It was seemingly sunless, with fiercely bright and crowded stars. The
- largest object, apart from Neptune itself, was a disk several diameters to the left.
- "Triton," Afra said, observing the direction of his glance. "Neptune's major moon. There's a smaller one,
- Nereid, that's farther out than we are now. Nereid's orbit is cometlike; very unusual for a planetary
- satellite. Of course, there may be other moons we haven't discovered yet; new ones keep popping up around the
- major planets."
- "This is all very interesting," Beatryx said, obviously only marginally interested. Ivo suspected that she
- still suffered from the shock of the melting procedure, but tended to internalize it. "But now that we're here,
- what do we do?"
- No one answered. Neptune loomed larger already, green monarch of the sea of space around them.
- "It looks so big," Beatryx said. "And—wild. Are you sure it's safe?"
- Groton smiled. "Neptune is seventeen or eighteen times as massive as Earth, but it is a lot less dense. What we
- see is not really the surface of the planet—it is the cloud cover. So it is large and wild, but don't
- worry—we won't try to land on it. We'll take up orbit around it."
- "We'll just love a year of free-fall," Afra said.
- Ivo watched the crumbs of their meal floating elusively in the currents of the forced-air circulation and knew
- what she meant. Free-fall was fun to visit, but not to stay. The space was too confined for long-term residence
- of four people, and muscles would atrophy in weightlessness if the body didn't malfunction in other ways first.
- And keeping Brad aerated yet contained would be tedious, perhaps dangerous. The melting was supposed to be a
- high-gravity alleviant, and might be vulnerable to prolonged weightlessness.
- No—an orbit around Neptune was no answer.
- "How about Triton?" Groton said. "It's about the size and mass of Mercury, I understand. Surface gravity should
- be about a quarter Earth-normal, and there might even be a little atmosphere. We'll need a base of operations,
- if only to process hydrogen for the tanks. And it would be fairly simple to intercept Triton at this angle,
- since we're coming up behind it."
- "That does sound very nice," Beatryx said.
- Groton was just warming up. "Now as I see it, our original purpose was to rescue the macroscope from
- deactivation or worse by the UN. To accomplish this it was necessary to remove the instrument from the
- immediate vicinity of Earth in a hurry. This much has been accomplished. Our main responsibility now is to keep
- ourselves advised of the situation at home, and to be ready to return the scope when the time is appropriate.
- Meanwhile, we can utilize the scope for reconnaissance."
- Ivo smiled. "You mean Super-Duper Poo—"
- Afra quashed him with a glance. Oh, well. Call it reconnaissance or call it poop scooping, there was no sense
- going back blind.
- "What's this?" Afra demanded. They looked at her, startled. She had apparently been reorganizing her purse
- during the preceding dialogue, and now was looking at a page of a little stenographer's notebook.
- Ivo saw strange squiggles on the sheet.
- "It's in stenotype—a script version," Afra said. "I never heard of such a thing! I use Gregg."
- "Oh, shorthand," Groton said. "Can you make it out?"
- Afra concentrated on the half-familiar symbols. "It doesn't make much sense. It says 'My pawn is pinned.' "
- "Another message from Schn!" Beatryx exclaimed.
- "He must have planted notes all over the station," Groton said. "That polyglot, then the Neptune-symbol, and
- now this. He could have written them all at once and distributed them for us to find randomly—"
- "But why didn't he come to us directly?" Beatryx wanted to know. "If he was close enough to get into Afra's
- purse—"
- "Schn is devious," Ivo said. But the explanation sounded insufficient, even to him. What other little
- surprises did the genius have in store for them?
- Neptune had grown monstrously by the time the ship braked down to something resembling orbital velocity. The
- planet's disk was fifteen times the apparent diameter of Luna from Earth, and its roiling atmospheric layers
- were horrendously evident. The great bands of color hardly showed now; instead there was a three-dimensional
- mlange of cloud and gas and turbulence suggesting a photograph of a complex of hurricanes. The spectators were
- still too far removed to perceive the actual motion, and could contemplate at leisure the awesome extent of the
- frozen detail.
- Ivo felt as though he were peering into a cauldron of layered oils recently disturbed by heating. He had a
- vision of Brad's basin perched on a furnace—and suppressed it, shocked at himself. Gray-blue bubbles a
- thousand miles across seemed to rise through the pooled, heavy gases, while slipstreams of turbulence trailed
- at the edges. In one place the recent passage of a bubble had left a beautifully defined cutaway section of
- gaseous strata, yellow layered on green on pink and black. In another, masses of whitish
- substance—hydrogen snow—were depressing the seeming ocean beneath, ballooning downward in a
- ponderous inversion. He was reminded of hot wax flowing into cool water.
- No, there would be no landing in that.
- Afra had retreated to the bowels of Joseph to supervise the maneuvering. They had cut inside Triton's
- retrograde orbit and were overhauling the moon at a rate that was rapid in miles per hour but seemed slow
- because of the immensity of the scale. The thirty-one-thousand-mile disk of Neptune dwarfed everything, and its
- rainbow hues rendered its satellite drab.
- Yet baby Triton had its share of intrigue. Only a tenth the diameter of Neptune, it was still one and a half
- times the span of Luna, and three and a half times Luna's mass. Triton, mass considered, was the true giant of
- the moons of the Solar system, though there were others with a larger diameter. It expanded until its disk was
- the size of that of the mighty Neptune, then larger, and it was as though the two were sister planets. But
- where Neptune was stormy and bright, Triton was still and dark, from this angle. Its surface was tunelessly
- rigid.
- "Rigid ridges," Ivo murmured, half expecting Afra to say "What?" But she was not at hand.
- There were craters: mighty broken rings of rock, shadowed in the middle, some pocked by smaller craters within.
- There were mountains: overlapping wrinkles across the surface. There was a brief atmosphere hazing the
- planetary outlines. And there were oceans.
- "Must be some compound of oxygen and nitrogen," Groton said. "Water is out of the question." Intrigued, he had
- Ivo focus the macroscope on it and code in a spectroscopic analysis. "Atmosphere is mostly neon and nitrogen,"
- Groton said as he studied the result. "With a little oxygen and trace argon. The ocean is a liquefied compound
- of—"
- Then they spied the object in space.
- "Alert!" Groton snapped into the intercom. "We're overhauling something, and I don't mean Triton."
- "A ship?" Afra's voice came back. "Schn?"
- Ivo centered the small finder-telescope upon it. The thing leaped into focus: a fragment of matter about forty
- miles in diameter. "Too big," he announced. "It's rock or another solid—and it's irregular." He checked
- the specific indications, since they were passing it rapidly enough to measure parallax. "About fifty miles
- long, thirty-five wide at the thickest point."
- "I see it!" Afra cried. "We have it on Joseph's screen now. We—that thing is in orbit!"
- "Not around Neptune," Groton protested. "It's heading in toward the planet. Couldn't—" He paused to take
- in his breath. "A moon of a moon? I don't believe it."
- But it had to be believed. Due observation and analysis showed that it was a satellite of Triton, orbiting at
- about ten thousand miles distance with its broad side facing its primary. Its direction was
- "normal"—opposite to that of retrograde Triton. Its composition: H2O.
- It was a solid mass of ice, so cold that its surface would be harder than steel—and at the edges it was
- translucent. The light of stars shone through it, separating into prismatic (though very faint) flashes of
- color, a constant peripheral display.
- "What a beauty!" Afra exclaimed. "Whatever shall we name it?"
- "Schn," Groton said succinctly.
- Ivo waited for Afra to object, but there was no reply from the intercom. Presumably she was waiting for him to
- object. The implications—
- "This," said Groton, "is a break. We won't have to set up an orbit; one is waiting here for us."
- "But we have to land on Triton," Ivo protested. "Schn couldn't possibly provide the gravity we need. Schn-
- moon, I mean." He had been made edgily aware of the unsatisfied curiosity about Schn-person that continued to
- nag at the others' minds.
- "No question there. But we can't simply settle down with the macroscope on Joseph's nose. We're geared for
- space; a landing would crush us."
- "But if the ship stood up under ten G's, and this is only a quarter G—"
- "Sorry, it doesn't work that way. The ten G's were steady and uniform; the drop would be another matter. The
- effect of it would be many times ten G."
- "Oh." At least Groton wasn't superior about his knowledge. "But if the ship can't land, and we can't stay in
- free-fall—"
- "Planetary module. We'll get down all right. It will actually be easier to shuttle back and forth, and we won't
- have to risk the macroscope on land. Just so long as we don't lose Joseph in the sky after we desert him. But
- with an object as big and bright as Schn to zero in on, we won't have a problem. We'll be able to spot that in
- the sky without a telescope, any time."
- The reasoning evidently appealed to Afra, because they were already phasing in on Schn. The block of ice
- seemed to drift closer, and the pits and bumps of its frigid surface magnified. The moonlet filled the screen,
- until it seemed as though they were coming in for a landing on a snowbound arctic plane—except that there
- was no discernible gravity.
- Gently Afra closed with it, guiding the ship in by means of the tiny chemical stabilizer jets set in the sides.
- Ivo wondered what would happen when they came to rest, since the macroscope housing bulged well beyond the
- girth of Joseph—then remembered that with so little attraction there would be no particular stress.
- Actually, they were closer to synchronous orbit than to a "landing," and it would be wise to tie the ship down.
- At fifty miles an hour, relative velocity, they approached, coming up underneath the moonlet; then twenty, and
- down to five. Schn seemed near enough to touch and the sense of being underneath it had dissolved; it was now
- like drifting down in a blimp. Finally, at barely one mile an hour, they covered the last few feet and jolted
- into contact. They were down.
- "Let's stretch our legs," Groton suggested as the two women came forward. "The recondensing water vapor will
- anchor the ship as it cools, and that won't be long at all. We have no responsibilities, for the moment."
- They went out upon the surface, and it was like flying. It was a vacation from reality. The trace vapors
- generated by the leaking warmth of their suits buoyed them up, away from the cold surface, and they had to use
- their gas jets to control their motion. A single push, and Ivo sailed along at a ten-foot elevation, feeling
- both powerful and insecure. To have a physical landscape so close, yet not to be bound by it...
- Schn, like Triton, was locked to its primary. They had landed upon the "downward" face, and this accentuated
- the wrongness. Triton was too big, too close; when they looked at it they seemed to be above it, and when they
- drifted too high it was like falling, except that they fell, instead, up toward Schn. Was it the stuff of
- dreams—or of nightmares?
- Ivo approached the horizon, and it did not recede from him. He drifted over the edge and had to correct as the
- "ground" dropped away from him, a new horizon a mile ahead. This really was a flat world; it was possible to
- fall off the edge, though the fall would be away rather than down. He navigated the intervening mile and found
- a third horizon, half a mile distant. One more, he thought; one more, then quiet. This experience was tiring.
- But, fascinated, he traversed two more—and there was Neptune.
- He knew that the ruling planet was no larger than it had appeared from the ship. He reminded himself of that.
- But then he had been closed in, protected; here he was exposed, and seemingly ready to plunge directly into it.
- The gaping face of it appalled him, so close, so fierce—the aspect of a physical destroyer. God of the
- sea—terror of man.
- Ivo fired his jet and retreated hastily.
- They had to take the ship into space again—a mile or so—to effect the separation of the module;
- then Afra piloted the chemical craft while Groton brought Joseph back to Schn. Ivo and Beatryx watched the
- entire maneuver from the landed macroscope housing, and he was not certain which of them was more nervous. An
- accident, even a slight mishap—and they could be stranded where they were for the duration. Until death
- did them part—shortly.
- There was no accident. They loaded minimum supplies into the module and set off as a group for Triton. Not
- until the rough landing was over did Ivo allow his mind to function normally again. The experience had frankly
- terrified him, and he knew that Beatryx had reacted similarly.
- Here at last there was gravity. Suited again, they stepped upon their new moon-planet home and looked about.
- They were in a valley formed by the curving walls of adjacent craters that were now great mountain ranges
- jutting to either side. Other ranges were visible in the distance. Not far from their landing spot was an
- immense crevasse: a geologic fault running between the craters, V-cleft, and filled at the bottom with liquid.
- The ground surface was packed with dust, somewhat like solid snow, with rocks nudging through it irregularly.
- Mighty Neptune provided a dim illumination; there was nothing like Earth's sunlight out here.
- "Well, we have our world," Beatryx said dubiously, after they had returned to the module. "Now what do we do
- with it?"
- "We'll have to camp in the module until we can construct permanent quarters here," said Groton thoughtfully.
- "But before we do that, we'd better survey the area for good locations."
- Afra had stripped off her suit in the pressurized cabin and was wiping the perspiration from her body with an
- absorbent cloth. Ivo realized that she was nude from the waist up—and further realized that their
- situation had intensified group interaction to such an extent that he hadn't even noticed her action until this
- moment. He suspected that it would be a long time before there was room again for modesty, when cubic yards
- were all the space available for the four, here. The macroscope had been roomy, compared to the module.
- "I'd like first to know how long we're going to stay," she said. "Is Schn-person somehow going to find us
- here, and if so, how soon? No sense building anything fancy if it's only for a few days." She had not
- interrupted her clean-up.
- Ivo remembered the breastless carcass he had watched melting, and was tempted to reach out and verify again
- that what he saw here was real. He refrained.
- "Ivo?" Beatryx prompted.
- He jumped. "I don't think Schn is coming. Anything we do, we'll have to do on our own."
- "Can you find him or can't you?" Afra demanded, peeling down the nether portion of her suit. "Or contact him.
- You've been more and more mysterious, and there's still that business about that poet—"
- Beatryx interrupted what was threatening to become a tirade. "Afra!"
- "But he's refusing to cooperate! We can't put up with—"
- It was Harold's turn to interrupt. "If the rest of you will leave off, I will address myself to the problem of
- Schn. I'll make a report when I have something to report. Meanwhile, there's nothing to stop us from setting
- things up. We'll need a base of operations regardless of the company. Let's just do things in an orderly manner
- and see what develops."
- Afra did not seem fully satisfied, but she shrugged into shorts and a fresh blouse. She didn't bother with a
- brassiere in quarter-gravity. "Assuming that we find a suitable location, exactly how do you propose to
- construct 'permanent quarters'? The only abundant building materials we have are plain rock and cold dust, and
- those have certain limitations."
- "I am aware of the limitations. But I figure Ivo can take another peek through the scope and come up with some
- galactic blueprints for us. This must be a fairly common situation, galactically speaking, and there must be
- survivors' handbooks. Why not use them?"
- "I can try. Tell me what kind of information you seek, and I'll look for it. I can't use the computer's
- automatic search pattern, since this is intellectual, but—"
- "Fine. I'll work out a schedule and talk to you again, and we'll ferry you up to the scope in a few days. I
- suppose we'd better set a limit on free-fall time, though—say, no more than one day in three. That sound
- reasonable?"
- Afra and Ivo nodded. Whatever leadership existed here seemed to be gravitating steadily to Groton, perhaps
- because their immediate problems had become ones of engineering—or perhaps, Ivo thought, just because of
- his level-headed calm.
- "Should he be alone?" Beatryx inquired.
- "Um, that too," Groton agreed. "Maybe we'd better make another rule that nobody be alone. That macroscope is
- dangerous, as we know—but so is Triton. We'll have to watch each other all the time, because we may not
- be able to survive as a group if even one of us goes."
- "Should we make sure each of us can do each task?" Afra asked next. "Right now, Ivo's the only one competent on
- the scope. Harold and I can pilot—"
- "If we can't get along without all of us," Ivo pointed out, "it doesn't really matter what any one of us knows.
- We function as a group or not at all."
- "There is macabre sense in that," Groton agreed, "if we ignore the possibility of someone's temporary
- incapacity. Let's assign tasks, then, and let people train for others as circumstance dictates. Ivo, you're the
- scoper, of course; Afra, you're the pilot, because I'll be the construction engineer. Beatryx—"
- "Cooking and laundry," she said, and they laughed.
- It was Beatryx who stood watch with him his first day on scope duty. Afra had piloted them off Triton and
- ensconced them safely in the macroscope, then dropped back to keep Groton company and help him survey for his
- construction. He had remained below in his suit, no one thinking to invoke the never-alone rule against him
- this time. Ivo had a carefully rehearsed headful of specifications, and his job now was to locate some galactic
- station that had the products required. He hardly comprehended the electronic terms, but he hoped that he could
- at least match bid to asked.
- The first assignment was rough: a survey of galactic physical technology. But Beatryx was there when he emerged
- from the awesome visions of the cosmos, and she was cheerful and unassuming, encouraging and sympathetic. Ivo
- could appreciate the reason Groton, no intellectual slouch himself, had passed over the female engineers he
- might have had and chosen a woman like this. It was the feeling of familiarity, of home, that he needed most
- when the revelations of the ages shook his fundamental assumptions, and she carried about her a pleasing aura
- of homebody Earth.
- Again he remembered Brad's remark about normality being no insult, and again he appreciated it intensely.
- Intelligence might be defined as facility at solving problems—but it was only one talent among many
- required for existence. What about the problem of being fit to live with? By that definition, Beatryx was the
- smartest among them.
- "Now I know what Lanier meant by the relation of music to poetry," he said as he removed helmet and goggles,
- his head revolving with the music of the spheres and the meter of communication. "The rules are
- identical—there."
- "Lanier?" she inquired. "Sidney Lanier who wrote about the marshes?"
- He looked at her, realizing his slip. "You know of him?"
- "Only a little. I never understood the interpretations they taught me in school, but I did like some of the
- verse. I suppose I liked the American poets because they seemed closer. I remember how sad it made me when I
- learned about Annabel Lee."
- "Annabel who?"
- "She was by Mr. Poe. I always used to think he was Italian, because of the river. I mean, he wrote about her. I
- memorized it because it made me cry."
- Ivo looked at her, seeing a woman of 37 who only once in the brief period he had known her had shown a sign of
- unhappiness. "Do you remember it now?"
- "I don't think I do, Ivo. It was a long time ago. Let me see." She concentrated. " 'She was a child and I was a
- child. In this kingdom by the sea; But we loved with a love that was more than love—I and my Annabel
- Lee.' " She shook her head. "She died—it was a wind blowing out of a cloud—but he loved her forever
- anyway."
- "I didn't realize you liked poetry," he said. "What's your favorite poem of all time?"
- "Oh, I remember that one," she said, her face animated. Ivo had judged her to be forty or more the first time
- he met her, then had learned her true age; now she seemed to have lopped half a dozen more years off that.
- People became so much much more alive when occupied in something really interesting to them. "It was so sad,
- but it seemed so true. I mean, I don't know it any more, but it was my favorite. It was about Jesus Christ and
- how they slew Him, when He came out of the woods. Oh, I wish I could remember how it went—"
- " 'Into the woods my Master went / Clean forspent, forspent. / Into the woods my Master came / Forspent with
- love and shame.' "
- "That's it! Oh, Ivo, that's it! How did you know?"
- "A Ballad of Trees and the Master," he said, "by Lanier."
- "Yes, yes, I had forgotten, yes that was his! But how did you know it?"
- "I know—quite a bit of his work. I—well, it's a long story, and I don't suppose it matters now."
- "Oh yes it does, Ivo! He's such a good poet—I know he is—you must tell me! I remember it, I think.
- He came out of the woods—'When Death and Shame would woo Him last,'—"
- " 'From under the trees they drew Him last; / 'Twas on a tree they slew Him—last / When out of the woods
- He came.' "
- There were tears in her eyes that would not fall in the trace gravity. "He found peace among the
- trees—and then they crucified Him on a tree. Wood, anyway. Such an awful thing." She reflected on it for
- a moment. "But you didn't tell me how you know about Sidney Lanier."
- Ivo was touched by her genuine appreciation and interest. "It was a kind of game we played. You see, none of us
- knew who our real parents were—"
- "You didn't know? Ivo, where were you?"
- "In a—project. They took people of all races and—mixed them together for a couple of generations
- and got children who were a combination of everything. The idea was to breed back to the basic stock of man, or
- at least obtain something equivalent to what he would have been if he hadn't split into so many races. To see
- if he was any better than the—well, the whites and the yellows and the browns and the blacks. They wanted
- to reduce cultural influences and make it all the same, so we had no parents. Just supervisors."
- "How horrible, Ivo! I didn't know."
- "It wasn't so bad. Matter of fact, we had quite a time. We were never hungry or cold or neglected, and had all
- the best of everything. It was quite stimulating, as it was meant to be. There were several hundred of us, all
- the same age and—race. I didn't really realize until I got out of the project that I was not a normal
- American."
- "Not a—"
- "We're considered nonwhite."
- "But that shouldn't make any difference, Ivo. Not in America."
- He did not pursue that aspect farther. "Anyway, since we had no parents or relatives, some of us invented them.
- It got to be quite a serious thing. We'd pick figures from history and trace the lineage and work out a line of
- descent for ourselves. We had the whole world to choose from, of course—all times and all races. We'd
- show how these ancestors resembled us in some way, or vice versa. Anyway, my white ancestor was Sidney Lanier."
- "I think that's very sweet, Ivo. But what made you decide he was the one?"
- "I suppose it was the flute playing. Lanier was a fine flutist, you know—perhaps the finest in the world
- at that time. He earned his living for several years as first flutist for a prominent orchestra, even though he
- had tuberculosis, before he got more serious as a poet."
- She frowned. "The flute? I don't see—Ivo! You play the flute!"
- He nodded.
- "Did you bring it with you? You must be a very good musician!"
- "Yes, I brought it with me—the only thing I did bring. That's the way Lanier would have done it. I guess
- music is my strong point. A single talent, like my math-logic talent. I never really worked at it, but I could
- play the flute better than any of the others."
- After another session with the macroscope, he yielded to her importunings, assembled his flute and played for
- her. The notes were oddly distorted in the confined space and trace-gravity air, but she listened raptly.
- For her? He was playing for himself, too, for he loved the flute. He caressed the instrument, letting the music
- flow through his being as though they were merely two stops between composer and audience. He lived each note,
- feeling his soul expand and renew, animated by the melody. This was the theme that brought him closer to his
- ancestor.
- After that it became a regular routine between them, for he felt comfortable while playing and her pleasure was
- genuine. He played the cold out of the bleak Schn-moonlet landscape; he played mighty Neptune up over the
- Triton horizon (Triton never turned a new face to Neptune, but Schn's revolution about it caused a regular
- eclipse of impressive dimension); he played the spirit of Earth into their exile.
- Sometimes, too, he took time off from the galactic bands to survey Earth and pick up the headlines from a New
- York newspaper, because Beatryx liked to know what was going on locally. In many respects, these sessions with
- her were as comfortable as anything he had known.
- Meanwhile, below, developments were impressive. If flute-playing was Ivo's genius, machinery was Groton's.
- "The problem is this," Groton had explained. "Information does not equal gadgetry. The amount of detail work
- required to build even a crude shelter at a place like this, with temperature, gravity and atmosphere problems,
- is appalling. Cutting, fitting, finishing, sealing, installing, testing—many thousands of man-hours, not
- to mention the equipment! So I need to know how a party our size, with a macroscope and an atomic engine and a
- planetary module and a few hand tools can terraform a world like Triton within, oh, six months. There must be a
- program for it somewhere. Find me that program!"
- Ivo found it. One of the far galactic stations had a complete A-to-Z presentation beginning with a way to tie
- down a Type I technology rocket so that the heat and power of the blasting motor could be utilized planetside,
- and ending with the proper etiquette for the housewarming party.
- Groton spent a tedious month fashioning the first crude semielectronic prerobotic tool: a type of waldo adapted
- to respond to a galactic instruction-beam. This device greatly facilitated the detail work for other machines,
- and progress multiplied.
- An alien factory melted the rock of Triton, mixed it with chemical elements extracted from the ocean and
- produced a fine, strong, airtight nonconductive material that bonded to itself in a matter of hours upon
- contact, regardless of ambient temperature. Other units carried huge blocks of this "galactite," light in the
- quarter-gravity but still heavy as inertial mass, to the lakeside site Groton had selected for the human
- enclave. Soon there was a pyramid of dominoes fifty feet on a side, completely sealed. The airlocks were more
- complicated, but a week of signal-directed labor sufficed. This castle was pressurized and heated and lighted,
- and the human party was able to move in and reside in suitless comfort.
- Meanwhile, Afra took her turn to babysit. Beatryx had the first several sessions, but the group felt that
- rotation was best, in the long run. Ivo was at this point transcribing the horrendously complicated data the
- early machines required. He hardly understood the terms or concepts, and had to consult with Groton frequently
- for lessons in elementary electronics. He did not dare augment his very limited comprehension through the
- program itself, because that might also let in the destroyer. He was forced to perform in ignorance, and it was
- hellishly fatiguing.
- It was not easy to be alone with Afra, however. She was too bright, too beautiful, too bitter. Ivo could hardly
- blame her, yet it was hard to accept her subtle coldness with equanimity.
- "You never knew your parents?" she inquired during one of the breaks.
- "None of us did." Evidently Beatryx had been talking to the others. Well, he hadn't asked her not to.
- "How many of you were there?"
- "Three hundred and thirty. Of course, there may have been other groups, for other ages; we were all within a
- year of each other. A few months, actually." Why had she grown so curious about his background? Or was it
- merely a ploy to fill time?
- "So you and Brad and Schn are the same age?"
- "Yes." As he said it, he realized the trap. Brad had told her that the groups were separate, and he had just
- admitted that they were not.
- She was silent for so long he felt moved to break the mood. "The idea was to combine—"
- "I know!" Then, guilty at her own ferocity. "It is just so hard to believe that Brad could have been colored. I
- never suspected it."
- This vestigial bigotry in Afra, though he had suspected its existence, came as a nasty shock to Ivo. "We varied
- in appearance, but the ratios were similar. Brad happened to be very light-skinned, while some were
- considerably darker than me. Does it matter?" Foolish question.
- "Yes. Yes it does, Ivo." She turned away and looked out over the ice. "Oh, I know I'm supposed to say I'm a
- Georgia girl brought up in the twentieth century without prejudice. I know what a person is is what matters,
- not his lineage, and everyone is equal in our society. That the seeming inferiority of the nonwhite population
- stems from cultural and economic disadvantage and has no genetic basis. I understand that when Black Power
- burns its ghettos and pillages stores it's only the frustration speaking that the complacent white majority has
- fostered for a century. That all we need to do is work together, all races and all subcultures, to build a
- better society and negate the evils of the past. But—but I wanted to marry him!"
- She spun about to face him, gripping the handrail. "It just isn't in me to love a Negro. I don't even know why.
- All my experience—"
- She let go and floated, both hands covering her face. "Oh, Brad, Brad, I do love you—"
- Damned either way. Ivo kept his mouth shut, remembering the thousand little ways he had been advised of his own
- inferiority, once he left the project. The liberals liked to claim that discrimination was a thing of the past,
- but few of them were to be found residing near Negro families. Official segregation no longer existed, but he
- had discovered how unpleasant it could get, how rapidly, when the powerful unofficial guidelines were ignored.
- He had heard from others how suddenly positions advertised as "equal opportunity" became "filled" when a
- nonwhite applied—and reopened for subsequent whites. Brad had chosen to "pass"—and had risen too
- high, too fast for reprisal when the truth leaked out. And evidently the truth had not reached Afra's ears, at
- the station. Ivo had chosen not to pass—and had paid the penalty. He was not one-third Caucasian, one-
- third Mongoloid; he was one-third Negroid, and that meant he was black. 1/3 C + 1/3 M + 1/3 N = N. He was less
- intelligent than a purebred white, despite the white tests that said otherwise; he was less wholesome, though
- he washed as often and brushed his teeth with a popular white dentifrice; he was indefinably but definitely
- unequal and everybody in America knew it, whatever they might utter for public consumption. Whether it was "Get
- out of here, Nigger!" as it had been in 1960, or the rigid courtesy he had experienced in 1970, or selective
- blindness in 1980, he was an intruder upon society.
- It had been impossible not to react. Hatred bred hatred, and the ghostly white skin of a stranger had come to
- make him tense up momentarily and think "White!" however objective he tried to keep himself. Yet he had been
- pitched calamitously into love at sight of the whitest skin of all...
- Afra had come out of it. "I am wrong. I know it. But I can't just change it, presto. I can call myself a white
- bigot and feel guilty, but that's still my nature." She looked at him in a way that hurt him. "You and Brad and
- Schn—all together?"
- "Yes."
- "The color and the IQ and the sex—all at once?"
- "Yes."
- "Why did he lie to me!" she cried in anguish.
- That required no answer.
- "And you, Ivo—you're lying to me too!"
- "Yes." A half-truth was also a half-lie.
- "You were in this free-love thing too. You've had more experience—"
- "The project broke up when we were fifteen."
- "Stop it! I can read you, Ivo. Tell me the truth. Tell me about you and Brad and Schn."
- "It isn't—" He stopped. What she was after, she would get, however much he might temporize. "There were a
- hundred and seventy boys and a hundred and sixty girls. We were raised together from infancy—one big
- dormitory, no segregation between sexes. We chose our own rooms and roommates and there were no hours."
- "A commune," she said tersely.
- "A commune. But the adults always appeared when there was real trouble, so everyone knew we were watched all
- the time. It didn't matter. Most of the kids were pretty smart."
- "They were selected for that," Afra said. "The complete man was supposed to be a genius."
- "Genetics and environment and statistics indicated that there would be something like genius somewhere within
- that group, yes. Every day there was education, starting as soon as a child could react to stimulation. Maybe
- before that—I don't remember. We were fed high-potency diets and protected against every disease known to
- man and given constant physical and intellectual stimulation. I think there were as many adult supervisors as
- children, but they only showed up for the teaching. Almost everyone could speak and read by the age of three,
- even the slow ones."
- "Group dynamics," she said. "It was competitive."
- "I guess so. But they were always snooping—the adults, I mean. That was another game—to fool them.
- Rigging the scores, faking sleep, that sort of thing. They were so gullible. Maybe it was because they were all
- so educated. They had too much faith in their tests and their bugs and their bell-shaped curves."
- "I can imagine. What about the girls?"
- He did not pretend to misunderstand her. "They knew they were female. A number of the kids were precocious that
- way too. But children four years old don't see sex the same way as adults do. The anal element—"
- "And Schn? That's where he got his name, isn't it?"
- "I guess so. We named ourselves; we were just numbers to the adults. To keep it impartial, I suppose. That's
- why my name is a pun. Schn—he got interested in language early—"
- "How early?"
- "Nobody knows. It just seemed he learned six or seven languages at once, along with English, and I understand
- he could write them too. I didn't know him then—or ever, for that matter. I think he knew a dozen by the
- time he was three."
- Afra digested this in silence.
- "And he was very pretty. So he roomed with lots of kids, and they all liked him at first. So he was sehr schon.
- I think the sehr means—"
- "I see. Just how far can four-year-olds go?"
- "Sexually? As far as anybody, the motions. I think. At least, Schn could, and the... girls. But he got bored
- with it pretty soon."
- "You're still lying by indirection, but I can't pin it down. How did Brad fit into this?"
- "He was Schn's best friend. His only friend at the end, perhaps. Schn didn't really need anybody. I guess it
- was because they were the two smartest, though Schn was really in a class by himself."
- She was silent again, and he knew she was thinking of Brad's 215 IQ. "They were—roommates."
- "Yes." Then he grasped the direction of her thinking. "You have to understand—there weren't any social
- conventions from outside. No restrictions." But it bothered him as sharply as it bothered her; he was defending
- it from necessity. "It was all play—homo or hetero or group—"
- "Group!"
- Ivo shrugged. "What's wrong with it, objectively?"
- "I seem to have more prejudices than I thought." Ivo was discovering how much more reasonable a shared
- prejudice seemed.
- "But there wasn't any challenge to that. It didn't mean anything. So most of our energies were concentrated on
- learning, and outwitting the fumbling adults."
- "How intelligent was the average child, if the supervisors didn't know?"
- "I don't know either. But I'd guess the adults thought it was one twenty-five, while actually it was 25 or 30
- points above that."
- She became thoughtful once more, perhaps pondering existence in a group where she would have been barely
- average. But her next words proved otherwise: "Your 'experts' didn't do their homework well enough. Didn't they
- know what happens to children deprived of their family life?"
- "It wasn't possible to have—"
- "Yes it was, if they'd really wanted to take the trouble. They could have placed each child in an adoptive
- home, or at least foster care, with the formal training and stimulation and what-have-you provided centrally.
- Similar in that respect to the way the Peckham Experiment functioned."
- Ivo tried to conceal his surprise at her reference. She was better educated than he had thought, despite what
- he already knew of her abilities. "They weren't trying for family harmony. They wanted brains."
- "So they defeated themselves by precipitating an unrestrained peer-group. When parental guidance is absent, the
- standards of the peer-group take over early—and they aren't always 'nice' standards. If the average
- American child is perverted to some extent by the increasing preoccupation, neglect and absence of his parents,
- and by the violence of TV and news headlines, and the viciousness of deprived peers that are his chief contact
- with the world, think how much worse it would be for the children who never had families at all! No incentive
- to excel at useful tasks, no development of conscience. You need a father in the house for that, or a good
- strong father-substitute. And the notion that only persons with masters degrees in education are qualified to
- raise children—no wonder they came up with someone like Schn!"
- Ivo hadn't seen it that way before, but it made sense to him now. What he was experiencing here, with Harold
- and Beatryx and Afra herself, was actually a family situation. Already it had stimulated him to performance far
- beyond anything he had approached before. And—he liked it. Argument, danger, grueling work and continued
- friction there might be—but they were all pulling together, and it was better than the life he had known
- on Earth.
- "Didn't that adult-baiting game bore Schn pretty soon too? What did he do about it?"
- Back to specifics. "He left."
- "From a monitored dormitory? An enclosed camp? Where did he go?"
- "Nobody knew, exactly. He was just gone."
- "You're lying again. Brad knew."
- "I guess so."
- "And you—you knew. You still know! Even Brad couldn't fetch him, but you could—except you
- wouldn't!"
- Ivo did not answer.
- "And it's all tied in somehow with that poem of yours, and the planet Neptune, and that damned pinned pawn."
- Had she assembled the puzzle? Schn evidently wanted her to. Did she know how readily she could summon the
- genie, knew she but its abode? Could she suspect the consequence of too rash a conjuration?
- The pyramid—actually a tetrahedron—became a splendid center under the patter of little metal feet
- supervised by instructions from space. One face was flush with the ground, and a triangle of triangles pointed
- at Neptune. Dull, impervious blocks on the outside gave way to twenty-first century comfort on the inside. Each
- person had a room—Groton and Beatryx an apartment, with electric accommodations and sophisticated
- plumbing. Spongy warm rugs lined the floors, and the walls were painted attractively.
- With power and a machine shop, and the incoming galactic program, Groton directed an irregular stream of
- wonders. He produced a device that converted Tritonian soil into protein, and another that generated a field of
- force that would enclose a larger area outside the tetrahedron and retain an Earthlike atmosphere. Yet another
- served to focus gravity and bring their weight, in this limited area of the planet, up to Earth-normal.
- Matter-conversion, force-field, gravity control—these things staggered Ivo's imagination. They had
- assumed that galactic technology would exceed that of Earth, but the fact was somewhat overwhelming. How many
- decades—how many centuries—would be required for Earth to develop such things on its own? The
- proboscoids of Sung had never achieved this level. They, of course, had not been able to penetrate the
- destroyer and receive the programs beyond it. Otherwise, many of their problems could have been materially
- alleviated.
- The recurring question: why, then, did the destroyer exist? And the recurring answer: data insufficient.
- Ivo tried to compliment Groton on his achievements. "I'm just an engineer following instructions," the man said
- blithely. It was to a considerable extent the truth, since his position had become analogous to that of a child
- turning on a television set and sitting back to watch experts at work. But however detailed the program, Groton
- deserved credit for making it applicable to their situation. It was his heyday.
- No longer were they required to walk the barren surface in space suits. An artificial sun replaced the
- minuscule original star in the sky, and light and heat blazed down upon the landscape twelve hours of each
- twenty-four, riding the fringe of the force-field. Beatryx planted beans from the ship's food supplies, and
- they sprouted in a garden stocked with the protein soil-mockup beside a reservoir of H2O—i.e., a genuine
- crescent-lake.
- Ivo, for his contribution to the good life, arranged to photograph images on the main screen of the macroscope,
- and made regular prints of Earth newspapers, magazines and books. These the others could read without danger of
- encroachment by the destroyer, since only its "live" image killed. Far from being a lonely, frozen exile, their
- stay on Triton had become, in a few active months, an independent vacation.
- Groton finally took his turn with Ivo at the macroscope, refusing to claim indefinitely the privilege of moon-
- side duty that his continuing performance had warranted. "Do the machines good to have time off," he remarked.
- "I told 'em to be back on the job 8 a.m. Monday and sober." For the first time since the onset of this
- adventure, the two men were together privately when there was time to converse.
- Ivo suspected there was a reason for it, since Groton still had important other chores to do and had already
- proven himself to be an indefatigable worker. Afra had been overshadowed and relegated to the role of technical
- assistant, and of course Beatryx had been the chief babysitter. Had Groton made time now for a reason?
- He had. "You remember I'm interested in astrology," he said.
- That was not the subject Ivo had anticipated. "Yes, you took my birth date and a significant experience." So
- long ago, it seemed! Back the other side of the melting—a whole separate existence, receding into memory.
- And did it make a difference, for the astrological discipline, that the childhood Ivo had made his own was that
- of Sidney Lanier? He felt a twinge of guilt, but was afraid that an explanation at this point would be awkward.
- "I also overheard you discussing it with Afra, way back when."
- "Yes. Brilliant girl, but her mind is resistant to certain concepts." Ivo had become aware of that, too.
- "Doesn't matter. I don't require that anyone else accept my values, and I am confident that astrology can stand
- on its own merits. But I have been casting horoscopes for each of the members of this party, and there is a
- certain mystery about you."
- Ivo wondered when the man had found time for this, in the face of the colossal job he had been doing on Triton.
- Here he shared Afra's perplexity: how was it that such a competent and realistic engineer was able to take a
- pseudo-science seriously? Groton did not seem to differentiate between the real and the unreal, yet his
- approach to all things seemed to be totally practical.
- "If you don't mind," Groton said after an interval, "I'd like to discuss this with you."
- "Why not? I can't say I believe in astrology any more than Afra does, but I don't mind questions."
- "Can you say you know enough about astrology to believe or disbelieve intelligently?"
- Ivo smiled. "No. So I guess I'm neutral."
- "It is surprising how certain most people are about what they like or don't like, or believe or don't believe,
- when their information is really too scanty for any meaningful decision. If I had chosen before the fact to
- disbelieve in the possibility of a signal from space that could build advanced machinery, our residence on
- Triton would be less comfortable than it is. Prejudice is often expensive."
- It occurred to Ivo that he had just had another lesson in open-mindedness. He had objected to Afra's views on
- race, but his own mind had been as one-sided in the matter of astrology. And, like Afra, he still couldn't
- reverse his standing attitudes; astrology, to him, was essentially fakery. He was as prejudiced as she.
- "Still, that's irrelevant," Groton said. "What I want to do is give you portions of two descriptions, and have
- you judge which one fits you best. It's a kind of psychological exercise—but don't misunderstand. I'm not
- trying to psychoanalyze you. This may help me to clear up my problem, and perhaps show you a little of what
- astrology is in practice."
- "Fire at will."
- "Odd you should choose that wording." Groton paused to collect his thoughts. "Here is the first description:
- This person is determined to get on the inside of things and to control the machinery of life. This position
- always encourages a conscious response to the undercurrents of the moment. At his best he is able to recognize
- the basic unity of experience, or to bring unsuspected and helpful relations into play; at his worst he is apt
- to cultivate suspicion or encourage half-baked effort. Life for him must be exciting, and he must be self-
- reliant. He is essentially fearless, and likes to move quickly and positively, taking the full consequence of
- whatever he does. He does not care much for abstract considerations, and gives little thought to other people."
- Groton paused. "Now here is the second one: This person is determined to test the mettle of reality in every
- possible sort of hard effort He desires to bring everything down to a utilitarian basis. At his best he is able
- to organize or redirect the energies of himself and others to an increased advantage; at his worst he is apt to
- become wholly malcontent and unsocial. Life for him must be purposeful; he is readily stimulated. He is high-
- visioned, optimistic, gregarious to a fault and often gullible. He must be challenged to do his best, or he
- becomes dogmatic and jealous. He is a realist in minor things, a do-or-die idealist otherwise."
- Ivo thought about it. "They're both so general, and I'm not sure I like either one too much. But the second
- seems closer. I do like to help people, but too often it doesn't work out. And I'd much rather earn my way by
- hard work than do something dramatic. I'm certainly not fearless."
- "This is my impression. Human traits are not portioned off precisely, and we all have a little of everything,
- so character summations are necessarily vague in spots. But the first hardly describes you. It is Aries the Ram
- in the twelfth house. Aries is part of the fire element—that's why I commented on your figure of speech."
- "My—?"
- "You said 'fire at will.' "
- "Oh."
- "The second is Aquarius the Water Carrier in the sixth house—air element. I could go on with the other
- planets—this was the sun, of course—but this differentiation is typical. You appear to fit
- Aquarius, not Aries."
- "And my birth date?"
- "Aries."
- "So I'm a misfit. Don't know where I belong. Whose birthday is Aquarius?"
- "I played a hunch from something my wife mentioned. Sidney Lanier."
- Ivo felt a nasty emotional shock. Pseudo-science or not, this was striking pretty close. "So you say I should
- be fire when I seem to be air. Could you have miscalculated?"
- "No. That's the mystery. I rechecked very carefully and it stands. Your personality is entirely different from
- the one indicated by your horoscope, and your personal episode only corroborates that difference. I could be
- mistaken in detail, but hardly to this extent. So: assuming my tenets to be valid, either your birth date is
- not the one you gave me, or—"
- "Or—?"
- "Do you play chess?"
- "No." Ivo did not challenge the abrupt change of subject.
- "It happens that I do. I'm not very good at it, but I used to play quite a bit, before I found more important
- uses for my time. So I believe I know what that message means."
- "Message?"
- "Schn's last. You remember: 'My pawn is pinned.' That's a chess expression."
- "I wouldn't know."
- "I think you would, Ivo, but I'll explain. Each piece in chess has a different motion and a different value. A
- pawn is a minor piece reckoned at one point and it moves straight ahead, one step at a time. The knight and the
- bishop are worth three points each, and their motions are correspondingly more intricate and far-ranging. The
- castle is worth five, and the queen nine or ten, so you see she is a very powerful piece. The pointages are
- only general guides to strategic value; no numerical score is kept, of course. The queen moves as far as she
- wants in any direction; it is her mobility that gives her strength, and her presence changes the entire
- complexion of the game."
- "I don't entirely follow the explanation, but I'll take your word for it."
- "Doesn't matter. The point is, you dare not ignore the queen. She can strike from any distance, while a pawn is
- severely limited. So the queen can check and even mate the king without danger to herself, but the pawn has to
- be guarded."
- "Mate? Guard?"
- Groton sighed. "You really don't know chess, do you! Here." He brought out a blackboard and made a checkerboard
- on it in chalk. Blackboards seemed to be popular among engineers. "The squares are black and white, but forget
- that for now." He added some letters. "Here's the black queen—she's circled. It could be a black bishop,
- of course; principle's the same. She's on king's-rook-eight, while all the whites are set up on the seventh and
- eight ranks, so." He ignored Ivo's confusion. "Now white's pawn is about to be queened, but can't because it is
- pinned. That's what Schn is talking about."
- Ivo contemplated the illustration. "I'm glad it makes sense to you."
- Groton pursued his logic relentlessly. "The king is the game, you see. You can't allow him to move into check.
- Your opponent will call you down for incorrect play if you do; there are no pitfalls of that nature in chess.
- Look—pawn moves up like this, next it's black's move and queen checks king. So pawn can't move, not while
- it's pinned. It has to protect the king."
- "That much I follow. I think. The pawn is like a bodyguard—if it steps out, assassination."
- "Close enough. But here is the rest of it: the pawn is a special piece, especially in this position, because if
- it gets to the back row it changes into a queen, or any other piece it chooses to. That can change the whole
- course of the game, because an extra queen in the end-game is a terror."
- "It does look pretty bad for that king, bottled in the corner like that."
- "White pawn promotes into a white queen; that's good for this king. Matter of fact, it means white can win the
- game—if that pawn can only move up. That's why the pin has to be broken; it is the crux of the game."
- "We're white?"
- "Right. And black is some alien intelligence fifteen thousand light-years deep in the galaxy."
- "The destroyer?"
- "That's what I mean. Somebody set up that alien queen, and she has our king threatened, all the way across the
- board. And all we have are pawns to hold her off."
- "And we've lost six pawns already."
- "Right Our seventh and eighth are on the board at the seventh rank. And one of them is pinned—the
- important one. The one in a position to queen."
- "Which one is that—in life, I mean."
- "That one." Groton aimed a heavy finger at Ivo.
- "Me? Because I can use the macroscope a little?"
- "Because you can fetch the white queen. Schn."
- "But how am I pinned?" Groton, now that he was on the trail, was as persistent as Afra.
- "I have been wondering about that. You are obviously Schn's pawn, and he has confirmed his involvement by
- sending us cryptic little messages. My guess is that he would come to us if he could. He told us why he can't,
- if we can only make sense of it." Groton looked at his diagram. "Now that pawn is pinned by the queen, so
- that's you pinned by the destroyer. If that pawn could move even one step, it would be another queen. So it is
- in effect a queen that is pinned, in the guise of a pawn. They are the same; the one is inherent in the other."
- "I suppose so, but—"
- "And that explains several things, such as the dichotomy in my charts. So it must be right."
- "So what must be right?"
- "That you are Schn. The fire element."
- "Sure. And the pin?" Careless words—but the game was over.
- "You sat through the sequence that put away Brad and killed the senator. You survived it, probably because you
- came below its critical limit. But Schn is buried in your mind, unconscious or penned in somewhere. He doesn't
- get burned because your mind takes the brunt, and you're just a pawn. But the moment he comes out—when
- you turn queen—that memory is there, waiting to blast him. And he knows it. So he can't come out; his
- pawn is pinned."
- Ivo nodded. "You take your time, but you do get there."
- "So you were aware of it? I thought it might be hidden from you." Groton glanced out the port at the frigid
- plateau, not seeming gratified at his success. "Your horoscope pointed the way, of course. There had to be an
- explanation for the chart's failure to match observation, and as is so often the case, the error was in the
- observation. So now the question is, how do we remove the pin? We can't get at the queen and we don't have many
- pieces on our board. Of course it's not so simple as I have it—this illustration has loopholes even taken
- purely as chess—but I could set up a sounder analogy if it were worth the trouble. It seems that the four
- of us will have to do it if it's going to be done at all. Do you agree?"
- "I think so. But how do you wipe out a memory? And even if you could, Schn probably couldn't use the
- macroscope himself. Not with that signal still there."
- "I don't know. That falls beyond the province of engineering, I fear. But we might hold a meeting on it, let
- Afra take a crack at it. But one other consideration—"
- "I know. What happens when Schn comes. To me."
- "Right."
- "I'm gone. The truth is, I only exist in Schn's imagination."
- "This, again, is what your horoscope suggested. It spelled out, in the sometimes perplexing way they do, Schn
- rather than Ivo. Nevertheless you seem pretty real to me."
- "I'm not. When Schn got fed up and decided to leave—which happened when he was about five years
- old—he did it by inventing an innocuous personality and setting it loose. Someone not too bright, so that
- the project supervisors wouldn't be attracted, but not suspiciously stupid either. Someone more or less
- colorless, but again, not suspiciously. Someone average in his exceptionality, if you see what I mean. So he
- worked it out and set it up in one aspect of his mind, and went to sleep. I am what remains—a genuine
- programmed personality. Somehow he cleared it with all the kids who knew him, and they forgot what he had been
- like and thought I had always been there. Except for Brad, of course. He sort of watched over me. But I was
- born full-blown at the age of five and never had a project childhood."
- "Most people would consider ages five to ten the flower of childhood."
- "Not at 330 Pecker Place! It was all over when I got there. That's what I meant when I told you before that I
- had no childhood episode for you. Everything was—set."
- Groton let that sidelight drop. "And Schn never came back?"
- "Well, he has to be summoned. That's my job—to judge when the time is right. But he had no reason to
- return. Ordinary life is unbearably tedious to him, so he leaves the mundane maintenance to me."
- "He left just because of tedium? But that isn't very likely, is it? Why would things have to be tedious for
- Schn? And why would he make his return involuntary—on his part, I mean? I'd be inclined to suspect some
- more urgent reason for that setup."
- "What else could there be?" Ivo asked uneasily. His own understanding of the conditions of his existence was
- beginning to seem insufficient to him.
- Groton plainly was not satisfied. "I may take a more careful look at the chart."
- "Best luck. Meanwhile, I'll just muddle along as well as I can."
- "Muddle? I'd call it a mature adjustment to reality on your part."
- "That's the nicest description for desperation I've heard today! When he wakes—and he'll have to wake, if
- the time comes—I'll be reintegrated into his total personality, and all my memories and aspirations with
- me, and I'll be gone. It's like a planetoid falling into the sun."
- "I was afraid of that. When the pawn queens, it isn't a pawn any more, not even in part. I can see why you
- never were anxious to invoke Schn."
- "I'm selfish, yes. Now that I'm here, I want to live. I want to prove myself. I don't like Schn."
- "I believe I would feel the same way." Groton thought for a moment more. "That trick with the sprouts—"
- "That's one of the few talents Schn bequeathed me in the name of not being a complete nonentity. That, and the
- flute playing. The supervisors had a ball analyzing the reasons I was so advanced in those areas and so
- retarded in others. I think they developed a whole new theory of child-potential, deciding that in a normal
- family situation both talents would have been suppressed. I don't really know. Anyway, that's where you see
- Schn's full power—except that he's like that in just about every area."
- "And you wiped out the sprouts champion of the station, after one practice game, without even sweating."
- "I wouldn't say that. There are limits, and sprouts gets pretty complicated."
- "Uh-huh. And my wife says you play the flute better than any person she's heard. And she has heard the masters;
- she's a classical music nut."
- "She never told me that."
- "She wouldn't."
- "Well, I didn't expect to keep the secret forever."
- "One by one we pry into your qualities. The Triton situation is too intimate for proper privacy."
- "That's the way Purgatory is, I guess."
- "No. That's the way friendship is. A great sharing, a good sharing." He paused again, troubled. "Look, Ivo,
- despite all that, I don't much like this particular turn of the wheel. Maybe I prefer Aquarius to Aries. Afra
- will catch on soon enough anyway. What say we let it ride for a while, see what develops?"
- Gratefully, Ivo nodded.
- Base operations continued apace, until the physical plant was complete. Then, with the urgency gone, the
- isolation pressed in again. Triton was not Earth, no matter how luxurious it became, and all of them were
- increasingly aware of it. The news from Earthside was depressing; hope faded that any return was politically
- feasible within a span of years.
- Ivo spent his allotted time at the macroscope, transcribing processes for which they had only theoretical use.
- There were truly potent force-fields capable of compressing solid rock into a state of degenerate matter; there
- were heavy-duty robotoids capable of constructing duplicate macroscopes. For what purpose, such miracles? They
- already had everything they needed except home.
- Groton enlarged the atmospheric screen and made other nominal improvements. Beatryx cooked and did their
- laundry by hand (though they easily could have had food and clothing that needed neither treatment) and
- cultivated and weeded her garden, while the galactic devices for such tasks stood idle.
- Afra reacted most strenuously. She set up a formidable laboratory and buried herself in it for many hours at a
- time. She demanded a search for specialized galactic medical techniques, and pored over what Ivo obligingly
- produced until her eyes were sunken and staring. She insisted on an extension of the macroscope screen for her
- lab, though they all knew it would have been suicidal for her to watch it. The great glass vat in which she had
- arranged to store Brad's protoplasm (bubbling eerily because of the aeration) rested upon a shelf, morbidly
- overlooking her efforts.
- "I don't like this," Groton said privately to the others. "She can't he thinking of reconstituting Brad and
- operating on him herself. But I'm afraid she is."
- "Does she have surgical training?" Ivo asked.
- "No. She's trying to learn it all now, on her own. She'll kill him."
- "What is she going to do?" Beatryx asked, worried.
- "As I make it, she means to remove his damaged nervous tissue and grow it back or replace it with galactic
- substitutes. As though she were grafting an artificial hand."
- "But it's his brain that's burned...." Beatryx said.
- Ivo mulled the point. How could it be possible to replace any portion of the brain, without drastically
- changing the personality? Even if Afra were to accomplish it, the result would not be the Brad she had known.
- And the civilization that set up the destroyer would surely have known about feasible corrective techniques,
- and arranged to make them useless, lest its barricade be breached. Salvation could not lie in that direction.
- Or was he rationalizing, jealous of the possible return of a rival? Had there not been something about becoming
- dogmatic and jealous, in that Aquarius portrait Groton had provided?
- "She can't reconstitute him unless I tune in the station," Ivo remarked.
- "Are you sure? Don't forget, she supervised his melting. She insisted on having a macroscope-screen extension.
- And that reconstitution signal tunes in itself, as it has to to revive a melt when nobody's around to
- supervise. I'd say she can do it—and will."
- "I don't know. I'd hate to risk it."
- This, too, had to ride. They were pinned. Any interference was as likely to provoke calamity as to alleviate
- it.
- Afra's preparations neared completion. They could tell by the way she hummed in her laboratory, by her air of
- expectancy, though she turned aside all questions.
- When the tension became unbearable, Groton went to reason with her—but she had locked them out. "Could
- get around that soon enough," he muttered, since he had directed the building of room, door and lock, and still
- had functioning mechanicals available. "But what's the point? She means to see it through, and she's an
- imperious lass. All fire and earth."
- Ivo was beginning to recognize astrological allusions. Fire burned and earth endured—or something like
- that. "Should we let her do it?"
- "All in favor of stopping her by sheer physical force," Groton said, and shrugged. Neither Ivo nor Beatryx
- cared to register a vote.
- "But we should watch her," Ivo said. "We know it's disaster, but we don't know exactly what kind. There will be
- pieces to pick up."
- "Literally," Groton agreed. "Ours, if we break in."
- "I was thinking of the macroscope."
- Groton's eyes widened. "Let's go!" he cried. "Beatryx, you stay here—but don't go in after her, no matter
- what you hear. Unless she calls for help."
- Frightened, she nodded. She looked, in that moment, haggard; she had lost sleep and weight. Ivo had not
- realized until this glance how deeply involved in this crisis Beatryx, the only other woman on Triton, felt
- herself to be. Why did he so often forget that other people had emotions as pressing as his own?
- The two men scrambled into their suits, checked each other hastily, and ran heavily into the domed garden. Tall
- wheat and barley waved in the intermittent artificial breeze (Beatryx insisted that it seemed just like a real
- breeze to her, but it derived from machinery and not meteorology), and green potato plants clustered near the
- exit. The heart-shaped, orange-tinted foliage of a sweet-potato vine angled toward the floating sun. Controlled
- mutation was theoretically available through galactic programming, but Beatryx would have none of it; she
- wanted only the plants of Earth that could be enticed to germinate from the stores.
- They charged down the garden path (gravel, with invaluable weeds arranged adjacently) and plunged through the
- atmospheric force-screen in a shower of crystals: the air carried across with them dropped almost instantly to
- a temperature that made its survival as gas impossible, and its water vapor solidified and shattered. Inside
- the dome of enclosure, behind them, the momentary backlash froze the nearest plants and created a localized
- snow flurry.
- Beyond the transparent shield the surface of Triton remained as before, a barren waste a hundred and eighty
- degrees below zero centigrade. The sea of cold oxygen-nitrogen picked up where the lake of warm oxygen-hydrogen
- left off, the field insulating the one from the other all the way to the bottom.
- The planetary module stood in isolation two miles distant. They ran toward it clumsily, still within the area
- of 1-G. A hundred yards beyond the dome this eased to slightly below Triton-normal. The gravity-focuser
- concentrated the attraction of an area a hundred miles square into a circle a few hundred yards square, taxing
- the major area for the benefit of the minor. It was not possible for this equipment to remove all gravity from
- any section, nor to magnify it without limit; this was a channelizer rather than a shield or amplifier. Much
- more powerful processes were available, but as Groton pointed out during one of their technical discussions,
- extremes were not advisable. A strong unbalance could destroy the atmosphere and much of the surface of Triton,
- and even jog the moon from its present orbit. Why risk it?
- The men made long bounds, keeping them shallow for speed, and moved rapidly through -G toward the module.
- Through they had been waiting almost idly for weeks, Ivo felt now as though a single wasted minute could make
- them too late. He reached the module first, ascended the ladder by bounds, and entered the airlock. It seemed
- so clumsy, after the sophistication of the force-field! They had been benefiting from the gimmicks of Type II
- technologies, and now were thrown back to their own Type I.
- He pressured the lock and went on into the interior, clearing the chamber for Groton's entry. He activated the
- internal heating mechanism, not for the occupants' sake but to insure proper functioning of the equipment. This
- machinery was suppose to operate at "comfortable" temperatures—say, within fifty degrees of freezing.
- Ivo now knew how to use the module, though he was not a sure pilot. The controls were deliberately simple, and
- the frequent trips to the Schn base had educated him rapidly in the subject of Type I space jockeying. Takeoff
- was routine.
- Finally they floated into the macroscope housing. This was maintained at a constant temperature and pressure
- because of the intricate sensory apparatus and the connected computer. They stripped to light clothing and
- settled down to work. Neither was concerned about the destroyer, since Ivo knew how to shield his mind from its
- influence and Groton had long since experimented under controlled conditions and verified that he was not
- affected unless he really concentrated.
- Groton had also tried to use the scope himself, in order to facilitate early construction, but had found that
- the same limit that protected him from mind-ravaging prevented him from assimilating the alien signals beyond.
- The typical mind was receptive to both or to neither. Ivo was a fluke—perhaps because he was not a
- complete person.
- It had been a long time since he practiced at such close range, though he knew that theoretically the
- macroscope could pick up anything, even its own functioning apparatus, if the proper adjustments were made.
- Definition in such cases was poor, however; too strong a signal was worse than too weak. He set the range for
- minimal and concentrated on the moon below.
- A section of the interior of Triton appeared: blank rock. Then, as he found his level, the surface showed,
- slightly fuzzy but readable. He shot across craters and clefts and oceans, guiding the pickup toward the dome
- while Groton watched. This type of exploration Groton could have handled, since it was of the basic
- nonintellectual level. But practice had given Ivo far greater skill, and they were in a hurry.
- "Coasting on ninety-five," Groton remarked. Ivo realized that the man had never had occasion to watch this
- particular maneuver before.
- "We're not exactly coasting. Faster this way than computing the exact coordinates of the camp. I wouldn't try
- it on a distant target, though." Something nagged him about Groton's remark, but he was too preoccupied to
- place it.
- Then they were in the dome. He slowed, feeling his way into the pyramid, and on toward the laboratory. There
- was a flash of Beatryx sitting nervously in the kitchen, and Groton grunted. He does love her, Ivo thought,
- finding that a revelation though he knew it had always been obvious.
- At last he closed on Afra's laboratory and brought the entire room into reasonably clear perspective. She was
- there, lying on a bunk; she had not yet started her... project. "We're in time," he said. "I don't know whether
- that's good or bad."
- "Good I can appreciate. Why bad?"
- "Because we're too far away to do anything if there's trouble—and I guess there will be. All we can do
- from here is watch."
- Groton nodded thoughtfully. "You're in love with her."
- The observation did not seem impertinent or out of place, now. "Since I saw her first. Brad introduced
- her—'Afra Glynn Summerfield'—and I was—well, that was it."
- "Why would Brad do that?"
- "Do what? It was our first meeting."
- "Make up a name. Didn't you know?"
- "You mean her name isn't Afra? Or Summerfield? I don't understand."
- "Isn't Glynn. I don't know what her middle name is, but it isn't that. I believe it is a family designation,
- Jones or Smith or something."
- Ivo sat stricken. "Brad! He did it on purpose!"
- "Did what?"
- "The name, don't you see? He set it up for me."
- "You've lost me, Ivo. You didn't fall in love with a name, did you?"
- Ivo's gaze was anchored to Afra where she lay. He remembered the time she had lain in his hammock, tormented
- and lovely, so soon after the destroyer disaster. "You didn't hear about me and Sidney Lanier? I told Beatryx,
- and you made that horoscope—"
- "My wife is circumspect about personal information. She must have felt that the details were confidential. All
- she mentioned was that you admired Lanier's poetry. Unfortunately I'm not familiar with his actual writings."
- "Oh. Well, I have this thing about the poet. I've studied his life and works, and anything that relates to him,
- and I react automatically to any reference—"
- "Oh-oh. That key sentence I fed you, back at the dawn of time. That was—"
- "A quotation from Lanier's The Symphony—perhaps his greatest piece. The moment I heard that, I knew Brad
- wanted me, and that he was serious. There's a special kind of—uh, brotherhood, between members of the
- project—peer-group compulsion, it's called. It's extremely strong, irresistible, maybe. I couldn't
- question such a call."
- "Oh, yes—the children of the kibbutzim have that, too. And that name, what was it—?"
- "Glynn. From another major poem, The Marshes of Glynn."
- Groton strained to remember. "Didn't we drive by—?"
- "The marshes of Glynn. In Georgia. Yes. The same ones Lanier drew his inspiration from. His poem was published
- anonymously at first, but it received such acclaim—anyway, that's why I was in the area, instead of
- looking for some high-paying Northern position, the way many of the others did. I spent years running down his
- historic travels."
- "Like that, eh?"
- "Like that, yes. And Brad understood that perfectly."
- "So he wasn't just playing a game with names. He wanted you to fix on Afra. She's even Georgian, like your
- marshes."
- "Lanier was Georgian. He fought in the War of the Rebellion—civil war, to you—Confederate."
- "I don't understand Brad's motivation. Afra says she and Brad were engaged to be married. Why would he want to
- stir up trouble like that?"
- "Maybe because he wanted Schn that bad. He knew I wouldn't walk out while Afra was around, and she wouldn't
- walk out while he was around. He even—he even threw us together, just to make sure the virus took hold.
- Having her show me around the station... It doesn't take much, with a girl like her. And I never caught on!"
- "Love is blind."
- "Good and blind. It was all so obvious! Insurance, in case he lost out to the destroyer. Ivo pinned to Afra's
- sleeve—and the only way I could get off it was to turn Schn loose."
- "You can call up Schn? When you decide?"
- "I can. But I can't put him down again, once I do."
- "And Schn wouldn't give a damn about Afra?"
- "Not a damn. Schn might be intrigued by someone on his own level, but Afra—"
- "A moron. I can see why he got bored at the age of five. No one in the world he could—say! 'My pawn is
- pinned!'—could that have meant you and Afra? You can't let go because then you'd lose her?"
- Ivo thought about it. "It could. But I think that's incidental. Love is nothing to Schn."
- "And not much to Brad, methinks. That's as sinister a piece of handiwork as I've come across. Using his own
- fianc—"
- "That wasn't the way he described their relation," Ivo said dryly. "Still, that's another reason I hesitate to
- uncork Schn. He's totally unscrupulous. He could probably solve our problem with the alien signal, but—"
- "But you can't be sure which color the queen might see herself? I appreciate your caution more and more."
- Ivo appreciated the appreciation, after having kept his secret so long. His initial impression of Groton had
- been so negative—and so wrong. He had seen a fat white slob, when he should have seen his own prejudice.
- Now the man—not fat at all!—was his closest ally. In similar fashion he had come to appreciate the
- individual qualities of Beatryx, who demonstrated so plainly and in such contrast to Afra that there were other
- things besides intelligence and beauty. Afra—
- Afra still slept or rested, her breathing even. "I guess it wasn't as late as we thought. Maybe we should take
- turns watching, until something happens."
- "Good idea. I'll snooze for a couple hours, then you can." And Groton pushed off and floated in the air as
- though it were a mattress, utterly relaxed.
- Ivo watched the laboratory. He felt a twinge of guilt for his snooping, but he was afraid to do otherwise. He
- did not want anything to happen to her. Brad's trick had been obvious—in retrospect—but
- devastatingly effective. Afra had indeed captured Ivo's imagination, and he felt a thrill every time he looked
- at her or thought about her. She was an impressive woman and she was from Georgia, whatever her faults might
- be. Call it foolishness, call it prejudice: he was committed for the duration.
- Had Brad really been in love with her, or even, as he had put it, infatuated? Ivo doubted it now. He had
- allowed himself to forget how cynical Brad could be about human relations. Many of those raised in the project
- were like that. They tended to be strong on capability and weak on conscience, especially when dealing with the
- outside world, with Schn the logical extreme. They were independent, morally as well as intellectually and
- financially. To Brad the challenge had always been more important than the individual. Afra might simply have
- been the handiest entertainment available for off-hours at the station, intriguing as a classic WASP—and
- useful for special purposes, such as the tethering of Schn's pawn. A Georgia girl for the Georgia historian.
- If she should succeed in reviving Brad as the man she had known, that in itself might represent disaster. No
- doubt her current fever of activity had been brought about by guilt over her own prejudice. Brad was like Ivo:
- tainted. He had Negroid blood in his veins, melanin in his skin. If she lost him, she would convince herself
- that it was due to her rejection of his racial makeup.
- Yet—bless her for that sensation of guilt! Was not that in essence conscience? Normal persons were held
- in bounds by limitations of pride and guilt; abnormal ones were defective in these qualities, and were thus
- dangerous to society. Even the subtle racism of the educated Southern white had its rules and restrictions; it
- was not inherently evil.
- Schn, on the other hand, had neither intellectual nor ethical limitations. He had no guilt, no shame. He would
- be a terror.
- Afra stirred. She stretched in a manner she would not have essayed in public and walked to the adjacent
- bathroom. This was not in the field of vision, and Ivo did not follow her. He was not, thanks to his guilt, a
- voyeur.
- In a few minutes she emerged and walked to the counter. Electronic equipment was set up above it, and he saw
- that she had adjusted her extension-screen to aim straight down from head-height. She contemplated the
- transparent vat for ninety seconds, then stooped to manhandle out the basin from a lower compartment.
- No doubt now: it was about to begin.
- "Harold."
- Groton woke, windmilling his arms for a moment before adjusting to the free-fall state. They watched.
- Afra opened the valve and let the thick liquid flow into the basin. She stood back, watching it. Ivo tried to
- imagine her thoughts, and could not. It was Bradley Carpenter that swirled into the container: her beloved.
- "I don't see any instruments," Groton said. "If it's surgery she has in mind—"
- True. There was no special equipment in evidence. But if she had given up on that, what did she plan? Certainly
- she did not intend to nurse him indefinitely.
- The protoplasm, freed from confinement and placed in a suitable environment, seemed to respond. It rippled and
- sparkled. Afra flushed the glass container out with water and allowed the rinse to pour into the basin too.
- And—the beam came on.
- Here they were, using the macroscope to spy on her—yet the alien signal was able to transmit itself
- through the system simultaneously. This was a property Ivo had not known it had.
- Once more the eye formed, the jellyfish, the pumping tunicate, the evolving vertebrate.
- "You know," Groton said, "there's such a simple answer—if it works. What would happen if the process
- could be stopped a moment early? Just a tiny fraction of a lifetime—"
- "So the destroyer never happened?" It was simple... too simple. Why hadn't the galactic manual recommended it?
- "She could be running him through once or twice, just to isolate the spot. To zero in on it. When she locates
- it—well, she must have something ready. He might be short some recent memories, but she could fill them
- in easily enough."
- The form continued to develop, achieving the air-breathing stage.
- "Or," Groton conjectured, "she might experiment with changes in the mixture. If it were possible to isolate the
- damaged cells in the fluid state and substitute healthy protoplasm—"
- "But it would be protoplasm with some other lineup of chromosomes!" Ivo said. "And where would she get it?"
- Neither man cared to conjecture.
- Afra trotted out a machine with pronged electrodes. Ivo remembered fetching the specifications for it from the
- macroscope, but had no comprehension of its purpose. Evidently Afra had studied its application more carefully.
- He saw now that the basin she was employing was metal, not plastic; it would conduct electric current.
- "A jolt just before the destroyer," Groton said. "To freeze the process right there—"
- "But the melting occurred after the destroyer," Ivo said, still namelessly disturbed. "The way the process
- works, every experience is part of the plasma. You can't take it away by timing—not without shaking up
- the entire system, and that's dangerous. I wouldn't—"
- "We're about to find out," Groton said. "Watch." Somehow the four hours of the reconstitution had elapsed
- already. Helplessly, Ivo watched. Afra placed one electrode upon the rim of the basin and fastened it there;
- she laid the other, a disk, upon the metamorphosing head. Timing it apparently by intuition, she touched the
- power switch.
- There was current. Ivo saw the figure in the vat stiffen. "Shock therapy?" Groton murmured. "That makes no
- sense to me."
- Afra cut off the power and removed the disk. She stepped back.
- The figure, now recognizably Brad, ceased its evolution. The eyelids wavered, the chest expanded.
- "Can she have done it?" Groton said disbelievingly.
- "She's done something. But I'm still afraid that destroyer experience is in him somewhere, waiting to take
- effect; Maybe after he's been around a few hours or days—" Or was it his jealous hopes speaking?
- "Oh-oh."
- There was certainly trouble. The shape in the basin, instead of coming fully alert, was changing again. "It's
- regressing!" Ivo cried. "She didn't stop it, she reversed it!"
- "Then it should melt, shouldn't it?"
- "It isn't melting!"
- Whatever was happening, it was no part of the cycle they had seen before. The beam remained on, and Afra
- watched, hand to her mouth, helpless. The change accelerated.
- The head swelled grotesquely, the legs shrank. The body drew into itself. Hands and feet became shapeless, then
- withdrew into mere points. The figure began to resemble a giant starfish, complete with suckers upon the lower
- surfaces of the projections.
- And there it stopped, absolutely unhuman.
- Afra screamed. Ivo could see her mouth open, lips pulled back harshly over the even white teeth, tongue
- elevated. He saw her chest pumping again and again, and could almost hear her desperate, ghastly sounds. She
- screamed until the spittle became pink.
- In the basin, the star-shaped thing struggled and heaved. It raised a tentacle as if searching for something,
- then dropped it loosely over the edge. The beam was off now, further evidence that this was the end. For a
- moment the creature convulsed, almost raising its body from the bottom; then it shuddered into relaxation and
- the five limbs uncurled.
- Slowly it changed color, becoming gray. It was dead.
- CHAPTER 7
- Beatryx was weeding the garden: some shoots of wheat were coming up beside the tomato plants, and she was
- carefully extracting them without damage to either type of plant. The tediously preserved shoots would shortly
- be transplanted to the south forty—forty square feet of verdant field.
- Ivo squatted down beside her but did not offer to help. This was her self-appointed task, and his unsolicited
- participation would constitute interference. Meaningful tasks were valuable. He noted that she had continued to
- shed weight; the round-faced matron was disconcertingly gone, replaced by the hollow-faced one. Material
- comfort did not automatically bring health and happiness, unfortunately.
- "You know she's taking it hard," he said after a suitable delay.
- "What can we do, Ivo? I hate to see it, but I just can't think of any way to help."
- "As I make it, she's having the reaction she suppressed when Brad lost out to the destroyer. She knew he was
- gone, then, but she refused to admit it. Now—"
- "Now we have to take turns standing watch over her, treating her like a criminal. I don't like it, Ivo."
- An understatement. Her whole body reflected her concern. Beatryx, physically, was in worse shape than Afra.
- "None of us do. But we don't dare leave her alone."
- She lifted a blade of green and placed it tenderly in her basin of moist sand. "It's terrible."
- "I wondered whether—" He paused, disturbed by the audacity of his idea. "Well, we are, as you say,
- already treating her like a criminal."
- "We have to do something," she said.
- "Maybe this is all wrong. That's why I wanted to talk it over. I thought, well, if she feels guilty, we might
- give her a trial. Sort of bring out the evidence, one way or the other, and all take a look at it, and decide
- who was how guilty of what. Then it would be—decided."
- "Who would decide, Ivo? I couldn't."
- "I don't think I could, either. I'm not objective. But—you know him better than I do—I thought your
- husband might—"
- "He's fond of her, Ivo. He wouldn't want to pass judgment on her." There was no sign of jealousy in her manner,
- and Ivo knew she was not the type to conceal what she felt, in such an area. It told him something about her,
- something nice; but it told more about Groton.
- "He'd have to agree, of course. But if it seemed a real trial would clear the air—make things all right
- again—"
- Beatryx stiffened. "Look, Ivo! Look!"
- Alarmed, suspecting mayhem or calamity, he followed her gaze. There was nothing.
- "On that tomato leaf!" she whispered, trembling with excitement.
- He looked, relieved that it was nothing important. "Looks perfectly healthy to me. But you'll have to
- spray—"
- Then he brought up short. "A bug!"
- "A bug!" she repeated.
- "It must have been a worm in the tomato," he said. "I thought everything was sterilized."
- "Maybe we'll have lots of bugs," she said, excited. "Triton bugs. And flies and spiders and worms. Maybe
- they'll get in the house and we'll have to put up screens!"
- It had been so long since they had seen any creature apart from the four members of the party that this was a
- signal discovery. "We are not alone," he said. "It's a good omen."
- "Do you think it's warm enough here for it?" she inquired anxiously. "Should I bring it some food? What do they
- eat?"
- Ivo smiled. "Nature knows best. I'm sure it's sitting on its supper right now. If we leave it alone it will
- probably raise a family soon. But I'll photograph a bug-book for you from the macroscope, so you can identify
- it."
- "Oh thank you!" she said sincerely.
- He left her kneeling beside the plant. If there were such things as omens, this was surely a sign that the
- nadir for the Triton party had passed.
- "A trial." Groton considered it. "There may be something in that. Certainly something needs to be done. That
- girl is very near the edge." If Beatryx had changed because of the stress of recent months, Groton had not. He
- seemed to have the most stable personality among them.
- "I got the idea from something I remembered. A bit on animal psychology. A dog had strayed or got lost
- somehow—I don't know the details—but after a few days his master got him back. The master was very
- glad to have him safe, but the dog just moped around the house, hardly eating or resting. Finally the man asked
- a veterinarian about the problem. The man said to roll up a newspaper and give the animal a good swat on the
- rear."
- "That wasn't very helpful."
- "It cured the dog. It seemed the dog expected to be punished for getting lost, and couldn't revert to normal
- until that punishment was over. He was just waiting for it, brooding, knowing things weren't right until it
- came. One token swat, and that dog almost tore the house apart for joy. The slate was clean again, you see."
- "You suggest that a swat on the rear will cure Afra?"
- "I don't know. It can't bring Brad back, of course, but the guilt—" Groton sat down. "You know, you're
- right about the guilt. It has no outlet—we don't blame her, really. But a trial? Well, hard to say what
- would do the job of expunging guilt...."
- "You would have to make the decision. On her guilt, I mean. Weigh the evidence, institute appropriate
- punishment—"
- "Yes, I suppose I would."
- Ivo could appreciate Groton's unease. They were all guilty, by their prior inaction, as much as Afra by her
- action. Who were they to pass judgment upon her?
- Groton opened the roll-top desk he had built for his study and drew out a sheet of paper. It was a circular
- chart divided into twelve pie-sections, with a smaller circle in the center. There were symbols all around the
- edge and in several of the segments, together with assorted numbers. Below the large circle were several
- geometrical drawings identified by further symbols.
- "This is her horoscope. Suppose I explain some of it to you, and you tell me whether this thing we contemplate
- is wise."
- Ivo doubted that this particular tack would help, but he was becoming accustomed to Groton's method of getting
- at a problem. If the astrological chart helped him to make up his mind (as Beatryx had once hinted), more power
- to it. He also remembered the coincidental insight of his own horoscope, that had pointed to Schn rather than
- to himself. That had been uncanny.
- "Do you know what I mean by the houses, cardinal signs, alchemy of the elements, portmanteau analysis—"
- "Say again, quarterspeed?"
- Groton smiled. "Just testing. I didn't want to insult you by oversimplifying. I'll stick as much as I can to
- layman's language—but I want you to understand that this is simplified, to the point where what I tell
- you is only approximately true."
- "Why can't you just give me the summaries, as you did before?" Ivo did not want to say that a detailed
- technical lecture was something other than he had bargained for.
- "Because that would be too much of me speaking. I need to show you enough of the principles so that you
- understand the essence of what the chart says, on your own. You may have a different opinion from mine, and
- your interpretation could help me to reach my own decision."
- Groton's manner reminded him of Afra's when she had insisted on the handling. The full meaning and validity of
- her request had not been clear to him until later; then he realized that her instinct had been sure. Groton
- evidently had reservations about this procedure, but was overruling them for some good reason. It would be wise
- to oblige. More and more, he was being made aware that his own views of things were often based on pitifully
- inadequate information.
- "All right. One opinion on tap, for what it's worth."
- Groton pointed to the chart. "Notice that this is in twelve segments. Actually, it is twenty-four segments:
- twelve superimposed on the other twelve, but for convenience we employ a single diagram. I have placed the
- identifiers around the rim, you see."
- "I recognize the numbers one through twelve; that's about all." He continued to study the obscure markings,
- however. "And Neptune! I couldn't forget that symbol. There in the six-box."
- "That's enough for a start. Let's call that the top disk: the twelve houses, numbered counterclockwise. The
- houses, roughly, represent circumstance: the situation, the potentiality the individual has to work with.
- That's not good or bad in itself; he may exploit it or not. But it's there, much as the chessmen we discussed
- before are there, ready for the game."
- "Twelve different circumstances?"
- "Yes. The first house represents identity, the second possessions, the third environment, and so on. That's
- really an oversimplification—"
- "You explained. Ballpark estimates."
- "Yes. Now the planets move through these houses, that are really segments of the celestial equator. Three-
- dimensional segments, to be sure, like those of an orange—but twelve of them make up the heavens about
- Earth."
- Ivo looked at the chart again. "So the center circle is Earth, and the outer one is the rest of the universe,
- carved up into twelve big houses, and we're looking down at an orange sliced in half. Yes."
- "Close enough. The planets represent the particular ways in which the individual asserts himself. The sun in
- the first house means—"
- "The sun? I thought you said planets."
- "We consider the sun and moon to be planets. It is best to set aside what you know about astronomy, for this;
- it has almost no genuine relation to astrology."
- "I begin to appreciate your sincerity. So the sun is a planet."
- "Viewed from Earth, they are all moving bodies, Sol and Luna no less than Venus or Pluto. They all have
- changing positions in the sky. We're not revising astronomy; we are merely arranging our terms to suit our
- convenience. Technically, it is astronomy that did the revising; it was originally a subdivision of astrology,
- and all the early astronomers were primarily astrologers. There is no conflict."
- "I follow."
- "The sun indicates purpose, the moon feeling, Mars initiative, and so on. There are tables in the books that
- give all this, if you find it helps. So the sun in the first house puts the planet of purpose in the house of
- identity. A person with this configuration, according to one description, is determined to exalt his ego one
- way or another, and tries to dominate his immediate situation. That doesn't mean he succeeds; this is merely
- his impulse. He may be bombastic rather than great."
- "You sound as if you have a reservation. Are there other descriptions for what sun-in-first means?"
- "There are always differences in interpretation. But my reservation stems from the oversimplification. The
- whole chart must be considered, not just the sun, or unfortunate mistakes can be made. You see, one of our
- group has this particular placement."
- "Afra!"
- "That's what I mean. It isn't Afra, as you can see by her chart; the first house is empty. It's Beatryx."
- "I think I'm catching on. If a person is born when the sun is in one of these segments, that tells something
- about his personality—but only something, not everything. And I guess the sun has to be somewhere. What
- is the second house?"
- "Possessions, among other things. Here, I'll make out a list; that's easiest, I think."
- "Oh yes. So the sun in the second house puts purpose in possessions. That man will be out to make money."
- "Or to achieve personal advantage some other way," Groton said, not pausing in his listing. "You have the
- general idea. Again, there is no guarantee he'll make a fortune—but he'll probably try."
- "Where is the sun in my—in Schn's horoscope?"
- "The twelfth house. That's confinement."
- "Purpose in confinement." Ivo thought that over. "This begins to grow on me, I must admit."
- "Just remember that the sun, important as it is, can be outweighed by an opposing configuration elsewhere. And
- of course the entire horoscope represents probability, not certainty. Heredity is obviously a major influence.
- Leo is the sign of the lion, but a mouse born into Leo is still a mouse."
- "I'll remember," Ivo agreed, smiling. "A leonine Mickey."
- "Notice the position of the sun in Afra's horoscope."
- Ivo studied the chart once more, finding it less confusing. "Is that the little circle with the dot inside?
- That's in the ninth house. But that's not the only thing there."
- "It certainly isn't alone, and in certain respects this is a remarkable chart. But let's ignore the others for
- the moment. The sun symbol goes near the rim, you see, followed by the ecliptic position in degrees and
- minutes, and on the inside is the zodiacal sign, which we'll go into in a moment."
- "What does the ninth house stand for?"
- "Understanding, consciousness, knowledge."
- "So Afra has purpose in understanding. That means she wants to know things—and if her heredity gives her
- high intelligence, she'll come to know a great deal."
- "The text says: 'The sun in the ninth house places the practical focus of life in a determination to exalt the
- ego through high standards and broadened interests. This position always encourages a conscious lean towards an
- intellectual understanding or a religious orientation. At his best the native is able to bring effective
- insights or genuine wisdom to every situation, and at his worst he is apt to meet all reality with a complacent
- intolerance or bigotry.' "
- "That sounds close enough. But it is really so general it could apply to almost anyone."
- "We'll try to get more specific—one planet at a time. You can't divide all humanity into twelve basic
- groupings without being general. By the time we check ten planets against twelve houses and twelve signs and
- verify with the symbols of the ascendants and overall patterns, we begin to have definition resembling that of
- the macroscope. Now where do you see the moon?"
- "Right beside the sun. Same house."
- "The moon represents feeling."
- "So that's feeling in understanding. To know her is to love her?" He said it lightly, but knew it had happened
- to him.
- "No, that's an outside impression, not controlled by her horoscope. It's what she feels and understands that's
- important here. Specifically: 'The moon in the ninth house centers all personal experience in issues of
- morality, elevating ends and reasons above practical needs. This position exaggerates every concern over ideas
- and motives. The native at his best is able to approach reality with an understanding support for every human
- capacity, and at his worst he is apt to worry over abstractions and dissipate every impulse to action.' Do you
- recognize Afra there?"
- "Yes, in a way. You know, this is—well, isn't it really pretty private? I have the feeling I'm prying
- into things that aren't my business." He saw that he was tacitly admitting an acceptance of astrology, but
- didn't care. "Nudity of the body is one thing, but—"
- "Good point. I consider a person's detailed horoscope to be very like the privileged information given to a
- lawyer, or perhaps a priest. Or medical or financial statements. This is one reason I hesitated to show you her
- chart before. But if we are to pass a judgment on her that may affect her entire life—"
- Ivo saw the point. "I'll—keep all this confidential. Even if she doesn't believe in astrology, or I
- don't, it's still—"
- Groton went on to another section. "The signs of the ecliptic define character. There are twelve of them,
- spaced similarly to the houses, but they are not identical to the houses. That's why we have to mark their
- symbols; the indications around the edge are only approximate, since the signs are not geometrically defined in
- the manner of the houses. Where do you spot the sun this time?"
- "The sign is a cross between a square-root symbol and a hunchbacked musical note."
- "That's Capricorn—the Goat. This is—"
- Ivo interrupted him to run down a nagging connection. "What did you say Schn was?"
- "Aries—the Ram. You can recognize his symbol by the spreading horns, situated in this case at the cusp of
- the twelfth house."
- "I see it. The circle with the antlers."
- "No, not that one; that's Taurus the Bull. Next above it."
- Ivo located the correct symbol. "So that's how you separate the sheep from the goats! But what's Aries doing on
- the Goat's chart? I thought—"
- "All houses and all signs appear on all charts. There's a little of everything in every person's makeup. But
- the positions of the planets show the emphasis for any one person. Schn's sun is in Aries, while Afra's Mars
- is in Aries; an entirely different matter, I assure you."
- "The sun is more important?"
- "That depends on the configuration. Generally, it is; that's why the popularized horoscopes use it, though
- that's like saying that your brain is more important than your heart. Aries rules the brain, coincidentally.
- But you can't get along without either one. In Afra's case Mars does have great weight, and perhaps makes her
- as much a fire person as is Schn. But the combination of sun, moon and Mercury in Capricorn puts enormous
- stress on earth—well, I don't want to get off into subjective interpretation. This is a BUCKET pattern,
- and the handle-planet, Mars, reveals a special capacity or important direction of interest. So this aspect of
- her chart indicates initiative and extreme self-containment."
- Ivo was beginning to get lost, much as he had when Brad attempted a "simplified" explanation. He did see the
- bucket-shape, however, with the handle toward the left and a semicircle of filled slices to the right. "So the
- way Afra just went ahead on her own to revive Brad, without worrying about the risk or what she would do
- afterward—that was spelled out the moment she was born? Because Mars happened to be in Aries? And you
- could have predicted—"
- "It's hardly that simple, Ivo. There are so many other factors, and she could have reacted in some entirely
- different fashion. Hindsight is no justification. But I did foresee some kind of crisis. There is an activation
- of Saturn at about this time in her life, following the emphasis of Mars that seemed to account for her prior
- problem with Brad. When he became destroyed. In another year there is a predomination of Uranus. That's three
- crises in fairly rapid order, for her—but the timing can vary by a year or more either way, and I simply
- cannot pin any of these down precisely."
- "But the odds are she'll have a third crisis as bad as the first two, within a year?"
- "In your terms, that about sums it up. Remember, I make no claim to—"
- "I remember. Is it possible for me to read this chart and look up the descriptions myself? You said you wanted
- to get an independent opinion—"
- "I don't think you'd find it very instructive, Ivo. It takes years to—"
- "I'll bet the chart on me says somewhere that I like to do things for myself."
- "Not exactly." Then Groton paused, catching the hint. "As you wish. Here are the texts. Here are the listings
- of symbols I wrote out, and you already have the chart. There are things I haven't explained yet, such as the
- grand trine in fire, and—"
- "I think I have enough to go on. Suppose you leave me to it for an hour or so? I may misread terribly, but I'll
- try to come up with a notion where I stand. Then we can decide about the trial. And I think I'd better have the
- other charts, too, for comparison."
- "It's in the stars," Groton said, yielding with good grace, and left him to it.
- Ivo began by checking Beatryx's chart. It was a twelve-slice disk like the first, but the markings differed. In
- the center it gave her date and place of birth: February 20, 1943, 6:23 CST a.m., Dallas, Texas, 33N 97W.
- Geographic coordinates, he decided. Below were several mathematical notes and the word SEE-SAW. He ignored
- these and concentrated on the symbols.
- He found the sun in the first house, just as Groton had said. "Purpose in identity," he murmured, and leafed
- through the nearest text until he came to a section titled "The Planets in the Twelve Houses." A glance at the
- description assured him that he had researched correctly.
- With more confidence he located the moon in the seventh house. "Feeling in partnership," he said, checking his
- lists. He found the place and read: "...at his best is able to find common elements in his associations with
- any other individuals, and at his worst he is apt to make things unnecessarily hard for himself." He
- recollected the interests she shared with him, poetic and musical, that had only appeared when there was need
- for conversation and companionship, and nodded. He also recalled her intensely personal reaction to Afra's
- folly.
- He tried next for the signs. Her sun was in Pisces: purpose in sympathy. The first volume was open at the
- houses and he wanted to keep his place, so he opened the second. It was an old, weathered tome.
- "Pisces produces a very sensitive nature...." he read. "Longing to understand and forgive his fellow men, to
- feel himself one with them and above all to succor those who are ill-treated by the world... vaguely sad
- idealism...often somewhat of a Cinderella in practical life...."
- He paused to think about that, too. It was as apt a description of Beatryx as he could imagine. It was almost
- as though the passage had been written with her in mind.
- He flipped back to the title page: Astrology and Its Practical Application, by E. Parker. Translated from the
- Dutch. Published in 1927.
- Fifteen years or more before Beatryx had been born.
- He checked her chart again and located the moon in Virgo. "Feeling in Assimilation," he thought. The book said:
- "There is much love for the fine arts, especially for literature. Works of art are often inwardly enjoyed
- without its being much shown...."
- Excited, now, he went to the other text—one copyrighted 1945 by one Marc Edmund Jones—and looked up
- moon-in-Virgo for confirmation. "Reacts to others with a deep hunger for common experience...."
- Be objective, he told himself. You're only reacting to what matches.
- But still he wondered....
- He drew forth Afra's chart and began looking up its elements and making notes. Even so, he quickly lost track
- of the multiple factors, and found some conflicts between texts. Finally he decided to handle it in
- businesslike fashion: he made a table of the abbreviated elements, so that he could consider it as a unit:
- PLANET HOUSE SIGN DESCRIPTION
- Sun 9th Cap. purpose X understanding, discrimination
- Moon 9th Cap. feeling X understanding, discrimination
- Mars 12th Aries initiative X confinement, aspiration
- Venus 8th Sag. acquisitiveness X regeneration, administration
- Merc. 9th Cap. mentality X understanding, discrimination
- Jup. 6th Libra enthusiasm X duty, equivalence
- Sat. 7th Sag. sensitiveness X partnership, administration
- Ur. 4th Leo independence X home, assurance
- Nep. 6th Scorp. obligation X duty, creativity
- Plu. 5th Virgo obsession X offspring, assimilation
- Ivo contemplated his production with a certain frustrated pride. He had made an unintelligible horoscope
- intelligible; he had reduced voluminous verbiage to its essence. Chaos to order, as it were—and he still
- didn't know what to make of it. There was a lot of discrimination, tied in with purpose, feeling and mentality,
- and this certainly seemed to reflect Afra's drives. But understanding tied in with the same three qualities.
- Then there was enthusiasm for duty and equivalence; obligation for duty and creativity; obsession for offspring
- and assimilation?
- What did all this say about her probable reaction to a Tritonian trial? Would it help her, or would it drive
- her to suicide? Or would she see through it all and laugh?
- Afra was a person, not a chart or a table.
- He should have left the astrology to Groton.
- Ivo shook his bursting head as though to rattle loose a productive notion and put the papers aside. He went to
- his own apartment and picked up the box that held his useless artifacts of Earth. He had never returned them to
- his clothing after the melting. The penny should still be there, amidst the junk... yes, his questing fingers
- found the disk. He fished it out without looking, flipped it into the air, caught it and slapped it against his
- wrist. "Heads we try her, tails we forget it," he said aloud. Then he looked.
- It was the bus token, possessing neither head nor tail.
- Groton rapped for attention. "We do not need to be unduly formal. Ivo, you've been assigned to prosecute.
- Please make your case."
- Ivo rose, feeling for a moment as though he were actually in a formal courtroom, addressing a jury of twelve.
- "Harold, it is my purpose to demonstrate beyond reasonable doubt that Afra Summerfield did willfully and with
- malice aforethought murder Bradley Carpenter. She—"
- Afra jumped to her feet in a fury. "What a thing to say! Of all the ridiculous, unwarranted, slanderous—"
- She broke off, seeing the other three silent and solemn.
- Groton turned slowly to address her. "You are of course entitled to express yourself, Afra. But it would be
- better if you let Beatryx speak in your defense. We do need to ascertain the truth of this matter, if we are to
- exist in harmony here."
- She subsided, pitiful in her misery and sudden uncertainty. "Yes, of course, Harold. I understand."
- "Proceed, Ivo, if you please."
- "We have here a pampered and arrogant young woman of the upper middle class. She was raised to believe herself
- superior to the common folk, by reason of the purity of her breeding, the finances of her family and the
- quality of her education. She possesses an alert mind and tends to deem those of more leisurely intellect to be
- inferior for that reason, too. At the same time, she resents those of demonstrably greater intelligence than
- hers, since such people appear by her definition to occupy a higher niche in the hierarchy. They are, in a
- word, superior."
- Afra watched him, appalled. "Is that what you really believe? That I—" But she halted again, seeing his
- impassive demeanor. "I'm sorry. I won't interrupt again."
- "Now picture the situation that obtained when she became employed within the orbiting Macroscope Project as a
- high-powered secretary. Many—perhaps most—of the trained personnel there exceeded both her
- education and her natural ability. Compared to them she was both ignorant and stupid. Surely this fostered in
- her a state of continuing resentment. No one likes to believe himself to be inferior, or to have others believe
- it, whatever the actual case may be."
- Ivo had intended to overstate the case, not really believing it himself, but he found himself responding to his
- own rhetoric. In accusing her, he was voicing some of his own attitudes. He felt inferior, and he had never
- liked it. And Afra was an intellectual snob.
- "In addition, these personnel were multiracial. Negroes, Mongolians and halfbreeds were ranked above her,
- inherently and socially. Even certain members of the maintenance crew were able to earn privileges she was
- denied. Remember, she is Georgia-born. To her, such persons are niggers, chinks and spies, tolerable so long as
- they 'keep their place' but never to be acknowledged as equals, let alone betters. These were also of foreign
- nationalities and foreign ideologies: to wit, socialist, communist and fascist. To her, a belch after a meal is
- uncouth and a cheek-to-cheek greeting between members of the same sex disgusting."
- He was going too far, bringing in irrelevancies, but could not seem to stop. His resentments were coming out,
- and she personified them. He was angry at her because he loved her.
- "But one thing kept her there, despite her obvious unsuitability for the position. She met an attractive young
- American scientist only slightly more intelligent than she who was willing to fraternize. She—became
- infatuated with him." Translation: Ivo was angry because Afra loved Brad....
- A crease appeared in Afra's brow and her color heightened, but she did not move or speak.
- "But it turned out, after a brief but intimate liaison, that this American had deceived her. He was far more
- able intellectually than she, having falsified his status in that respect. He had far, more education, and
- regarded what she had taken to be a commitment for marriage as no more than a temporary entertainment. Further,
- he proposed to reassign her favors to an acquaintance. She thus found herself reduced to the lowest status
- imaginable to her: so-called white slavery."
- Beatryx gestured in distress. "Ivo, that's horrible. You have no right to accuse her of—"
- He felt cold now, no longer angry. "Of de facto prostitution? I was not doing so. I was making the point that
- Bradley Carpenter treated her as a diversion. His real purpose—"
- "You're overdoing it," Groton cautioned him. "Brad isn't on trial."
- Ivo was glad to let that aspect drop. Brad had, after all, been his friend. He had known for twenty years what
- Brad was like: a polite, cautious, dull Schn. If Brad used people ruthlessly, what would Schn do?
- "It subsequently turned out that her supposed fianc was himself of mixed blood: by her definition, a mulatto
- or worse. And he had been raised in a free-love colony where morality in the conventional sense was unknown.
- Thus she learned that she had not been the first to share intimacies with him; rather, she was the last in a
- very long line, and followed after girls—and boys—of all the races of the world."
- Some condemnation! Ivo himself was as conservative as Afra, and as biased, despite what he knew of his origin.
- Yet he had shared much of the life of the project until its breakup. When, thereafter, he had encountered
- individual girls from it, he had indulged in the usual amenities. Outsiders would have considered this to be
- flagrant promiscuity. Yet the project bond was special; its members shared a heritage, and there were no
- reservations between them. What was more natural than a sharing of intellect and experience, in this way
- recapturing a fragment of that larger camaraderie?
- Ivo had been shocked by Afra's nudity and actions at the time of the handling—but that was because she
- was a nonproject girl. Had he been properly objective, he would have had no problem. She had been true to her
- viewpoint, then and in her relation to Brad, while he was a thorough hypocrite. He should be on trial, not
- she....
- Time to wrap it up, before he got carried away again. He gestured at Afra. "It is not for us, as it was not for
- her, to judge the morality of Bradley Carpenter. He is dead by this woman's hand. It is for us to determine
- whether the defendant had motivation for murder—and surely, by her bigoted definitions, she had. Her act
- must be interpreted in this light. There can be no verdict but guilty."
- He had spoken well, but he felt tight and sick. This trial had shown him unwelcome things in himself.
- Beatryx, assigned counsel for the defense, took the floor. She was gaunt now, and troubled, but her voice was
- strong. "Harold, this is all wrong. Ivo has put things all out of proportion. There's hardly anybody who
- couldn't be condemned by that sort of reasoning. Afra was trying to bring back the man she loved, and she tried
- very hard, but it didn't work. Nobody else did anything. The rest of us would have let him fade away, there in
- his tank. If she had known what would happen, she never would have—"
- "No," Afra said. "I couldn't stand to have him remain as jelly, or as an idiot. Better to have him dead, than
- that."
- Ivo froze. Beatryx was making a good case—and Afra had just undermined it.
- "That isn't true!" Beatryx told her. "You just think because he died, you have to take the blame. But he did it
- himself—he watched the destroyer on purpose."
- Afra stared straight ahead. Beatryx was right. Afra hadn't tried to kill Brad. She had taken a wild gamble in
- an effort to bring him back—from the dead, in effect. Her failure did not imply malice.
- "Do you have any statement to make on your own behalf?" Groton asked Afra after a moment.
- There was no response.
- "In that case, having heard the presentation and being already familiar with the background of this case, it
- behooves me to render an impartial decision."
- Groton was going through with it, but it seemed to Ivo that this "trial" was in a shambles. Afra had not fought
- back properly, and so had not been officially vindicated. They had accomplished nothing.
- "I find the defendant guilty of conduct prejudicial to the well-being of the decedent, Bradley Carpenter.
- Motivation for overt, premeditated murder, however, has by no means been shown, and more than a single
- interpretation may be placed on the defendant's physical actions. At worst, they were reckless. The actual
- instrument of demise appears to have been the phenomenon we term the destroyer, combined with an incompletely
- understood function of the melting cycle. Rehabilitation of the defendant therefore seems feasible."
- Brother! Would Afra swallow this?
- "Are you saying it was an accident?" Beatryx asked. "But she still has to pay for it?"
- "Just about," Groton conceded. "Recklessness, though, has been well established in my judgment."
- "I suppose that's all right, then."
- Ivo nodded acquiescence.
- "I therefore sentence you, Afra Summerfield of Georgia, to exile from the equal society of man until such time
- as the neutralization of the said destroyer seems feasible, so that no other person need ever be similarly
- afflicted. This will be considered penance by corrective endeavor. Further: because to a considerable extent
- your personal pride was at fault, this sentence includes a period of confinement at onerous labor. You shall
- assume the gardening and cooking and laundry chores for the Triton encampment and shall not leave the garden-
- kitchen-laundry areas except to make beds and to perform such other menial tasks as may be required of you by
- the other members of this encampment. This labor shall terminate only upon the group's departure from the
- present locale, at which time you shall be permitted to petition the group for readmittance to its society on a
- probationary basis.
- "Until that point you shall not again be addressed by name, nor shall you address any member of the group by
- name."
- And Afra, amazingly, nodded. She wanted to be punished!
- "This sentence," Groton said after a pause, "is suspended, owing to—"
- "No!" Afra said dully. "It's a fair sentence."
- So Groton had intended only a token reprimand. Afra, anticipating this, had insisted that it be real. Her
- privilege, of course—but were they helping her to recover, or merely catering to her masochism?
- "Girl," Ivo snapped into the intercom.
- After a few seconds Afra's voice came back. "Sir?"
- "Report to the drawing room for conference."
- She appeared duly, clad in a simple black skirt falling below the knees, with a long-sleeved blouse overset by
- a loose housecoat. A drab kerchief bound her hair, giving her something of the aspect of a nun.
- She stood silently, waiting for him to speak.
- "Sit down."
- "Sir?"
- "Down. I have something to show you."
- She settled on the least comfortable perch available.
- Ivo took his stance before the blackboard he had set up. "A conception of cosmology," he said, assuming the
- manner of a lecturer. "The evidence available indicates that our universe is in a state of continual expansion.
- Calculations suggest that there is a finite limit to such expansion, governed by variables too complex to
- discuss at this time. For convenience we shall think of the present universe as that four-dimensional volume
- beyond which our three-dimensional physical space and matter cannot expand: the cosmic limitation. We shall
- further consider these four dimensions to be spatial in nature, though in fact the universe is a complex of n
- dimensions, few of which are spatial and many of which interact with spatial planes deviously. Do you
- understand?"
- "Which other dimensions are you thinking of?"
- "Time, mass, intensity, probability—any measurable or theoretically measurable quality." She nodded, and
- he saw that he had her interest. There was nothing like a few weeks of household drudgery to make the stellar
- reaches more exciting. "Now assume that the 3-space cosmos we perceive can be represented by a derivative: a
- one-dimensional line." He drew a line on the board. "If you prefer, you may think of this line as a cord or
- section of pipe, in itself embracing three dimensions, but finite and flexible." He amplified his drawing:
- "Quite clear," she said. "A pipe of macroscopic diameter represented by a line."
- "Our fourth spatial dimension is now illustrated by a two-space figure: a circle." He erased the pipe-section
- and drew a circle on the board. "Within this circle is our line. Let's say it extends from point A to point B
- on the perimeter." He set it up:
- "The ends of the universe," she agreed.
- "Call this 3-space line within this 4-space circle the universe at, or soon after, its inception."
- "The fabled big bang."
- "Yes. Now in what manner would our fixed circle accommodate our variable line—if that line lengthened?
- Say the line AB expanded to a length of 2 AB?"
- "It would have to wrinkle," she said immediately.
- "Precisely." He erased his figure and drew another with a bending line:
- "Now our universe has been expanding for some time," he continued. "How would you represent a hundredfold
- extension?"
- She stood up, came to the board, accepted the chalk from him, and drew a more involved figure in place of his
- last:
- "Very good," he said. "Now how about a thousandfold? A millionfold?"
- "The convolutions would develop convolutions," she said, "assuming that your line is infinitely flexible. May I
- draw a detail subsection?"
- "You may."
- Carefully she rendered it:
- "This would be shaped into larger loops," she explained, "and the small ones could be subdivided similarly,
- until your circle is an impacted mass of threads. The diameter and flexibility of your line would be the only
- limitation of the process."
- "Excellent," he said. "Sit down."
- She bristled momentarily, then remembered her place. She sat.
- "Now assuming that this is an accurate cosmology," he lectured, "note certain features." He pointed with the
- chalk. "Our line touches itself at many points, both in the small loops and large ones. Suppose it were
- possible to pass across those connections, instead of traveling down the length of our line in normal fashion?"
- "Down the line being traveled from one area to another in space? As from Earth to Neptune?" He nodded.
- "Why—" She hesitated, seeing the possibilities. "If Earth and Neptune happened to be in adjacent loops,
- you might jump from one to the other in—well, virtually, no time."
- "Let's say that this is the case, and that those adjacent subloops are here." He pointed to the top of the
- first major loop. "Assume that arrangements and preparations make the effective duration of any single jump a
- matter of a few hours. How long would it take to reach Alpha Centauri from Earth?"
- "That depends on its position and the configuration. It might be possible in a single hop, or it might require
- several months of jumping. By the same token, it might be as easy to traverse the entire galaxy—if this
- representation of the nature of space is accurate."
- "The macroscope suggests this is the case."
- She caught on rapidly. "So the destroyer origin is theoretically within reach?"
- "Yes."
- She looked at him, life coming into her face. She, like Beatryx, had lost weight, but she was lovely yet. "How
- long have you worn that shirt?"
- He stuttered, caught completely by surprise. "I—I don't know. What—?"
- "Too long. May I?"
- "I—"
- She walked around him, pulling out his shirt and unbuttoning it. She removed it and bundled it under her arm.
- She kissed him lightly on the cheek and departed, leaving him somewhat stupefied.
- It had been forcibly brought home to him who, if this were a game, had the ranking hand.
- A mouse born into Leo was still a mouse, he remembered. Afra, however low she might sink, remained a stronger
- personality than he.
- Six hours later his shirt was back, clean and fragrant.
- He looked for Afra, not knowing what to say or whether to say it—and found her kneeling beside Brad's
- grave, sweet-pea flowers in her hand, tears coursing down her cheeks.
- And what had he expected?
- Earth: city: "disadvantaged" neighborhood.
- Children played in a tiny dirt yard, throwing rocks at a broken bottle. Their clothing was dirty and sodden
- with sweat; their feet were bare. All were thin, and posture and appearance hinted at malnutrition.
- Inside the house, a sick child slept restlessly, flies crawling across his cheek and buzzing up whenever he
- moved. He lay on a ragged mattress, refuse collected beneath it. Roaches peered from the hole in the wall where
- the yellow plaster had fallen away.
- In the next room a grizzled man sprawled before a bright television set, swigging now and then from a concave
- whisky bottle. He was as grimy as the children.
- Ivo imagined the dialogue he might have with this man, were conversation possible:
- "You're going to pot here. Why don't you move to a better neighborhood?"
- "Can't afford it. I'm in hock now."
- "Why don't you look for a better job, then? The economy is booming; you could make a lot more money."
- "I tried that. Man said I needed more education."
- "Why don't you go back to school, then? To one of the free technical universities?"
- "They have a quota system; only so many per district, and this one's full up until 1985."
- "Well, why don't you move, then... oh, I see."
- Ivo removed the helmet and goggles and shook his head. This was the age of affluence, with a record GNP and
- excellent jobs begging for personnel. Yet the macroscope showed the truth: whether because of this particular
- vicious circle or some variant of it, people were living in poverty. The residence he had just viewed was
- typical of a growing—not shrinking—segment of the population.
- There had been a time, not so very long ago, when only nonwhite Americans lived this way. There would come a
- time, not so very far removed, when only the affluent lived any other way.
- Why should he have any regrets about leaving this area of space?
- He did, though.
- Groton watched the screen as Ivo guided the image into the disk of Neptune. The mighty vapors boiled at an
- apparent distance of a thousand miles, throwing up great gouts of color.
- Five hundred miles, four hundred, and it was easy to fancy that they were aboard a ship actually coming in for
- a landing, and to feel the fierce spume of the methane storm. The dark dot he had centered on had now been
- clarified as the eye of a hurricane—the eye alone three hundred miles in diameter and awesomely deep.
- Hydrogen gas swirled thinly in its center, and thick methane weighted with ammonia crystals rushed around the
- rim. The wind velocity at the surface they could presently see was four hundred miles per hour.
- The cliffs of the cloudwall rose up, titanic, translucent, deadly. Then shadow as he lost the funnel, recovered
- it, lost it again. A hundred miles down, the tube was only a few tens of miles across, narrowing rapidly, and
- it wavered. Finally it was gone for good: either too thin to pinpoint or dissipated in the thickening
- atmosphere five hundred miles below the opening. Some light remained, but it was fading rapidly with depth.
- A thousand miles down: still the turbulent gases and flying storm crystals. Two thousand: the same. Three
- thousand—and no solid surface.
- "Does this planet have a surface?" Ivo demanded in frustration.
- "Got to," Groton said. "Somewhere. Too dense overall to be all gas."
- Four thousand. Five.
- "Sure your settings are tuned? Maybe we're not as deep as we thought."
- "I'm sure. It's the damn planet that's wrong!"
- Six, seven.
- At eight thousand miles below the visible surface they encountered the first solid material: caked ammonia ice.
- The macroscope readings were becoming vague; in this cold there was too little radiation in the proper range.
- At nine, genuine water-ice: rock-hard, opaque.
- Ten: the same.
- "We're two-thirds of the way to the core—and nothing but ice?" Ivo demanded.
- The traces were almost unreadable—but at almost twelve thousand miles depth they struck rock.
- "Do you realize," Groton whispered, "that Neptune proper is smaller than Earth? Less than an eight-thousand
- mile diameter core—" He looked at the indications, that abruptly showed clear. "But what a core!
- Tungsten, gold, platinum, iridium, osmium—the heaviest elements of the universe are packed in here! Think
- of what a gold mine this place is!" He paused. "Gold? Throw it away! The stuff here—" He gave up.
- "Is it all precious metal?"
- "Sorry—got excited. No, it's seventy percent iron, and the rest mostly oxygen and silicon. The heavy
- stuff just leaped out at me. But there is a lot of it, compared to what we're used to, and the proportion is
- bound to increase with depth. Mighty solid lithosphere. But then, it has to be. As I make it, something like
- two-thirds the mass of this planet has to be in the core—and the core's no larger than our Earth. My
- God—I didn't think! This core—it has to be ten, eleven times the average density of Earth, to make
- that mass. Nothing's that solid."
- "Going down," Ivo said.
- It was that solid. The multiple heavy elements on the core-ball's "surface" were floating there because the
- interior was several times their density.
- It was composed of partially collapsed matter: the refuse, possibly, of an extinct dwarf star. Protons and
- neutrons were jammed together with only imperfect electron layers holding them apart.
- "It seems," Groton remarked, "that half our job has been done for us."
- Ivo nodded, satisfied.
- Ivo began to explain their intent to the women.
- "The idea is to utilize the principle of gravitational collapse. We have obtained schematics for a rather
- sophisticated variant of the gravity focuser, though this resembles what we have here on Triton about the way a
- hydrogen bomb resembles a matchstick. Assembly of the generators alone will take months, even with a full crew
- of waldoes, and the related safeguards—"
- "What do you mean by 'gravitational collapse'?" Afra interjected.
- "Oh. Well, simplified, it is the effect gravitational attraction has on matter when taken to the extreme. Any
- object of sufficient mass tends to compress itself by its own gravity, and the more dense it is the stronger
- this force becomes. Actually the other forces, electromagnetic and nuclear, are far stronger on a unit basis
- than—"
- "May I?" Groton put in. "I think I can simplify this for the benefit of those who haven't been exposed to a
- galactic education." Suddenly Ivo realized that "those" meant Beatryx. He had become used to Afra's almost
- instant comprehension, and tended to forget that the other woman was slower, though as vitally concerned. He
- had forgotten, also, that he was now talking in a manner he would not have comprehended himself, not so long
- ago; despite his care not to fathom galactic meanings too deeply, he had picked up a considerable amount.
- And of course that was the reason Afra had asked her question. She knew astronomy and physics far better than
- he did, and was aware that the other woman was being left behind.
- "You see," Groton said, "Triton is smaller than Earth, so we weigh less there—I mean here—or did,
- before we started changing things. Schn is smaller yet, so on it we hardly weigh anything at all. But it isn't
- just size that counts. If Schn were made of osmium instead of ice, it would have about twenty-five times its
- present mass, and therefore more gravity. We would then weigh more there than we do, though still very little."
- Beatryx nodded. Ivo was impressed; he had not really appreciated what a real talent teaching was. Comprehension
- was one thing; converting one's knowledge into a clear explanation for others was another.
- "But a planet isn't just pulling at us," Groton continued. "It is pulling at itself, too. It is much more
- tightly packed in the center than at the edge, because of its own gravity. And if we squeezed Triton down into
- a little ball about the size of Schn, and stood on that we'd weigh more than we do now, just because it was so
- dense and because we were so much closer to its center.
- "And if we squeezed it down into a ball the size of a pea—why then the gravity would be very strong
- indeed. It might even begin to squeeze itself down farther, because its own attraction was so powerful. That's
- what's known as the gravitational radius—the point at which an object begins to collapse in upon itself
- as though it were a leaking tire. Once that happens, it's too late; nothing can stop it from going all the
- way."
- "But what happens to it?" Beatryx demanded, alarmed.
- "That's what we'd very much like to know. Ivo seems to have an answer from the macroscope, however."
- "It seems that matter can't just collapse into singularity—that is, nothing," Ivo said, doing his best to
- emulate Groton's style. "That would violate fundamental laws of—well, it's no go. So instead it punches
- through to another spot in the universe, following the line of least resistance."
- "Punches through..." Afra murmured, putting items together. "That's how you mean to—"
- "To jump to the galactic reaches. Yes. But there are some problems."
- "I should say so! You're playing with the molecular, the atomic collapse of matter! Assuming that you have a
- process to force this, which for the sake of conjecture I'll assume you do, exactly what happens to people
- compressed to pinhead size?"
- "Worse than that," Ivo said. "A two-hundred-pound man would have to squeeze down to one ten-billionth the size
- of—"
- "One ten-billionth!"
- "—of the nucleus of an atom. That's if he were to go it alone, of course; not so small if accompanied by
- other mass."
- "That's very small, isn't it," Beatryx said.
- "Very small," Ivo agreed. "But a mass the size of, say, the sun would not have to reduce by the same ratio. The
- greater the mass, the easier it is. But about people, now—this entire program is taken from the major
- extragalactic station. It is the only one that carries anything of the sort, for some reason. Actually, it
- doesn't carry anything but the technology related to such travel; its area of information is smaller than I
- thought at first. The melting is part of the preparation for it. This station says that animate flesh can
- survive the transformation, provided it is properly prepared."
- "And it was right before," Groton said.
- "Let's have the worst," Afra said grimly.
- "Well, first the liquefication we're already familiar with. Then isolation of the individual cells, and a kind
- of gasification."
- "The gaseous state rebounds better after compression," Groton put in helpfully. "Once molecular structure is
- reestablished."
- "And the field—that's a simplified description—maintains an exact ratio during compression," Ivo
- said. "That is, it fastens every atom in place and stabilizes things so that the entire field collapses evenly,
- and nothing is jostled or mixed up in the irregular currents of collapse. Much the same as spots on a full
- balloon will shrink in place when it is deflated, but not if it pops. After the—jump—the field
- maintains the ratios for the expansion, and only lets go when everything is as it was before. The machinery can
- take it all right; the extra flexibility for living things is required—because they are living. You can't
- turn life off and turn it on again. Not in the normal course."
- "You say the larger the accompanying mass, the easier the procedure," Afra said, becoming seriously interested.
- Large concepts came more readily, after the success of the melting and the Triton colony machinery. "Does that
- mean you're going to try to fasten onto—well, Schn,—and compress us with it?"
- "You have the idea, but we have larger masses at hand, and the equipment will be geared for them. The larger
- the mass, the less sophisticated the necessary technology, because of the smaller compression ratio. So—"
- "Triton itself? That may be simple, but it is ambitious."
- "Neptune."
- She seemed beyond surprise. "Do you know where we'll emerge?"
- Ivo looked at Groton, who shrugged. "We don't. The maps have changed in three million years. The expansion of
- space hasn't stopped. Even if the convolutions were constant, the arrangement of stars and galaxies keeps
- shifting. We need a contemporary projection—and there isn't any available on the macrosphere."
- "So we simply punch through and hope for the best?"
- "Yes. After a number of tries, we should be able to set our own map, and perhaps to extrapolate reasonably."
- "Suppose we land inside a star?"
- "The odds are vastly against it. But there seems to be provision for it even so; apparently matter will slide
- off other matter, when jumping. Path of least resistance means it is easier to punch through to an unoccupied
- spot than to double up on a star or planet or even a dust nebula that is indenting space on the other side. So
- we don't have to worry about it at all."
- "Suppose we get lost?"
- "We can't get lost as long as we have the macroscope. Not for long, anyway. The galaxy may look strange from
- another location in space, but we do have a rough notion of its present layout."
- "Do you?" Afra inquired. "Did you stop to think that a fifteen thousand light-year jump—to pick the kind
- of figure we'll be dealing with if we are to reach the destroyer—is like traveling fifteen thousand years
- into the future? All you've seen to date is the past history of a fragment of the universe. Your 'present
- layout' may be useless in determining your position."
- "We'll still have the programs; most of them are galactically dated. And of course there'll be the destroyer
- signal. Ill-wind department; we want to abolish it, so we use it for orientation."
- "What makes you believe there is only one destroyer?"
- Again Ivo and Groton exchanged glances. "We can always fix on the Solar system," Groton said. "We're pretty
- familiar with that. We can estimate how far we've gone by judging how Earth appears, and of course the fix on
- Earth will establish our direction. With azimuth and measurement—"
- "With all due respect, gentlemen," Afra said briskly, "you are sadly inundated if not totally submerged. You
- may not even be able to locate ol' Sol from fifteen thousand light-years' removal. The configurations will be
- entirely different, and Sol's absolute magnitude is not great. Let alone the strong possibility of obscuration
- by intragalactic dust and gas. As it is, we can only see, telescopically, one-thousandth of the Milky-Way
- center, and the dust is worse at the fringes. The macroscope is much better, of course, but—"
- "Translation:" Groton said. " 'We men are all wet; we'll get lost in a hurry.' " Beatryx gave him a
- smile—and, surprisingly, so did Afra.
- "How would you handle it?" Ivo asked her.
- "First I would orient on some distinctive extragalactic landmark such as the Andromeda galaxy. That's two
- million light-years away, in round figures, and if we jump farther than that we won't need to worry anymore
- about local affairs like destroyers. Then I'd fix on certain Cepheids, and look for the configurations typical
- of this general area—say, within a thousand light-years of Sol. Once I had identified the Pole Star I'd
- be within a hundred parsecs—"
- "Andromeda being another galaxy like our own, only larger," Groton said to Beatryx. "We should be able to see
- it from almost anywhere, because it is outside of and broadside to ours. The Cepheid variables—"
- "I'll explain what I mean, thank you," Afra said. "A Cepheid is a bright star that gets brighter every so
- often—regularly, as though it has a heartbeat. And the longer a star's period—that is, the time it
- takes to go from dim to bright and back again—the greater its absolute magnitude. Its real brightness. So
- all we have to do is measure its brightness as seen from our location and keep track of its period and we can
- figure out how far away it is. Because a star that is far away looks dimmer than one that is close."
- "Why yes," Beatryx said, pleased. "That's very clear."
- Ivo said nothing, not wanting to admit that he had not known what a Cepheid variable was, or how it could be
- used to ascertain galactic distances. He had produced technological wonders during their stay on Triton, and
- the principles Groton had applied to his machinery were in advance of anything known by Earthbound specialists.
- Ivo had increased his awareness considerably during all this, but his participation had been that of a
- stenographer. He had no real idea of content. He had done it, but he didn't understand it. The result was
- detailed technical knowledge in some areas buttressed by appalling gaps in related areas. He could talk about
- gravitational collapse, yet not know what a Cepheid was.
- And how much of Earth's civilization was exactly like that, he wondered. Doing Without comprehending—even
- when this was tantamount to suicide?
- "When," Beatryx said, "do we go?"
- It was four months of intense effort, mental, physical and emotional—but the group was in harness again,
- and profiting thereby. The members lived and worked in comfort, but the hours were savage. No longer did anyone
- do laundry or cooking by hand; that wasteful practice had been shoved aside in the rush.
- Beatryx became mistress of the automated life-services equipment so that the others were free for full-time
- labors. She also learned how to supervise the connection-soldering machines and circuit-assemblers, making sure
- that each quality-control dial registered favorably for each completed unit.
- Ivo traveled the galaxy via the macroscope in search of critical bits of information, since the intergalactic
- broadcast seemed to assume that the supportive techniques were already known; he also transcribed ponderous
- amounts of backup data.
- Afra received much of this material and spent many days with the macroscope computer verifying tolerances,
- vectors and critical ratios. She admitted that the essential theory of it was beyond her; she was merely
- adapting established processes to their needs and confirming its applications.
- Groton took her results, made up diagrams of his own, and tuned in the waldoes. He also supervised a complete
- survey of the globe of Triton, and selected particular locations with extreme care for the construction of
- enormous mechanical complexes. A visitor would have thought the planet to be the site of a burgeoning
- industrial commitment. In certain respects it was.
- They were participating in superscience: Type III technology. None of them comprehended more than a fraction of
- it But by accident or cosmic design, they were a team that could do the job, with the overwhelming assistance
- of the supervising programs from space. The first crude waldoes had given way to tremendous mechanical beasts
- that roved Triton as though the human element had been dispatched, and computers superior to the one the
- macroscope employed were now in routine service—but the incentive lay with the human component. Ivo, Afra
- and Groton became immersed in their separate areas and did not communicate directly with each other for days at
- a time, and too often the contacts were irritable, for all were chronically overextended. Beatryx, with her
- invariably ameliorative personality, kept them in touch, and this was as necessary a function as any of the
- others.
- The action became impersonal, for the project was much larger than they were, and the entire group had become
- merely the implementing agency. Yet Ivo watched what was happening and took pride in it, and he was sure the
- others did too. He knew that though Earth had largely forgotten their spectacular theft—the news had
- leaked out, making them momentarily infamous—the completion of their effort would leave the Earth-based
- astronomers and physicists gaping.
- The nature of the work shifted. Excavators burrowed into the lithosphere of Triton, casting up fragments of
- rock in a null-gravity field. A hole formed, deepening day by day: a deep hole, braced by immense metallic
- tubing. The borer advanced at the rate of just over ten miles per day, the ejecta spouting forth in a geyser of
- grit and raining down steadily upon the normal-gravity torus surrounding the hole.
- In time the tunnel, sixty feet in diameter, achieved the limit of depth the planet would tolerate. Metallic
- alloys could not prevent implosion beyond this point, and a force-field was unpractical in the neighborhood of
- the existing null-G field.
- The machines finished their business and retired. For a time activity diminished. Triton was at peace again.
- Then the shield of force that maintained an Earth environment around the tetrahedron home disintegrated. The
- foreign atmosphere puffed out, crystallized, and settled languidly upon the ground, dead as the erstwhile
- vegetation. The tetrahedron remained, sealed, in desolation.
- A figure trekked from the disaster area, encased in a space suit. It paused where a grave lay frozen and passed
- on to the waiting module. It entered; the vehicle blasted away, and Triton was uninhabited.
- On the moonlet Schn the reintegration of units occurred, and Joseph mated again with the macroscope housing.
- The ties cast loose; the ship-assembly drifted free of the ice, and Schn too was vacant.
- The space-borne macroscope entered the null-gravity column, still functioning but splayed and ineffective at
- the thousand-mile elevation. The vehicle descended against the increasingly strong updraft of nitrogen and
- oxygen.
- Near the surface of Triton the circulation became fierce; dust, debris and snow formed a tornado. The ship came
- down forwards, the macroscope housing leading, and nudged along on fractional power of the main engine.
- At three feet per second relative velocity the ship entered the tunnel at the base of the windy column. The
- turbulence subsided around it. Buoyed by the escaping atmosphere, that passed with a five-foot clearance around
- the rim of the housing, the assembly descended, gently accelerating. The flowing gas cushioned it, preventing
- brutal contact with the walls. At fifteen miles per hour maximum velocity, the ship tunneled through the moon.
- In three days it came to rest. The null-G column expired; debris filtered down. A nudge from the hot jets, no
- longer leashed at minimal power; the metallic restrainers, designed for exactly this failure, dissolved. The
- tunnel imploded, the action shocking back up its length and burying the ship a thousand miles beneath the
- surface.
- Now the immense field generators came into play elsewhere on Triton. Three new null-G columns developed,
- spearing out from the advance side like the prongs of the Neptune symbol. The atmosphere, augmented by cubic
- miles of rock pulverized into dust and voluminous byproduct pollutants, rushed into the breach and shot outward
- in ten-mile diameter thrusts.
- Triton slowed in its orbit, reluctantly, as the three vast motors braked it. Slowly it began to spiral in
- toward its primary—then gained velocity as its tether shortened.
- The mighty gravity of Neptune embraced its minion and hauled it into its gaseous bosom. Great ruptures appeared
- in the sea-god's ocean of atmosphere, torn up by the gravity of the spiraling ball. The tiny ice-moonlet Schn
- disappeared into that melee and did not reappear. Triton had lost its satellite, a moment before it lost its
- own identity.
- Well within Roche's Limit, that proximity that would have sundered a normally orbiting moon, Triton shuddered
- but did not break up. Events were far too precipitous to allow tidal force opportunity to take full effect.
- Contact: the stormy exterior veil of the gas-giant parted. Ahead of Triton, crystals of ammonia-ice exploded
- into vapor as the heat of friction boiled the atmosphere. Behind, there appeared a turbulent wake five thousand
- miles wide, the crystals frothing whitely as they rematerialized in the surging breadth of it.
- In five hours the moon had looped the planet at the fringe of its atmosphere and was entirely immersed in
- hydrogen. At fifteen thousand miles per hour it carved an atmospheric trench and looped again. On the third
- circuit it touched what had been the surface of water-ice and blasted it into steam. Water and ammonia thrust
- outward convulsively, throwing mile-long splinters of ice high into the storm, to warm and fragment violently
- again; sleet and boiling water and methane gas battled in the most violent conflation ever to occur on the
- surface of the planet.
- On the fifth circuit the molten moon touched the solid portion of Neptune. At three thousand miles per hour
- stone met metal, rolling and melting. Now the wake was of bursting lava and precious heavy elements.
- The ball that came to rest at last, embedded within a lake of liquid metal, was six hundred miles in
- diameter—but intact. Precipitously near its margin, like a worm in an apple, nestled the encapsulated
- ship.
- Yet the action was not over. From that capsule spread two Type III technology fields of force: the first
- encompassed the moon and planet, now forever fused, extending outward twenty thousand miles, permeating every
- particle of dust, every molecule of gas, every crushed atom of the core. It anchored every atom in place
- irrevocably, relative to the whole. The second field permeated the first and began a cataclysmic contraction,
- taking the entire package with it. It fed upon the energies released by that compression, and continued
- relentlessly.
- Neptune shrank, its turbulence abruptly frozen in place. Atmosphere and all, it diminished as though the viewer
- were retreating from it at a hundred thousand miles per hour—but there was no viewer. It became the size
- of Earth, of Luna, of Ceres the asteroid. It dwindled to a single mile's diameter—but its full mass and
- that of its moon and its moon's moon remained. It achieved its gravitational radius.
- Then it shrank again, so rapidly it seemed to vanish. In a microsecond it was gone.
- Five million miles out, tiny Nereid—Neptune's second moon—became a planet in its own right,
- circling the sun in Neptune's erstwhile orbit. Caught on its backswing, it had insufficient velocity even to
- retreat from Sol, let alone escape it, and fell instead in toward the orbit of Uranus as though looking for a
- home.
- Man's physical exploration of the cosmos had begun.
- CHAPTER 8
- The marshes of Glynn: now they were crossed by highways, infringed upon by the welling city that sent its
- pseudopods of industrial flesh questing outward in a great half-circle. Brunswick—founded in 1771, now
- more numerously populated than the entire state of Georgia at the date of this city's inception. The reputed
- cotton was gone from this area, and the pecans and the peaches, perhaps encouraged in their departure by the
- advice of the poet who made this region aesthetically renowned. Instead there were shipbuilding yards, the
- ships not necessarily of the water, and machine shops, the machines not necessarily the servants of man. The
- old pulp mills, their forest cellulose depleted, had been replaced by more sophisticated refineries, and the
- canneries by protein-simulatories. There was more to learn about chemistry in Brunswick than any man could ever
- know.
- "Do you have your fix, Ivo? We're moving into position above the null-G column and it may get a little breezy."
- "Almost, Harold."
- Yet the marshes remained, protected in part by statute of the Empire State of the South, that the live-oak
- might retain its ancestral home, and perhaps too the Cherokee rose. From the city he flew, disembodied, all
- observing, passing through obstacles without flinching, seeming to breathe the freer atmosphere of nature. The
- dusky English sparrows gave way to the red-winged blackbird; the chimney-swift to the belted kingfisher. The
- ugly cockroach hid, the lovely dragonfly emerged; the bold house rat yielded to the shy cottontail rabbit; the
- gray park squirrel faded in the face of the gleaming blacksnake.
- "Are you about finished, Ivo? We're descending toward the excavation."
- "Almost, Afra."
- The marshes: and if there were water moccasins and alligators and snapping turtles, were these not more
- beautiful and less destructive than the stout tourists, the hapless domesticants? From the watery inlets rose
- the ancient bald cypress trees, magnificently—some would say grotesquely—swollen at the base, their
- islands of woody "knees" adjacent. Farther along were a rare American elm, several glossy-leaved handsome
- magnolias, some small sassafras, large sycamore, medium tulip-tree—and finally the aristocrat of the
- south, the great live-oak, garlanded with hanging Spanish moss.
- He came to a halt beneath it, within its somber cathedral of foliage, responding to the massive permanence of
- it, the solitude.
- "Glooms of the live-oaks, beautiful-braided and woven / With intricate shades of the vines that myriad-cloven /
- Clamber the forks of the multiform boughs—"
- "What did you say, Ivo?"
- "A poem I know, Beatryx. I'm sorry; I did not mean to repeat it aloud."
- "One by Sidney Lanier? But isn't that poetry meant to be spoken aloud? Please go on with it."
- Not really surprised, he obliged. "Emerald twilights—Virginal shy lights / wrought of the leaves to
- allure to the whisper of vows, / When lovers pace timidly down through the green colonnades—"
- He broke off, staring at the spreading oak in consternation. It was the poem of Schn's first message, the one
- that lead up to the terminal thought. If Afra were to hear it and identify it—
- He calmed himself. It was, after all, only a poem; it bore only obliquely on his secret. Why should he hide it?
- Afra must already have caught on to the truth. Significantly, she had stopped pressing him on the matter of
- Schn. "It goes on like that. I was looking at a tree, on Earth, and it reminded me."
- "It's very nice," Beatryx agreed.
- He had his fix: that mighty live-oak in the marshes of Glynn. He keyed the location into the computer as the
- primary reference point. He was ready for the first jump.
- Ready—to penetrate to the bowels of Triton, to be entombed there, to undertake, while the entire moon
- decelerated, the melting... and gasifying... and collision with Neptune... and compression... and...
- The scene opened on his fix: the magnificent live-oak, extending its rotund branches as though to embrace all
- the world. The tree was hardly changed, except—yes, it was smaller, more vigorously leafed. Still bearded
- with Spanish moss, it was a young adult rather than a patriarch. The oval green leaves were more shiny, the
- acorns seemed richer in their scaly cups.
- "When lovers pace timidly down through the green colonnades, / Of the heavenly woods and glades, / That run to
- the radiant marginal sand-beach within / The wide sea-marshes of Glynn;—"
- And, astoundingly, there were lovers! A young man in what Ivo took to be a farmer's outfit and a rather pretty
- girl, her looks spoiled somewhat for Ivo by the dated cut of her dress. They were just leaving a bower, perhaps
- having completed their liaison there.
- Dated dress? Ivo reproved himself. He was thinking in late twentieth century terms. He cared nothing for
- fashion, dictated as it was by commercially-minded foreigners, yet somehow anything not contemporary was less
- attractive than it should be. He suspected that he would have been quite satisfied, had he lived in this girl's
- time, with her costume. It decorated, after all, the timeless attributes of the sex.
- He followed them past a mighty white-oak that had been a rotting stump before and into a swampy glade where two
- and three foot high red-flowered knotweeds bloomed, and white-flowered arrowhead plants, and bright yellow
- buttercups. At the edge of an open pond stood yard-high pickerelweeds with glossy spadelike leaves as long as a
- spread-fingered hand, the blue flowers just forming on the upright spike; and upon the water lay the great
- green disks of the water-lily, not yet in bloom.
- The season was late spring or early summer, Ivo decided. June, perhaps. Late enough for the first pickerel-
- weed, too early yet for goldenrod.
- He left the couple to their silent dialogue and traveled deeper into the swamp. Yes, there was an alligator in
- pursuit of fish, as graceful a swimmer as any. Emerging near the city, he passed cottontail rabbits and
- flickers browsing for beetles in the fields. It was amazing how much closer nature came to civilization, here.
- He traversed the city, and found a creosoting plant, a box factory, a conventional cannery, shipping wharves,
- and at last a newspaper with the date: June 5, 1930.
- They had jumped fifty light-years from Earth.
- And those lovers—in their early seventies, now. It was a wonderful and somewhat painful thought.
- Another jump, another fix: the scene differed: The terrain was still marshy, but no trace of either the stately
- live-oak or huge white-oak remained. Instead it was bright dawn upon white cedars, the average tree perhaps
- eighty feet tall, crowded together and cutting off much of the light of the sun so that it did not touch the
- ground directly.
- Ivo paused to consider the implications. Cedar preferred freshwater swamps, and the marshes of Glynn were salt.
- How had this come about?
- Either his fix was off or there had been a serious change in the landscape. The computer was responsible for
- the fix, establishing it by the gravitic and magnetic qualities of the planet: a complex and indirect process,
- but thorough. The location checked out. Therefore—
- How big a jump had they taken?
- "Continental drift?" Afra inquired, her voice seeming to emerge from the cedar grove. It was not hard to
- picture her standing there, just behind a tree.
- "Drift?" Back to the stupids again.
- "The movement of the continents in the course of geologic time," she explained. "If the expression on your face
- means what it surely means, your landscape has changed. You might be a mile or so from where you thought you
- were, and it wouldn't be the scope's fault. The continent itself could have shifted. Or orogeny could
- have—"
- "Could be. I seem to be in a freshwater swamp, inland from where I was, and the fix checks. But how much
- time—?"
- "Oh, a few million years or so."
- He drew off the goggles and stared at her. She was smiling, as he had suspected. "Such a jump is possible, you
- know," he said, nettled.
- "Certainly. But not this time. Our stellar configuration establishes our continued residence within the Milky-
- Way galaxy, so we have to be within seventy thousand light-years or so of Earth. I would judge within ten
- thousand, actually. And it is also possible for rivers to change course and for beaches to submerge. A few
- thousand years would be enough to change your flora and fauna perceptibly."
- Ivo replaced the goggles with something less than good grace and sped toward Brunswick. His exploration, he
- knew now, was confirmatory only; Afra had already worked out the position by astronomical means. The very
- process of locating Earth established its distance, though only his own investigation could pin it down
- precisely. The macroscope had a sweep-adjustment that enabled it to select for a certain type of image; that
- was one of a number of refinements courtesy of galactic broadcasts. Otherwise the problem of locating Earth
- would be horrendously complicated.
- There was nothing at the Brunswick location except scrub forest. "It's pre-1771, anyway."
- He heard the rustle of her leaning forward. How he wished she would do that when his eyes were on her, when
- there was no technical business at hand. But she belonged to a dead man yet, however the live might yearn for
- her.
- She murmured: "As I make it, the jumps should be gradated sharply. Probably fifty years is the
- minimum—forty-nine, actually—because you can't jump from the end of one loop to the middle of the
- one adjacent, or from place to place within your own. The larger loops should be multiples of these, since
- they're made out of looplets, and then there could be multiples of those—we don't know how far it
- extends. Even a slight change in the angle of our jump could shift us from the smalls to the mediums or worse.
- If we assume each level is the square of the prior one, first level being roughly fifty years, the second would
- be two and a half thousand years and the third six and a quarter million—light-years. So just keep calm
- until you know which level it is."
- "Six and a quarter million?" he repeated, comprehending her reason for the private discussion. "That—that
- could put us in another galaxy!"
- "Not likely. Probably in intergalactic space. But as I said, the local light survey places us definitely within
- a galactic structure, and since you found Earth where it was supposed to be, the odds are it is our own. I
- conjecture level two, therefore."
- "Two and a half thousand." It was still appalling—and she wasn't sure. It was possible, if unlikely, that
- this was merely an Earthlike planet occupying the same spot in another galaxy or cluster that Earth occupied in
- the Milky Way. Perhaps every galaxy was laid out on a common plan. Cepheid variables, novas, planets, all
- fitting into their destined slots....
- He abolished it as fantasy. "That's before the Christian era."
- She made no reply, but he felt her closeness, her excitement. To peer into ancient history! No man had done
- such a thing so directly before.
- "Oh what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea? / Somehow my soul seems suddenly free—"
- She replied: "Ye marshes, how candid and simple and nothing-withholding and free / Ye publish yourselves to the
- sky and offer yourselves to the sea!" And she touched his hand.
- Thus did she confess to him that she knew of Sidney Lanier and what he signified in Ivo's life, and perhaps had
- known from the beginning; and her hand now squeezing his own suggested an added meaning to the words she
- quoted. Candid and simple and nothing-withholding and free? He dared not hope; it was most likely an
- intellectual game, for her.
- He had tried to emulate the qualities of Lanier the person, to mold his character after that of his adopted
- ancestor—but it had not worked. Ivo could not create poetry, and he totally lacked Lanier's winning ways
- with the ladies. How much better off he would have been to develop a personality truly his own!
- "Jump it to Europe," Afra said.
- He jumped it to Europe. The time was noon at Rome—and there was no settlement of man there. "Pre-Roman,"
- he announced.
- "Try Egypt."
- "Nothing at Alexandria," he said after a moment. "Not even dry land."
- "Naturally not, if it's pre-Roman. You want Memphis."
- He headed southeast, toward the noncoded location, feeling out of sorts again.
- On an eastern channel of the Nile delta he discovered a bustling city, not large by his expectations but with
- the aura of a capital of some sort. Memphis?
- "Doesn't sound like it," Afra said. "But any city is good news for us. Look for a palace or a temple; see if
- you can find written records to photograph. We should be able to date those."
- Ivo obliged, descending to street level near a complex of buildings he took to be significant. The street was
- narrow and filthy, lined by tiny mud-brick dwellings set close together and generally no more than a single
- story high. He could make out the straw coating of the weathered bricks, and fancied he could almost sniff the
- surrounding slum offal. Inferior residential districts had not begun with America, certainly!
- The natives were human: slender, swarthy Mediterraneans with black hair and brown eyes. A number were naked,
- and these he presumed were slaves; their racial types were variable, ranging from Nordic blond to full black.
- Even the clothed ones gained little; they possessed none of the glorious habiliment he had thought of as
- ancient Egyptian. There were no gold ornaments or bright cloths, and not even shoes or sandals. Barefoot,
- bareheaded, the men were clad only in the wraparound schenti: white cloth held at the waist by a wide leather
- belt, the outfit reaching only to the knees. The women wore long tight skirts and a number were bare-breasted.
- The effect would have been delightful, had they been young, healthy and clean; these were not.
- At the temple/palace grounds things changed abruptly. There were no women, and the men were much better
- dressed. They wore wide, short wigs, hairpiece quality a seeming guide to status. They wore full skirts with a
- short sleeve for the left arm only and overset by a pleated mantle of linen. Evidently the people he had seen
- on the street were of the lowest class.
- Some stone was in evidence, but up close the structures were hardly impressive. The jewelry the personnel wore
- furnished most of the temple color.
- He explored several private cells, finding them routinely occupied. If this were a place of worship, it was
- decadent; if a palace, the Pharaoh was far away. One section even seemed to be still under construction. Here
- there were guards, their spears, axes and pear-shaped shields set aside as they watched lethargic slaves
- chipping stone under the supervision of a harried elderly taskmaster. There was no particular brutality about
- it; only the supervisor—probably the responsible one—showed any urgency, and his gesticulations
- went largely unheeded.
- Ivo came in for a closer look, knowing that where there was activity of this nature there had to be some kind
- of blueprint or written directive. If that document were dated, or carried the name of the chief
- executive—
- At this point another man came into the scene. His hair was divided and partly shaved above the ears, and he
- had a long braided lock falling in front of one ear and curling up at the end. Two bright feathers decorated
- the remainder of his hair. His arms were tattooed, as were his thighs, in crosshatched patterns. He wore a wrap
- of decorated fabric that looped around the body and anchored to one shoulder, the hem richly bordered.
- This man looked up, facing Ivo. His mouth parted in an O of surprise. He gesticulated.
- The guards woke up. In a moment they were beside the man, bright headpieces in place, short-sleeved metal
- shirts gleaming, ox-hide shields up. There were many more of them than Ivo had suspected. Some must have been
- summoned by the commotion from elsewhere on the grounds. Many were Egyptian, while others were racially similar
- to the recent arrival. Ivo realized he was dealing with a superimposition of cultures. The Egyptians must have
- been conquered recently.
- The feather-headed man pointed. There was no question who commanded, here. The guards lifted their spears, and
- some dropped back to notch arrows. All looked toward Ivo.
- They saw him!
- Now the slaves were looking too, desisting from their labors. Frightened, they clustered on the far side of the
- court, while the guards formed a defensive line. Postures were aggressive, but no one took action. They were
- waiting for the command.
- "What is it?" Afra's voice demanded nearby, jolting him. He had thought for a moment that one of the guards had
- spoken audibly—a ridiculous notion. Thousands of years separated scene from viewer, and the macroscope
- did not transmit sound.
- Almost as ridiculous a notion, actually, as that of these men of the past seeing Ivo, as though this were
- merely a window.
- The feathered leader made his decision. His mouth moved as he barked commands. The guards began to move,
- closing in on—
- Without answering Afra, Ivo manipulated the controls convulsively and shot straight up two hundred feet,
- instinctively fleeing from the situation. The faces of the warriors turned up to follow him, and he could see
- that they were afraid.
- "Ivo, you saw something!" Afra persisted.
- "Nothing," he said, feeling himself shaking. Lanier had had courage! "Must be a little tired." He was drifting
- far above the city now, finding a certain birdlike security in height.
- "Maybe you should take a break," she said with concern. "These transformations are weakening us all, and we
- don't know how much of your strength this searching draws. No point in risking—"
- "I'm okay." He was ashamed to admit what form his fatigue had taken, and did not trust the result of his
- observation. Non-Egyptians in ancient Egypt? As rulers? He was sure Egypt had done the conquering, not the
- reverse.
- Of course he had become sleepy, letting a dream-image replace that of the scope. He had known something like
- that to happen when reading: the words on the page would become more and more fantastic, until with a start he
- realized that his eyes were closed. Returning to the real book he would find his place, noting where the
- mundane text diverged from the astonishing vision—only to drift off again similarly.
- He understood that this could happen to a fatigued driver, too. The man would spy something incredible, like an
- ocean liner crossing at an intersection, and realize that he was dreaming at the wheel. If he were sensible, he
- would pull over immediately and rest, lest the next nod be fatal. The mind had intriguing ways to sublimate
- strain.
- He was tired; that explained it, though he did not feel depleted. Perhaps it was not so much a physical effect
- as a psychic one. Knowing how far they had ranged from Earth—so far that light reflected from their base
- of operations, the planet Neptune, would not reach home for thousands of years—knowing this, he
- unconsciously sought a closer identification with the home planet. He wanted to step into the world he saw,
- somehow, much as a child wanted to step into a storybook picture. A world of ancient adventure and glory, where
- the threat of nuclear holocaust or mind-destruction did not exist. For all its primitive faults, a better
- world....
- If it happened again, he would quit. Afra was right; there was no point in wearing himself out, when his
- mission was so important. A misreading of a year or two might throw them a light-year or two off course. Better
- to be sensible: to wait a few hours and do it properly, than to risk inaccurate information.
- And it was important, he reminded himself again. They were not just traveling; they were attempting to map the
- convolutions of the cosmos as the jump cycles penetrated them, and in that sense an error of as much as a day
- might invalidate the phase. How much would a tiny inaccuracy be magnified by a large jump? There was no point
- in the map unless it were precise, and without the map they would never be able to return physically to Earth.
- Only the macroscope could pinpoint their location so exactly; the telescope, over a distance of a thousand
- light-years, was a blunderbuss.
- "You know best, Ivo," she said quietly.
- Almost, he quit then. "Thanks," he said, meaning it. "I don't think Egypt is doing us much good. Where else
- should I try?"
- "You might try Damascus. That's traditionally the oldest city in the world, and a very important one. Move
- northeast about four hundred miles—"
- "On my way." He could jump there instantly by touching the correct coding, since Damascus was on the list; but
- he preferred to make the trek by, as it were, his own power. It gave him badly needed confidence.
- He shot across the delta of the Nile at jet-plane velocity and intersected the coastline. His route would take
- him over the southwest corner of the Mediterranean Sea—probably the same route used by the Egyptian ships
- in the course of trade or war with Asia minor. Except that he was high above the ground. Even so must the
- fabulous spirits of Near East legend have swooped in minutes over land and sea—the godlets, the genii,
- gaseous creatures of malevolence and power. Their number was supposed to have been severely curtailed by
- Biblical King Solomon, who confined them to bottles when they would not swear fealty to him. Some were said to
- have remained helpless in such confinement for thousands of years. Could they be considered in fact travelers
- via the macroscope, able to witness without participating? What a horrible fate, to be corked forever,
- sentient, within a tiny sphere!
- Time had passed during his sojourn in the land of Egypt, and his exodus was late. The day was terminal, dusk
- approaching, and he was traveling into it. The descending sun sparkled from the waves and tinted the edges of
- clouds. "How still the plains of the waters be! / The tide is in his ecstasy. / The tide is at his highest
- height: / And it is night." And what if this were the Mediterranean instead of the marshes of Glynn? The words
- of the poet still applied.
- A ship came into sight upon the ocean. He swerved to study it: a stout galley, a dozen or fifteen oars stroking
- the water rhythmically on each side. So they really did use them, in the olden days! It had a mast, but the
- sail was furled: not enough wind. Probably anxious to get home tonight, he thought fondly, and no wonder; this
- ship could not be much over fifty feet long. Compared to the modern liners, a thousand feet from stem to stern
- (he smiled a little wistfully, remembering Brad's pun)... though this one did not appear to have much of a
- stem... or even the three-hundred-foot sailing ships....
- No. This toy dared not stray far from its port.
- He was too low, too slow; he wanted to reach Damascus before nightfall. He could not afford to tarry beside
- every curiosity along the way, tempting as such diversions might be.
- He lifted—and did not rise. The ocean was nearer now, less placid; the green waves slopped randomly fifty
- feet beneath him. He felt cold.
- He concentrated on the macroscopic controls, closing his eyes to the scene around him. If this were a second
- snooze, he wanted to pull out of it before admitting defeat. Pride required at least an orderly retreat. If it
- were a momentary slip of the fingers, no problem. The spherical control was in his right hand, guiding his
- journey as he automatically adjusted it, hardly conscious of his manipulation. A twist—
- The ball was gone! His fingers closed on air.
- He opened his eyes. The living liquid was twenty feet below and he was falling.
- He grabbed at the goggles. His hand smacked into his bare face.
- "Ivo!" Afra's voice, from a distance.
- The water struck, the force and chill of it numbing his naked body. Brine slapped into his eyes, his mouth,
- blinding and choking him.
- He forgot about the niceties of perception and probability, and swam. His head broke surface and he coughed out
- the spume fogging his lungs and shook the sting from his eyes.
- He was here. No doubt of that. Had he really heard Afra cry his name, as though she cared, just before the
- splash? Academic curiosity, now.
- Who was he to claim the thing was impossible? He could drown in mid-protest. Better to deal with reality as he
- found it.
- He had fallen somewhat ahead of the ship, and to the side. He did not know how far he was from land, but it was
- too far. He was not that strong a swimmer, and the cold was getting to him already, and he did not even know
- the direction. His best hope was to intercept the galley; otherwise—
- He swam. His arms were heavy already, unused to these conditions and probably fatigued in advance by the
- melting/gastifying/compression cycle, though he had no personal awareness of the details. They had set the
- program, and had gone under the melt-beam... and come out of it to find space shifted about them. Space travel,
- in practice, was that simple. Afra no longer demanded the handling, such was her own confidence now. Meanwhile,
- it was hard to keep from breathing the water, since the waves came irregularly and he was not adept at the
- crawl breathing cycle. Finally he lifted his head and switched to breast-stroke/frog-kick, watching for the
- ship.
- It seemed it was easier for him to traverse the light-years than to cover a hundred feet of choppy water.
- The galley was in sight! The oars lifted and stroked, lifted and stroked, and the vessel cut through the sea at
- an impressive rate, large and sleek from this lowly angle. Circular shields lined the top, and in occasional
- swells he could see the great front ram lift: a warship.
- He was not going to make it. He was still a little ahead, but his rate of progress toward it was insufficient
- and getting slower. Already the numbness of his arms had reduced him to a dog-paddle. In a few minutes the ship
- would pass him and be on its way, leaving him to tire at last and sink. Would that return him to their Neptune-
- base, buried deep in the continent of Triton with the screaming methane storms above and impacted matter below?
- Or would it simply be the end?
- He did not have the nerve to find out. His struggle had to be for life as he experienced it; he could not end
- this adventure by suicide, even if it were no more than a nightmare.
- He saw the galley now with sharp clarity: dark brown wood low in the water surmounted by the row of oar-holes,
- and above them square windows with additional mountings for oars. The bow was vertical and without ornament,
- curving forward near the waterline to project into the massive six-foot spike that clove the ocean and, upon
- occasion (he was sure), the hulls of enemy ships. The rear curved up and back like the neck of a swan,
- terminating in a forward-tilting point twelve feet above the waterline. The last oar-brace was larger, and from
- it came the sturdy rudder, resembling a paddle inserted backwards. The side of the vessel above the oar-banks
- was checkered with alternate wooden and wickerwork panels, and the capping row of multicolored circular shields
- contributed to the galley's increasingly formidable aspect.
- There was a lookout sitting high in the bow, now directly opposite him. Ivo yelled.
- The head swung around immediately: no snoozing there. An exclamation, and other heads appeared. The banks of
- oars lifted and paused at the height of their uniform backstroke, and the ship coasted to a halt. Then a chain
- of gruff orders, and it spun neatly and shot toward him.
- Had he thought it a toy, from the patronizing vantage of his macroscopic elevation? This was a precisely
- disciplined, highly maneuverable warship!
- It hove-to above him and he clambered clumsily aboard the ram—Aries the ram?—immensely grateful for
- its support. He discovered that it was triparte: the major portion was an extension of the narrow keel,
- reinforced with bronze plates, with two braces converging from the sides of the bow. The entire thing could be
- crushed or broken off without holing the ship proper. It must have seen action recently, too, for there were no
- barnacles on it.
- Hands reached down from the upper deck. Ivo braced himself against the curving bow and stood up, clinging
- weakly against the motion of the boat. He was just able to reach the proffered assistance, and in a moment they
- had him hauled roughly aboard, bruised, chilled through and as tired as he had ever felt, but intact.
- A short warrior stood before him, resplendent in metal helmet and leather armor unlike that of the Egyptians:
- evidently the captain. He studied Ivo, who stood naked and shivering violently in the slight evening breeze.
- "Who are you?" the captain demanded brusquely.
- "Ivo Archer." He realized that these people were not going to help him until they were satisfied he was not
- dangerous to them.
- "Ivarch," the captain repeated. "Slave, free or royal?"
- "Free." But how could he prove it, naked as a slave and without money or home-address or friends?
- "Which nation?"
- "America."
- "Arpad?"
- "America." Naturally they would not have heard of it, but there seemed to be no point in prevarication.
- The captain hesitated, probably uncertain whether a citizen of an unknown country deserved courtesy or rebuke.
- At length he made his choice. "Mattan will decide."
- Mattan: a superior? A god? Fate?
- The captain wheeled neatly in military fashion. "Clothe this man and feed him." A man of decision, he.
- They brought Ivo an abrasive fiber blanket and put him belowdecks where the air was steamy from the
- perspiration of the naked oarsmen. The stench was terrific, but the warmth made it worthwhile. Before long the
- stiffness withdrew from his limbs and he felt his vigor oozing back.
- He was seated in the stern just ahead of the rudder—man's compartment. There was a center aisle about
- five feet across that ran the length of the hull, cluttered with boxes and buckles. On either side were the
- narrow benches upon which the oarsmen sat, one per oar. They heaved in unison, as they had to, for in these
- cramped quarters any wrong or poorly timed motion would create chaos. Every second oar projected well into the
- aisle, but the men did not bother with the added leverage available. They were slaves, obviously, but none was
- chained or, as far as he could tell, unhappy. Most of them were light-skinned.
- Night, and the hold grew dark. The officer at the far end terminated the cadence and bawled out his orders. The
- oars were shipped, their ends pushed to the floor and fastened there with stiff leather straps. There followed
- a period of fifteen minutes while the slaves stood up, stretched, chatted, and relieved themselves into the
- available containers. The rudderman—another officer, since he wore the leather armor—tied his own
- oars and used the bucket. Ivo, seeing the way of it and finding himself in need, availed himself in like
- fashion of the facilities. More of the reason for the intense atmosphere was now evident; not all of it was
- sweat.
- But was it any worse than the broken toilet and steaming garbage of a twentieth-century slum dwelling?
- Under the supervision of the bow officer, the slaves hauled on the bottom panels of the lower deck and handed
- up from the bilge the supplies: rolls of hard bread, goatskins of wine. The rudderman went topside and returned
- shortly with two legs of smoked goatmeat, one of which he passed to the cadence officer. Rank had its
- privileges.
- Ivo took one of the rolls and found it wooden. It had not occurred to him just how solid unleavened bread could
- be. He couldn't bite it; he had to gnaw. Soon the saltiness of it inspired thirst, and he borrowed a skin. He
- squeezed it the way he had seen the others do, to arc a stream into his mouth without contaminating the nozzle
- with his saliva. The brownish stuff splashed across his face, bringing laughter from the slaves.
- Ivo laughed too, sensing no enmity from these people, and wiped the burning fluid out of his eyes and off his
- hair. This concoction was beyond contamination! On the second attempt he managed to center on his mouth, though
- he did not have the technique of swallowing while squirting and had to break off quickly. Wine? This brew
- tasted like overripe dishwater with frogjuice in it, but it was wet.
- Some of the slaves had brought out fine lines of knotted tendon and were dangling these out the oar-ports. Soon
- Ivo saw why: they were fishing, and not without success. The fish liked the chips of bread! There was air-space
- around the rising mast, and in an enormous ceramic bowl they built a smoky fire to roast their catches against.
- The lucky slaves might well sup better than the masters!
- While this was not the life Ivo would have chosen for himself, he did find a certain appeal in it. A man here
- had only to pull his oar and keep the cadence, and he was adequately fed and sheltered and protected, with
- little to worry about (except an enemy ram?) and plenty of company.
- After an hour the crude tallow candles were snuffed. The men returned to their places and slept, seemingly not
- discommoded by the cramped discomfort. The officer-shift changed; the two hitherto on duty went above, while a
- single armed soldier paced the aisle. Any slave could have grabbed him from behind, but none was interested;
- this was token force to keep order, nothing more. Probably the slaves had no knowledge of sailing or of
- navigation; mutiny was pointless.
- Ivo lay down on the filthy deck and slept without difficulty, only moderately queasy from the constant rocking
- of the boat.
- At break of day a rising wind rocked the ship more violently. The slaves grinned as they heard the sounds of
- the great sail being unfurled and hoisted: no rowing this morning! The breeze took hold and the sidewise rhythm
- subsided, making Ivo feel better. He was not ordinarily subject to motion sickness, but the combination of
- smell, wine, fatigue and wind had assaulted his intestinal well-being.
- About noon orders began to fly above. The men came alive, taking their places and unshipping the oars, though
- the craft was still under sail. The alternate men who had the projecting oars stood up this time, grasping the
- tips. The center aisle was now filled, one man standing behind another, arms resting on wood held waist-high.
- The cadence began and the oarsmen strove vigorously. The ship—still under sail!—accelerated. Then
- Ivo heard distant cheering, and understood.
- The ship was coming home.
- The cadence accelerated and the men fairly bent the oars in their effort, muscles glistening. Ivo peered
- through the nearest port with some difficulty and was able to make out the outlines of a walled city. Nothing
- like putting on a show for the homefolk!
- Then halt! and the oars reversed as the sail dropped, braking the ship within a few feet of the dock.
- The captain had not forgotten Ivo. Two soldiers came to escort him from the ship. He blinked in the brightness
- of day, topside, then was hustled over the gang to the dock. The harbor was in the southern section of the
- city; the sunlight slanted over his right shoulder as he walked.
- The terrain was rocky, houses perched upon slanted foundations, and the narrow streets curved a great deal. It
- was a wealthy city. Some buildings were of stone and wood, built to last, though most were of many stories and
- crowded into very small areas, making the streets seem like mere crevices in a solid mass of residence. Almost
- every house had its terrace, however, which helped.
- Ivo was delivered to an antechamber where an elegant assortment of bedsheets were hung. The two guards
- departed, but he was sure they were not far away. What next?
- A girl, bare of head, foot and breast, entered and approached him with provocative confidence. He decided to go
- along with whatever was expected.
- Efficiently she stripped the soiled blanket from him and deposited it in a corner. She brought a basin of cold
- water and sponged his body down and rubbed scented ointment into his muscles. Since she was obviously trained
- for this and competent, he maintained his composure; but it was only the continuing feeling of unreality that
- enabled him to put up with such familiar handling by an unfamiliar woman. The arms and legs weren't so bad, but
- the buttocks—
- And how had Afra felt, being handled by him?
- Then she sat him down upon a bench and brought out a horrendous iron blade. While he watched with alarm, she
- sharpened it assiduously against a leather strap. The insecurity of his present situation impressed him
- strongly.
- Carefully she bathed his face and shaved him, never cutting his flesh despite the irregularity and clumsiness
- of the razor. She finished by rubbing perfume into his hair and combing it back.
- The bedsheets he had noted before turned out to be apparel: lengths of embroidered cloth. The girl took one
- down and wrapped it about him in a series of convolutions surely as intricate as any of the folds of
- macroscopic space and pinned it into place. He emerged from her ministrations in a handsome red tunic and soft
- leather sandals. He was sure he could never duplicate the costume by himself, should it come undone; he might
- even have trouble getting out of it on his own! When a citizen of this city retired at night, did he have a
- girl like this come to undress him properly? Hm.
- Suitably prepared, he followed her to his interview with Mattan.
- Mattan was mortal and courteous: an official of some importance in the city, if appearances were any guide. He
- reclined beside a tray of pastries and ripe fruit, dressed in a bright yellow robe and assorted jewelry. The
- tray was a sheet of almost-transparent glass: undoubtedly a rarity in this age, and a sign of wealth and power.
- He gestured Ivo to a couch opposite.
- "And how do you find the Hegemony of Tyre, Ivarch of Merica?" Mattan inquired politely. His voice was soft and
- sure.
- So it was to Tyre he had come—one of the old Phoenician cities on the coast of Asia Minor. Perhaps this
- was as good for his purpose as Damascus. Tyre had been a leader for many centuries, until—he strained to
- remember—it had finally fallen to Alexander three centuries before Christ. Had it warred with anyone
- else? He wasn't sure.
- "You do not choose to comment?" Mattan inquired, too gently. "One could be led to the impression that you were
- averse to our hospitality."
- "I have not been in this area long," Ivo said hastily, wondering what the man's purpose was.
- "Merica is very far away, then."
- "Very far."
- "But surely not so far that its citizens have not heard of the might of Tyre?"
- "Not that far."
- "And what brings you here so precipitously?"
- "I—got lost on my way to Damascus."
- "Your ship was wrecked?"
- "In a manner of speaking." How could he explain what had happened? He hardly understood it himself. Somehow the
- world he had only watched had become physically real, and his twentieth-century existence unreal. Another
- macroscopic trap more subtle yet? Time travel? How could he, denuded of his equipment and thrown upon his
- personal resources, find his way back?
- Mattan nibbled at a grape, not offering any to Ivo. "It occurs to me that we are not being entirely candid with
- each other, Ivarch."
- "I don't think you would believe my story."
- "Perhaps not. Still, I would certainly like to hear it. I am informed that you were picked up thirty miles out
- to sea, in a region clear of enemy ships, and I can see for myself that you are not locally sired. In fact,"
- and he peered knowledgeably at Ivo's face, "I am at a loss to define your ethnic heritage. Tyre is as eclectic
- a pot as any in the world, but you are a veritable cauldron of race! I observe traces of so many
- things—Mycenaean, of course, but also Egyptian, Cimmerian, Nubian and others I hesitate to mention. Yet
- you know the tongue of Canaan as well as any native of the Seven Cities, while professing ignorance of our
- ways. In fact, I do not see how your story can be anything less than incredible."
- "The tongue of Canaan?" But then, had he really expected them to speak American English? "I have no secrets,
- but I just don't think my story would help you." Or me, he thought.
- "Perhaps I should judge that for myself. Is there any way I can facilitate the spinning of your yarn?"
- "Well, yes. I need to know the date." Or was that concern now pointless?
- "You were not aware that this is the summer season in the thirty-ninth year of Hiram?"
- "I was not aware. It seemed like winter when I was in the water." And it did not help much. When was
- Hiram—presumably their king—on the Christian calendar? Five hundred BC? Two thousand?
- "Nor that Hiram died six years ago?"
- "No. But why did you number—"
- "Forgive me for verifying your ignorance. It had entered my mind—purely as a matter of speculation,
- naturally—that you could be considered to be the representative of a hostile power."
- "A spy?"
- "That was not precisely my term. But I am inclined to discredit the possibility. You are far too nave."
- Ivo was becoming less so rapidly. "What happens to—representatives of hostile powers?"
- "That depends on their, shall we say, cooperation. An incorrigible—that is, one who cannot or will not
- provide us with sufficient and significant information—may be offered in sacrifice to Baal Melqart. Our
- Baal prefers tender children or succulent infants, naturally, and this is said to be a distressing demise for
- an adult, since the facilities are not wholly adequate. Still—"
- The threat was adequate, whatever the condition of the facilities. Human sacrifice! And he had been shocked by
- Brad's revelation of the black-market in human bodies in his own time! At least that had been for a purpose,
- grisly as its practice was. Here it would be sheer waste. "What of a person whose story is merely
- unbelievable?"
- "Sooner or later it must, in the nature of things, become believable." Mattan shrugged away the unpleasantness.
- "Perhaps if I were to clarify the current situation for you, you would then find it easier to relate your
- framework to ours."
- "I think I would." Was Mattan permitting him to stall for time, or was he really trying to be helpful? The
- Tyrean was an educated and intelligent man, but Ivo needed to know more of his attitudes before trying to
- explain the concept of time travel—particularly when Ivo himself did not believe in it. Did Mattan, for
- example, believe in magic? If so, that might be the most promising approach. He suspected the man would not put
- up with delay beyond a certain point; the mailed fist was only casually veiled.
- Mattan settled back on his couch, looked at the cedar-paneled ceiling, and took an ample breath. This was
- evidently the type of dialogue he preferred. "In the days of Tyre's origin there were three equal powers, three
- equivalent spheres of influence that parceled the civilized world between them. The first was Egyptian,
- extending from northern Africa, along the banks of the emperor of all rivers—the Nile—to the fourth
- cataract, and as far north as Damascus. The second was Hittite, including all of Anatolia and the region of the
- coast south as far as Damascus. The third was Assyrian, whose sphere was east of the other two, including the
- remainder of greater Syria and virtually all of Mesopotamia.
- "Of these three superpowers, I would deem the most formidable to have been the Hittite, chiefly because of the
- vigor of their leadership and their facility with the working of iron. Unfortunately, they also had the worst
- enemies. The northern nomads—Cimmerians and Cythians and such—raided constantly, and the western
- barbarians—Thracians and Greeks—invaded in masses. The Phrygians even set up a kingdom in western
- Anatolia, and the Hittite empire finally collapsed. This left a power vacuum of monstrous proportion that was
- to cause interminable trouble. For a time the entire countryside was a nest of robber barons.
- "This left two superpowers—but both were hard-pressed. For a time Assyria expanded, but eventually it
- fell into stagnation and merely defended itself against the nomads from the south, the Arameans. Egypt lost its
- possessions in Palestine and resisted the incursions of the fierce Peoples of the Sea with difficulty.
- "The result was that a number of lesser powers developed, feeding on the decay of the great ones. Perhaps none
- of this anarchy would have happened if the Hittite empire had survived." He stood up and drew aside a curtain.
- There, set into the wall, was a huge cedar panel with a painted map. Ivo recognized the crude outlines of the
- far eastern Mediterranean. His host really was a student of history!
- "The Philistines," Mattan continued, touching a section of the Asia Minor coast, "invaded Palestine from the
- sea, having been repulsed by Egypt. The Hebrews, meanwhile, invaded from the desert, having also been repulsed
- by Egypt. Thus were the rightful residents of the land between Egypt and Damascus dispossessed: we Canaanites,
- who had occupied it for a thousand years in peace. We could have repulsed one invader, meager as our military
- posture was compared to that of the superpowers, but the combination was beyond our means. Our enemies were
- numerous and savage, while we were civilized. Fortunately, Tyre and her sister cities along the northern
- coastline—Acco, Sidon, Berytus, Byblos, Arwad and Ugarit—these seven were strong even then, and we
- were able through our developing naval power and coastal fortifications to hold off the despoilers and to
- succor many of our victimized kinsmen. We developed our industry and improved our craftsmanship and made our
- fair cities a sanctuary for vigorous men of all types, even the Mycenaeans. Thus did we begin to prosper from
- out of the ashes of holocaust."
- Holocaust! One by one, Ivo thought, the pet fears of his own time were realized in this earlier age. So little
- seemed to have changed. The weakening of superpowers, the onset of anarchy, the high hopes for a new
- beginning—what remained to distinguish his own world from this one?
- The destroyer remained! Nothing like that could exist here. Nothing.
- "That is where it stands today," Mattan said. "The great destroyer Assyria remains confined—" His eyes
- narrowed as Ivo jumped. "Though I believe strong leadership could make it great again, and may do so to our
- cost. The Hittite empire is beyond redemption, however. And Egypt has been taken over by the Libyans." Again he
- noted Ivo's reaction, but continued talking. "Sheshonk calls himself Pharaoh, but he is only a usurper thinking
- to build his capital at Bubastis. Of course he does have a certain barbarian vitality. He is laying siege to
- Ugarit now and has his eyes on Byblos. But he will be wise not to interfere with Sidon or Tyre."
- Ivo had followed only the gist of all this, more concerned with his own situation. At least the mystery of his
- Egyptian experience had been partially alleviated. There was a superimposition of cultures: Libyan over
- Egyptian. The main question remained unanswered, however: how could he be participating? Probably he would have
- found himself physically in Egypt, had he not fled immediately... and had he had the sense to quit then and
- rest for a few hours away from the macroscope, none of this present adventure might have come to pass.
- Well, recrimination was futile. Mattan was waiting for his comment on the local situation. The Pharaoh of Egypt
- was attacking Ugarit. "But aren't the Phoenician cities being attacked? Why don't you help them?"
- "That becomes problematical. For one thing, their colonies along the African coast—and there is more to
- Africa than you might suspect—are competing with ours. For another, we can't afford to weaken our
- comparative standing with our rival Sidon, and Sidon has not agreed to match any assistance we might grant. For
- a third, we have a continuing contract with the Kingdom of Israel, and a war effort against even a decaying
- giant like Egypt at this time would seriously interfere with this. That would be bad business."
- "Israel? But I thought you were at war with the Hebrews!"
- "Not currently. Hiram and Solomon got along well enough, and now that the Hebrews have split up into Israel and
- Judah, they're not so much of a threat. There is still much copper and iron to be had from Wadi Arabah, in
- their present territory. One must appreciate the practical side of things."
- Mattan, like the deceased Senator Borland, was a practical man. And Sidney Lanier had inveighed (would
- inveigh?) against cruel trade! He had been a trifle late.
- Then another thought: "Solomon? You mean this is that time?"
- "Ah, you have heard of David's son. Almost as great a king as our own Hiram, in his fashion, and he certainly
- did a good deal with the kingdom he had. It isn't easy to bring culture to nomads. Solomon died only three
- years ago, and his empire broke up. Too bad; Sheshonk will overrun them before long. For a while it seemed as
- though a new power were developing in that area, but that's all over. Tyre will have to carry the burden
- alone." He brought his gaze to bear on Ivo "And now, Ivarch, if you please, your story."
- This still posed a problem. Mattan had showed no inclination toward superstition or magic; rather, he was
- extremely pragmatic. It hardly seemed likely that he would go for anything as fantastic as the macroscope.
- "First," Mattan said, "explain to me exactly where Merica is." He gestured to the map. "Is it represented
- here?"
- "No. It is much farther away. Do you have a map of the world?"
- "This is the map of the world."
- Oh-oh. "You mean the civilized world, don't you? There are lands beyond it."
- Mattan nodded. "I misunderstood. Yes, there are regions beyond and we are exploring them. Suppose you sketch a
- map of your own?"
- The tone remained mild, but Ivo realized that he was being tested again. This man was determined to take his
- measure, and smart enough to know that he didn't have it yet. Ivo also seemed to remember that the Phoenicians
- had traveled out quite far in search of trade and exploitation, as had their rivals the Greeks, and were
- secretive about any important discoveries. Hadn't they mined tin or something in Britain? And what about the
- story of the lost Phoenician ship, blown from an attempted circumnavigation of Africa over to South America,
- where its craftsmen inspired Western pyramid-building? Still, he was on much firmer ground here.
- He accepted the blank scroll Mattan provided and drew a tiny copy of the wall-map. Then he extended it to
- complete the closure of the Mediterranean. He was no cartographer; his rendition was crude and not particularly
- accurate, but he doubted that mattered. "Here is Italy," he said, "and Sicily—the boot tripping over the
- rock." Mattan nodded thoughtfully, and Ivo knew that this was a geography so far familiar to the man.
- "Here is the western coast of Europe, and the British Isles." Mattan was so carefully noncommittal that Ivo was
- certain he knew something of this area also. "And to the south is the rest of the continent of Africa, so."
- "What lies to the east?"
- "A huge continent." Ivo sketched an exceedingly crude Asia.
- "And where is Merica?"
- "Across the sea to the west." He began to sketch it in, leaving inadequate space for the width of the Atlantic
- because of the limitation of his map-surface.
- "I see," Mattan said as Ivo's charcoal rounded the peninsula that would later be Florida. "And in what manner
- did you travel here?"
- Ivo took hold of himself and gave the only answer. "I flew."
- "And can you fly for me now?"
- "No."
- "I see." Mattan thought a bit more. "And do they speak Phoenician in America?"
- "No."
- "How did you master it, then?"
- "I don't know. It just seemed to come to me when I needed it."
- "I see." The two words became more ominous with each repetition, and this time the pause was very long. "You
- are, then, laying claim to the godhead?"
- The godhead: the attributes of deity? Ivo wondered how far he could get by breaking and running. "In America,
- these things—like flying, I mean—are not surprising. There is nothing supernatural about it."
- "America is a land of gods, then."
- "No, no! It—" But how could he explain, to this intelligent yet so ignorant man? Here there were many
- gods, and they were no more supernatural than the One God of Christian times. Mattan's suspicions were quite
- justified, by the standards of his age. Any further attempts to clarify the nature of the divine would merely
- make things worse.
- "Were it not for your distinctive physical makeup and your cognizance of certain matters no local could know, I
- would brand you a champion prevaricator," Mattan said. "As it is, I confess to certain doubts. Your
- misinformation is as intriguing as your information, and I cannot tell whether you are preposterously clever or
- preposterously inept at invention. Either way, you are preposterous. I do not see how you could be what you
- call a spy, yet I am at a loss to explain what you are."
- There was a silence.
- "I think," Mattan said at last, "that this is properly a matter for the priesthood."
- Ivo felt cold again, and the increasing hunger he had felt while watching Mattan eat departed abruptly. "I have
- spoken heresy?"
- "By no means. You have not remarked at all on Melqart, and in any event your Merica appears to be beyond the
- dominion of our Baal. But since I seem to have exhausted the procedures available to me..."
- If this were the final threat, it had become subtle again. There had been no further mention of sacrifice. "I
- suppose I could talk to your priests, though I can't tell them anything I haven't told you."
- "Excellent. My men will show you the way. I'm sure you will reach an understanding with Melqart, and perhaps
- complete unity."
- Ivo was not entirely satisfied with that phrasing, but he accompanied the two husky guards without explicit
- objection. He noticed that they, like every person he had seen here and aboard the ship, were shorter than he.
- He was a virtual giant in this city. Though he hardly thought of himself as the physical type, his superior
- size and weight would give him a certain advantage if trouble came.
- These soldiers were better armed than the ones he had observed in Egypt, possessing vests of metal mesh and
- well-fitted low helmets, as well as long spears and sharp swords. Tucked in each stout belt was a wicked
- battle-axe.
- Ivo had a second thought about his supposed physical advantage.
- "Strange," the guard on his right remarked as they entered the slender street. "I have never seen a lamb go to
- the sacrifice so calmly." He spoke a different language from Phoenician, and Ivo realized with a start that
- these were conscripts from some other area, mercenaries who did not realize that he could understand their
- dialogue.
- "Mattan probably told him he was going to witness the ceremony," the other said. "And him already shorn!"
- Ivo noticed now that both men were bearded—as had been Mattan. Why, then, had the visitor been so
- painstakingly shaved?
- "Well, he'll get a fine view—of the fiery stomach of Baal!" the first agreed, laughing. "I thought every
- fool knew that no one but a priest ever leaves the temple."
- "You are mistaken," the other replied. "Every day the urns go out to the burial ground."
- "His bones would not fit in a child's urn, even after cremation," the first protested. "Far too long."
- They were at the foot of the steps leading to an elegant stone building. Two mighty columns stood beside the
- entrance, one painted yellow, the other green. The second guard turned to Ivo and put out his calloused hand.
- His short sword hung from a chest harness, sheathed in leather, the hilt almost brushing Ivo's left elbow. "Let
- me help you up these hallowed stairs, sir," the man said in Phoenician.
- "The priests would be very unhappy if such an honored guest were to stumble," the other said. "And Baal would
- be fuming." And, in the other language: "Yes—look at the length of that humerus!"
- Ivo looked up and saw a white-robed priest coming to meet them. Several temple guards accompanied him. All
- looked purposeful.
- He grabbed at the left guard's sword and drew it from the scabbard before the man reacted. Then he shouldered
- past and turned to face the second, afraid that flight would bring a spear at his back. But that guard also had
- been slow to react, perhaps not expecting the lamb to turn, and stood open-mouthed, hand not even on his
- weapon.
- The guard who had donated his sword tripped over his battle-axe and sprawled on the ground. His shield, that
- had been hooked in some fashion to his left hip, lay between them on the lowest step. Ivo swooped at it and
- picked it up with his left hand, fumbling a moment with the grip. It was surprisingly light: an oval disk of
- wood, padded behind the hand-strap, nocked at the rim from countless military encounters. Obviously it was
- intended for active defense; one had to meet the oncoming sword or spear with it and deflect or snare the barb,
- rather than simply hiding behind the shield.
- The other guard had finally caught on that something was wrong. He drew out his sword and raised his own
- shield, advancing cumbersomely on Ivo. It was hard to believe that these were veterans; they were like oxen.
- Behind the attacking guard the priest cried out, and the temple personnel charged down the steps, crowding each
- other dangerously.
- Ivo hefted his weapon. The sword was about two feet long, not counting the hilt, and tapered so that the widest
- part of the blade was six or eight inches from the tip. Both edges were sharp, though hardly knifelike;
- muscular power had to be applied to hack through opposing armor and the blade could not maintain a really good
- edge.
- The weapon was clumsy and the handle was too small for a comfortable grip. He could hardly fight effectively
- with this, or, for that matter, protect himself with the shield. Not that he wanted to fight at all: violence
- of this sort was not in his nature. There had to be some reasonable means to—
- The guard struck with his sword, and Ivo automatically blocked with the wooden disk.
- It worked.
- The blade collided with the notched rim and clung for an instant, held by the spongy wood. Ivo swept his own
- sword around in a clumsy quarter-circle, and the guard jerked back.
- He had missed—but the swing had been oddly refreshing. The sword, so clumsy just to hold, became a nicely
- balanced instrument in motion. He saw now that its delicate taper contributed to its effectiveness, placing the
- greatest width and weight behind the intended point of contact.
- He had already wasted too much time. During the few seconds of this action, the temple guards had continued
- advancing, and were now almost upon him. He could not hope to overcome them all. He would have to run, and risk
- the spears.
- He turned—and discovered more troops coming up from the street. He was already surrounded.
- Do the unexpected! he thought, remembering the advice from somewhere. The unexpected could prevail in almost
- any situation. They obviously expected him either to fight or to run, and neither course could save him long.
- They had stopped within twenty feet, forming a closing ring of swords, the two original guards among them. The
- priest stood in the center of the line upon the wide steps, gesticulating. His feet, Ivo noticed, were bare.
- Ivo charged at him, bounding up the low steps three at a time. At ten feet he hurled the shield at the priest's
- head. It skimmed through the air like a sail, rotating.
- The man jumped aside, agile enough, banging into the guard adjacent. Ivo threw his sword at the line of men on
- the other side. It whirled like a boomerang, flashing sunlight in all directions.
- The three nearest shields came up reflexively to block it, as he had known they would, but the men were taken
- aback. Before they recovered, Ivo dived at the stumbling priest, catching him around the waist and shoving him
- back against the standing guards again. They all went down in a tangle.
- A sword clattered almost by his ear, thrown up by one of the scrambling warriors. Ivo snatched at it, then
- caught the priest around the waist once more as he tried to stand up. The man, fortunately, was of birdlike
- physique, easy to manhandle. Ivo pinned the priest against him, in lieu of a shield, and backed up the steps.
- The guards started after them, but Ivo raised the great blade to his captive's neck, and they hung back.
- But he had to do something else soon, for the heavy sword was already weighing down his arm in this awkward
- pose. The threat would lose effect if the blade sagged wearily to the hostage's chest....
- "Listen, treacherous one!" Ivo hissed into the man's ear as the two retreated. "Either we visit Melqart's
- furnace together, or we escape together. It is for you to decide whether we part company in life or in death.
- Do you understand me?"
- The man said nothing, but Ivo was sure he had the message. At the top of the stair between the columns Ivo
- released him, but held the sword at his back. The massed soldiers were following, ever more numerous, not
- closely; they were making a resounding clatter, but not risking the hostage. Ivo congratulated himself on an
- excellent choice.
- He placed his back against the yellow pillar, mind racing to formulate a workable plan of escape. Audacity he
- had never suspected in himself had taken him this far, but there had to be a limit to his luck. The priest did
- not move, and the crowd below did not advance.
- He prodded the priest. "Into the temple," he whispered. "Make no turn or sudden motion without advising me. If
- I doubt your intention one moment, it will be your last." Was it he, meek Ivo Archer, reading the lines of this
- melodrama? Why not complete the scene by informing the man that he had an itchy sword-finger?
- Not funny. Sweat made the handle of the weapon treacherously slippery, and already he felt the sting of a
- developing blister.
- The priest uncurled a talonlike finger and pointed. "Oho!" Ivo said. "There's a private door?" The priest led
- him around the column to the side of the building. Sure enough, there was a small entrance there opening into a
- dark corridor running parallel to the outer wall. There was hardly room for his head to clear, though the
- smaller man had no trouble.
- They entered. This did seem better than the main hall, since only one person at a time could follow, and the
- gloom would make pursuit harder. Light came in only from high narrow vents, embrasures in the outer wall.
- Twenty feet along the priest tapped a stone of the inner wall. Then he put his fragile shoulder against it and
- pushed. Ivo watched this suspiciously, at the same time glancing back to make sure no one was following yet.
- The stone swung back, leaving a blank opening from which a cool draft came. Cool, but corrupt; there was
- stagnant water somewhere. "Secret exit?"
- The man nodded. Ivo could barely see him here, and kept one hand on the bony arm. The stone must have been very
- lightly balanced, to move at the urging of such a skeleton. And why did the hostage never speak?
- "In case of rebellion, foreign conquest...?" Ivo inquired, poking his sword-hand into it dubiously. No
- response.
- Ivo prodded him. "You first." The priest drew back, alarmed. "Uh-huh. We meet our fate together. Hurry!" There
- was a commotion behind, and he knew the troops were clustered around their entrance, and probably had the
- temple proper surrounded for good measure. "I know you aren't dumb," Ivo said fiercely. "I heard you calling to
- the guards, before. So either get in there or tell me why not, or I'll run you through right now!"
- He was bluffing, but hoped it didn't show.
- "There is a better exit ahead," the priest said quickly. His voice, after all that suspense, was ordinary.
- Ivo smiled grimly. Victory—and another trap avoided. The violent approach did have its recommendations.
- "That one we shall both use—for better or worse."
- But there was no time. The sounds outside verified his recent conjecture: the guards surrounded the temple, and
- this time a higher priest was evidently in command. His human shield was almost useless. Now there were noises
- from the far end of the passage as well.
- The priest suddenly tore free of Ivo's loose grasp. Ivo lunged, grabbing with his left hand and sweeping with
- the sword. The blade crashed into the man's side, but not hard enough to cut through the cloth. Trying to avoid
- it, the priest scuttled sidewise, his back against the tilted stone.
- Ivo grabbed again—and only succeeded in shoving the little man into the hole. The stone yielded smoothly,
- closing on a descending scream and a faint splash—some fifty feet down, by the timing. Some escape!
- Now Ivo was alone, pinned between armed bands without his hostage. Was there another exit, or had that been
- merely the rascally priest's stall for time? There had to be one!
- He moved along the wall, pushing at each great block, but none gave way. Minutes passed. His eyes adapted to
- the dim light, but all he saw was a veneer of dirt on wall and floor. His own scuff-marks were all that
- disturbed it.
- Why weren't they attacking? They must have overheard his struggle with the priest, and realized the man was
- dead. Or had they assumed that Ivo had fallen, so that the priest would emerge in a moment? Or was the delay
- part of some more subtle ploy—something less risky to them than a frontal attack in a confined space?
- He rolled his eyes up, shrugging... and spied a dark hole in the ceiling, a few feet in front of him. The
- second exit!
- He tossed his sword into it, and the metal clattered on stone and came to rest without falling out. He followed
- it immediately, reaching up to catch the edges with his fingers. He chinned himself on it—and could not
- get any higher, as his feet kicked without support. He had to drop down.
- He studied the situation, then chinned himself into the hole again. An athlete, or perhaps some birdlike
- priest, might have entered it easily, since it was hardly above head-height—but Ivo was neither. Yet an
- effective escape hatch should have some convenient handhold....
- Ivo braced his chin uncomfortably against the rim and got one elbow up. His questing hand struck the sword. He
- grunted, feeling the sting of the pitted blade grating against his palm, but did not drop back. Then he had it:
- a firm wooden bar.
- There was caked dust upon it, but dryer and fluffier than that below. No one had been here for a long time,
- evidently. A good sign, or a bad omen?
- Well, Ivo had little choice now. He got his shoulders up, his chest, one foot, and finally the rest of him
- without losing too much skin. He licked the grime off his bleeding palm and picked up the sword. Infection was
- the least of his worries at the moment.
- A belated thought: the soldiers could trace his trail in the dust. He had to cover up.
- Probably the tunnel was riddled with exits. If he could conceal the one he had actually employed, they would be
- hours tracing him down.
- As a planner, he was a misfit. Again he had thought of the obvious just too late for convenience.
- Regretfully, he eased himself down into the tunnel again, his cut hand smarting as the dust ground in. Then he
- ran scuffling down the passage and back, slapping his hand against each inner panel. Let them analyze that
- trail! Then up again, into the hole. He swept up handfuls of the dust and sprinkled then near the entrance and
- on the bar, hoping that this would conceal the evidence of his passage. He couldn't see the effect at all,
- perhaps fortunately.
- And, at last, on.
- He was in a cramped passage running skew to the one below, as nearly as he could tell by the aim of the walls,
- and absolutely dark. His sandals, never meant for such exertions, tended to catch on the rough-hewn flooring.
- Finally there was light. He emerged on a dusty balcony overlooking an interior court at what he took to be the
- rear of the temple. In the center was a huge, grotesque metal statue shaped roughly like a man. Smoke spiraled
- up from a vent in its head, and a ramp led into a gate set in its bulging belly: Melqart, the carnivorous Baal
- of Tyre.
- Ivo turned aside, not particularly curious. It seemed to him that he could smell the lingering aroma of roasted
- flesh. No wonder the Israelites had fought against this faith! And had the Nazi machine, so many centuries
- later, been a monstrous reincarnation of the spirit of Baal?
- He spied crude stairs leading down, also layered with dust. He hesitated. There were still hours of daylight
- remaining, and once he left the temple he would be vulnerable again. Perhaps they were waiting beyond this
- exit, too. It would be better to wait until nightfall, when he might escape unnoticed. They would not expect
- him to linger within sight of the metal god. And perhaps the priests, who must surely know of this passage,
- would not reveal it to the soldiers. Better that one lamb go free for a while, than that the secrets of the
- temple be betrayed. Yes—his unexpected, and therefore sensible, course was to remain right here... sword
- ready.
- He located a concealing niche and lay down. He tried to hold on to the sword, but his right hand had a blister
- and his left a cut, so he laid it beside him. Once more, oddly, he had no difficulty sleeping. Perhaps it was
- because he was sure any approach would alert him. He hoped.
- It was dark when he woke. His hand still smarted and he was hungry. He had not enjoyed the rough staples of the
- galley slaves, and had not had any of Mattan's delicacies. Even Melqart was beginning to smell appetizing.
- Ivo decided it was time to get out of this region. He descended the steps cautiously, trying not to disturb the
- dust any more than necessary. He also heeded the sounds of temple activity. He wondered whether the troops were
- still patiently waiting in ambush for him, at the two ends of the original passage. A soldier might have peeked
- and found him gone, the fake escape hatch still open. No, it was closed now. Would they think he had taken that
- plunge? In that case they would not be alert for him.
- A heavy door closed off the foot of the stair. It was barred, but the bar was inside. No doubt about it: this
- was the priesthood's official emergency outlet. He lifted the plank, set it aside, and pushed. Nothing
- happened.
- Was it barred outside too? That did not seem reasonable, for then it would have to be opened from both sides
- simultaneously: a dubious emergency exit. He kneeled down and put his eye to the crack. Lights from the city
- came through. He traced the crack up and down and found no blockage. The door was merely tight.
- He put his shoulder against it and shoved hard. It held. Finally he braced both feet against the bottom stair,
- set his back against the door, and straightened his knees hard.
- The portal crashed open. Ivo fell on his back, the sword clattering beside him. The noise was horrendous. There
- were immediate shouts, and torchbearing figures came running toward him from both sides of the building.
- He was in trouble again. Naturally.
- Ivo picked himself up, brandished the sword (finding the blister less painful), and ran. The torches swerved to
- intercept him. He slowed to navigate the stone terraces beside the temple, and the first group of men was upon
- him. He could see the glint of broad blades in the torchlight, the spark of staring eyes.
- He swung his sword. It caught the leading man on the shield. Ivo swung again, this time striking flesh; the man
- screamed and fell back. Two more attacked at once, striking from either side. Ivo felt the searing contact of a
- blade meeting his left arm and fell back himself. Again his grip was slippery, whether from sweat or blood he
- could not determine. The light was too bad, and his own sensations too confused. He lunged desperately at the
- figure who had wounded him, aiming for the glint of the helmet—and in the dark he scored.
- The fellow had been carrying the torch instead of his shield, and had tried instinctively to block—with
- the torch. Ivo's blade, coming into the sphere of light, struck both hand and face, sickeningly. The torch flew
- out and rolled on the ground, providing him a passing glimpse of what he had wrought; then the spreading blood
- extinguished the fire messily.
- The shallow steps were as nothing. He was down them and away, running into the city, without being aware of the
- motions. Behind him the torches milled and followed, like angry bees searching for their mission.
- The streets were dark. He charged down the nearest, panting already, heedless of the direction or possible
- obstacles. He made a right-angle turn at the first intersection, angled again—and found himself as lost
- as the torches.
- He was surrounded by three-story houses closely set, boxlike and gloomy. He could not see whether any had
- windows or doors without approaching closely, but was sure entry would gain him nothing but further outcry.
- Where could he go? He had no money—was not even certain they used it here—and no home. The night
- was not cold—yet—but he did not want to wander about indefinitely.
- Suddenly the torches confronted him again. The temple troops had not given up the search; indeed, they were
- combing the city for him. He ran dismally before them, ashamed of the blood already on his sword. He had not
- meant to kill the man, only to drive him back, perhaps to wound him superficially. He had to believe that.
- His own wound was sodden under the dragging loops of his tunic, still squeezing out plasma with every motion he
- made, he was sure. That was another reason he had to find sanctuary.
- Where, where? He could not even flee to the countryside, for Tyre was an island—a walled island.
- Torches were coming down two alleys of the next intersection. He could see by their massed brilliance that the
- houses were richer than he had thought. Though the ground-level exterior walls of most were of blank stucco,
- the upper stories were of wood with small square window openings, and some even had balustrades supported by
- miniature palm columns. Not slum housing, certainly.
- The next intersection was torched on three sides, including the street behind him. Ivo ran in the one direction
- permitted him, thankful that they had not quite sealed him off entirely. Yet even if he eluded them, he saw no
- long-range salvation. He could not run much longer.
- "Fugitive!"
- It was a woman's voice, pitched low but with excellent carrying quality. Ivo rotated to face it, hauling up the
- tainted blade defensively.
- "Fugitive—here!" the voice repeated urgently. "Come quickly, before they see you."
- He had to trust her. He ran toward the caped figure standing upon a tiny terrace.
- "The blood!" she exclaimed disapprovingly. "You have left a trail of blood!"
- So that was how they had boxed him in so readily! He could not see it himself, but they obviously could, with
- the torches. Had he any chance at all?
- "Perhaps I can still help you," she said. "Come inside."
- He stumbled in the door she stood beside—in this case, a hole in the wall covered by a length of hide or
- canvas—and found himself within a small and dirty vestibule. The walls were covered by crumbling brown
- plaster. Not a domicile of wealth, obviously—yet he could hardly be choosy!
- The woman closed the entrance and led him to a small interior court. She was young and tall—very tall for
- this locale—and quite fair of feature, and the cloak hardly concealed her voluptuousness of form. He
- wondered dully whether she could be a prostitute. If so, she would turn him out quickly enough when she
- discovered that he had no money or barter.
- "We must stop the blood," she said. "I know an empty house where they will not find us tonight. But we can't
- let the blood betray us." She peeled back the cloth that had become a soggy bandage and began sponging off the
- wound.
- "Who are you?" he demanded. "Why do you help me?"
- "I am Aia. I do not worship Melqart, nor do I like human sacrifice."
- She bound his arm with a rough cloth. Ivo hesitated to inspect the compress closely, certain that it was not
- very clean. Something nagged him about her statement, but he could not, in his present fuddled state, pin it
- down. Perhaps it was that opposition to a particular policy or religion should not necessarily lead one to risk
- one's own well-being in that connection? There ought to be a stronger, more primitive motive.
- Still, there was the adage about gift-horses—if they had horses here.
- "And," she said, "I need help myself, to escape from this foul city. Alone, I would soon be pressed into
- slavery."
- Oh. Nothing like a male fugitive for such assistance! Someone whose imperative for rapid escape was guaranteed.
- If that were her case—and there now seemed to be no reason to question it—their needs could very
- well coincide.
- "Do you trust yourself to a stranger?" he asked her anyway. "A criminal, for all you know, a rapist, even a
- murderer?"
- "Do you desire to murder me?"
- "No."
- "Then there is no harm you can do me."
- Oh.
- "Now we must hurry. The temple guards will find this house very soon." She showed him to the back exit and
- peered at the street. Torches were passing.
- "And who are you?" she inquired as they waited.
- "Ivarch of Merica. I was taken in by a ship and brought before Mattan for interrogation."
- "Mattan," she said darkly. "He is notorious. Soft spoken but never to be trusted. A dabbler in past events."
- An apt assessment. "What I don't understand is why he sent me to be sacrificed. How could he get information
- that way?"
- She shrugged. "Mattan is Mattan. Come—they are past."
- So they were, for the moment. Soon they would discover the termination of the bloodstain trail on the other
- side of the house and backtrack. Aia led him into the dark street, guiding him past irregularities and
- obstructions while he sheltered the sword under his tunic. She seemed to have an inherent sensitivity to
- danger, knowing where the temple patrols were likely to be and how to avoid them. In half an hour they were
- comfortably ensconced in the house she had spoken of: empty, yes, but very well stocked.
- Ivo ripped off the remaining shreds of his tunic and cleaned up in the well-appointed bath. He had not expected
- any drainage facilities, but this had a wooden pipe leading down and out, and the floor was of pink cement set
- with little marble cubes. As elegant as anything of the twentieth century, except for the lack of heated or
- running water.
- Then he had to beg Aia's help to don a new tunic, hoping she would not be outraged by the request. She obliged
- without comment, fortunately.
- The remainder of the house was simply executed: several rectangular rooms without architectural pretensions.
- The foundation was stone cleverly fitted together with a minimum of cement, giving way to bricks with
- occasional upright slabs of stone for strength, and finally to straight wood. The cedar paneling of the upper
- rooms was handsome but not ornate and there were no objects of art. The owner, apparently conforming to
- Phoenician taste, had no personal interest in elegance, with the exception of clothing. The house was stocked
- with an array of material fully as splendid as that of Mattan's residence: multicolored cloaks, tunics and
- skirts, heavily embroidered. Some were of wool, others of fine linen. Purple was predominant, and he seemed to
- remember that Tyre had been famous for its purple dye. Even the pointed caps were richly hued.
- Aia served him a tremendous and welcome meal: smoked goatmeat, olives, figs, date wine, honey and pastries made
- from unidentified grains, finishing off with whole pomegranates. It was almost too rich for him, after his day
- of hunger, but he disciplined his appetite and filled his stomach without reaction. "How did you know of this
- place?" he asked her as he pried out the juicy pomegranate morsels. "Won't the owner object?"
- "The owner is a rich merchant who is on the mainland this week negotiating a shipment of cedarwood," she said.
- "And of course he is checking into the labors of his mainland slaves who make jewelry and statuettes of foreign
- gods."
- "Strange—I have seen nothing like that around here."
- "Oh, he has good craftsmen—but of course such baubles are for export only. Fine workmanship brings a
- better price, you see."
- "Even for religious artifacts? I should think—"
- "Look," she said. She got up gracefully and pulled aside a curtain. Behind was a voluptuous statuette of a
- female, with bulging stomach and ponderous breasts, flanked by two sphinxes. "Astarte," she said. "I'll show
- you how to milk her."
- She fetched a cup of goat milk and poured it carefully into a hole in the goddess's head. Then she took a brand
- from the main fire and touched it to the mossy kindling beneath the statue. The flame caught, warming the
- entire metal figure.
- Suddenly milk spouted from the nipples of the hanging breasts, to pour into a bowl held upon the goddess's
- belly. Ivo stared, fascinated and a little repelled, though he realized there was nothing either magical or
- obscene about it.
- "The heat melts the wax plugs," Aia explained. "The worshipers don't know that, though. Great moneymaker, I
- understand."
- "But to commercialize other people's religion—"
- "Oh, he patronizes his own religion too, never fear. He pays graft to the temple and buys small boys for his
- pleasures. When he tires of one, he donates that lad to Melqart. He is considered extremely devout."
- Ivo, his conscience eased, did not inquire into the matter further. This was as good a domicile to raid as any.
- "How long are we safe here?"
- "No more than a day. Tomorrow night we must leave the city, for they will surely be watching and nowhere in
- Tyre is there permanent security from the temple."
- When the meal was done she took the lamp—a simple clay saucer, undecorated, with a single pinched beak
- for the wick—and showed him to the sleeping compartment, where soft pelts were piled upon straw. It
- looked delightful.
- Ivo flung himself down in the bed gratefully... but soon discovered that he had company. "Even the best of
- ships come into port at night," she murmured.
- She had removed her cloak and other apparel and snuggled under the pelts beside him, close, and he learned that
- his original estimate of her physical properties had erred conservatively. She was scented with a heavy perfume
- he could not identify, apart from its effluence of sex appeal, and she was as lithe and sleek as a panther.
- Ivo was tired, but he had had a good afternoon's sleep in the temple and was recovering nicely from his more
- recent wounds and exertions. Aia had taken good care of him, and the flesh injury of his left arm only hurt
- when he banged it. He felt, all in all, adequate to the occasion—except for one detail.
- "My ship docks elsewhere," he said. Then, not wishing to hurt her feelings by too blunt a statement, he tried
- to explain: "I love another woman, and have no inclination to embrace any but her. I mean no offense to you."
- "Your wife?" she asked alertly.
- "No."
- "Your concubine."
- "No."
- "It is hard to see what she offers, then, that I do not. You have a very handsome ship, and I have a
- comfortable port. If we are to travel together—"
- "I love her. Don't you understand?"
- She gazed speculatively at him, the lamplight flickering against the wall behind her head and touching her hair
- with reddish highlights. "What is her name?"
- What harm was there in the truth, here? "Afra," he said, and felt a kind of relief in the confession. "Her name
- is Afra, and she doesn't love me and I have no right to her, no right at all, but I love her."
- "I loved a man once," Aia said, "but he died. Then I saw how foolish it was to depend on such a thing. Love
- protects nothing, it only restricts pleasure. Take pleasure in me; she will not suffer." A pause. "Or is she
- near?"
- "No. She is thousands of years away."
- "Thousands of years!" It had been a slip, but he saw that it bothered her only momentarily, since of course she
- did not understand the connection. "By foot or by ship?"
- "By ship," he said, no longer worrying about misunderstandings.
- "Then you will never possess her again." She looked at him a moment more. "But how did you get here, so long a
- journey? You are still young."
- "My gods are very powerful."
- "Oh." She pondered a little longer. "If the gods of the Canaanite had been stronger, I might have had my lover
- back."
- "How so?" He was not particularly curious about her tragedy, but wanted to divert the conversation from both
- her immediately amorous intent and her queries about his travels.
- "I tried to follow the way of the gods, as Anat brought back Aliyan," she said. "But it didn't work."
- "I am not familiar with those names."
- "You must come from very far away," she murmured. "I will tell you: El was the supreme god of the Canaanite: El
- the Bull, the Sun. His wife was Asherat-of-the-sea, mother-goddess. Together they begat Baal, god of the
- mountains, and of the storm and the rain."
- "Very interesting," Ivo remarked absently, wondering what he had let himself in for. "How does that relate to
- your—"
- "I'm telling you, lover-to-be. Baal's son was Aliyan. The two of them entered into a struggle with Mot of the
- summer heat, who resides deep in the womb of the earth. They did not return, so Anat went in after them. She
- was Aliyan's sister and his wife, of course."
- "Of course." What was a little incest, between gods? "All in the family."
- "Yes. She found Aliyan's body in the abode of the dead, and carried it to the height of Saphon and buried him
- there with many sacrifices. That's what I did with my lover. I fixed him a very nice stone coffin—"
- "I understand."
- She took the hint and returned to the mythological narrative. "Then Anat killed Mot, who had killed her
- husband. With a sickle she cut him, with a winnow she winnowed him; she scattered his flesh in the field, and
- he was dead."
- "I'm sure he was."
- "Then she brought Aliyan back to life and set him on Mot's throne. And that was the way the seasons began
- again. When she killed Mot, that was the annual harvest, of course."
- Live and learn! So it was all a variant of the seasonal mythology he had heard in other guises. "But you
- couldn't bring your lover back to life?"
- "No. I tried, but the gods didn't help. He just rotted. That's one reason I don't appreciate Melqart."
- "I sympathize. He really should have done more for you."
- "These things do pass," she said philosophically. "I was denied my lover, and you are denied yours. Why don't
- you pretend I am she, and I'll pretend you are he whom I once loved. We shall have joy in one another, while
- both being true to our memories."
- The suggestion, phrased this way, caught him by surprise, and he started to make an angry refusal—but
- changed his mind. He was not sure what Aia's true motives were, or how cynical might be her intent, but her
- body was decidedly conducive and the notion had its peculiar appeal. He had faith that somehow he would return
- to Afra, for this was not his world—but it was not time or distance that separated him from her. Afra
- would never be his—not so long as she loved a dead man. Not so long as their joint mission required that
- he give up his identity to the ruthlessly clever Schn.
- Was he to torture himself by perpetual abstinence, knowing that his aspiration had no reasonable fulfillment?
- Why not settle for the unreasonable fulfillment, in that case? For what he could get?
- Why not?
- "All right," he said.
- Aia helped him to remove his tunic, touching him with exciting intimacy in the process, and they came together
- amidst the furry upholstery, shock of flesh against flesh. His left arm gave one twinge and anesthetized
- itself.
- "Speak to me words of love," she murmured, not yet quite acceding to the ultimate. "Tell me what you feel."
- Oh, no! "I can't, I never spoke love before."
- "No wonder you never impressed her! Don't you know that the whispered word moves a woman as no caress does?
- Hurry—I'm getting sleepy."
- He considered the request, distracted somewhat by her breathing. She was, by touch, as well-endowed as the
- goddess Astarte, but much younger. "The only words I know that would not be stupid are not my own. They're from
- a poem, Evening Song, by—" But what would she know of Sidney Lanier, unborn these many centuries?
- She was silent, so he went ahead with the poem. "Look off, dear love, across the sallow sands, / And mark yon
- meeting of the sun and sea. / How long they kiss in sight of all the lands. / Ah! longer, longer we."
- He recited the two remaining stanzas, frustrated because they had neither rhyme nor meter in Phoenician, and
- waited for her reaction. There was none.
- She was asleep.
- She was up before him in the morning, trying on finery from the domicile's stock. "None of these will do," she
- said sadly, shaking her head. "Too obvious."
- "Obvious?"
- "If I go into the street in one of these, every person in sight will stare."
- She was not unduly pessimistic. She was, by daylight as by night, an extraordinarily lovely girl.
- "Did you have suitable pleasure in me last night?" she asked next, with what irony he could not be certain.
- "Well, I must admit I expected something else."
- "Oh?"
- "You fell asleep."
- "Oh, yes. I always do. That's why I like a man to hold me."
- Ivo tried to make something of this and failed. "While it certainly was stimulating holding you, I did find it
- a bit frustrating."
- "How could that be?"
- "I had somehow thought we were going to make love."
- She turned to face him, resplendent in a purple skirt that stopped at the waist, and nothing else. Hold a bowl
- to her midriff... he thought. "Didn't you?"
- "I said you were asleep."
- "Of course."
- Ivo looked at her, disgruntled. "You mean you expected me to—to go ahead anyway?"
- "Certainly. As many times as you desired."
- "Maybe next time," he said, not clear whether he should feel angry or foolish.
- They spent the day feasting and resting, since there was no predicting how much of either exercise they would
- get for some time to come. Aia acquainted him, in snatches, with her own history: Brought to one of the violent
- Aramean states from her home in the Kingdom of Urartu—Urartu being the most civilized nation of the
- world, by her definition—because she was the daughter of a traveling trader. Upon maturity, she had
- undertaken a marriage to a prince of Sidon. "He was the one I loved," she confided. "If Baal will not succor a
- prince, what good is he?" But she had never seen Sidon; his merchant ship had been waylaid by a galley from
- Tyre and taken captive, her betrothed killed resisting. Thus, a year ago, she had found herself here, hostage,
- in daily peril of being added to the temple staff as a ritual prostitute. Only the suggestion of wealthy family
- connections had saved her from that; a hostage used by Melqart lost value. But the truth was that her family
- had suffered reverses and was not wealthy, and momentarily the temple accountant would verify this and
- dissipate her subterfuge. "So you see, I have been waiting for a chance to escape—and now, with you, I
- have it."
- Ivo perceived holes in her story, but did not challenge it. Undoubtedly her past was more mundane than she
- cared to admit. "How far is Urartu from here?"
- "Very far. But I don't want to go there. The politics will have changed, and my family could not afford me now.
- I will go with you."
- Ivo shrugged, appreciating her help but having no idea where to journey. First, however, they had to get off
- the island that was Tyre, hardly a mile in circumference; then he could make longer-range plans.
- They packed as much as could be concealed under heavy cloaks: breads, dried fish, small crocks of wine. The
- host-merchant had been too canny to leave anything really valuable in his house during his absence; there was
- no gold or jewelry. Ivo inquired about coins, and learned by her reaction that they had not yet been invented.
- Trade was largely by barter, with weighed metals increasing as a medium of exchange, but no standardization had
- occurred.
- At dusk Aia took him to the edge of the city, where the high wall balked their escape. Guards paced along the
- top of it, carrying dim lanterns. Ivo wondered how the open-dish lamps had been adapted for windy wet outdoor
- use, but they did not get close enough for him to observe. He would be satisfied just to know how they could
- get past the wall.
- The girl knew what she was doing, however. "The factories go through," she whispered. "And no one watches
- inside at night."
- Factories?
- She led him into a dark building. He had to hold on to her hand to keep from getting lost, as he could not see
- at all inside. But that was not his major concern of the moment. His nose was.
- The smell was appalling—a suffocating redolence of corruption unlike any he had encountered before. He
- tried to seal off his nostrils, but the thought of taking such putrefaction unfiltered into his lungs repelled
- him even more. "What—what?" he whispered.
- She laughed. "They can't hear us here. Speak up."
- "What died here? A flatulent whale?"
- "Oh, you mean the murex. It is a little strong, but that's the price of industry."
- So industry polluted the atmosphere in ancient days too! "What is it?"
- "The murex. The shellfish. Don't you know how they process it?"
- "No." He hoped they would soon be through the building and into clean air again.
- "That's right. I forgot it's a trade secret. Well, they gather the murex, break the shells, extract the fish
- and dump it in big vats. They let it rot there for some time, until the yellow forms. For the darker shades
- they have to put it in the sun. Then they filter it down and market it. It's a big industry here; no one
- outside of the Seven Cities knows the secret. Here, I'll find a shell for you."
- She banged about in the dark, and in due course pressed an object into his hand. It was a shell resembling that
- of a spiny conch.
- "Market what?" he demanded, perplexed about the point of all this.
- "The dyes, of course. Yellow, rose, purple—"
- "From decomposing shellfish?" But now he understood. The great mystery of the purple dye of the Phoenicians! He
- was thankful he hadn't chosen to wear a purple outfit.
- At length they emerged, and he took in refreshing lungfuls of partially oxygenated air. They were outside the
- wall, walking along a narrow starlit beach strewn with crushed shell, hunching in the fortification's shadow in
- order to avoid the gaze of the patrolling guards.
- They arrived circuitously at a docking area where the lesser ships were tied. This was a shallow harbor facing
- toward the mainland, evidently limited to local shuttling. There were also several coracles: doughnut-shaped
- little boats or rafts (depending on viewpoint) with calked boards across the inside where the hole might have
- been. Ivo remembered the macroscope station, and wondered whether the stations of the future—his
- future—would be as far beyond the torus as atomic liners were beyond the coracle.
- The tiny boats did not look seaworthy, but Aia assured him that they were the best to be had for a crew of two
- on the sneak. She climbed into one about six feet in diameter, and he followed her and experimented with the
- paddles. There were V-notched sticks braced at either side, fulcrums for the long oars; he had to take up one
- while she managed the other.
- He stood within the precarious structure and looked across the water at the mainland. Suddenly it seemed very
- far away, and the calm, shallow water intervening seemed ominously deep and rough. "Somebody should build a
- causeway," he muttered.
- "We must pull together," she said, "or the craft will simply spin about. Not too hard—I am not as strong
- as you." Privately, he wondered. She was careful to flatter him regularly, but she was a well-conditioned
- female. She was uncommonly knowledgeable about nonfeminine affairs, from temple politics to coracle paddling.
- After some initial unsteadiness, much of it stemming from his early flinching as he tried to put too much
- weight on his left arm, they managed to stroke the clumsy craft out of the harbor. The water was gentle, yet
- even little swells rolled the party about alarmingly, and progress was hard work. It was the coracle's natural
- ambition to rotate, and only continuous and well-synchronized paddling kept it on course.
- In that period of silence and painful effort—why did sword-swinging superheroes never feel their wounds
- the following day?—Ivo reviewed his recent experience mentally. How had it all come about? It was
- obviously impossible for him to be where he seemed to be. Could he in some fashion have traversed three
- thousand or more light-years without benefit of galactic machinery, he still could not have landed in Earth's
- past. The future, yes; the present, possibly; the past, never. The past was forever gone, and anything like
- time travel brought calamitous paradox. He could not physically participate in past events without altering
- history, which in turn meant that it was not the past; that was the fact that made it unapproachable.
- Yet he certainly was somewhere. The adventures were too real, the pains too persistent, the series too
- cohesive, for any idle nightmare. It was becoming evident that he was not going to get out of this by himself.
- He knew too little, and had such slender resources that he had to depend on a mysterious woman.
- Was it time to confess his own inadequacy and summon Schn? He had been shying away from this notion, but he
- knew that Schn would place the historical perspective instantly, and pinpoint not only the year but the exact
- degree by which this reality differed from Earth's true history. Schn would know how to reverse whatever
- circumstances had brought him here, and thus how to bring back Afra and Groton and Beatryx and the Neptune
- base.
- But Schn might very well have his personality destroyed by the ambushing destroyer in Ivo's memory, before any
- of the rest of it came to pass. Then he would be gone, not merely buried, and with him that fragment, that
- waking dream that was Ivo.
- Better not to chance it. The pawn was still pinned. This was a problem he had to handle by himself.
- As though that decision were catalytic, another notion came to him. He realized what had bothered him about
- Aia, the first time they had spoken together. "Who are you?" he had demanded, and she had replied immediately,
- "I am Aia. I don't worship Melqart or like human sacrifice." Something like that.
- How had she known that he was fleeing the temple, or why?
- Certainly it could have been a guess—but she had not been asking him. She had known. She had said the one
- thing calculated to assuage his suspicions, and had followed it up with enough blandishment and personal
- motivation to keep them lulled. She had said that she wanted to escape, but it seemed that her real intention
- was to stick with him, wherever he might go.
- He thought back to his interview with Mattan. The man obviously had not been satisfied, yet he had not pursued
- the matter of Ivo's origins. Instead he had forwarded his guest to the temple for further
- interrogation—and the guards had conveniently staged a giveaway dialogue.
- Mattan was clever; there could be no questioning that. Suppose he had had firm suspicions that Ivo was a spy
- who refused to talk, spinning any fantasy to avoid the truth? Would torture be effective? Perhaps—but
- there was also the risk of reprisals, especially in the event the visitor turned out to be innocent after all,
- or of powerful connection. Perhaps, even, he had been infiltrated to provoke an embarrassing incident. Why not,
- then, prompt the spy to bolt for home, and follow him there? What surer method to fathom the truth?
- A skilled spy would know many dialects, naturally. A spy would comprehend the dialogue of the mercenaries, and
- react accordingly. Ivo remembered how handy that sword had been—virtually proffered to his hand, as the
- guard turned to him at the foot of the temple steps. How slow those men had been to react, though they were
- obviously long-time professionals, so that even his clumsy efforts had availed.
- Of course, the priest had tried to trick him—but perhaps the man hadn't had the word yet, or was merely
- cowardly. Then the chase through the city—with all avenues of escape closed off but one, and attractive
- Aia waiting at the end of that one.
- She had been so eager to ingratiate herself with him—but not personally involved enough to stay awake for
- the romantic denouement. Well, this released him of any obligation he might have felt for her assistance.
- What would have happened, had he meekly accompanied the two guards into the temple? Probably nothing. He would
- have demonstrated thereby his ignorance of the mercenary dialect, his innocence of spylike suspicions, his
- general navet about temple politics. He might then have been treated with the courtesy due a genuine traveler
- from a distant land. His gift of tongues had betrayed him.
- Gift of tongues?
- He stopped rowing, and the coracle jerked about as Aia's stroke met no counteraction. "Careful, lover," she
- said.
- "It occurs to me that I have nowhere to go," he told her, watching her as carefully as he could in the dark.
- "Nowhere? But—"
- "America is much too far away, and I would be no better off at any other local city than I am at Tyre. We might
- as well go back."
- "But Mattan—"
- "What of Mattan? I'm sure I can explain about the mistake to him, and everything will be all right."
- "All right! After he sent you as sacrifice to Melqart?"
- "I was only going to the temple to talk with the priests there. Mattan told me so. I suppose the one that met
- me assumed I was to be sacrificed, but they should have all that straightened out by now. These little errors
- happen. I should have realized then that it was a common misunderstanding."
- "A misunderstanding! How blind can you—" She paused. "Well, what about me? Aren't you going to help me
- escape?"
- "From what?"
- "From the temple. I told you how they meant to make me serve as—"
- "You told me that there was no harm a man could do you. You could have a good life at the temple, and a nice
- comfortable sleep every night with a new ship in your port, just the way you like it."
- For a moment he thought she was going to hit him with the paddle; but her words, when they came, were low. "Do
- you know what Mattan does with an unsuccessful spy?"
- "One he catches, you mean? I do have some inkling."
- "One he assigns."
- Now he caught her meaning. "The sacrifice?"
- "Bride of Melqart—and our Baal has a fiery member."
- "Suppose we land you on the mainland, then, and I can paddle back by myself. I want to see Mattan and clear
- this thing up as soon as possible."
- "You couldn't handle this craft by yourself."
- "Maybe I can find a canoe or something. I'll make do. You can travel back to Urartu."
- "I didn't really come from Urartu."
- "Strange. I do really come from America."
- "Stay with me," she pleaded, setting down the paddle and reaching for him. "I can guide you past the soldiers
- that are watching us now, and when we are free I promise you I will stay awake until you are exhausted. Until
- the very hull of your ship is blistered. I will steal valuables for you. I will—"
- "Steady," he said, worried about the equilibrium of the craft as Aia sought to approach and embrace him. She
- did have a fine body, but her mind appealed to him less and less. "Unfortunately your promises lack conviction.
- Or are they threats?"
- She let go. "What do you want?"
- "I want, believe it or not, to go home. It is not a journey you can share. I travel to the stars."
- "I can take you to the finest astrologer!" she said eagerly.
- He began to laugh, harshly. Then, as he had done a night ago, he reconsidered. He just might be able to use a
- good astrologer. Hadn't Groton told him that they had traditionally been the most educated of men? "Where?"
- "It is said that the very best reside in Babylonia, particularly the city of Harran. We can join a trading
- caravan—
- "How long would such a trip take?"
- "It is across the great deserts where the nomads raid."
- "How long?"
- "Not long. Thirty days, maybe only twenty-five."
- "Scratch Babylon. Who is there in Tyre?"
- She considered disconsolately. "There is Gorolot—but he is very old. However, in other cities—"
- "Should be very wise, then. Is he an honest scholar or a faker?"
- "Honest. That is why he is so poor. But elsewhere there are—"
- "Gorolot will do. We'll see him tonight."
- "Tonight! He is already asleep."
- "We'll have to wake him."
- "We have no money for his fee."
- "Do you want to help or don't you?"
- "Will you leave Tyre after you see him?"
- "Sleeping Beauty, I may leave this world after I see him!"
- She twisted the paddle until the craft was in position for the return voyage.
- "What I have in mind for payment," Ivo said, "is service. If Gorolot is old and poor and honest, he has no
- servants, right? A strong young woman could do marvels for his household, and perhaps encourage business too.
- And—"
- "I am no household slave!" she exclaimed.
- "And Mattan would never suspect that the household slave of an aged astrologer could be an unsuccessful
- counterspy or potential bride of Melqart."
- She paddled silently.
- Gorolot, once roused by strenuous clamor, had the aspect of a sleepy old fraud. His eyes were sunken, his beard
- straggly and white, his clothing unkempt. He agreed to consider Ivo's case once the terms had been clarified.
- "I wish I had a better offer to make," Ivo said regretfully. "But I may not be in these parts long.
- Aia—you'll have to change her name—isn't too reliable and will need a lot of supervision—"
- "I will not!" she exclaimed angrily. "I can do the job as well as any girl in the city."
- "And you dare not entrust the daily marketing for staples to her, because she can't bargain well—"
- "I bargain very well! I'll show you!"
- "And she'll probably run away within a week or two, but at least—"
- "I will not!"
- "But she may be all right, if she doesn't fall asleep on the job."
- "I—" She shot him a dirty look and twitched her hip, conscious at last of the needling.
- The two men sat down at Gorolot's official table. Ivo saw that there were no flashy pictures of stars, planets
- or other symbols in evidence, and the man had donned no special robe. Probably the soiled tunic on his back was
- all he owned. The effect was unimpressive, even though such things had no inherent validity.
- "What is your date of birth?" Gorolot inquired.
- Ivo hesitated, but found after reflection that he was able to express it in local chronology, except for the
- year. That he solved by taking his age and figuring back to the year he would have been born, had he been born
- into this world and age. It came to the fifteenth year of the reign of Hiram the Great.
- Gorolot brought out a scroll of stripped camel hide together with several clay tablets. "Do not expect too
- much," he warned. "The meanings of the motions of the planets are not yet well known to us, and many times have
- I made mistakes. Often the Babylonian interpretations differ from the Egyptian, and I do not know the truth of
- it. I offer only the portents; I do not vouch for their authenticity."
- Ivo nodded. An honest man, yes, and a humble one. How many potentially well-paying customers did he alienate by
- his candor?
- For almost an hour the astrologer pored over his records and assessed the imperatives of the seven
- planets—Uranus, Neptune and Pluto being unknown to Phoenician astronomy—questioning Ivo
- occasionally, while Aia showed her mounting impatience. "Others give instant readings," she whispered.
- "Others are charlatans," Ivo replied. Gorolot labored on, unheeding.
- At last he looked up. "Is there some event in your life that—"
- Ivo gave him the same event he had given Groton, modified slightly in detail.
- Still the astrologer was not satisfied. He mumbled and shook his head and rechecked his texts and runes
- fretfully. "I cannot help you," he said abruptly.
- Aia started to object, but Ivo gestured her to silence. "You have already helped me considerably," he said. "I
- know you see something. What is it?"
- "Nothing."
- "You have spent all this time contemplating nothing?" Aia demanded.
- "The signs are contradictory, as I warned you they might be," Gorolot said to Ivo. "But more than that, and it
- disturbs me deeply, some aspects are sure, yet they are the least credible of all. Either you have never been
- born, or you come from so far away that you are not truly under any of the signs I know." He shrugged. "You
- must have been born, for I see you here, and I do not credit genii. Yet the signs are all-inclusive. So there
- is error—but not one it is in me to fathom. I am old and tired, and perhaps my brain is weakening. Take
- your servant-girl and go."
- "You admit you are a charlatan!" Aia exclaimed.
- "No," Ivo said firmly. "He is right. I have never been born—but I will be born thousands of years hence.
- And in my time the constellations have moved, and there are newly discovered planets; some of their meanings
- have—er, developed with the march of time."
- Gorolot peered at him over the flickering pewter lamp. "My charts suggest that this is so, but still it is a
- thing beyond my experience. I deem myself a sensible man, and all my life I have denied the supposed impact of
- the supernatural on the affairs of men. Yet here you are, real but inexplicable. Surely you mock me?"
- Aia was silent now, looking at Ivo intently. The red in her hair was stronger, her features almost familiar in
- a non-Phoenician sense. She was extremely lovely.
- "Do you speak other languages?" Ivo asked the astrologer. The man nodded. "I will show you that I am not of
- this world. I have the gift of tongues."
- "Are you familiar with this one?" Gorolot said in a foreign language, smiling.
- "Egyptian, southern dialect," Ivo said in the same language.
- "And this?"
- "Phrygian—as a Lydian tribesman would speak it."
- "No one in Tyre knows this one but me, and I know it only from my texts," Gorolot said carefully.
- "No wonder. It is parent-stock Etruscan. If I may—here is a correction on your phrasing." He gave it.
- Gorolot stared at him. "You are right. I remember now. You speak it far better than I." He had lapsed into
- Phoenician. "You do have the gift of tongues, and you are far too young to have mastered it here. You
- are—"
- "I don't believe it," Aia said, half believing it.
- "So you come from Ugarit—peasant stock," Ivo told her. She looked dismayed, and he turned back to
- Gorolot.
- The man's features changed. The white beard faded, leaving him clean-shaven. His face filled out. Behind him
- the mud-plaster wall metamorphosed into metal.
- Groton was opposite him, a look of incredulous hope on his face. To the side stood Afra, weeping silently.
- "I'm back," Ivo said.
- "It was Schn's doing," Ivo explained. Afra obviously had caught on to his secret, so no further pretense was
- in order. "It took me a long time to catch on to that, possibly because he tried to hide the evidence from me,
- more likely because I didn't really want to believe it. But even a genius can't convince an ordinary person
- that white is purple. Not always. Not when the purple stinks." But he hadn't told them about the dye yet. "And
- that gift of tongues was the unmistakable key. Schn has it, and he had to make it available to me in order to
- have me participate properly in that world; otherwise I would have popped out again quickly. When I realized
- that, I was on the way to victory, because I knew he was behind it all."
- "Why?" Groton wanted to know.
- "Why did he do it? Easy. Because he wants to take over, and he can't do it unless I abdicate. He tried to drive
- me into a situation that only he could save me from, hoping that I would capitulate. Maybe he forgot how
- stubborn I was."
- "But the destroyer—"
- "Either he doesn't know about that, or he isn't afraid of it."
- "Why didn't he give you just one language—Phoenician?"
- "It doesn't work that way. He can't give me part of a talent. Only so many speech centers in the brain, as I
- make it."
- "But that would mean that English takes up one," Afra said, "and all the other languages of the world, the
- other. That isn't reasonable."
- "Schn isn't reasonable, by our definition. Maybe he has some other setup. Anyway, it's everything, or it's
- nothing."
- "Do you have it now?" Afra asked, mopping her face. She looked so much like Aia that it set him back. Obviously
- one girl had been modeled from the other, just as one astrologer had emulated the other.
- "No."
- "He took it away when you broke out?" Groton asked.
- "No. I left it there. I didn't want it."
- The two looked at him.
- "It's hard to explain. This arrangement between us—it isn't absolutely set. He can give me things, like
- the intuitive computations, and I can accept them. But I can't take anything he doesn't make available and he
- can't force anything on me that I refuse to accept. This episode was a special case; I was off-balance and
- tired, and I accepted more than I should have. Then I had to fight my way out by his rules, the hard way. But I
- stopped it there; I didn't take the gift with me."
- "But why?" Afra cried. "The gift of tongues! Every language anyone ever spoke!"
- "Because each trait I accept from him brings me that much closer to him. I started with two, and that's the way
- I like it. I don't need tongues."
- "But if you can have all that and remain yourself—"
- This was like arguing with Aia. "I can't. As I stand, I have two parts out of, say, twenty that make up Schn.
- Tongues would be a third part, and then I might be tempted to gamble on artistic ability or eidetic
- recollection. And after that I might get a craving for physical dexterity—you know, be a champion at
- sports, be able to do sleight-of-hand, control the roll of dice—and at some point Schn would achieve
- controlling interest. It's more subtle than the destroyer, but the effect is the same, for me." And suddenly
- another reason he had been able to avoid the destroyer popped up: he had had a lifetime of practice protecting
- his individuality from oblivion.
- "That's how you—turn into Schn?"
- "That's one way. There are others." He decided to change the subject. "Of course, I'll never know whether I
- really had tongues. It could all have been American English, with the suggestion of translation. Just enough
- for verisimilitude in the dream."
- "Dream?" Afra said.
- "The Phoenician episode I summarized for you. It seemed like several days, and it was real for me, but—"
- "Maybe we'd better play off one of the tapes," Groton said.
- "Tapes?" It was Ivo's turn to be perplexed.
- Afra was already busy. "Listen." She switched on the playback.
- A stream of gibberish poured out of the speaker. "This was yesterday," Afra said. "That is, about twenty-seven
- hours ago. Your voice."
- "I was speaking?"
- "Ancient Phoenician. Fluently. I was able to pick out words only here and there, so we set up a program and ran
- the tape through the computer and patched up a translation. Do you want to hear it?"
- "I'd better."
- She lifted the printout. "Are you trusting yourself to a stranger? A brigand, perhaps a rapist or murderer? No.
- Ifarsh of America. I was captured by a ship and brought to Mattan for questioning. What I don't comprehend is
- the reason he sent me for sacrifice. How could—"
- "That's enough," Ivo said, embarrassed. "Did you translate—everything I said?"
- "Yes. We had to."
- "We rigged up a real-time continuous translation," Groton said, "and monitored it. In case there was any way we
- could help. Just now you messed it by switching to non-programmed languages."
- Ivo tried to remember all the things he had said, particularly to Aia. He felt his cheeks growing hot.
- "How did you finally fight your way out of it?" Groton asked him. "We knew something special was happening, but
- we couldn't tell what. You were telling someone there about your presence here, but—"
- "I was telling you, Harold." And with that statement he had another realization: that this man had become
- Harold instead of Groton in thought as well as speech. That was significant. "Or at least your ancestor-in-
- spirit. An astrologer, and an honest and knowledgeable man. I remembered that they were the best-educated men
- in those days, because they were the true astronomers and scientists before those fields were recognized as
- such, always questing for the secrets of things. It seemed to me that if I could convince one intelligent
- person in that world that I didn't belong there—literally—then the framework would be rent, or at
- least punctured. And I guess I convinced him, because it happened." He thought about the implications. "I hope
- Gorolot wasn't too upset when I disappeared."
- "Aia will console him," Afra said with gentle irony. It had not taken her long to revert to her normal
- cynicism. Had she been crying for him, that moment he first returned?
- "Similar to punching through by gravitational collapse," Harold said. "This would have been credibility
- collapse, though. You do believe that world was real?" He was asking for an opinion rather than a defense.
- "I would hate to believe that it wasn't. If I was really speaking Phoenician—"
- "I think I understand." Harold looked about. "We'd better take a break, now that it's over. This has been rough
- on all of us, and my wife doesn't even—"
- Beatryx appeared, carrying a tray. Incongruously, that reminded Ivo that now they were in a gravity defocuser,
- rather than the intensifier of Triton days, since they were buried in massive Neptune. How much stranger this
- situation was than the one he had visited!
- Beatryx saw him. "Ivo!" she cried immediately. "You're back!"
- That seemed to make it complete.
- Though less than three days had passed, it was a novelty to sleep in a modern bed again, and to be free of the
- pain of a flesh wound on the arm and a cut on the hand. He had been too much a part of the world of Tyre, had
- experienced too much there. He had sought only to leave it—yet now he was sorry, perversely, that it was
- gone. Was it that he craved the adventure it had offered?
- There he had been a man—a man in constant danger and discomfort, but a man. Here he was no more than a
- surrogate, a mild-mannered reporter waiting for Superman to take over. He wondered whether, if the offer of
- such adventure were made again, he would accept it. Give Schn what he wanted, in exchange for that
- satisfaction. For Schn could do that, if he chose; and the covenant would bind him. He could relegate Ivo to a
- fantasy fragment, his personality turned inward instead of outward, and let him live out his life there
- untrammeled by the inadequacies of the present. Perhaps it would be a short life, but—
- There was a motion nearby that made him jump. "Hello, Ivo."
- Afra.
- She sat down beside him: fresh, white, perfumed, elegantly packaged. "I think I know what you're thinking, Ivo.
- You're nostalgic for that world."
- "I guess I am, now that it's over."
- "And you're afraid you might go back to it the next time you use the macroscope, or something like it."
- He nodded. She was so beautiful in the half-light that he felt her presence as heat radiating against the side
- of his body toward her. The effect might be subjective, but it was powerful.
- "This Aia—was she me?"
- "No. She was a spy, a courtesan."
- "She still could have been me, Ivo. That name is close. And I was used to—to keep you at the station, so
- that Schn would be available. I'm not very proud of that."
- "You didn't know."
- "I should have known. I don't like being stupid, particularly about a thing like that. Brad told me to be nice
- to you. I—I'm trying to say I'm sorry. About that and a lot of things. But that isn't why I came here."
- He felt it safest not to comment. Why did a lovely woman come to the bed of an admirer? To reminisce?
- "I suppose it's like the—the handling. I'll just have to say it. And do it. I heard what you said to her.
- About me."
- Oh-oh. "I was afraid of that. I didn't mean to—"
- "Don't you apologize to me! I'm the one at fault. All I can say is that I was dense, or blind, or both. I
- didn't know, I really didn't know—until I read it on the printout. I didn't know you loved me."
- "I didn't want you to know. I'd rather you forgot it."
- She did not move, but it was as though she leaned over him where he lay. "That isn't the past tense, is it,
- Ivo. You love me now—and I won't forget it. I—well, you know my situation. I can't say I love you
- or ever will."
- "I understand."
- "That Aia—she offered herself to you, and you wanted her. But you told her—"
- Ivo felt his face burning again. "Can't we just let that pass?"
- "No we can't, Ivo. You held her in your arms and she made you recite poetry—but then you didn't make love
- to her. And you could have."
- "How do you know? It was my vision."
- "Not entirely, Ivo. I do know. Did you think you were having an innocent wet dream? I was with you."
- He had thought he was already embarrassed, but once again she had made him realize that he had been navely
- skirting the edge of the chasm. Again he had fallen in.
- "I know this hurts you, but I have to say it. The girl you held was me. Naked, ready—"
- What possible comment? "But if I'd—"
- "I said you could have. I won't say I'm sorry you didn't."
- "But why?"
- "I had this crazy idea that if I could somehow bridge the gap between us—between your world and
- mine—it would bring you back. I felt responsible... maybe guilty is the word. It wasn't premeditated.
- There was something nagging at my mind—something Brad once told me about Schn—but it wouldn't come
- clear. I did realize where Schn was, of course, though it took me entirely too long to put two and two
- together. And I think if Schn had won, I could have—I don't know. I just had to do something. I was
- monitoring the tape, the others were asleep, and... the time seemed right. And—we do need you, Ivo.
- Objectively. We can't locate ourselves in the galaxy without you. Not close enough."
- She had been talking rapidly, throwing justifications at him as quickly as she thought of them. As though she
- had to apologize for ever having offered her body to him in any guise. And, he thought bitterly, if she felt
- ashamed of the impulse, then her apology was in order. She had said once that she did not like acting like a
- whore.
- She took his silence as an objection. "We had to have you back. It was that simple. It isn't as though there
- are any physical secrets between us, after the handling and the melting. If you were falling and I could offer
- a hand to pull you back—the principle is the same. You did it for me, on Triton, with your trial. So this
- time it was my turn to—to contribute."
- The irony was that it might have worked. Could he possibly have made physical love to Afra and not been drawn
- back to her world? He doubted it.
- "I thank you for the gesture," he said, feeling quixotic.
- "Now that we understand each other," she said, relieved, "the rest is easy. I want you to know that this world
- needs you more than that one does. So—this world offers you more. It is, as I said, that simple."
- "It's still too complicated for me. What are you getting at now?"
- "You love me. I need you. That's not the same thing, I know, but it's honest. If my embrace will hold you here,
- I give it to you. Anything Aia had for you—I will match. Anything any woman has for you. You don't have
- to travel to any other world—you mustn't travel—"
- "I suppose you are pretty much like Aia."
- There was no flickering lamplight, but the classic lines of her forehead, nose and chin wavered in his gaze.
- "That's no compliment, but it's the truth," she said. "We sell what we have for what we need. Men their brains,
- women their bodies. Better that than hypocrisy."
- There was a silence of several minutes. Ivo thought of all the things he might say, but knew she knew them
- already. She had said one thing and meant another, earlier; now the truth was coming into view as the base
- warred with the sublime. She was offering paid love—the last thing he wanted from her, but all she had,
- realistically, to give.
- Again the question he had asked himself in Tyre: why not settle for the best he could get? He had been willing
- to embrace Aia's body in lieu of Afra; why not accept Afra's body—in lieu of Afra? Both women had come to
- terms with their necessities, knowing they could not bring their lovers back to life; why not he?
- Yet if he had learned any lesson in Tyre, it was this: there was no salvation in a surrogate.
- "Maybe next time," he said.
- She did not move or look at him. "Look off, dear Love, across the sallow sands...."
- She was still sitting there when he fell asleep.
- It was night in the marshes of Glynn. He had either to wait a few hours and try again, or travel to the
- daylight side of the globe.
- He felt Afra's hand take his left. "If you go, I will don the goggles and follow you," she said. It was a
- threat, for she would encounter not Tyre but the destroyer.
- "I'm on guard now, and rested," he replied. "It's safe." But he felt better for the touch of her fingers, their
- almost-affectionate pressure. Last night he had turned her down; today, oddly, she was warmer toward him.
- Tyre appeared unchanged, superficially. Warships still docked at the ports of the island city and the buildings
- remained tall and crowded. He recognized the temple complex and the area where he had met Aia, that night.
- "We don't seem to have moved," he said, perplexed. He wondered how he could have seen the city so accurately
- before, since they had probably removed him from the macroscope as soon as he fell into the Mediterranean. He
- must have been there!
- "More likely it's a fifty-year jump," Afra said. "Backward or forward or sidewise. Can you find a landmark?"
- She still had not relinquished his hand, except for the brief periods he needed it for coordinated adjustments.
- He centered on Gorolot's house, quite curious and a little nervous. Strangers occupied it, and the
- configurations of the structure had changed, as though the house had been rebuilt. Ivo lingered, disappointed,
- though he remained apprehensive about the effect the sight of Gorolot—or Aia—might have on him.
- "You can go back," a masculine voice said in his ear, in Phoenician.
- Ivo clenched Afra's hand. "Pull me out!" he said urgently. "It's Schn!"
- He felt her fingers returning his pressure, as from a distance, and the tug of the goggles coming off—but
- the scene did not shift.
- "Why do you fight me?" Schn asked in Ivo's voice.
- "Because you may be destroyed the moment you take over, for one thing. Don't you know that?"
- "When I take over," Schn said as though never doubting the eventuality, "I will have the whole of your
- experience to draw on, should I require it. At present I have almost none of it. It is exceedingly difficult
- for me even to contact you, since you don't let go until your mind is distracted. So I don't know what your
- problem is—but I do know there is something intriguing afoot."
- Someone was still tugging at a distant extremity. "Hold up a minute, Afra," Ivo called. "He only wants to
- talk."
- "I don't trust him," she said from the far reaches.
- "Give us two minutes."
- "Little puritan Ivo has a girlfriend now?" Schn inquired. Obviously he knew—but how much?
- "No. Now look, I have to explain why I can't let you have the body. We're in touch with a nonhuman signal
- that—"
- "I can give you romantic prowess. No woman can withstand that. A warty toad could seduce a princess."
- "I know, but no. Now this galactic civilization has broadcast what we call the destroyer signal that—"
- "How about turning me loose for a specified interval? Just long enough to lick this problem of yours."
- "No! You don't understand what I'm—"
- "Junior, are you trying to lecture me on—"
- A cold shock hit him, reminding him of the original plunge into the Mediterranean. Ivo looked up to find Afra
- standing before him, the bucket in her hands. "Yeah, that did it," he said, shaking himself. She had doused him
- with icewater: three gallons over his head.
- "Are you going to be trapped every time you use the scope?" she demanded. "You were talking in Phoenician
- again, but I got the bit about two minutes, not that I waited that long. What did he want?"
- "He wants out," Ivo said, shivering. He began to strip off his clothing. "But he can't get out until I let
- him."
- "What about the destroyer?"
- "He doesn't seem to know about that, or want to hear it. I couldn't make him listen."
- "He must know about it. What about that message—'My pawn is pinned'? He knew then."
- Ivo, bouncing up and down to warm up, halted. The wet floor was slippery under his bare toes. "I didn't think
- of that. He must be lying."
- "That doesn't make sense either. If he knew the destroyer would get him, why should he expose himself to it?
- And if he knows it won't, why not say so? This isn't a game of twenty questions."
- "Now that I think of it," Ivo admitted, "he didn't sound much like a genius to me, I've never actually talked
- directly with him before, but—it was more like a kid bargaining."
- "A child." She brought a towel and started patting him dry, and he realized that for the first time he had
- undressed unselfconsciously before her. They had all seen each others' bodies during the meltings, but this was
- not such an occasion. Barriers were still coming down unobtrusively. "How old was he when—?"
- "I'm not sure. It took some time to—to set me up. I remember some events back to age five, but there are
- blank spots up until eight or nine. That doesn't necessarily mean he took over then—"
- "So Schn never lived as an adult."
- "I guess not, physically."
- "Or emotionally. You matured, not he. Is it surprising, then, that he appears childish to us? His intelligence
- and talent don't change the fact that he is immature. He likes to play games, to send out mysterious messages,
- create worlds of imagination. For him, right and wrong are merely concepts; he has no devotion to adult truth.
- No developed conscience. And if the notion of the destroyer frightens him—why, he puts it out of his
- mind. He no longer admits its danger. He thinks that he can conquer anything just by tackling it with gusto."
- Ivo nodded thoughtfully, looking about for some dry shorts. "But he's still got more knowledge and ability than
- any adult."
- She brought the shorts. "A sixteen-year-old boy has better reflexes than most mature men, and more knowledge
- about automotive engineering—turbo or electric or hydraulic—but he's still the world's worst
- driver. It takes more than knowledge and ability; it takes control and restraint. Obviously Schn doesn't have
- that."
- "If he began driving—what a crash he could make!"
- "Let's just defuse the destroyer first," she said, smiling grimly. "You were right all along: we're better off
- without Schn."
- CHAPTER 9
- "We have made," Afra announced as though it were news, "five jumps—and we are now farther removed from
- the destroyer source than we were when we started."
- "Schn says he can get us there within another six," Ivo said. "He has been figuring the configurations."
- "How does he know them? I thought he didn't have access to—no, I see he does. He's there when we pinpoint
- our distance by Earth history, and he probably picks up everything you hear when you're on the scope. Though
- how he can figure anything meaningful from the pitiful information we have—"
- "Let's review," Harold said. "Obviously there is something we have missed—unless Schn is lying."
- "He could be lying," Ivo said. "But he probably wouldn't bother. He wouldn't be interested in coming out unless
- he were sure he could accomplish something—and he wouldn't have the patience to go through many more
- jumps."
- "Our first jump was about fifty years, to 1930," Harold said. "Our second was almost three thousand years, to
- 930 BC as we make it. A 2,860 year difference, but actually a larger jump because it landed us on the opposite
- side of Earth, spacially. Then another fifty-year jump to 890 BC, slantwise. This could get confusing if it
- were not so serious! Finally, jumps to 975 and 975 BC—just sliding around the arc, getting nowhere. But
- apparently Schn can make something of it."
- Afra turned to Ivo. "You have his computational ability. Can't you map the pattern he sees?"
- "No. He's using more than mathematics, or at least is making use of more factors than I know how to apply. He
- can be a lot more creative than I can; his reasoning is an art, while mine is conventional."
- "Maybe he's using astrology," Afra said sourly.
- Harold shook his head. "Astrology doesn't—"
- "Chances are he knows it, though," Ivo said. "So it's no joke. If it is possible to make a space-curvature map
- of the galaxy by astrological means, Schn can do it. He—"
- "Forget it," Afra snapped.
- But Harold was thoughtful. He believes, Ivo thought, having this come home to him personally for the first
- time, though of course he had known it intellectually before. He really believes.
- And suppose Schn believed too?
- How was any one person to know what was valid and what was not? Even if astrology were a false doctrine, Harold
- had already applied it to better effect than Afra had her doctrines.
- "I wonder whether we haven't taken too nave a view of jumpspace," Afra said after a pause. "We've been
- thinking of a simple string-in-circle analogy—but a four-dimensional convolution would be a system of a
- different order. We can't plot it on a two-dimensional map."
- "I could build a spatial-coordinates box," Harold said. "Intersecting lines and planes of force to hold the
- items in place, the whole thing transparent so we can study any section from any angle. If we plotted our five
- known points of tangency and looked for an applicable framework, we might be able to begin deriving
- equations—"
- Afra grabbed his arm, abruptly excited. "How soon?"
- The sixth jump was a large one, but that was the least of it.
- They contemplated the figures and could not deny them.
- "It is a different destroyer," Afra said.
- They were another five thousand light-years slantwise from Sol, and Earth history stood at approximately 4,000
- BC. The destroyer signal that bathed Earth in 1980-81 was gone—but sixteen thousand light-years down a
- divergent azimuth was the point source of a second emission virtually identical to the first.
- "I suspect," Harold said, "that we are up against a genuine galactic conspiracy. A paranoiac's delight."
- "I'm ecstatic," Afra said.
- He cocked a finger at her warningly, as though she were a child of five. "It cannot be coincidence that similar
- broadcasters of this nature are set up thirty-thousand light-years from each other, the range of each about
- eighteen thousand miles, presumably expanding in all directions at light velocity. Note how both skirt the
- middle edge of the galaxy. Six so placed, with a seventh in the center, would cover the vast majority of the
- stars available."
- "Which seems to prove that their target is all civilization, Earth's being incidental," Afra agreed.
- "Which may also mean that those sources are armed," Ivo said. "Physically, I mean. They couldn't have stood up
- for all these millennia, against all the species we know exist, otherwise." He paused. "Do we go on?"
- "Yes we go on!" Afra said so fiercely it alarmed him. Every so often she still furnished such a reminder of her
- personal involvement in this mission. Her memory of Brad—the god-prince who had died and not returned to
- life.
- They were becoming blas about galactic travel, or at least inured; but the tenth jump amazed them all. It was
- about thirty-five thousand light-years—and it placed them entirely outside the Milky Way Galaxy by
- approximately thirty thousand. They had jumped almost vertically out of the great disk.
- There were no destroyer sources in evidence.
- The party gathered to look at their galaxy on the "direct vision" screen. This was actually an image relayed
- from sensors set into orbit around Neptune. Harold had not been idle during the intervals of recuperation
- between hops, and he had sophisticated machinery to play with. The mini-satellites even survived the jumps
- without disturbance, once the anchor-field had been modified to account for such motion.
- Below them it lay, filling well over a ninety-degree arc: the entire galaxy of man's domicile, viewed broadside
- by man for the first time. The pallid white of the stars and nebulae deflowered by Earth's atmosphere existed
- no more; the colossal fog of interstellar gas and dust had been banished from the vicinity of the observer. The
- result was a view of the Milky Way Galaxy as it really existed—ten thousand times as rich as that
- perceivable from Earth.
- Color, yes—but not as any painter could represent, or any atmosphere-blinded eye could fathom. Red in the
- center where the old lights faded; blue at the fringe where the fierce new lights formed. A spectrum
- between—but also so much more! Here the visible splay extended beyond the range for which nomenclature
- existed, and rounded out the hues for which human names did exist. A mighty swirl, a multiple spiral of
- radiance, wave on wave of tiny bright particles, merged yet discrete. The Milky Way was translucent, yet mind-
- staggeringly intricate in three, in four dimensions.
- At the fringe it was wafer-thin, sustained largely by the masses of cosmic dust that smeared out thousands of
- stars with every hideously compelling wisp and whorl. Within this sparse galactic atmosphere, nestled in
- tentacles of gas, floated Sol and its solar debris: hardly worthy of notice, compared to the main body; indeed,
- invisible without magnification.
- And, clear from this exquisite vantage, the pattern of the stellar conglomeration that was the galaxy emerged:
- the great spiral arms, coiling outward from the center, doubled bands of matter beginning as the light of
- massed stars and terminating as the black of thinning dust. Not flat, not even; the ribbons were twisted,
- showing now broadside, now edgewise, resembling open mobius strips or the helix of galactic DNA.
- And yes, he thought, yes—the galaxy was a cell, bearing its cosmic organelles and glowing in its
- animation; motile, warm-bodied, evolving, its life span enduring for tens of billions of years.
- Ivo felt a physical hunger, and realized that he had been looking at the galaxy for many hours. He had been
- stupefied by it, as a worshiper was said to be blessedly stupefied by confrontation with his god.
- He broke the trance and looked about him. Afra stood nearest, lovely in her mortal fashion, her eyes
- encompassing a hundred billion stars, her lungs inhaling cubic par-sees of space.
- Harold turned to face him, and he noticed with a shock that the man, like the women, had lost weight sometime
- in the past few months. Everyone was changing! "Did you observe the globular clusters? Hundreds of them
- orbiting the galaxy, a million stars in each. Look!" He pointed. "That one must be within ten thousand light-
- years of us."
- Ivo saw what he had somehow missed before: a glob of light near at hand and about as far out from the galactic
- disk as they were. It resembled a small galaxy except that it was shapeless, a Rorschach blob of brilliance. It
- was as though some of the cotton had drifted free when the fabric of the main tapestry was woven. At its
- fringe, as with the main galaxy, the stars were sparse, but they thickened at the center, converting from blue
- to mid-range. This cluster was younger than the main body.
- There were many others in sight, most closer in toward the galactic nucleus. Each, perhaps, was a cosmos in
- itself, possessing lifebearing planets and stellar civilizations. The overall pattern of the entire group of
- clusters was spherical—or at least hemispherical, since he could not see what lay on the far side of the
- main disk. Though he could not perceive individual motion, it struck him that the clusters were in fact
- orbiting the center of the galaxy—elliptical orbits, brushing very near to its rim and riding higher over
- its broad face. Some even seemed to be colliding with the galactic fringe, though that was so diffuse that it
- was a matter of interpretation.
- Almost, he could picture the original ball of gas and dust, turning grandly in space and throwing out gauze and
- sparks. The majority of the material remained in the plane of rotation, to become the spiral arms and the
- overall disk-shape; but a few mavericks took separate courses, and were the clusters.
- How did the universe appear to a creature looking out from a planet aboard one of these island systems? Did any
- cultures aspire to descend to the mighty mother complex? Was their god a whirlpool thirty thousand parsecs in
- diameter?
- Beatryx emerged from the kitchen area, and Ivo realized that it had been the smell of cooking that had first
- brought his attention to his stomach. She was typically the bringer of nourishment. It was good that someone
- was practical!
- At last Afra came out of it. "We are within the traveler field, but beyond the destroyer," she said musingly.
- "We are thirty thousand light-years toward the traveler—so it will be passing Earth and the galaxy for at
- least that period in the future. Obviously it preceded the destroyers, too, or they would have started earlier
- and reached out this far. And that suggests—"
- "That the point of the destroyer may be merely to suppress the alien beam," Harold finished for her. "Since
- myriad local stations come through nicely, they cannot have incited the destroyer."
- "Talk of xenophobia!" she exclaimed. "Just because it proved that there was superior technology
- elsewhere—!"
- Harold cocked his head at her. "Is that the way you see it? I might have reasoned along another line."
- "I am aware of your—"
- "Soup's on!" Beatryx called, once more abridging the discussion appropriately.
- Because there was no destroyer here, they turned on the main screen to watch Ivo work. Afra could have used the
- macroscope herself, but there was now a certain group recognition that this was Ivo's prerogative, and that
- practice had brought him to a level of proficiency no other person could match without a similar
- apprenticeship. It was his show.
- He had stage fright.
- He avoided the routine programs, now offered in such splendor and multiplicity that it would require years to
- Index them by hand. Their several language coding families were of course unfamiliar to the others; Ivo had
- mastered the basics only after intense concentration, though all were to some extent similar to the technique
- of the destroyer itself. He also avoided the traveler signal (when had that term come into use?); that would
- come in its own time. Instead he concentrated on the nonbroadcast band and searched for Earth: the world of Man
- as it was thirty thousand years ago.
- And couldn't pick it up.
- He rechecked the coordinates derived from their telescopic sightings of the Andromeda Galaxy and selected
- Population II Cepheids of the Milky Way, and made due allowance for galactic rotation and the separate motions
- of the stars in the course of 30,000 years. Everything checked; he knew where to find Earth.
- Except that it wasn't there.
- "Either I've lost my touch, or Earth didn't exist thirty thousand years ago," he said ruefully.
- "Nonsense," Afra said. "Let me try it." She seemed eager.
- Ivo gave place to her, feeling as though he had been sent to the showers.
- Afra played with the controls for twenty minutes, focusing first on the Earth-locale, then elsewhere. The
- screen remained a mlange of color; no clear image appeared. At last she swung around to focus on one of the
- globular clusters outside the galaxy—and got an image.
- She had set the computer to fix on any planetary surface encountered in a routine sweep of the views available,
- and it had done that. The picture was of a dark barren moon far from its primary. In the night sky above the
- horizon individual stars could be made out, and even the light band of massed distant stars.
- "That's no cluster!" Groton exclaimed. "You wouldn't find a band like that in a spherical mass of stars."
- Afra fussed with the controls, adjusting the scene clumsily and finally losing it. She returned to the computer
- sweep, while Ivo chafed internally at the loss of the only picture they had landed, and such a mysterious one.
- The picture would not come in again. She began to show her temper.
- "Something strange here," Harold said. "The alignment of that image doesn't check with the direct view of the
- cluster. And the scene was typical of a planet within the galaxy. That light band was the Milky Way!"
- Afra set the computer for Earth-type planet selection, leaving the azimuth where it was, and waited while it
- filtered and sorted the crowded macrons. Ivo was anxious to take over again, but held himself back. The
- situation certainly was strange, and Afra obviously lacked the expertise necessary to solve the contradictions.
- But it would not be diplomatic to point this out.
- A green landscape appeared, Earthlike but not Earth. Afra jumped to manual—and lost it. She swore in
- unladylike manner.
- Abruptly she disengaged. "I'm not doing any good here. Take it back, Ivo."
- And he was in it, oblivious to the others, using the goggles though the main screen remained on. He felt his
- way into the situation, reacting as though the computer were part of his own brain. There was no image directly
- from Earth—or from any other point in the galaxy. Except for the programs; they came through splendidly.
- What was the distinction between the tame macrons and the wild ones, that only the tame should pass?
- The programs were artificial, generated by sophisticated Type II technology macronic equipment set up within a
- powerful gravitic field. He knew that much from the local stations, who discussed their techniques freely.
- Their signals, in effect, were polarized, stripped of wasteful harmonics and superficial imprints, and radiated
- out evenly. Natural impulses were weak and unruly, by contrast, and tangled with superimpositions. A wild
- macron could produce several hundred distinct pictures and a great deal of additional scramble; a cultured
- macron produced only one, or one integrated complex.
- It was like the difference between a random splash and a controlled jet of water. The splash interacted with
- its environment more copiously, but the jet went farther and accomplished more in a particular manner.
- What was the galactic environment?
- Light. Gas. Energy.
- "Gravity."
- It was Schn whispering in his ear. Communication between them was growing more facile, to Ivo's distress. He
- preferred Schn thoroughly buried.
- Gravity: cumulative in its gross effect, but divided within its originating body. Outside the massive
- galaxy—
- Macrons: essences born of gravitic ripples, and subject to them. And what happened to those emerging from the
- galaxy itself, meeting the larger interactions of the universe?
- He knew, now. The programs struck through, even as far as other galaxies, if properly focused, for they were
- beamed and streamlined and syncopated and unencumbered. But the wild impulses could not make it; they were too
- woolly, prickly, horny, disorganized. They felt the great galactic field, were bent by it (for they were
- creatures of gravity), hauled around as were the clusters, strained....
- But not the light. Galactic gravity was not enough to prevent the light from escaping. And finally the light
- struck out into deep space, leaving its macrons behind, divorced. Like a cloak shed of its master, the mantle
- of macrons collapsed, compacted, lost form—but remained as lightspeed impulses, clumping to each other,
- billions where one had been before. Unable to escape the master field, they remained in orbit about the mighty
- primary, the galactic nucleus.
- Thus, shotgun images at right angles to the disk of the galaxy.
- Thus, no direct contemporary—within 30,000 years—news.
- Thus—history.
- Ivo narrowed the coded specifications to a classification of one: Earth. Earth, any time since life conquered
- its land masses. He swept the captive stream, searching for animation. He scored.
- They were watching the screen, and he heard their joint outcry. Earth, yes—
- The creature resembled in a certain fashion a crocodile, but its snout was short and blunt. Its body, with its
- stout round legs and powerful tail, was about seven feet long. A grotesque bridgework of bone and leather stood
- upon its back, like a stiff sail.
- It was morning, and the animal rested torpidly at right angles to the rays of the sun, its eyes partially
- closed. Behind it was an edge of water clustered with banded stems, a number of them broken. Tall brush or
- alienistic trees stood in the background, and the ground seemed bleak because there was no grass.
- "That," said Afra, "is Dimetrodon. The sail-backed lizard of the Permian period of Earth, two hundred and fifty
- million years ago. The sail was used as a primitive temperature control mechanism before better means were
- found. Though Dimetrodon looks clumsy, that heat-control was an immense advantage, since reptiles tend to be
- dull when cold—"
- "I don't see how a sail could make it warm," Beatryx said.
- "Oh, it does, it does, and cool too. Broadside to the sun it soaks up heat; endwise it dissipates it. Reptiles
- don't dare get too hot, either, you see. Quite clever, really—and it does make identification easy."
- "Paleontology is not my strong point," Harold said, "but some such conjecture came to my mind, minus the
- nomenclature. Wasn't the sail-back the ancestor to the dinosaurs?"
- Ivo, wearing the goggles, could not see the expression on her face, but he could hear it. "What dinosaur
- practiced temperature control? Dimetrodon was a carnivorous pelycosaur, probably ancestral to the therapsids.
- Mammal-like reptiles, to you."
- "Oops, wrong family tree," he said without rancor. "Still, a surprising manifestation, considering that we are
- only thirty thousand light-years out. I don't see how it could actually be Earth."
- "It is Earth," Ivo said, remembering that the others had not been privy to his deliberations. "The macrons are
- in orbit around the galaxy. They've clumped together until they have something like mass in themselves, but we
- can still read them when we catch them. These must have circled a thousand times. I don't dare mess with the
- orientation; reception is largely a matter of chance, since there's so much to choose from. All space and all
- time, as it were."
- And as he spoke, the picture faded. The vagaries of macronics had washed out the reception. He reset the sweep
- and angled back and forth, searching for a steadier pulse.
- "Two hundred and fifty million years!" Afra said. "The galaxy should have completed a full revolution in that
- period."
- "Galactic revolution shouldn't be relevant," Harold said. "We're out from the flat face of it, not the edge.
- The macron orbiting here must be at right angles to the galactic rotation, and not circular at all. I wonder
- whether it isn't more like a magnetic field?"
- Ivo had another picture on the screen: an animal resembling a deer, but with doglike paws. It stood about a
- yard high, and poked its nose through the low brush as though searching for vegetable tidbits.
- "Mammalian," Afra said. "Oligocene, probably. I don't quite place the—"
- Then it happened: one of those breaks that mock probability. There was a concerted gasp.
- A monstrous beak stabbed down into the picture, followed by a tiny malignant eye and white headfeathers. It was
- the head of a bird—almost, in itself, the size of the full torso of the deerlike animal. The cruel beak
- gaped, stabbed, and closed on the deer's quivering neck.
- Now the rest of the predator came into view. It was indeed a bird: nine feet tall and constructed like a
- wingless and huge-legged hawk. Three mighty claws pierced turf with every step, each scaly and muscular.
- "Phororhacos!" Afra exclaimed, awed. "Miocene, in South America. Twenty million years ago—"
- "How horrible!" That was Beatryx.
- "Horrible? Phororhacos was a magnificent specimen, one of the pinnacles of avian evolution. Flightless, to be
- sure—but this bird was supreme on land, in its territory. If diversity of species is considered, aves is
- more successful than mammalia—"
- They watched the bird lift its prey by the neck and shake it into unconsciousness or death. Ivo felt the pangs
- of the onslaught, and had to refrain from putting his hand against his neck. Then beak and talon disemboweled
- the carcass, and the gory feeding began. Now Ivo felt the taste of warm blood in his toothless mouth.
- The picture faded again.
- "We skipped two hundred million years between images," Afra said. "How about one in between—like a
- dinosaur?"
- "In time, we should be able to fill in Earth's entire history, from this debris," Ivo said. "But the selection
- is largely random, for any one scene. The macrons aren't uniformly distributed, though they seem to be
- reasonably well ordered within the clumps. I can keep trying, though." He, too, was fascinated by this widening
- of their horizon. No longer did they have to jump enormous distances in order to see the preman past.
- All space and all time....
- "I hate to break this up," Harold said, "but we do have more serious concerns. We are drifting far outside our
- galaxy, and a wrong jump could lose us entirely."
- That brought them to attention, and he continued more specifically: "I gather that the pictures would be less
- random if their scope were not so limited, no pun intended. Suppose we look at the Solar System as a whole, and
- try to get some clue to the finer alignment of our macronic streams? If we can learn to manipulate our
- reception properly, the significant history of our entire galaxy will be open to us. That means—"
- "That means we can trace the onset of the destroyer!" Afra broke in. "Discover what species did it, and why."
- She paused. "Except that it hasn't reached this far out yet."
- "That's why we are free to experiment. Once we know what we're doing, we can slide in closer and pick it up
- again. We won't have to approach that generator blind."
- "Is that right, Ivo?" she asked. "Would a Solar System fix—the entire system—promote uniform
- reception?"
- There had been a time when she did not ask his opinion on anything technical. "Yes. I could put the screen on
- schematic, and there would be a much broader band to work with. It would be excellent practice, though I can't
- guarantee the results at first."
- She did not answer, so he set it up. The image in his goggles and on the screen became a cartoon diagram
- coordinated by the computer and his own general guidance. The sun was represented by a white disk of light, and
- the planets by colored specks traveling dotted orbits, with their moons in similarly marked paths. The scale
- was not true, but the identities and positions were clear enough.
- "I'll try for a system history," Ivo said. "But it will take some time to map the macron streams, assuming they
- are reasonably consistent. Then I'll have to patch together recordings, since I won't have chronological order
- at first. No point in your watching."
- "We are with you, Ivo," Afra said with sudden warmth. "We'll watch. Maybe we can help."
- He knew she was being impersonally practical, but the gesture still warmed him considerably. This was the way
- he preferred her: working with him, not trying to buy him. He bent to the task, searching for comprehensible
- traces. He had a macroscopic patchwork ahead of him.
- "Let me do it, clubfingers," Schn. said in his ear. "I can post it all in an hour. You'll take two weeks, and
- you'll miss a lot."
- Ivo had already discovered the magnitude of the task. He did not want to be embarrassed by the inevitable
- tiring of his audience as the unproductive hours went by. "Do it, then," he replied irritably, and gave Schn
- rein. More and more was becoming possible, between them.
- Yet—if Schn could do this, using the macroscope—what had happened to the destroyer? The entire
- basis of Ivo's refusal to free Schn was being thrown into question.
- Perhaps—was it a hope?—he would fail.
- Schn had not been bluffing. He expanded into Ivo's brain and body and applied his juvenile but overwhelming
- intellect to the problem. Ivo watched his left fingers dance over the computer keys while his right ones flexed
- on the knob, and wondered whether he had not made a serious mistake. He had not freed Schn—but Schn
- might free himself, given this leeway. He was clever enough....
- The screen cleared. The indicated scale expanded to two light-years diameter and a representation of cosmic
- dust appeared.
- "What are you doing?" Afra demanded. "That's no stellar system."
- "Primeval hydrogen cloud, stupid," Schn replied with Ivo's lips and tongue, while Ivo winced.
- Afra shut up and the show went on. Had he not been observing from so intimate a spot, Ivo would have suspected
- it of being entirely fanciful. As it was, he knew that Schn had actually manipulated the macroscope to pick up
- impulses dating back five or ten billion years; the representation, though indirect, bridged and abridged, was
- an honest one.
- The cloud of primitive gas swirled and contracted, the time scale showing the passage of roughly a million
- years every 25 seconds. In the course of ten million years the gas cloud compressed itself into a diameter of a
- hundred million miles, then to a scant one million, and then it flared into life and became a star. The
- compression had raised its temperature until the hydrogen/helium "ignition" point was achieved; now it was
- drawing enormous energy from the conversion of hydrogen atoms to a quarter the number of helium atoms.
- "It's like trying to cram four glasses of liquor into a fifth," Afra explained to Beatryx. "A quart won't fit
- into a fifth, so—"
- "Doesn't it depend on the size of the fifth glass?" Oh no, Ivo thought. Once more the two women had crossed
- signals. Harold would have to untangle them, as he always did. Eventually Beatryx would be made to understand
- that four hydrogen atoms had a combined atomic weight of 4.04, while a single helium atom's weight was 4.00.
- The combination of four hydrogens to make one helium thus released the extra .04 as energy: the life of stars.
- Only one percent of the new atom released—but so great was the aggregate that it halted the collapse of
- the huge cloud/star pictured on the screen and stabilized it for a period. Most of the light of the universe
- derived from this same process; the myriad stars of the Milky Way Galaxy were merely foci for hydrogen/helium
- conversion.
- Several billion years passed in a few intense minutes. At last the fuel ran low, and the sun swelled into a
- vast red giant a hundred times its prior diameter.
- "That can't be Sol!" Harold objected. "Our sun is only halfway through its life cycle."
- Schn did not dignify this with a reply. Ivo did not comprehend the situation either, but still knew the image
- was accurate.
- The star, having exhausted its available hydrogen, collapsed again. But within it now was a core of almost pure
- helium, the product of its lifelong consumption of hydrogen. As it contracted to a much tighter ball than
- before, the internal temperature increased to ten times that of the earlier conversion. Something had to give.
- It did: the helium began to break down into carbon. A new fuel had been discovered.
- The star was in business again, as a fast-living white dwarf.
- But soon the helium ran out, and the tiny star faded into a blackened ball of matter no larger than a planet.
- It had come to a dismal end. It was dense with collapsed matter and peripheral heavy elements captured during
- its glory from galactic debris, but it was dead, a drifting ash.
- After more millions of years this minuscule corpse was swept into the sphere of influence of a nascent star, a
- body forming from the more plentiful gas nearer the rim of the galaxy. As the new star, heedless of its
- degrading destiny, took on the characteristic brilliance of the long atomic conversion, this cinder became a
- satellite, sweeping up some of the gas for itself. It enhanced its mass and developed an atmosphere, but
- remained inert. Its day was done; it was never to regain its erstwhile grandeur.
- "That's Earth!" Afra said. Then, immediately: "No, it can't be. Wrong composition, and the core is much too
- dense." She was absorbing the symbols for material and density automatically, seeing the planet as it was.
- A second ember was acquired by the young system, also representing the death of an ancient star. Then a third
- and a fourth, each accruing what pitiful lagniappe it could from the scant debris of space. The last two were
- much larger cores than the first, and acquired more atmosphere for their dotage, but had no hope of
- rejuvenation. Four planets orbited the star, each far older as entities than it was.
- A neighbor had problems. The picture shifted to cover it for a geologic moment. This star was much larger than
- the original one and had consumed its hydrogen—and helium—lavishly. In a scant few million years it
- had run its course. But its mass, and therefore its internal heat, was such that the conversions did not stop
- at carbon. Oxygen, sodium, silicon, calcium—all the way down to iron, 26 on the atomic scale, the
- elements formed in this stellar furnace. A series of thermal intensifications—cataclysmic
- storms—broke through the shell of helium even before its breakdown was complete, producing trace amounts
- of heavy metals up to lead; but the basic, energy-releasing conversions predominated. The demise of a large
- star was not a quiet matter.
- When nothing remained at the core lighter than iron, the gravitic collapse resumed. The heat ascended to a
- hundred billion degrees. Strength was drawn from this collapse, and energy poured back into the core to form
- new matter. The heavier elements all the way up to uranium now were manufactured in quantity.
- But at this final collapse the star rebounded in an explosion that splattered its mass across the galaxy: a
- supernova. A splendid spectrum of heavy elements shot past the more conservative viewpoint star and through its
- satellite system, and some of this was captured while some fell into the star itself. The system was richer
- than it had been, feeding greedily upon the gobbets of its neighbor's destruction.
- The original planet intercepted a fair share of this largesse, and gained perceptibly thereby, as did the
- others. But the largest fragments, mostly iron, fell into orbit and coalesced into planets in their own right.
- Now three small satellites circled within the four large ones.
- "Mars, Earth, Venus!" Afra said, caught up in this adventure. "And the first planet we saw is Neptune—our
- planet!"
- Schn still did not bother to comment. Ivo felt Schn's concentration as he identified and captured the diverse
- threads of the macronic tapestry and organized them into a coherent and chronological visual history. This was
- a task that required all of Schn's powers, the artistic with the computational and linguistic. They were
- nevertheless exceptional powers for an exceptional undertaking; Ivo had tended to lose sight of just how potent
- a mind his mentor-personality possessed. If a mouse born into Leo remained a mouse, a lion confined to the
- harness of a mouse remained a lion. Or, in this case, a Ram.
- More time passed, and the slow accretions continued. A billion years after the first, a second nova developed
- in the immediate neighborhood. More rich debris angled by, and the sun's family levied another tax on it,
- acquiring material for two more inner planets and a number of major moons.
- "Mercury and—Vulcan?" Afra inquired. "Or is that Pluto, misplaced?" For there were now five inner
- planets—one more than could be accounted for.
- Schn kept on working.
- From distant space, travelers came. Most passed, merely deflected by Sol's gravity, not captured. One, however,
- lurched into a wobbly elliptical orbit that passed close to that of planet Jupiter.
- "Six inner planets?" Afra demanded in a tone of outrage.
- It was not to be. Jupiter wrestled the newcomer around in a harsh initiation, twisting it inward toward the
- sun... and toward the orbit of the next inward planet. Too close. They drifted, interacted—and came
- together.
- And sundered each other before they touched.
- "Roche's Limit squared," Afra murmured.
- One fragment shot out to intercept planet Saturn, and was captured there—too close. Roche's Limit exerted
- itself again: the apprentice moon shattered, and the tiny fragments gradually coalesced into a discernible
- ring.
- A major fragment of the original demolition traveled farther. It intercepted Neptune, where it too broke up,
- forming two tremendous moons and some fragments. One moon escaped the planet but not the system, and became the
- erratic outer minion Pluto; the other hooked in close to Neptune and remained as Triton.
- Another major fragment angled across an inner orbit and interacted there, too large for capture, too small to
- escape. The two bodies formed the binary planet known as Earth and Luna.
- Then a close shot at almost normal time. The landscape of Earth, seven hundred million years ago: strange
- continents, strange life on both land and sea. The moon came then, sweeping terribly close, a tenth of the
- distance it was to have at the time of Man. No romantic approach, this, but the awful threat of another
- application of the Limit. The tides of Earth swelled into calamity, gaping chasms split the surface of Luna.
- Mounds of water passed entirely over the continents, obliterating every feature upon them and leaving nothing
- but bare and level land. No land-based life survived, even in fossil, and much of the higher sea-life also
- perished in that violence. The progression of animate existence on Earth had been set back by a billion years:
- the greatest calamity it was ever to know.
- "And now we make love by the light of Luna," Afra said, "and plot it into our horoscopes as 'feeling.' "
- It was Harold's turn not to comment.
- All this, stemming from the single trans-Mars wreckage—yet the bulk of the refuse dispersed as powder or
- spiraled into the sun, to have no tangible impact. Debris remained to form a crude ring around the sun in the
- form of the asteroid belt, and a number of chunks eventually became retrograde moonlets. It would be long
- before the disorder wrought by this accident was smoothed over.
- A third nova, more distant, provided another cloud of dust and particles, adding several tiny moons. Some of
- the swirls become comets, but the complexion of the system did not alter in any important way. Sol had its
- family, collected from all over the galaxy, portions of which were older and portions newer than itself. Life
- recovered from its setback on Earth and individual species crawled back upon the reemerging land and drifting
- continents in the wake of a receding moon.
- One thing more: a solitary traveler came from the more thickly-settled center-section of the galaxy. It was a
- planetary body moving rather slowly, as though its kinetic energies had been spent by encounters with other
- systems. It looped about Sol in an extraordinarily wide pass, hesitated, and settled down to stay, averaging
- seven billion miles out.
- "What is that?" Afra inquired.
- "That thing must be twice the size of Jupiter!" Harold said. "How could it be there, in our system, and we not
- know it?" But no one answered.
- Ivo half-suspected Schn of joking.
- The motion stopped. The picture remained: the contemporary situation, updated to within a million years. They
- had witnessed in summary the astonishing formation and history of the Solar System.
- "Beautiful, Ivo!" Harold exclaimed. "If you can do that, you can do anything. Congratulations."
- Ivo removed the macroscope paraphernalia. They all were smiling at him, and Afra was getting ready to speak. "I
- didn't do it," he said.
- "How can you say that!" Beatryx protested. "Everything was so clear."
- But Afra and Harold had sobered immediately. "Schn?" Harold asked with sympathy.
- Ivo nodded. "He said it would take me two weeks, and he was right. He said he could do it in an hour. So I
- dared him to, I guess."
- "Wasn't that—dangerous?" Afra asked.
- "Yes. But I retained possession."
- Harold was not satisfied. "My chart indicates that a person like Schn would be unlikely to put that amount of
- effort into a project unless he expected to gain personally. What was his motive?"
- "So it was Schn who called me 'stupid,' " Afra murmured.
- "I think he has found a way to get around the destroyer," Ivo said carefully. "The memory trace in my mind, I
- mean, and maybe the rest too. I think he can take over, now—and I guess he wants to."
- "Are you willing to let him?" Harold asked, not looking at him.
- "Well, that is in the contract, you might say. If the rest of you feel I should." He said it as though it were
- a routine decision, but it was only with considerable effort that he kept his voice from shaking. It was
- extinction he contemplated, and it terrified him.
- When Afra had feared loss of identity she had fallen back on physical resources and demanded the handling.
- Irrational, perhaps, but at least it had satisfied her. What did he have to bolster his courage?
- "So Schn was merely making a demonstration for us," Harold said. "An impressive one, I admit. Proving that he
- can make good on his claims. That he can get us to the destroyer, and with the advance information we need. All
- we have to do is ask him."
- Afra's eyes were on Harold now, but she remained silent. Ivo wondered in what spheres her thoughts were
- coursing, and was afraid to guess. She was intent and exquisite.
- "Is it necessary to take a vote?" Harold asked, casually. Thus readily did they accept the prospect of a
- companion's departure.
- "Yes," Afra said.
- "Secret ballot?"
- She nodded agreement.
- How badly did she want that destroyer?
- Harold leaned over and filched the note-pad from Afra's purse. Ivo wondered idly why he didn't use his own pad
- for the dirty work. Harold tore out a sheet, folded it, creased it between his fingernails, tore and retore it.
- He handed out the ballots.
- "I—don't think I'd better vote," Ivo said, refusing his ballot. "Three can't tie." Did they
- realize—?
- Harold shrugged and marked his paper. "The question is, do we ask for Schn, yes or no," he said.
- The two women marked theirs and folded them deliberately. Harold picked up the ballots, shuffled them without
- looking and handed the three to Ivo. "Read the verdict."
- "But I'll recognize the script. It won't be secret."
- The truth was that he was afraid to look. This was another nightmare, where everybody took things casually
- except himself, he being the only one to properly appreciate the nature of the chasm over which he leaned.
- "Have the computer read them, then," Harold said. How could he be so indifferent?
- Ivo dumped the slips into the analyzer hopper and punched SUMMARIZE. There was a scramble inside the machine as
- it assimilated the evidence.
- The printout emerged. Ivo tore it off, forcing himself to read:
- NO
- NO
- NO
- IVO
- LOVE
- The relief was so great he felt ill. It took him a moment to realize that somebody had voted more than once,
- and another to discern the other oddities about the listing. Someone had written "NO" carelessly so that the
- first stroke of the "N" was unconnected, and the machine had picked it up as "I" and "V" and added the "O."
- Thus the word became his name.
- He was unable to explain how the last word had come about.
- Harold stood up. "Was there any doubt?" he asked. "I don't think we'll need to do this again. Let's get back on
- the job. We have a lot to do and none of us are geniuses."
- Only after they were gone did he realize that he still held the printout—that he had not read aloud or
- shown to any of them.
- Reentry into the galaxy—was anticlimactic. Group confidence was on the ascendant. They had been unable to
- pinpoint the destroyer's moment of origin; there had been nothing, then everything, and there was no emanation
- from the area except those terrible "tame" macrons. Apparently the destroyer broadcaster had been set up
- rapidly by a task force that jumped into location and away again in a few hours, and whose technicians could
- somehow interfere with wild macronic emission. Unless the observer happened to land at the very fringe of the
- broadcast, its inception could not be caught. But still they had confidence, sure somehow that the worst was
- over.
- They centered on the destroyer source nearest Earth, jumping toward it and away again, but gaining from
- experience. The jumpspace map was sketchy, but it helped, and overall their approach was steady. Five thousand
- light-years from it; eight thousand, one thousand, seven thousand, four hundred, two thousand, seventy, twenty.
- There they paused. "We can't get any closer," Afra said. "Our minimum jump is fifty years, and that would put
- us thirty years on the other side, or worse."
- "Nothing to do but back off and make another pass," Harold said. "Shuffle the alignment and hope."
- "Schn says he can—"
- "If he wants to give us the info, fine," Harold said. "If he's using it to buy his way into this enterprise,
- tell him to get lost. We idiots can muddle through on our own."
- They retreated and made another pass, coming within ten light-years. The third try was worse, but the fourth
- was very close: less than a parsec, or just over three light-years.
- "This is probably about the best our luck has to offer," Afra said. "We could renovate Joseph and row across,
- as it were. A few years in melt—"
- "We'd have to reconstitute every year, for safety," Ivo reminded her. "The melt's shelf-life isn't guaranteed
- indefinitely."
- "I am not a gambling man," Harold said, "but I'd rather gamble. That is, try some more passes. I don't want to
- approach the destroyer in the melted state. I want my wits about me, not my protoplasm."
- They gambled—and lost. Six more passes failed to bring them within five light-years of the target. That
- parsec had been their best, and they couldn't even find that track again. Jumpspace was too complex a puzzle.
- "Schn says—"
- "Shut up!" This time it was Afra, and her vehemence gave him another warm feeling. He remembered the word LOVE
- in the balloting, and dared to wonder. His love for her had changed its nature but never its certainty; he knew
- her well, now, and understood her liabilities as well as her assets, and loved them all. It was a love without
- illusion; he expected nothing of her, and drew his pleasure solely from being near her. Or so he told himself.
- But—had she written the word? Harold would not have done it, and Beatryx should not have thought of it.
- Still—
- "I think," said Harold, "we had better give up on this one. There are several others in the galaxy, and for our
- purpose any one of them should do for a beginning. Perhaps our channel runs closer to another destroyer."
- That much they had verified, coming down into the Milky Way: there were a number of destroyers. Their
- devastating signals had intercepted the human party at about eighteen thousand light-years, wherever they moved
- within or near the galaxy. Once they had had two destroyers in "sight" simultaneously, and had verified the
- similarity of the signals by superimposing one on the other.
- They gambled again, going for a new target. Once more their luck changed. Their second pass at the second
- destroyer brought them to just within one light-day.
- At last they learned why it had been so difficult to obtain normal macroscopic information about any destroyer.
- Here virtually all macronic impulses were overridden by the artificial signal; or perhaps they were preempted
- for its purpose. Only one flux emanated from this area of space, and hardly anything coherent entered it. Apart
- from the destroyer signal itself, it was blackout. The macroscope, for the first time, was out of commission.
- Except for the traveler signal. That, oddly, came through as strongly as ever. This was one more evidence of
- the superiority of the extragalactic technology: the traveler could not be jammed or blocked or diverted.
- "Damn lucky, too," Harold said. "Think of the trouble we'd have getting out of here, otherwise."
- Afra busied herself with the telescopes while the others set about demothballing Joseph. The ship had been
- buried within Triton, which in turn was buried in Neptune, and extricating it and themselves whole was no
- offhand matter. Fortunately—though Harold denied that chance had been involved in such an engineering
- decision—they had also mothballed the heavy equipment. Harold had constructed it on macroscopic plans,
- and what could be done could be undone enough for storage. Anything not deposited well within the Triton
- drillhole had been melted down during the Neptune approach, of course.
- "I have photographed the destroyer complex," Afra reported at lunch. "Can't actually see anything with these
- inefficient optical instruments, but as I make it the center unit is almost two miles in diameter and
- spherical. Definitely artificial. Metallic surface. Since we can't use the macroscope on it, we'll have to go
- inside ourselves."
- "We seem to be getting blas about galactic technology," Harold said. "Now we complain about imperfect detail
- vision at a distance of one light-day! Still, why not go inside, then?"
- "Because they might tweak our tailfeathers with a contraterrene missile, that's why not," she said. "So I
- suggest we make a dry run first." She appeared uncommonly cheerful, as though, perversely, a weight had lifted
- from her mind.
- "How?" Harold asked her. "Joseph is all we have."
- "Catapult, stupid," she said, smiling. "We have a spot gravity nullifier, remember? And plenty of material."
- Harold knocked his forehead with the heel of his hand. He, too, seemed uncharacteristically lighthearted. "Of
- course! We can shape a mock ship and launch it toward the destroyer—"
- "Let's begin with the satellites," she said. "I think they're the battleships."
- "Satellites?"
- "I told you. The destroyer is ringed with hundred-foot spheres—six of them, about five light-minutes out,
- north-south-east-west-up-down."
- "You did not, girl, tell me. You implied that you could not obtain such detail with optics. This complicates
- the problem."
- "I did tell you. Where were you when I said 'destroyer complex'?"
- "Who was it who said 'There is no faith stronger than that of a bad-tempered woman in her own infallibility'?"
- "Cabell said it. But he also implied that a bad-tempered woman needs an even-tempered man." Both smiled.
- Ivo went on eating, but Beatryx's excellent cooking had become tasteless. Afra and Groton!
- No—he was jumping to an unfounded suspicion. A ludicrous one! Their open banter merely reflected the
- increasing intimacy of the little group. It was almost the way the project had been, when he and Brad and all
- the others had batted inanities back and forth while pursuing deeper studies. Afra and Groton had had to work
- closely together ever since Triton—particularly when Ivo himself had skipped off to Tyre and left them
- stranded in deep space. And there had developed a kind of father-daughter relation between them since the
- trial. Afra had lost her own father somehow, so—
- Groton and his waldoes and machines performed their miracles of construction again, and in due course Neptune
- had a planetary cannon. The bore was thirty-five feet across and two miles long, bottomed by the field-
- distortion mechanism. Slender tubes opened to the atmospheric surface of the planet in a circle many miles
- across, and fed into the nether sections of the bore. Great baffles stood ready to redirect the force of the
- gases that would converge the moment the generators opened the tunnel to space.
- They gathered in the control room to watch the launching. Neptune was rotating, relative to the destroyer
- complex, and the action had to be properly timed. Afra had done the calculations, querying Ivo only for
- verification. She had made it plain, in similarly subtle ways, that the relation between them had changed. She
- was not dependent on him for such work.
- Groton manipulated his controls, that seemed to be almost as intricate as those of the macroscope maintenance,
- and on the screen the monster dummy-ship was lifted into place. This was a breech-loading cannon with a clip of
- four; further expenditures on dummies had been deemed a waste of time.
- Groton fired. The gravity-diffusion field came on, taking a moment to develop full intensity. It was generated
- by a different unit than theirs of the residential area, since it was essential that they continue to be
- shielded from the full gravity and pressure of the planet. Then gas hurtled through the pipes and smashed into
- the base of the projectile, itself abruptly weightless. The control chamber shuddered.
- Above, atmosphere imploded into the column of null, meeting the baffles there and forming into an instant
- hurricane with an eye that was a geyser of methane snow. All the pressure of Neptune's atmosphere drove that
- bullet forward: one million pounds per square inch, initial.
- Out from ammonia and water, both vaporized by the friction; through hydrogen and beyond the mighty atmosphere:
- a thousand miles beyond the apparent surface of the planet the motor cut in. The rocket accelerated at a rate
- that would have terminated any fleshly occupants and shattered unprotected equipment. It was a temporary motor,
- designed for power and not duration, and it consumed itself as it functioned; and it got the ship up to a
- velocity that would bring it to the destroyer in days instead of months.
- "Certainly looks like a ship from here," Afra said with admiration. "Are you sure you didn't put Joseph in that
- lock by mistake?"
- "Drone ship, on my honor. It only weighs a tenth as much as Joseph, and that galactic formula would asphyxiate
- our type of life as soon as it ignited, not to mention the fact that it burns its own guts. You can do a lot
- with chemical drive if you don't have to sit on top of it."
- The watch began. Each person tracked the drone for four hours, ready to sound the alarm when anything happened.
- A light-day was a very small distance compared to those they had become accustomed to, but even galactically
- sponsored chemical drive was very weak. The rocket achieved its top velocity and coasted, an empty shell. Their
- vigil lasted a fortnight.
- The drone passed the nearest satellite and angled toward the destroyer itself. Nothing happened. It came within
- a light-minute of the main sphere and curved around it as though bent by a tremendous gravitational force, but
- did not stop. It passed another satellite on the way out.
- "Either they're dead or playing possum," Groton said. "Do we try another?"
- Another two weeks of eventless waiting, Ivo thought, but certainly the wisest course.
- "I'm satisfied," Afra said. "Obviously there are no functioning automatic defenses. I'm sorry we wasted this
- much time. Let's move in ourselves."
- Ivo thought of objecting, then decided not to. She had spoken and it was so, impetuous or not. This project was
- hers, now.
- They were space-borne again, and it was a strange sensation. Not since they put down on Schn, erstwhile moon
- of a moon, had they taken Joseph out of planetary control for any extended period. In the passing months the
- old reflexes had faded, if they had ever been really implanted, making free-fall unfamiliar, making them have
- to stop and think out their actions.
- "I like it," Afra said. "Neptune is home, of course, but this is vacation."
- Why was she so buoyant? Ivo wondered. They were near the termination of their grisly mission, in whatever guise
- that mission existed now, and he would have expected it to remind her forcefully of the fate of her supposed
- fianc. Instead she acted as though she had found new love. She hardly seemed to care about the destroyer
- itself, though it was the instigator of all of this.
- Groton clapped his hand on Afra's shoulder, sending her skidding in the weightlessness. "Girl, if you don't get
- on those computations before I reorganize our gear, I'll have the cap'n hurl you into the brig!"
- They had tied down their equipment and pushed out from Neptune slowly, without the benefit of full gravity
- nullification. This had been expensive in working fluid, but far safer for man and machine. Now the ship was
- scooping in more hydrogen and compressing it, at the fringe of the Neptune atmosphere, so that they would have
- full tanks for the main haul. They were ready to retool for straight space flight.
- They had to melt, despite Groton's earlier objection; there was no other way to cover such a distance. The
- cycle was routine, however, once their course had been set. They revived in good condition light-seconds from
- one of the satellites. It had seemed wiser to investigate the minion before the master.
- Ivo had been lulled by the somewhat cavalier attitude affected by the others, but the sight of the alien sphere
- looming so close—telescopically—reminded him with a shock that this was to be their first physical
- contact with an artifact of extraterrestrial civilization. A malignant one.
- It was monstrous as they approached, not so much in its hundred-foot diameter (Afra had done expert
- photographic work and analyzing, to pinpoint that size at a distance of a light-day, even allowing for the
- superior equipment sponsored by galactic technology) as in its suggestion of implacable power. The surface was
- pocked, as though it had been subject to spatial debris for many millions of years. Portions of it projected,
- reminiscent of cannon.
- Afra took over the telescope to make detail photographs. Now, while her attention was wholly taken up, he could
- watch her. She was radiant; her hair was bound in a single braid that drifted over one shoulder and down her
- front, red against the white of her blouse. She had recovered the weight she had lost and was now in vibrant
- health. Her lips were parted, half-smiling in her concentration. Light from the equipment played over her high
- cheekbone and across her perfect chin, caressing her face with shadow.
- Was it the single rose he smelled again?
- "Moonstruck," Brad had termed him, setting that emotional snare, and Afra was that moon. Ivo knew he would have
- loved her anyway, whatever her color, whatever her intelligence. It was perhaps her appearance more than her
- personality; he had disillusioned himself long ago about his romantic values and hers. Still, the love he felt
- encompassed all of her, the violent along with the beautiful. All, no matter what.
- She jerked her head up, eyes widening in shock, showing that blue again. Ivo jumped guiltily, thinking she had
- caught him staring, but her exclamation banished such inconsequential alarm immediately.
- "It's tracking us!"
- Groton and Beatryx seemed to materialize beside her.
- "It's live!" Afra said with the same shock. "It has a range-finder on us."
- "Since we're a sitting duck, all we can do is quack," Groton said, but he did not look as complacent as he
- sounded.
- Beatryx ventured one of her rare technical comments: "Wouldn't it have done something, if it meant to?"
- Afra smiled, as she did so readily and prettily now. "You're right," Tryx. I'm getting hysterical after the
- fact. We'd be smithereened by now if we were going to be. We're within fifty thousand miles, and you can bet
- that's well within its sphere of control. So eradication just isn't in our horoscope for today."
- The strange antenna continued to track as they came close. It was a bowl-shaped spiral of wire about two feet
- in diameter, with beads strung on the outermost spire. There was no other sign of life. Ivo felt the cold sweat
- on his palms and wiped it off, embarrassed by it and what it signified. Was he the only one to feel old-
- fashioned fear?
- The journey via melting and ten-G acceleration had reduced the problems of deceleration and docking to
- elementary ones; maneuvering was nothing after distance had been conquered. Afra piloted them into a companion
- orbit—the destroyer-sphere five light-minutes distant, small as it was, was the primary for
- both—and let Joseph drift. None of them had conjectured how an object two miles in diameter could have a
- gravitational field about it equivalent to that of a small star. Galactic technology had done it, utilizing
- gravity as a tool, and that was explanation enough.
- "Someone should stay on the ship," Groton said. "We can't be sure what is waiting—there."
- "Ivo should stay," Afra said. "If anything happens, he's the only one who can get the ship out. Neptune,
- rather." She said it as though he were a fixture, a commodity; she hadn't asked his opinion. "Give me one
- companion, though; I'm afraid of the dark."
- "I'll stay," Beatryx said. "You go, Harold."
- Ivo could find no legitimate objection to make.
- The two got into their suits and departed via the airlock at the appropriate time. Ivo was alone with Beatryx
- for the first time since their last conversation on satellite Schn, seemingly so long ago. In the interim he
- had traveled into Earth's historic past, and into its geologic past, and beyond the fringe of the galaxy. His
- body had run through the astonishing liquefication and reconstitution so many times that the process had become
- routine, even tedious. He had lived many lifetimes, and many of his basic certainties had been annulled.
- Why, then, did it bother him so much that Afra and Groton should be together?
- He tried to say something to Beatryx, but realized that he could not ask her advice without undermining her own
- framework. She had proper faith in her husband.
- He looked at her, realizing in this isolated moment of association and reflection how much she had changed. She
- had been plump and fortyish when he met her at age thirty-seven; in the period of the Triton trouble she had
- become emaciated and fortyish. Now she was thirty-eight—and had regained her health without her former
- avoirdupois. She looked thirtyish. Her hair had brightened into full blonde, her limbs were sleek, her torso
- reminiscent of the goddess she had been momentarily during the first re-constitution. It had happened
- gradually, this change in her; the surprise was that it had taken him so long to recognize it.
- "You have changed, Ivo," she said.
- "I've changed?"
- "Since your visit to Tyre. You were so young at first, so unsure. Now you're more mature."
- "I don't feel mature," he said, flattered but disbelieving. "I'm still full of doubts and frustrations. And
- Tyre was nothing but violence and intrigue—not my type of life at all. I don't see how it could have
- changed me."
- She only shrugged.
- He glanced at the screen again, reminded that half their party was in the alien structure. Groton and
- Afra—
- "She has let go of Bradley Carpenter," Beatryx said. "Have you seen the difference? She's changed so much.
- Isn't it wonderful?"
- Was there such a thing as being too generous? True, the two were risking their lives by attempting personal
- contact with aliens likely to be powerful and hostile; but the human interaction could not be entirely ignored.
- "I've noticed the difference, yes."
- "And she gets along so much better with Harold. I'm sure he has been good for her. He's very steady."
- Ivo nodded.
- "She's such a lovely girl," Beatryx said. There was no malice in her tone; nothing but concerned pleasure.
- "Lovely."
- "You look tired, Ivo. why don't I keep watch while you rest?"
- "That's very kind of you." He went to his hammock and strapped himself in. It was an anchor rather than a
- support, in this weightlessness.
- It was this about Beatryx, he thought: she was happy. There was no place in her philosophy for jealousy or
- petty conjecture. She did not worry about her husband because she had no internal doubts.
- How much could the group have accomplished, without her? The ingredients of strife had been abundantly present,
- particularly with the strong personalities of Groton and Afra clashing at the outset, and the background
- specter of Schn, but somehow every flareup had been diverted or pacified. Beatryx had done it... and profited
- in the doing. Intelligence, determination, skill—these would have come to nothing without that basic
- stability.
- He must have slept, for he was Sidney Lanier again: poor, ill, his aspirations unrecognized. He did some more
- teaching, but the pupils were unruly, the employers exacting. It was the Reconstruction, and it was bad; the
- carpetbaggers corrupted everything. "Dumb in the dark, not even God invoking," he wrote, "we lie in chains, too
- weak to be afraid."
- But the love of Mary Day, now Mary Day Lanier, sustained him. She was as ill as he, and as hard put upon, but
- their marriage was an unqualified blessing. His son Charles delighted him, for he loved children though he did
- not really understand them.
- In 1869 James Wood Davidson published a survey of two hundred and forty-one Southern writers. Lanier was
- listed, though largely for completeness; much more space was devoted to others considered more notable.
- But you were the greatest of them all! Ivo cried. If only your contemporaries had opened their minds—
- But nothing changed. The mind of Ivo was prisoner to the situation of another person; he could watch, he could
- know, but he could not influence.
- As Schn was watching him even now...
- At Macon they spoke of Sidney Lanier as "A young fool trying to write poetry." They paid no attention to his
- dialect poems—a form whose origin was later to be credited to another man—or his cautions against
- the shiftless, shortsighted Georgia Cracker ways. Cotton was destroying the land; wheat and corn were far
- better crops, but the farmers refused to change.
- He put his sentiment at least into a major poem, "Corn," and sent it off to the leading literary magazine of
- the day, Howells' Atlantic Monthly.
- Howells rejected it.
- Lanier was crushed by this response. He believed in his work, yet the unambitious efforts of others achieved
- readier acceptance. "In looking around at the publications of the younger poets," he was later to remark, "I am
- struck with the circumstance that none of them even attempt anything great. The morbid fear of doing something
- wrong or unpolished appears to have influenced their choice of subjects."
- Not only in poetry! Ivo thought. The entire society is governed by mediocrity. We never learn.
- Several other prominent magazines rejected "Corn."
- Were they absolutely blind?
- At last Lippincott's Magazine accepted it. Publication made Lanier's poetic fame; henceforth he was known,
- though still poor and ill.
- The year was 1875, and he was thirty-three years old. He would not live to forty.
- Ivo must have slept, for the exploratory party was back already.
- "What a bomb!" Afra exclaimed. "There's enough armament there to blast a fleet. Chemical, laser, and things we
- won't invent for centuries! All of it on standby."
- "I don't understand," Beatryx said.
- "It's a battlewagon, dear," Groton explained. "But somebody turned it off. All but the sensory equipment."
- "It could have blasted Neptune to bits!" Afra said. The potential violence seemed to fascinate her. "It
- has—I think they're gravity-bombs. Devices that would throw the fields associated with matter into
- complete chaos. Whoever built that wagon really knew how to fight a war!"
- Ivo decided to get into the conversation. "It must be there to protect the destroyer. But why would they
- deactivate it? If enemies had boarded it and turned it off, they would have gone on to squelch the destroyer
- too."
- "And why build such an arsenal, if not to be used?" Groton said. "I can't make sense of it either."
- Afra was not fazed. "We know where the answer is."
- "Did it occur to you that we may not much like the answer, when and if we find it?" Groton, at least, seemed to
- be taking the matter seriously.
- "It's in the stars. Who am I to object?"
- The two-mile bulk of the destroyer itself seemed more like a small planet, compared to the satellite. Though
- the gravitic field about it was monstrous, intensity had not increased proportionately as they approached its
- surface, and the weight of the ship was only a quarter what it would have been on Earth. This still made for
- tricky maneuvering, since the macroscope housing was vulnerable in gravity. But indentations in the sides of
- the sphere resembled docking facilities, so they piloted Joseph in instead of establishing a tight orbit. The
- builders had evidently expected visitors, and had made the approach convenient.
- Ivo gave up counting the incongruities of the situation. Better simply to accept what offered, as the others
- were doing.
- The dock was a tubelike affair open at each end, as though a missile had passed cleanly through the rim. The
- gravity was minimal inside—just enough to hold Joseph in place at the center of the tube. The macroscope
- housing thus never had to rest in an awkward position; the ship was able to "land" with it attached.
- Groton and Afra donned their suits again and went out first. Ivo watched him boost her into the lock with a
- familiar hand on the rear.
- Three minutes later their cheerful reports began coming in. "Very well organized," Groton remarked. "Very
- businesslike. There seem to be magnetic moorings we can attach to the hull. Why not?"
- "And pressure-locks," Afra said, her voice girlishly thrilled. "Harold, you anchor Joseph while I figure out
- the settings."
- "Right." The sounds of his exertions came through, and the clank of tools, audible without benefit of earphone.
- Ivo wondered how this was possible, in the exterior vacuum, then realized that the sonic vibrations were being
- transmitted through the hardware and into the. ship. Groton was holding on to something, and standing
- somewhere, so contacts were plentiful.
- Then came the knock of another contact with Joseph's hull. The ship had been secured.
- "I'm setting it for Earth-normal pressure and composition," Afra said. "I don't even have to remember the
- oxygen-nitrogen ratio or the fine points; it has a gas-analyzer. One sample puff from my suit—"
- "Let's not trust it too far," Groton cautioned. "Don't forget this is the destroyer."
- "Don't get worked up, daddy. If it let us get this far, it isn't going to trick us with a mickey now. I'm going
- in."
- Ivo wondered. Wasn't it possible that the destroyer cared less about infringing individuals than about
- dangerous species or cultures? This had the aspect of flypaper—or, if occupied, of the spider's lair.
- But if it had them, it had them. No incidental caution could protect them within its bowels, if personal
- malignance waited. They could be snuffed out in a thousand casual ways. Had they wanted security, they should
- have stayed well clear of the destroyer. Thousands of light-years clear.
- "Removing suit," Afra said. A pause. "Air's good. Shall I go on into the interior?"
- "Not without checking it!" Groton said. "That's only the airlock, you know. What's inside could ruin your
- delicate complexion. It might be hundred percent ammonia at five degrees Kelvin."
- "No it mightn't. The system has been keyed to the lock. The entire wing has been pressurized to match my
- sample. I tell you, these galactics are experienced."
- "What do you think, folks?" Groton asked dubiously.
- Ivo remembered that he was on this circuit too. "She'll have to get out of the lock before anybody else uses
- it. Might as well go in."
- "You, dear?" Groton inquired.
- "Whatever you think, dear," Beatryx said. She had faith in her husband's judgment, and Ivo envied her that.
- "Come on out, then, both of you. We should take on this particular adventure as a group. I'll wait here for you
- while Miss Impetuous shows the way."
- "Goats are naturally inquisitive," Afra said.
- Goat = Capricorn, her astrological sign, Ivo thought. Groton must have showed her her chart, during one of
- their... private discussions. And did Beatryx know that she was Pisces—a poor fish?
- They dressed and climbed out. Ivo assisted Beatryx, but not with any palm on the bottom.
- Groton stood on a platform resembling that of a train station. Massive cables reached from the rounded ceiling
- to Joseph on either side.
- "Just swing over on the spare," Groton recommended. "The gravity increases near the lock. You could jump, but
- why take chances?"
- Ivo wondered again whether the humor were conscious. How much difference could one more chance make, now?
- They swung over. This was his first physical contact with an alien artifact, since he had not visited the
- satellite, and he was vaguely disappointed both at its ordinary substance and at the continuing casualness with
- which the others adjusted to the situation. This was supposed to be the moment of climax—Alien
- Contact!—and nobody noticed.
- Or was he merely put out because he had become a minor figure in a major adventure? After this, if they
- survived, Afra would be able to handle the travel signal (at least until they reencountered the existent
- destroyer field, which would take thousands of years to dissipate even at light speed;) and so she would have
- no further need of Ivo.
- "Okay, I'll go through and you follow in turn," Groton said. "No problem with these controls—" He went on
- to demonstrate.
- "Hurry up!" Afra said from the inside. "I'm itching to look about in here."
- Had this degenerated into a child's game of "Spaceman"? Girl astronaut wanted them to hurry because she was
- impatient to explore!
- He thought he heard Schn laughing. Little Ivo had thought to manage this adventure himself, and only succeeded
- in making himself unimportant. Ivo was no Lanier, he was not likely to achieve fame on his own. Schn, on the
- other hand—
- They don't need you, either, he thought furiously at the lurking personality. Schn did not reply.
- The interior was, as Afra had claimed, pressurized. He and Beatryx joined the other two in summer clothing,
- depositing their suits in binnacles provided for them adjacent to the lock. Regular tourist facilities!
- The changes in the two women were quite noticeable now, as they stood side by side during that inevitable
- hesitation before proceeding further into the station. Both were well proportioned, Afra a little taller and
- more dynamic. Afra was modern—and it looked less well on her, in contrast to the more conservative
- motions of the other. Where Afra jumped, Beatryx stepped. The difference in their ages showed less in
- appearance than in attitude and posture and facial expression.
- Finally he pinned down the elusive but essential distinction: what Afra had was sex appeal; what Beatryx had
- was femininity.
- Ivo wondered whether he and Groton had changed similarly.
- They were in a long quiet hall lighted from the ceiling, a hall that slanted gently downward. "Down" was toward
- the center of the sphere, not the rim; nothing so simple as centripetal pseudo-gravity here. The materials of
- the hall's construction were conventional, as these things went; no scintillating shields, no compacted matter.
- If this were typical, the two-mile sphere could not possibly have the mass of a star, or even a planet. Somehow
- it generated gravity without mass.
- The situation was not, on second thought, surprising. A potent gravitic field was no doubt necessary to power
- the destroyer impulse, and it should be a simple matter to allow some of it to overlap around the unit,
- providing for visitors. It was handy for holding down satellites too, even at distances similar to those
- prevailing in the Solar System itself. Earth was only eight light-minutes from Sol....
- A hundred yards or so along, the hall widened into a level chamber. Here there were alcoves set in the walls,
- and objects resting within them.
- Afra trotted to the nearest on the left side. "Do you think the exhibit is safe to touch?" she inquired, now
- hesitant.
- "Do you see any DO NOT HANDLE signs, stupid?"
- "Harold, one of these minutes I'm going to whisper nasty things about you into your wife's docile ear."
- "She's known them for fifteen years." Groton put his arm around Beatryx, who smiled complacently.
- Afra reached into the alcove and lifted out its artifact. It was a sphere about four inches in diameter, rigid
- and light, made of some plastic material. It was transparent; as she held it up to the light they all could see
- its emptiness.
- "A container?" Groton conjectured.
- "A toy?" Beatryx said.
- Groton looked at her. "I wonder. An educational toy. A model of the destroyer?"
- "Not without docking vents," Afra said. She put it back and went on to the next. This was a cone six inches
- high with a flat base four inches across. It was made of the same transparent material, and was similarly
- empty.
- "Dunce cap," Ivo suggested.
- She ignored him and went on. The third figure was a cylindrical segment on the same scale as the cone, closed
- off by a flat disk at each end. It was solid but light, the silver-white surface opaque but reflective. Afra
- turned it about. "Metallic, but very light," she said. "Probably—"
- Suddenly she dropped it back in the alcove and brushed her hands against her shorts as though they were
- burning.
- The others watched her. "What happened?" Groton asked.
- "That's lithium!"
- Groton looked. "I believe you are right. But there's a polish on it—a coating of wax, perhaps. It
- shouldn't be dangerous to handle."
- What was so touchy about lithium? Ivo wondered, but he decided not to inquire. Probably it burned skin, like an
- acid, or was poisonous.
- Afra looked foolish. "I must be more nervous than I let on. I just never expected—" She paused, glancing
- down the wall. "Something occurs to me. Is the next one a silvery-gray pyramid?"
- Groton checked. "Close. Actually it's a tetrahedron, similar to the one we built originally on Triton. Your
- true pyramid has five sides, counting the bottom."
- "Beryllium."
- "How do you know?"
- "This is an elemental arrangement. Look at—"
- "Elementary arrangement," Groton corrected her.
- "Elemental. You do know what an element is? Look at these objects. The first is a sphere, which means it has
- only one side: outside. The second is a closed cone: two sides, one curved, one flat. The third, the cylinder,
- has three. Yours has four, and so on. The first two aren't empty—they're gases! Hydrogen and helium,
- first and second elements on the periodic table—"
- "Could be," Groton said, impressed.
- "And likely to be so for any technologically advanced species. Lithium, the metal that's half the weight of
- water, third. Beryllium, fourth. Boron—"
- She broke off again and lurched for the sixth alcove—and froze before it.
- The others followed. There lay a four-inch cube—six sides—of a bright clear substance.
- Groton picked it up. "What's number six on the table? Six protons, six electrons... isn't that supposed to be
- carbon?" Then he too froze, eyes fixed on the cube. The light refracted through it strongly.
- Then Ivo made the connection. "Carbon in crystalline form—that's diamond!"
- They gazed upon it: sixty-four cubic inches of diamond, that had to have been cut from a much larger crystal.
- A single exhibit—of scores in the hall.
- Then Afra was moving down the length of the room, calling off the samples.
- "Nitrogen—oxygen—fluorine—neon...."
- Groton shook his head. "What a fortune! And they're only samples, shape-coded for ready reference. They—"
- Words failed him. Reverently, he replaced the diamond block.
- "Scandium—titanium—vanadium—chromium—" Afra chanted as she rushed on. "They're all
- here! All of them!"
- Beatryx was perplexed. "Why shouldn't they put them on display, if they want to?"
- Groton came out of his daze. "No reason, dear. No reason at all. It's just a very expensive exhibit, to leave
- open to strangers. Perhaps it is their way of informing us that wealth means nothing to them."
- She nodded, reassured.
- "The rare earths, too!" Afra called. She was now on the opposite side of the room, working her way back.
- "Here's promethium—pounds of it! And it doesn't even occur in nature!"
- "Does she know all the elements by heart?" Ivo muttered.
- "Osmium! That little cube must weigh twenty pounds! And solid iridium—on Earth that would sell for a
- thousand dollars an ounce!"
- "Better stay clear of the radioactives, Afra!" Groton cautioned her.
- "They're glassed in. Lead glass, or something; no radiation. I hope. At least they don't have them by the
- pound! Uranium—neptunium—plutonium—"
- "Saturnium—jupiterium—marsium," Ivo muttered, facetiously carrying the planetary identifiers
- farther. It seemed to him that too much was being made of this exhibit.
- "Earthium—venusium—mercurochrome—"
- "Mercury," Groton said, overhearing him. "There is such an element."
- Oh.
- Afra came back at last, subdued. "Their table goes to a hundred and twenty. Those latter shapes get pretty
- intricate..."
- "You know better than that, Afra," Groton said. "Some of those artificial elements have half-lives of hours,
- even minutes. They can't sit on display."
- "Even seconds, half-life. They're still here. Look for yourself."
- "Facsimiles, maybe. Not—"
- "Bet?"
- "No." Groton looked for himself. "Must be some kind of stasis field," he said dubiously. "If they can do what
- they can do with gravity—"
- "Suddenly I feel very small," she said.
- But Ivo reminded himself that such tricks were nothing compared to the compression of an entire planet into its
- gravitational radius, and the protection of accompanying human flesh. This exhibit was impressive, but hardly
- alarming, viewed in perspective. He suspected that there was more to it than they had spotted so far.
- The hall continued beyond the element display, slanting down again. Ivo wondered about such things as the
- temperature. Sharp changes in it should affect some of the element-exhibits, changing them from solid to
- liquid, or liquid to gas. Yet the exhibit had been geared to a comfortable temperature for human beings, and
- was obviously a permanent arrangement. The layout, too—convenient for human beings, even to the height of
- the alcove.
- Had this been the destroyer station closest to Earth, there could have been suspicion of a carefully tailored
- show. But this one was almost fifty thousand light-years distant. It could not have been designed for
- men—unless there were men in the galaxy not of Earth. Or very similar creatures.
- The implications disturbed him, but no more than anything else about this strange museum. He knew it had been
- said that a planetary creature had to be somewhat like man in order to rise to civilization and technology, and
- that long chains of reasoning had been used to "prove" this thesis—but man's reasoning in such respects
- was necessarily biased, and he had discounted it. Yet if it were true—if it were true—did it also
- hold for man's personality? The greed, the stupidity, the bloodthirst—?
- Was that Schn laughing again?
- The passage opened into a second room. This one was much larger than the first, and the alcoves began at floor-
- level.
- "Machinery!" Groton exclaimed with the same kind of excitement Afra had expressed before. He went to the first
- exhibit: a giant slab of metal, shaped like a wedge of cheese. As he approached, a ball fell on it and rolled
- off. Nothing else happened.
- "Machine?" Ivo inquired.
- "Inclined plane—the elementary machine, yes."
- Well, if Groton were satisfied...
- The second item was a simple lever. Fulcrum and rod, the point of the latter wedged under a large block. As
- they came up to it, the rod moved, and the block slid over a small amount. Groton nodded, pleased, and Ivo
- followed him to the next. The two women walked ahead, giving only cursory attention to this display.
- The third resembled a vise. A long handle turned a heavy screw, so that the force applied was geared down
- twice. "Plane and lever," Groton remarked. "We're jumping ahead about fifty thousand years each time, as human
- technology goes."
- "So far."
- The fourth one had a furnace and a boiler, and resembled a primitive steam engine—which it was. The fifth
- was an electric turbine.
- After that they became complicated. To Ivo's untrained eye, they resembled complex motors, heaters and radio
- equipment. Some he recognized as variants of devices he had blue printed via the macroscope; others were beyond
- his comprehension. Not all were intricate in detail; some were deceptively smooth. He suspected that an old
- automobile mechanic would find a printed-circuit board with embedded micro-transistors to be similarly smooth.
- One thing he was sure of: none of it was fakery.
- Groton stopped at the tenth machine. "I thought I'd seen real technology when we terraformed Triton," he said.
- "Now—I am a believer. I've digested about as much as I care to try in one outing. Let's go on."
- The girls had already done so, and were in the next chamber. This contained what appeared to be objects of art.
- The display commenced with simple two- and three-dimensional representations of concretes and abstracts, and
- went on to astonishing permutations. This time it was Beatryx who was fascinated.
- "Oh, yes, I see it," she said, moving languidly from item to item. She was lovely in her absorption, as though
- the grandeur and artistry of what she perceived transfigured her own flesh. Now she outshone Afra. Ivo had not
- realized how fervent her interest in matters artistic was, though it followed naturally from her appreciation
- of music. He had assumed that what she did not talk about was of no concern to her, and now he chided himself
- for comprehending shallowly—yet again.
- The display did not appeal to him as a whole, but individual selections did. He could appreciate the
- mathematical symbolism in some; it was of a sophisticated nature, and allied to the galactic language codes.
- A number were portraits of creatures. They were of planets remote from Earth, but were intelligent and
- civilized, though he could not tell how he could be sure of either fact. Probably the subtle clues manifested
- themselves to him subliminally, as when Brad had first shown him alien scapes on the macroscope. Description?
- Pointless; the creatures were manlike in certain respects and quite alien in certain others. What mattered more
- was their intangible symmetry of form and dignity of countenance. These were Greek idealizations; the perfect
- physique with the well-tutored mind and disciplined emotion. These were handsome male, females and neuters.
- They were represented here as art, and they were art, in the same sense that a rendition of a finely contoured
- athlete or nude woman was art by human terms.
- The rooms continued, each one at a lower level than the one preceding, until it seemed that the party had to be
- at the second lap of a spiral. One chamber contained books; printed scrolls, coiled tapes, metallic memory
- disks. Probably all the information the builders of the station might have broadcast to space was here, the
- reply to anyone who might suspect that the destroyer was merely sour grapes delivered by an ignorant culture.
- It was, in retrospect, obvious that that had never been the case.
- One room contained food. Many hours and many miles had passed in fascination; they were hungry. Macroscopic
- chemical identifiers labeled the entrees, which were in stasis ovens. The party made selections as though they
- were dining at an automat, "defrosting" items, and the menu was strange but good.
- Nowhere was there sign of animate habitation. It was as though the builders had stocked the station as a hostel
- and center of information, and left it for travelers who could come in the following eons. Yet it was also the
- source of the very signal that banished travel. What paradox was this?
- The hall opened at last to a small room—and abruptly terminated. There were no alcoves, no exhibits; only
- a pedestal in the center supporting a small intricate object.
- They walked around it indecisively. "Does it seem to you that we are being led down the garden path?" Afra
- inquired. "The exhibits are impressive, and I am impressed—but is this all? A museum tour and a dead
- end?"
- "It is all we are supposed to see," Groton said. "And somehow I do not think it would be wise to force the
- issue."
- "We came to force the issue!" Afra said.
- "What I meant to say was, let's not start hammering at the walls. We could discover ourselves in hard vacuum.
- Further exploration in an intellectual capacity should be all right."
- Ivo was looking at the device on the pedestal. It was about eighteen inches long, and reminded him vaguely of
- the S D P S: an object of greater significance than first appeared. It was in basic outline cylindrical, but
- within that general boundary was a mass of convoluted tubings, planes, wires and attachments. It seemed to be
- partly electronic in nature, but not entirely a machine; partly artistic, but not a piece of sculpture. Yet
- there was a certain familiarity about it; some quality, some purpose inherent in it that he felt he should
- recognize.
- He picked it up, finding the weight slight for so intricate an object: perhaps two pounds, and deviously
- balanced. The incipient recognition of its nature struck him more strongly. He ought to know what it was.
- Something happened.
- It was as though there were the noise of a great gong, but with vibrations not quite audible to human ears.
- Light flared, yet his eyes registered no image. There was a shock of heat and pressure and ponderosity that his
- body could not discern definitely, and some overwhelming odor that his nostrils missed.
- The others were looking at him and at each other, aware that something important had been manifested—and
- not aware of more.
- Ivo still held the instrument.
- "Play it, Ivo," Beatryx said.
- And all were mute, realizing that in all the chambers there had been no musical devices.
- Ivo looked at it again, this time seeing conduits like those of a complex horn; fibers like those of stringed
- instruments; drumlike diaphragms; reeds. There was no place to blow, no spot to strike; but fingers could touch
- controls and eyes could trace connections.
- The object was vibrating gently, as though the lifting of it had activated its power source. It had come alive,
- awaiting the musician's imperative.
- He touched a stud at random—and was rewarded by a roll of thunder.
- Beatryx, Afra, Groton: they stared up and out, trying instinctively to trace the source, to protect themselves
- if the walls caved in... before realizing what had happened. Multiphonal sound!
- "When you picked it up," Groton began—
- "You touched a control," Afra finished. Both were shaken. "The BONG button."
- "And now the thunder stud," Beatryx said.
- Ivo slid one finger across a panel. A siren wail came at them from all directions, deafening yet melodious.
- He explored the rest of it, producing a measured cacophony: every type of sound he could imagine was
- represented here, each imbued with visual, tactile and olfactory demesnes. If only he could bring this sensuous
- panorama under control—
- And he could. Already his hands were responding to the instrument's ratios, achieving the measure of it,
- growing into the necessary disciplines. This was his talent, this way with an organ of melody. He had confined
- himself to the flute—Sidney Lanier's choice—but the truth was that all of Schn's gift was his.
- Probably there was no human being with greater natural potential than his own—should he choose to invoke
- it.
- Ivo could not call out the technical aspects or discuss the theory knowledgeably; that was not part of it. He
- could not even read musical notation, for he had never studied it, choosing instead to learn by ear. But with
- an instrument in his hands and the desire to play, he could produce a harmony, and he could do it precisely,
- however complicated the descriptive terms for what he performed.
- Now he developed that massive raw talent, bringing all his incipient skill to bear. He picked a suitable
- exercise, adapting for the flute at first, hearing the words as the song became animate. It was not from
- Lanier; that would come when he had command. One had to practice with lesser themes first. A trial run only...
- Drink to me only with thine eyes and I will pledge with mine;
- Or leave a kiss within the cup and I'll not ask for wine.
- The thirst that from the soul doth rise doth ask a drink divine;
- But could I of Jove's nectar sip, I would not change for thine.
- The others stood as the simple haunting melody surrounded them, marvelously clear, almost liquid, possessed
- increasingly of that clat, that soul that was the true artist's way. The galactic instrument brought also the
- suggestion of a heady nectar... and the touch of magic lips.
- Afra was staring raptly at him, never having heard him play before. Had that been his worst blunder? Not to
- employ the real talent he had?
- Groton was staring at Afra....
- No, he was staring beyond her! The blank wall blocking the continuation of their tour was dissolving, revealing
- another passage. The way was open again!
- "The free ride is over," Groton murmured. "Now we have to participate."
- They moved down it then in silence, Ivo still carrying the instrument. This hall opened into a tremendous
- chamber whose ceiling was an opaque mist and whose floor was a translucency without visible termination. There
- were no walls; the sides merely faded into darkness, though there was light close at hand.
- They walked within it, looking in vain for something tangible. But now even the floor was gone. Physically
- gone: it too had dissolved and left them in free-fall, hanging weightless in an atmosphere. Their point of
- entry, too, had vanished; they tried to swim back through the pleasant air, but there was nothing to locate.
- They were isolated and lost.
- "So it was a trap," Afra said, seemingly more irritated than frightened.
- "Or—a test," Groton said. "We had to demonstrate a certain type of competence to gain admittance, after
- the strictly sightseeing sections were finished. Perhaps we shall have to demonstrate more, before being
- permitted to leave."
- They looked at Ivo, who was floating a little apart from the others, and he looked at the thing in his hands.
- "Try the same tune you did before," Afra suggested. "Just to be sure."
- He played "Drink to Me Only" again. Nothing happened. He tried several other simple tunes, and the sound came
- at them from all over the unbounded chamber, not simple at all, but they remained as they were: four people
- drifting in nebulosity.
- "I persist in suspecting that the key is musical," Groton said. "Why else that instrument, obviously neither
- toy nor exhibit. So far we may only have touched on its capability."
- "Do you know," Ivo said thoughtfully, "Lanier believed that the rules for poetry and music were identical, and
- he tried to demonstrate this in his work. His flute-playing was said to be poetically inspired, and much of his
- poetry was musically harmonious. He even—"
- "Very well," Afra said, unsurprised and still unworried, though the web of the spider seemed to be tightening.
- "Let's follow up on Lanier. He wrote a travelogue of Florida, one poor novel, and the poems 'Corn,' 'The
- Marshes of Glynn,' The Symphony'—"
- "The Symphony!" Groton said it, but they all had reacted to the title. "Would that be—?"
- "Play it, Ivo!" Beatryx said.
- "The Symphony" was poetry, not music; there was no prescribed tune for it. But Ivo lifted the instrument and
- felt the power come into his being, for he had dreamed of setting this piece to music many times. He had never
- had the courage to make the attempt, on his own initiative. But here was his chance to make something of
- himself and his talent; to find out whether he could open, musically, the door to the riddle that was the
- destroyer.
- There was music in meaning, and meaning in music, and they were very close to one another in the work of Sidney
- Lanier and in this poem in particular. Each portion of it was spoken by a different instrument, personified,
- and the whole was the orchestral symphony...
- The macroscopic communications systems he had experienced shared this trait. Music, color, meaning—all
- were interchangeable, and he was sure some species communicated melodically on their homeworlds. A translation
- was possible, if he borrowed from galactic coding—and if he had the skill to do it accurately. He had
- learned to comprehend galactic languages, but he had never tried to translate into them. The music charged his
- hands and body—but could he render the poetry?
- The others waited, knowing his problem, searching for some way to help. Harold Groton, whose astrological
- interpretations could do no good in this situation; Afra Summerfield, whose physical beauty and analytical mind
- were similarly useless; Beatryx Groton, whose empathy could not enchant his suddenly uncertain fingers.
- Analysis, empathy, astrology...
- Then he saw that they could help, all of them. Just by being available.
- Ivo began to play.
- CHAPTER 10
- The mists receded; the shadowless darkness evaporated. In the grandeur of sound the vision came, vastly
- mechanized: the image of the galaxy, cosmic dish of brilliance turning about its nebulous axis, trailing its
- spiral arms, radiating into space a spherical chord of energy of which the visible spectrum was less than one
- percent.
- Then came the planets, recognizably Solarian, superimposed upon the nebular framework: Pluto, Neptune, Uranus,
- Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Venus, Mercury, Luna. And it was as though they rolled around within that bowl at
- differing velocities, Sol rolling too, and Earth at the center. Merged with that was a second bowl, that
- shifted against the first without friction: galactic and planetary roulette. The combined motions were diverse
- and complex; it seemed that no eye could trace where within that melee all the planets were at any given moment
- or how the bowls aligned. Only if the action stopped could such a survey be accomplished—and such a
- cessation would destroy it all.
- It could not be halted—but it could be photographed, in a manner, and such pictures revealed unique
- aspects. For the two concavities were marked off in quarters, and each quarter in thirds: twenty-four sections
- between them, twelve against twelve. Each of these was an open chamber wherein a planet might lodge forever,
- once caught by the flash of the camera. And the flashes came, four of them, making the planets freeze and the
- two bowls mesh together, binding themselves to the configurations of the instant; and in each case a form of
- existence was thereby set.
- The motions were such that only the instant fixed the ratios; had the action been halted a fraction sooner or
- later, an entirely different configuration would have resulted, and reality would have deviated by that amount.
- This, then, the symphony of motion and meaning, embracing all experience. The instant of its theoretic
- cessation, that fixation of all planets, was the horoscope.
- There was the swell of massed strings as Ivo descended to the circle of pie-shaped pens, searching out the fire
- symbols. He found a lion with flaming mane and passed it by; a centaur with drawn bow, the arrow a torch, and
- gave a nod to the archer that was not himself; and the ram. Here he tarried, approaching the animal with
- caution. The blades of its pasture were red spears of conflagration and the hairs of its body were coils of
- spreading smoke, but it was the head that predominated. Upon one mighty horn was written ASPIRATION and upon
- the other, TRADE.
- "O Trade! O Trade! would thou wert dead!" Ivo exclaimed, quoting the words of the poet in the language of
- music: themes of the violin.
- But Aries the Ram turned his molten head and snorted fire. "The beasts they hunger, and eat, and die; And so do
- we, and the world's a sty; Hush fellow swine; Why nuzzle and cry? Swinehood hath no remedy."
- And Ivo was afraid of this enormous beast, that spoke of other beasts and was so close to him that its very
- gaze seemed to burn his flesh, and he comprehended its power and determination. But still he tried: "Does
- business mean, Die, you—live, I? Then 'Trade is trade' but sings a lie: 'Tis only war grown miserly."
- Aries pointed one horn at a scorched scroll illuminated in the massed-string surge, and Ivo read:
- Formal galactic history commences with the formation of the first interstellar communications network. Only
- scattered authentic prior evidences exist for the employment of artificial macronics, and these may be
- disregarded as transitory phenomena of insignificant galactic moment.
- The first two cultures to establish a dialogue were only two hundred light-years apart; but a thousand years
- elapsed from the onset of broadcasting to confirmation. The second culture received the signals of the first
- and comprehended them, but delayed some time before deciding to respond. It is conjectured that conservative
- elements within that culture feared the long-range effect of a dialogue with complete aliens: a caution that
- was justified if value was placed on the status quo.
- During the second millennium fifteen additional cultures joined the network, having observed the successful
- interchange of the first pair and having gained confidence thereby. This was the nucleus of primitive galactic
- civilization.
- Within a hundred thousand years the initial signal had traversed the galaxy and gone beyond, diffusing into the
- entropy of macronic debris; but its originator had ceased broadcasting within ten thousand, presumably because
- of species decline or natural catastrophe. It had not been, in retrospect, a particularly notable culture; it
- owes its distinction in galactic history solely to the fact that it was the first to precipitate the network.
- Others, however, stimulated by that sample period, remained active, and the total number of participants
- increased steadily for the first several million years. Eventually the number stabilized, ushering in the so-
- called main phase.
- Spheres of influence developed, the extent of each determined by the relative commencement time of broadcast
- the level of knowledge provided, the endurance of the originating culture and the compatibility of neighboring
- cultures. Certain stations, having nothing original to contribute, closed down and were lost to history. Some
- became intermittent, doing little more than announcing their presence every millennium or so. Some became
- "service" stations, relaying material gathered and correlated from others. Some merely acknowledged prevailing
- broadcasts and expressed identification with the more notable ones. A few broadcast without reference to
- incoming signals, in this manner avoiding direct competition for prestige.
- Thus fairly stable spheres developed amid the general chaos, centered on the most durable and knowledgeable
- stations. This stability extended beyond individual broadcasters, for when a major station desisted lesser ones
- would fill its place and continue disseminating its information. Quite a number of prominent spheres were based
- on long-defunct cultures, since the quality of knowledge developed transcended the details of species or
- culture. Overall civilization gradually expanded, as individual species profited by the knowledge of their
- neighbors. At times dominance within a sphere would shift, as a pupil became more vigorous than the instructor;
- but generally the leading cultures maintained their positions, owing perhaps to greater inherent species
- ability. This main phase endured for about a hundred million years, and almost all the early cultures were
- replaced by later ones who could lay claim to very little original knowledge. The time of pioneering was over,
- galactically, and it seemed that the ultimate in civilization had been attained.
- The onset of the First Siege altered this situation drastically. This came in the form of an extragalactic
- broadcast that intercepted the galaxy broadside and thus saturated it within a few thousand years. This was the
- first intergalactic communicatory contact made, apart from faint, blurred signals of relatively primitive
- culture. This one was advanced: more sophisticated in knowledge and application than any hitherto known. By its
- mere existence it proved that the local level of civilization and technology was fledgling rather than mature.
- It presented a technique until this point thought to be beyond animated physical capability: the key to what
- amounted to instantaneous travel between the stars of the galaxy.
- It was hailed as a miracle. No longer was commerce confined to the intellect. For the first time, divergent
- planetary species were able to make physical contact.
- But the wiser cultures saw it for what it was—and could not cry the alarm before the consequences were
- upon them.
- The stellar constellation known on Earth as Aries was not a true association of stars at all, for some were
- relatively close to the planet and others were far removed, in that apparent region of space. Yet this could be
- construed as a segment of the galaxy, and within it were numerous cultures. In this time of interstellar
- travel, empires were forming; and it was to one of these that Schn journeyed.
- As Ivo had found himself at the Hegemony of Tyre, so Schn landed on an Earth-type but alien planet, feeling
- its gravity and breathing its atmosphere. There was vegetation, similar in function if not in detail to that of
- Earth, and there was what passed for civilization.
- The planet appeared to be at war.
- Schn assimilated the situation almost immediately. He proceeded to the nearest recruiting office. "I am a
- talented alien in need of employment," he said to the boothed official.
- The beetle-browed, facet-eyed creature contemplated him. "I grant you are alien—sickeningly so," it
- honked. "If you are verbally talented, I suggest you make use of your ability to show cause why I should not
- vaporize you where you stand on your repulsive meaty digits, in three minutes or less."
- Schn could tell by the shade of its carapace that it was suspicious. "Obviously you suspect me of being a
- representative of a hostile power, since I perceive you are on a war, er, footing here." The hesitation
- reflected the creature's absence of feet. "Obviously, too, I could be a spy or saboteur, since the ability to
- penetrate your defenses without observation is a requisite for that trade. And my direct approach to you is no
- guarantee that my motives are innocent; I could be holding a radiation bomb triggered to go off the moment you
- blast me. That would be my employer's guarantee that my failure to insinuate myself into your military machine
- could not lead to awkward exposure of his vile designs. I would naturally prefer to preserve my life and
- quietly gather whatever useful information I could while maintaining scrupulous cover. I should for that reason
- be an excellent employee of yours, since suspicion would naturally center on my activities and only months or
- years of excellent and unimpeachable service could dissipate this doubt—by which time the present crisis
- should long since be over and my employer could be allied to yours. But if I cannot accomplish this, at least
- my employer may have the satisfaction of knowing that a cubic mile of this planet's lithosphere—perhaps a
- trifle less, if the shoddy workmanship of the past is any criterion—has been rendered uninhabitable by my
- radioactive demise. Two of my three minutes are done; you may keep the third."
- The creature paused, almost as though in doubt. "Will you accede to fluoroscopic examination?"
- "Certainly. But that could be construed as an uncertainty on your part that your superiors would surely
- question. It would be wiser to blast me right now, before any such complications develop."
- "If you are armed as you describe, that would be disastrous."
- "Perhaps I am bluffing. A bluff is certainly cheaper than a bomb, particularly in these days of runaway
- inflation."
- "If you are bluffing, then you are probably not a spy and there is no need to blast you. In fact it could be an
- inadequacy on my record. If you are not bluffing—"
- "There is something in what you say, and I commend your perspicacity. Still, I must point out that I could be a
- real spy who is bluffing merely about the bomb. That is more likely, don't you agree, than my being an innocent
- person with a bomb."
- "If you were innocent, you wouldn't have a bomb."
- Schn shrugged in eloquent defeat not untinged with a hint of well-concealed bad grace. "Have it your way."
- "Assuming that you are a spy, whether armed or unarmed, how could I best deal with you without risking my own
- life or record?"
- "That's an excellent question. You will no doubt think of much better alternatives, but all that occurs to me
- at the moment is the possibility of referring the case to your immediate superior, as a matter warranting his
- discretion."
- It was expeditiously done. After an essentially similar dialogue, Schn was bounced up another link in the
- chain of command. And another. Eventually he spoke to the chief of intelligence.
- "We are satisfied that you are what you claim to be," the Chief said. "Namely, a talented alien in need of
- employment. You are also of a physical stock not on record in the galactic speciology, but you are too clever
- to have been trained on a primitive planet. The probability is, then, that you are a spy for someone—but
- we hesitate to interrogate you thoroughly until we can be sure you are not an observer from a quote friendly
- unquote or at least neutral power. Since we have at the moment only one potential enemy and several thousand
- potential allies, and since we are not adverse to assistance, it behooves us to deal cautiously with you.
- Probability suggests you are an asset—but how can we minimize the risk?"
- "Just don't try to send me to any temple of Baal."
- "Pardon?"
- "It would be expeditious to offer me compensation that is somewhat greater than the amount my overt services
- warrant. That way, I would be inclined to transfer my allegiance to you, in the event it was not already with
- your planet. Spies are notoriously underpaid, you know."
- The Chief vibrated a follicle against his beak. "Surely you realize that this is a ridiculous proposition? We
- would not possibly—"
- Schn sighed. "Of course you are right. A captaincy in your navy would be an unheard of reward for a suspected
- spy, however meritorious his service."
- "Who said anything about—!" the Chief began, his shell crackling with righteous indignation. "A
- captaincy! I was thinking of Third Lieutenant, J. G., apprentice, probationary."
- Captain Schn docked his sleek destroyer and gave his crew thirty-hour planetary leave while the ship underwent
- preventive maintenance. He set the thermostat within his flame-red cloak of authority to an invigorating sixty-
- five degrees Fahrenheit, making the mental conversion to local units effortlessly. The few civilians passing
- him on the street saluted with alacrity; he ignored them. Protocol did no require that an officer return
- courtesy to any person more than three grades below him, and of course civilians were beneath rank.
- He mounted the ramp of the capital and brushed past the rigid guards. The other officers were already assembled
- in the presidential suite: the five supreme individuals of the planet, gathered about the giant semicircular
- table. The Monarch, the Prime Minister, the Fleet Admiral, the Chief of Intelligence and the Chancellor of the
- Exchequer—all waiting somberly for the meeting to begin.
- Schn took his place. Not one of the others was particularly pleased at his presence, but they did not dare to
- make a key decision without him. They knew he was clever enough to foil anything arranged without his consent.
- The Prime Minister elevated himself, lifting his venerable thorax above the table. "Gentlemen—we have
- received an ultimatum from the Hegemony of Lion. We are met here to consider our response."
- The Monarch turned to him. "A prcis, if you please."
- "Surrender of all military equipment together with attached personnel. Deportation of hostages to Lion, as
- itemized. Indemnities. Reconstruction."
- "Standard contract," the Chief observed.
- "All present of this council appear on the hostage list?" the Monarch inquired.
- The Minister rattled agreement. "All but the Captain. Together with households."
- The Chancellor coughed. "Households! That means our daughters get dinked."
- "Good for them, I'm sure," the Chief muttered.
- The Chancellor inflated angrily, but the Monarch cut him off by speaking again. "How strict are the
- indemnities?"
- "Standard. Ten percent of Gross Planetary Product for Ram and environs, fifteen percent for subsidiary worlds.
- Exploitation of subsequently developed offworld resources, fifty percent."
- "Too high," the Admiral said. "They should not get more than twenty percent of windfall acquisitions."
- "Academic, since we won't have our navy," the Chief pointed out. "No ships, no loot—unless you plan to
- refit merchant vessels for your piracy."
- "Piracy!"
- "Gentlemen, let's not quibble over terminology in this time of crisis," the Monarch said. "The question is, do
- we acquiesce?"
- "No!" the Admiral exclaimed. "We have the space fold coordinates of their main system updated to the second. We
- have the missiles for an inundation strike. Act now, and we can wipe them out. Solve the problem once and for
- all."
- "Very neat," the Chief said dryly. "Except for their second-strike capability. What use mutual destruction?"
- "Better that than slavery!"
- "A standard contract is hardly slavery, even with fifty percent windfall appropriation. We have issued similar
- contracts to lesser species in the past."
- "What makes you think they'll honor those terms, once our fleet has been dismantled?"
- "Haven't you heard of the Gemini Convention?"
- "That's pass. We never bothered with it. Not for fifty thousand years—"
- "Gentlemen," the Monarch repeated, and the argument subsided fretfully.
- "It seems our various opinions are fairly set," the Minister remarked. "Some are amenable to compromise, some
- feel we would be foolish to allow ourselves to be read out of power by such means."
- "Better read than dead," the Chief murmured.
- "Treason!" the Admiral exclaimed.
- "However," the Minister continued loudly, "we must agree on some recommendation before this session ends. The
- Monarch, of course, will make the decision."
- There was a silence.
- "I am, as you know, from a far system," Schn said after an interval. "Possibly my perspective differs from
- yours."
- They waited noncommittally, grudgingly allowing him to make his case.
- "As I understand it, Ram has historically had good relations with Lion. Both hegemonies rose to sapience about
- a million years before the Traveler appeared, and because of their proximity—within a hundred light-years
- of each other—an intense dialogue was feasible. The development of spacefold transport was hailed as the
- beginning of an era of splendor, now that these longtime and compatible correspondents could meet physically
- and without a time delay of centuries."
- "Ancient history," snorted the Admiral.
- "Yet instead of a mutually beneficial interchange—trade—you developed antipathy. You were at war
- within a thousand years, and have fought intermittently and inconclusively ever since, just as Tyre fought with
- Sidon."
- "Tyre? Sidon?" the Admiral inquired. "Where in the galaxy are they? What kind of fleets do they have?"
- "Mixed fleets: war galleys and merchanters," Schn replied straight-faced. "The point is, they depleted their
- resources and discommoded their navies by striving senselessly against each other, instead of mobilizing
- against their mutual enemies."
- "That's an oversimplification," the Minister said. "We have had numerous encounters with other systems—"
- "Three wars with Centaur, two with Swan, altercations with Eagle, Horse, Dog, Hare—" Schn put in.
- "Alliances with Bear, Beaver, Dragon—" the Minister interposed in turn, retaining his equanimity.
- "All of which were violently sundered. Why? What happened to the mighty era of knowledge and prosperity
- heralded by the availability of interstellar travel?"
- "Our neighbors disappointed us."
- "They all were unworthy. Sure. And now Lion has issued an ultimatum demanding your conditional surrender.
- Surely they had provocation?"
- The Admiral and the Minister rustled their scales discordantly.
- "There was a border incident," the Chief admitted after a small delay.
- "Of what nature. Practically speaking, you don't have a border with Lion. You have to use spacefold—and
- you can't just rub up against your neighbor by accident. Not when you have to compress an object of near-
- planetary mass into its gravitational radius in order to poke through. For that matter, spacefold transport and
- accurate coordinates make the entire galaxy your neighbor. Light velocity limitation means nothing anymore."
- "It was a reconnaissance mission," the Admiral said.
- "A two-thousand-mile diameter moon on reconnaissance? Equipped to service several thousand warships, each
- potentially armed with planet-busters? Your euphemism hardly becomes the situation. And I'll bet you planted it
- within five light-seconds of their homeworld."
- "Three light-seconds," the Admiral said almost inaudibly.
- "And you didn't bother with any ultimatum, did you? Just a nice, neat fait accompli. You thought. Sneak your
- battlemoon right within range of their capital-planet, while their own ships were elsewhere. So what happened?"
- "They were ready for us," the Minister said. "They had complete information."
- "Incredible bungling," the Chancellor of the Exchequer muttered. "Have you any idea what a battlemoon costs?"
- "Obviously there was a leak," Schn said. He was beginning to get bored.
- "Obviously." The Admiral glared at the Chief, who averted his facets.
- "So now Lion has your, er, expedition, and the balance of power has shifted in its favor. Thus the ultimatum."
- None of them replied.
- "I have," Schn continued after a pause, "been doing a little research. I find that this entire question is
- unimportant."
- Their eyes appraised him stonily.
- "Ram and Lion are two principalities amid a galaxy of kingdoms, federations and empires. The only reason
- neither has been gobbled up yet is that there is insufficient wealth between you to warrant the trouble.
- However, the flux of major powers is at the state where it has become economically feasible to absorb you both,
- rather than tolerate your petty raids on civilized installations any longer. You Phoenicians and Greeks are
- ripe for Egypt or Assyria—or even Alexander."
- The Monarch contemplated him sadly through a golden facet. "Are you ready now to inform us whom you represent?
- This Alexander, perhaps?"
- "I represent no one but myself. I am merely stating facts that should be obvious to any objective party. Your
- shortsightedness is destroying you. You are wasting each other's resources while the wolves look on, and they
- are only waiting until you are at your weakest stage before snapping you up. You would be far better off to
- make an honest alliance with Lion—even to the extent of accepting that so-called contract—and thus
- perhaps postpone a more final loss of identity."
- Still they did not comment.
- At last the Monarch looked up. "What you say makes sense to us, Captain. We are in the wrong, but it is not too
- late. We shall accept the contract."
- There was no dissent, of course. The Monarch of Ram had spoken.
- Two weeks later Schn's ship berthed within the transport satellite: another moon of minimum effective mass. It
- had been stripped, the Chief informed him, and was nothing but a ball of rock, with the exception of the tube
- leading down into the compression mechanism compartment. The equipment, Schn knew, was far more sophisticated
- than that constructed by the human party on Triton; this could make use of a far smaller mass, and the location
- perceptors were precise. This, together with the up-to-date spacefold maps of this area of the galaxy, made a
- controlled jump routine. He had done his homework here, too, and was familiar with the equipment.
- He was alone. He had been selected to make the trip to Lion bearing the capitulation message. "They would not
- trust any sizable party," the Chief had explained. "But you, an alien, can negotiate the details, and return
- with their expeditionary party. We shall be ready, then."
- Yeah, sure, bugeye.
- Schn entered the control compartment and examined the telltales. The mechanism had been set and locked:
- transport was scheduled to occur within the hour, and this had been timed exactly. The express position of the
- object was important, as the human explorers had known; what the dull-witted humans had not suspected was that
- the precise time of transport was equally critical. For the universe was not stable; it had been expanding, and
- now was in a state of flux preparatory to contraction, and this affected every part of it. Some sections were
- still expanding, while others were already contracting, and special stresses acted even on the interiors of
- galaxies and stellar systems that appeared to the fleeting animate observer to maintain their original sizes
- and positions. And this flux caused a drift between adjacent surfaces of jumpspace; the loops were fairly
- constant, but their fabric continued to stretch, eventually forming new loops of similar size or abolishing old
- ones. As a result, the differential between adjacent surfaces could be a swift current. In some instances, as
- shift piled upon shift and jumpspace warped frantically to compensate, the passage of minutes meant a similar
- number of light-minutes deviation from the calculated location of emergence.
- So his journey had been carefully calculated in advance, and the equipment sealed to prevent potentially
- disastrous distortion. Emergence at the wrong point in space, even if only a few million miles off, could be
- taken as an indication of betrayal, and the waiting warships would open fire.
- Schn unlimbered the special equipment he had brought (smuggled) and powdered the locking devices with single
- applications of his limited-slip laser. The panel opened, exposing the intricate circuitry. He manipulated his
- tools with the dexterity and competence he naturally possessed and made certain minor adjustments.
- He was not traveling quite where the good Monarch of Ram had arranged.
- He returned to his ship, sealed himself in, and entered the melting chamber. The ten-second melt-radiation
- warner sounded; then—
- He came out of it whole, knowing that many hours had passed while his body melted, vaporized and finally
- compressed along with the ship and moon into a comparative speck—and then reversed the process at the
- other end of the jump.
- He set himself before the ship's macroscope and looked out at the universe.
- There was no destroyer signal, as he had known. The ship's computer shifted through the configurations and
- matched his present location: approximately one light-hour away from his scheduled rendezvous in the home-
- system of Lion.
- He smiled. It had worked.
- He had set the contraction mechanism for a triple sequence with a delay of only minutes between each effort.
- Thus the moon had made the first jump to Lion, hesitated momentarily, and gone into the return cycle before
- protoplasmic reconstitution could start. The brief interim and the relative motion of the two surfaces of space
- had sent it back at an angle, and it had emerged several light-minutes from its origin. Before the home-crowd
- could respond, since it took minutes for them even to see it, it had gone into the third compression, to emerge
- at its present spot. Its route had been a kind of N figure, the displacement magnified by the stress exerted on
- the fabric of space by adjacent punchthroughs. Dangerous—but what were heroes for, if not to brave
- danger?
- Only then had the reconstitution process commenced. This had taken hours—but his displacement in space
- should have been sufficient for security. Just about now things should be popping.
- They were. The sweep showed the traces that indicated an armada encircling the inhabited world of this system:
- battleships traveling at speed. The Lions had anticipated treachery.
- And the anticipation had been well fulfilled. Two uncharted moons drifted within the system, light-hours apart,
- and he knew that at least one more was present on the far side, too far from his own location to register yet.
- Observation by optics or macronics was so slow! It was an all-out attack; the inundation strike the Ram Admiral
- had urged.
- What of the Lion second-strike capability the Chief had so carefully mentioned? Schn smiled again. The
- solution to that inhibitor was obvious. The Rams had underestimated the perspicacity of the stranger, thinking
- to set him up as a duped emissary. They had staged a mock meeting and made a mock decision, while the war
- preparations moved ahead full-scale. There had never been a true capitulation, and probably not even a genuine
- ultimatum. This thrust had been decades in the making.
- Lion ships still cruised in the vicinity of the supposed emergence, though the bulk of that fleet was already
- heading toward him. They had thought that his moon was merely another unit in the invasion—as indeed it
- was. But it had not stayed long enough to allow their planet-busters to score, and now was in an unscheduled
- location. Doubly unscheduled: naturally the Ram schedule differed from that set up for the truce mission, and
- his own schedule differed from Ram's.
- He adjusted the macroscope to focus within his own moon and took a look on sweep. Sure enough, the buried
- warships were already coming to life, their crews having emerged from mass gasification. He had at least done
- them the favor of saving them from the planet-busters; Lion intelligence was better than Ram's. Not that it
- made any difference to him.
- Strange that they had trusted him with the spacefold mechanism. Perhaps they had feared that he would recognize
- a dummy-panel—a correct assumption—and had felt that the lock sufficed against incidental mischief.
- If they really thought he was an important Lion spy, verisimilitude required that he be allowed to observe the
- setting for himself.
- There were hundreds of simpler and surer ways of doing it, naturally. But the military mind had never been
- noted for its subtlety or efficiency, fortunately. Fortunately? It would not be the military mind if it were
- clever. Most likely, the Ram strategists had simply underestimated him by a factor of two or three.
- In due course his Ram escort would get around to dispatching him as superfluous. His ship was
- unarmed—theoretically in accordance with the negotiations setup—and lacked working fluid for any
- extended trip. They were sure they had him penned safely; their immediate concern was the approaching fleet of
- Lion.
- He refocused the scope on the farther reaches of the system. Sure enough: the third expedition had appeared. No
- moonlet, this; Ram had transported its entire home-world! That was their answer to Lion's second-strike
- capability, as he had suspected. Removal of the target from the target-system.
- A third time he smiled. Such navet!
- For now the Lion home-planet was gone, leaving only the massed offensive arm to attack the Ram planet before
- its inhabitants could be reconstituted. Two could play at this game of treachery and system-jumping!
- Oh, the fragments would be small, very small, when the first accredited empire came collecting!
- Now it was time to make contact with Lion, on the way to larger things. In three hours the jumpspace mechanism
- would initiate its fourth and final cycle, with disastrous consequences for any unprepared troops in the
- vicinity. Those outside the field of compression would be smashed by the moon's collapse and displacement;
- those still within it would be preserved—but not in animate state. Only the resilient gas-form could
- sustain that terrible implosion alive.
- Schn paused before the chamber entrance. Exactly how grateful, he wondered, would the opposing
- monarch—the Pride of Lion—be for a complete undamaged military moon, together with a number of
- serviceable warships?
- Not grateful enough, he decided. Lion would attempt to string him along as had Ram, exercising the eternal
- governmental prerogative of amorality and fallibility. Meanwhile the internecine struggle would continue, each
- home-world in orbit about its neighbor's sun, its native life suffering from the unfamiliar radiation.
- No, the real rewards for the entrepreneur would not occur until an empire made its move.
- Perhaps such a move could be hastened by a little judicious manipulation....
- Still smiling, Schn stepped into the chamber. "Alexander, where are you?" he murmured as the warner sounded.
- "A velvet flute-note fell down pleasantly upon the bosom of that harmony..." And Ivo was that flute, or of it,
- and the chambers he descended into were liquid. First he encountered the scorpion resting on the beach, not a
- horror, huge as it was, but rather with an aspect of creativity and fairness. Then he passed the crab, who
- watched patiently from under the surface, housed beneath a shell. At last he stopped at the tank wherein the
- fishes were swimming, like twin animate feet wading under the wave. Upon the one was written SYMPATHY, and upon
- the other HEART.
- "From the warm concave of the fluted note Somewhat, half song, half odor, forth did float, As if a rose might
- somehow be a throat...." Ivo said to Pisces in the prescribed mode.
- And the first fish replied: "Yea, Nature, singing sweet and lone Breathes through life's strident polyphone..."
- And the second fish continued: "Yea, all fair forms, and sounds and lights, And warmths, and mysteries, and
- mights, Of Nature's utmost depths and heights..."
- And the first: "So Nature calls through all her system wide, Give me thy love, O man, so long denied..."
- And the second: "Trade! is thy heart all dead, all dead? And hast thou nothing but a head? I'm all for heart,"
- the flute-voice said.
- And on the bottom of the tank was written in sand and shell:
- Physical contact between the stellar cultures of the galaxy in fact meant chaos. All species had needs and
- ambitions, and few were ethical in galactic sense when subject to meaningful temptation. Prejudices submerged
- during the long purely-intellectual contact reappeared now with renewed force. It developed that certain warm,
- liquid-blooded species had an inherent aversion to certain cold mucous-surfaced species, however equivalent
- their intellects, and many other combinations were similarly incompatible. Certain species turned pirate,
- preying on others and taking wealth, slaves and food without fair recompense; others inaugurated programs of
- colonization that led rapidly to friction. Not all encounters were violent; some were mutually beneficial. But
- the old, stable order had been completely overturned, and power shifted radically from the intellectual to the
- biological and physical. Highly civilized cultures were overrun and annihilated by barbarians.
- A new order arose, dominated by the most ruthless and cunning species. Greed and distrust acted to split and
- weaken the empires of these new leaders, forcing further change and breakup, in an ever more dissolute spiral.
- In the course of half a million years, galactic civilization as an entity disappeared entirely, submerged in
- the tide of violence; no macroscopic broadcasting stations remained except the extragalactic Traveler. Isolated
- by their own released savagery, all species declined. It was the Siege of Darkness.
- Approximately one million years after its inauguration the Traveler beam terminated. The siege was
- over—but the progress of galactic civilization had been set back immeasurably. As time passed,
- macroscopic stations began again to broadcast, and a new network was established—but the scars of the
- Siege were long in healing. Love, once denied, recovered slowly.
- "You are better now," the voice said hopefully.
- Beatryx opened her eyes, that were still stinging from the salt, and squinted into the warm sunlight. She was
- wearing a black bathing suit somewhat more scant than seemed appropriate. "Oh, yes!" she agreed, a little dizzy
- from her recent immersion. It had seemed she was drowning....
- The young man's face seemed to shine. "Lida! Persis! Durwin! A paean, for she who was lost is healed!"
- Three handsome young persons bounded across the sand. "Joy!" the leader cried, a muscular giant, sleek with the
- water dripping from his torso.
- In moments they stood before her: two bronzed young men, two lovely girls, each radiating vitality. All had
- lustrous black hair and classically sculptured features.
- The first man spoke again, more formally: "This is Persis, girl of peace." The girl performed a motion
- suggestive of a curtsy, smiling. Her teeth were bright and even. "This is Lida, beloved of us all." The second
- girl genuflected, smiling as politely as the first. "And my dear friend Durwin." The second man raised his hand
- in a formal wave rather like a salute, hoisting an eyebrow merrily.
- "And I," the speaker said diffidently, "am Hume—lover of my home." His smile was the most winning of all.
- Beatryx tried to speak, but Hume squatted to touch her lips lightly with his slender finger. "Do not name
- yourself. Surely we know you already. Have you not brought joy to us?"
- "She who brings joy!" Durwin exclaimed. "Her name would be—"
- "Beatrice!" the two girls cried.
- "No," Hume said solemnly. "That would be common joy, and hers is uncommon."
- Durwin studied her. "You are right. Look at her hair! She is as a diamond amidst quartz. Yet joy must be her
- designation. Not Beatrice, nor Beatrix—"
- "But Beatryx!" Hume finished.
- "We shall call her Tryx," the girl Persis said;
- Beatryx listened to all of this with tolerance. "You knew my name already," she said.
- "We knew what it had to be," Hume said, and offered no further explanation.
- "Where is this?" She looked at the white sand and he strings of seaweed and the green-white surf.
- "Where," Hume inquired gently, "would you like it to be?"
- "Why, I don't really know. I suppose it doesn't matter. It must be like Ivo's dream, when he went to
- Tyre—only it seems so real!"
- "Come," Durwin said. "Evening is hard upon us, and the village is not in sight."
- "Yes," Lida agreed. "We must show you to our companions."
- Then Beatryx was walking down the long beach, seeing the light of the setting sun refracted off the rolling
- water in splays of colored light. The men paced her on either side and the girls skipped next to them. Inland
- the palmlike vegetation rose, casting long and waving shadows in the distance. The air was warm and moist, rich
- with the briny odors of the sea. Underfoot—all feet were bare, including hers, she suddenly
- realized—the sand was hot but not uncomfortable, spiced with multihued pebbles and occasional conchlike
- shells. The word "murex" came to her, but she could not place either the source or the meaning; certainly she
- had never seen shells quite like these before.
- Half a mile down the curving shoreline rested the village, a cluster of conical tents on the beach. In the
- center she saw a bonfire, great fat sparks leaping into the darkening sky, occasional fluffy wood-ashes
- drifting in the air current coming in across the water. She could smell the burning cellulose, together with
- hot stones and charred seaweed, and the hungry aroma of roasting fish.
- Hume took her by the arm and guided her into the crowd. "This is Tryx," he proclaimed. "Come from the water,
- and great joy to us that she is sound and well."
- "Another rescued!" someone cried. They gathered about, dark-haired, slender, glowing with health and
- friendliness. There were about thirty in all, as comely a group as she had ever seen. "See how fair she is!" a
- girl exclaimed.
- Beatryx laughed, embarrassed. "I am not fair! I'm almost forty!" With that she wondered where Harold was. It
- was strange to be anywhere without him, and not entirely comfortable, though these were certainly nice people.
- Harold and Ivo and Afra—were they still back in the floating chamber, watching her as the three had
- watched Ivo before? But she had no Schn-personality to direct the trip... it was all so complicated.
- The others smiled. "We must build a house for you," one said, and immediately there was a flurry of action. One
- of the tents was evidently a storehouse; from it the men and women, working in cheerful concert, brought poles
- and rolls of clothlike material and lengths of cord. Some quickly planted the poles deep in the sand and bound
- them together at the top, while others wrapped the cloth around the outside of the resultant structure. Beatryx
- noticed that there were snap fastenings at the edges, so that the material could be easily joined to itself and
- to the uprights.
- And it was complete: a many-colored teepee residence for her to stay in while she was here. They stood back and
- looked at her expectantly.
- "It's very nice," she said. "But—"
- They waited, but she could not go on. It way very nice, and their society was very nice—but how could she
- inquire the purpose of it all? She had entered some kind of—diagram?—something with little balls
- falling and wheels spinning, and she had seen strange animals as though one of Harold's charts had come to
- life, and finally she had fallen into a pond with talking fish—or had she been the fish,
- somehow?—and some kind of writing on the bottom. She understood vaguely that it all had to do with
- history and the reason she and Harold and Ivo and Afra had come to this place. That place. But now she was by
- herself, and there was no history and no explanation, and she did not know how to phrase her question.
- If only Harold were here to take charge! He was so practical about such things.
- "Thank you so much," she finally said.
- "A paean!" Hume cried, and suddenly the group was in song, a melody of sheer exuberance and youthful glee. The
- voices of the girls were like flutes, marvelously clear and high.
- Then they were all sitting around the fire, now a ring of dimming coals, and passing spicy, juicy fish around,
- each one wrapped in tough green leaves. For drink there was something very like coconut milk, but richer and
- more filling. She worried that it might be alcoholic, but was soon satisfied that it was not.
- No one seemed to have lamps, and when the last of the fire died they were sitting in the dark. The men were
- exchanging stories of the fish they had speared or almost speared that day, and the territory they had
- explored: some fabulous fish, some astonishing territory, if everything were to be believed. The girls spoke of
- the pretty flowers they had seen inland, and the colored stones they had collected. No one asked Beatryx where
- she had been, and she was glad of that because she did not see how she could explain.
- It was all very pleasant, and even the sea-breeze was not cold; but there was one problem. She had dined well
- and sipped well, and certain urgencies of nature were developing. But which tent...?
- On her left sat Hume; on her right, Durwin. She could not inquire.
- At last the gathering broke up and the merry voices faded into the night. It was time to retire.
- She stood up uncertainly. She was no longer sure where her tent was, or what she should do once she reached it.
- As for the other—
- A gentle hand took her arm. "Will you walk with me?" Persis' soft voice came.
- Thankfully she accepted the guidance. They walked out of the village and into the line of vegetation; she could
- tell only by the retreating sound of the waves and by the occlusion of a swath of stars by overhanging branches
- every so often. Now and then her foot came down on a twig or pebble, but there was nothing harsh enough to
- cause pain.
- "Here."
- "Here?" They were still in the forest; she was sure of that much. Night insects chirruped and fluttered nearby.
- Where was the building?
- Persis squatted down.
- Beatryx realized, with a despairing shock, that this was it. There were no lavatory facilities! Nothing but the
- bushes. And these people weren't even disturbed!
- Harold would have arranged to build a privy, at least...
- There was a fluffy mattress on the floor of her domicile, and no wind entered to disturb things. Persis showed
- her where to hang her bathing suit, and left. The advantage of the teepee format was that everything was within
- reach in the dark. It was comfortable enough.
- Comfortable enough physically, but not aesthetically. To sleep without night clothing... and no sanitary
- facilities! She knew she was being foolish, but these were aspects of the primitive idyl that disturbed her
- profoundly.
- Now she wondered about the sleeping arrangements of her companions. It seemed to her that there had been fewer
- than twenty structures in the village. Not enough for each person to have one. Were a number of these young men
- and women married? She had seen no sign of this; no rings on any fingers, no marital designations.
- Perhaps Hume and Durwin shared a tent, and Lida and Persis. Young people often did not like to remain alone.
- Nor, for that matter, did people like Beatryx herself. Still—
- She knew what Harold would say: other peoples, other customs. Let them be.
- If only he were here!
- In the morning the young men gathered more dry branches for the fire, but did not light it. The girls brought
- fruit from the forest, harvesting it from somewhere, and more coconuts. The nectar, it turned out, was from
- these. Teams of men punched holes in the mighty-husked objects and skillfully poured the juice into gourds. The
- women added flavoring from crushed berries.
- Breakfast was as supper had been: a communal gathering around the fire—still unlit—and distribution
- of succulent sections of fruit and cups of drink. Instead of tales of the day's adventures, the dialogue was
- about forthcoming projects: where the best fishing might be had, whether it was time to move the camp to a new
- location, the prospects for rain.
- "I," Hume said, "shall scout to the south this morning. Maybe I can find a suitable campsite."
- "And who will go with you?" Persis demanded with a twinkle. "Do you think we can trust a man to make such an
- important survey?"
- "Tryx will go with me!" he replied jovially. "Was I not first to find her?"
- "Are you sure it was not her sunbeam hair you found first?" Persis concentrated with mock-brooding on a strand
- of her own black tresses.
- "I really don't know anything about campsites," Beatryx protested. It was foolish again, but she felt flattered
- by the frequent references to her hair. Once, of course, it had been quite fair, and some of the color
- lingered. Of course it would be subject to comment amid a black-haired group such as this, but it really was
- nothing remarkable.
- "Do you think he does?" Persis said. Beatryx took a moment to remember that this referred to knowledge of
- campsites. The matter seemed to be decided.
- She and Hume walked down the beach, not hurrying. Beatryx worried about sunburn, but clouds were growing in the
- sky and rain seemed to be a more likely problem.
- "Is it like this—all the time?" she asked, still having trouble framing her question. She had not
- understood, before, why Ivo had not simply snapped out of his Tyre-dream. Now she appreciated his situation.
- This world included sleep! Waking up was merely waking up, not a return. There was nothing to take hold of, no
- way to—she still couldn't formulate it.
- "All summer," he said. He carried a fishing spear that he used as a staff.
- So that was it! A summer holiday. "Where are your families?"
- "Oh, they're inland. It is too dangerous for them on the beaches."
- "Dangerous?" That didn't sound like vacation!
- "The blacks," he said, as though that explained it.
- "What are the blacks?"
- He looked uncomfortable. "They come up from the sea. I thought you knew all about—that. We have to stop
- them from infesting the land. Every year some try. If they ever take hold and start breeding—" He looked
- ahead. "There it is! I wanted you to see it."
- She followed his gaze and spied an abutment of rock—a sheer cliff rising out of the sea, twenty feet
- high. It was an unusual formation, since the vertical side faced away from the ocean and toward the beach.
- Harold would have made some observation about reverse tidal undercutting, but she didn't really understand that
- kind of thing. It was very pretty.
- The clouds had overcast the sun, but as if stage-directed they parted to let a beam come down. It struck the
- sea-side of the rock, and there was a brilliant flash from the edge.
- "What is that?" she asked, concerned.
- "The sun-stone," he said, running toward it. She had to follow, bewildered.
- The overcast closed in again, but as she came up to the cliff she discovered why the rock had seemed to take
- fire. It was mirror-surfaced! The face toward the beach was a clean fracture that had been polished by nature
- or man until it shone. The beach was reflected in it, and the distant trees, making it appear almost like a
- window to another world.
- Could she step through? Would that convey her back to—
- Then she saw herself within it, and gasped.
- She had lost twenty years. Her hair was thick and blonde, as it had been before she settled in to married life.
- Her face was thin, narrow-chinned, like those of the girls here, and her figure appallingly trim.
- "And you said you were not fair!" Hume said, divining her thoughts. "You said you were forty."
- "But I was—am," she said, confused. "I don't understand this."
- "Why try? Too much understanding only brings sorrow, as we well know." And he was off again down the beach, the
- mirror-rock a fancy only of the moment.
- She lingered, ostensibly to investigate the other facets of the structure, all as clear as the first but much
- smaller, but actually taking in the marvelous picture. The too-scant suit—now it was voluptuous. She was
- young again, and... fair. Perhaps she had known it before, and not believed.
- "Tryx!"
- She jumped, surprised by his impatience, and ashamed to be caught indulging in schoolgirl vanity, and ran to
- him. Yes, she could recognize it now: she had the vitality of a girl of seventeen.
- But Hume's exclamation had not been impatient. He had found something.
- A line of footprints crossed the beach from the water to the trees. They were not human; the indentations were
- too large and shallow, even where the moist sand near the surf held them well. Webbed prints.
- "It must have crossed within the hour," Hume said tersely.
- A reaction ran up her bare back and tightened the nape of her neck. "A—black?"
- He nodded. "We can't catch it now. Impossible to run it down in the brush, except with a full party."
- "What can we do?" The tension made her feel nauseated in exactly the way Ivo had described.
- "I'll stand guard here. You run back to the village and warn the others. And be careful—they usually
- travel in pairs and cross in different places, so that if we get one—hurry!"
- Fear gave her fleetness. She skipped over the sand, running at the line where the water gave it firmness,
- though the ocean horrified her now. Creatures from the deeps!
- She passed the mirror-stone and went on, panting already. How far had they come down the beach? At least a
- mile—a long, long distance, now. What if the black came back before she fetched the others? Hume had only
- his spear. Those awful footprints...
- She had to slow down. She was young, but she could not keep up this headlong pace. Her side ached.
- She walked, recovering. She felt guilty, as though she were malingering, but this was the best she could do.
- She glanced over her shoulder, half afraid something would be coming after her, and saw that the mirror-stone
- was already out of sight. That made her more nervous than ever.
- Something caught her eye in the water, and she turned back. She jumped, though she knew it was only a wave, or
- perhaps a bit of driftwood coming into sight between the swells. She started to run again, but the pain in her
- side came back quickly, dragging at her strength.
- Again that shape in the ocean, attracting her unwilling eye. She forced herself to look carefully, trying to
- convince herself all the way down inside that it was nothing. Only a freak swell caused by adjoining currents
- in the tide; that was what Harold would say, comfortingly.
- A black, monstrous-eyed head rose out of the whitening froth, two glossy antennae quivering.
- Beatryx screamed.
- It was the wrong thing to do. Instantly the head swiveled to cover her. She saw its banded snout, the fixed
- round hole of a toothless mouth beneath. It was earless, but it had heard her—and now it was swimming or
- slithering toward her with alarming speed.
- She bolted for the forest, but the loose dry sand caught at her feet while giving way beneath them, impeding
- her and throwing her off balance. She fell, sand flying up and into her face. She choked on it and tried to
- brush it out of her eyes, but her hands were covered with it.
- Somehow she could not get coordinated. She remained on hands and knees in the sand, watching the creature
- through streaming eyes.
- The thing rose out of the water and came at her, a towering ebony figure. The scales of its thick body gleamed
- metallically. She saw through her sandy tears that its extremities—all four of them—were webbed.
- This was a black!
- Then it loomed above her, hoisted upon two legs, the great square bulk of its forward segment swaying near. The
- antennae vibrated, casting off drops of moisture...
- A cry in the distance! The black's head rotated toward the sound and its dangling flipper-forefeet hoisted up.
- The others had heard her cries! They were coming! The brute shuffled around and away, driving for the ocean.
- But already a party of men were running along the fringe of surf, cutting off its retreat. The black was
- clumsy; it could not move rapidly on land, and she saw that the powdery sand inhibited its grossly webbed feet
- even more than her own. It was trapped.
- "Joy! You are all right!" Persis cried, running up to her and flinging herself to her knees.
- "Hume!" Beatryx gasped, remembering. "He—he's watching for another one! Beyond the mirror-stone!"
- "The sun-stone!" Several men detached themselves and pounded on down the beach, holding their spears aloft.
- They understood.
- Meanwhile six men were closing in on the nearby creature. It spun about awkwardly, seeking some passage to the
- water, but there was none. At last it charged, a caged bull, raising its solid forelimbs threateningly.
- Durwin's spear thunked into its body. The black stumbled, clutching at the shaft but not mortally wounded, and
- the men were on it.
- "Kill it! Kill it!" Persis screamed, her eyes dilated, her fingers curved into claws.
- "Kill it!" Beatryx echoed, horrified by the narrowness of her escape.
- The spears rose and fell in a frenzy of attack. The sea-thing's gross body twisted and fell, bright red blood
- dripping down its scales. A kind of groan issued from it; then it collapsed face-down in the sand, the water
- lapping at the tip of one forelimb.
- "It's dead," Durwin said with grim satisfaction. "Now let's go after that other one. Spread out and watch for
- any more along the beach, too."
- The men moved on, leaving the vanquished hulk where it lay bleeding into the moist sand. It was the women who
- spread out, facing the ocean, each one scrutinizing the ocean for signs. Their grim expressions differed
- strikingly from the simple camaraderie of the evening before.
- "How fortunate we heard you in time!" Persis said, helping Beatryx to her feet. "In another moment it would
- have touched you."
- "I thought I was dead, when I fell," Beatryx said, still shaking with reaction. "I couldn't get up again, I was
- so frightened."
- "Dead?" A fine dark eyebrow arched inquisitively.
- "I mean, I couldn't get away from it."
- Persis nodded. "That's horrible, I know. One of them touched me once, on the arm, and I thought I'd never wash
- that spot clean. I was an outcast for weeks. Filthy thing!"
- Something was strange. "It didn't hurt you?"
- "Of course not. They wouldn't dare attack a human being."
- A sick feeling crept over Beatryx. "What do they do, then? I mean, if you hadn't come here in time—"
- "Don't you know? It probably would have touched you, tried to talk to you. Disgusting."
- "They talk?"
- "They talk. But let's get off this depressing subject. You must be very tired, after what you went through."
- Beatryx looked toward the body. "What about it?"
- "The men will burn it and bury the suit. We don't need to look. They'll put on special gloves, and bury them
- too, afterward. That's the worst part of it—having to handle them."
- Something else nagged her. "The suit?"
- "The diving suit. They use those rigs for swimming under the water. Didn't you see?"
- Beatryx walked to the body, appalled at what she knew she would find. "That's a man!"
- "That's a black!" Persis corrected her. Then, horrified: "What are you doing?"
- Beatryx ignored her. She kneeled beside the corpse, seeing now the machined parts she had taken for scales. The
- protective face-mask attached to the large goggles, almost the way the macroscope headgear did. The breathing
- apparatus—what she had seen as the "snout"—was fastened below the helmet to a ribbed diving outfit.
- She put her hands to the helmet and twisted, and the mask snapped loose. She worked it away from the face.
- The head inside was that of a young man, as handsome in his own way as Hume was in his. This man was dark,
- however: a Negro.
- A black.
- Beatryx stumbled along in the dusk. The stones and brush and sharp twigs hurt her feet but did not slow her.
- The cries of the men and women of the beach village were lost behind her; they would not find her tonight, and
- tomorrow did not matter.
- That such a lovely world could have such horror! It had been so appealing at first, with the delicious climate,
- attractive seascape, and friendly people. And her own gift-body, youthful and vigorous.
- But to kill fellow-men so brutally simply because they came from the sea—she could not comprehend or
- accept this. Harold would never have abided it. He was a peaceful man but could be moved to severe measures
- when something really important came up. "The horoscope does not specify race," he would have said.
- So she had fled. Not bravely, not openly; she was not a courageous woman, and she did not know what was best.
- She had washed her hands again and again, as they demanded, though in truth she was not ashamed of the touch of
- the black; rather she was painfully remorseful that she had failed to touch the man when it had counted, in her
- fatal ignorance. She had waited until night, then gone into the forest as though to—to employ the
- facilities. Then she had plunged into the darkness, though the branches struck cruelly at her bare flesh and
- the rocks turned under her bruising feet.
- No, she did not have physical courage, and the darkness terrified her, with its thousand lurking suggestions of
- spiders and snakes and centipedes. But there was something she had to do. It was the thing Harold would have
- done.
- She made her way to the beach and found the corpse. Then she moved down toward the mirror-cliff. Even in the
- night she was sure she could find that landmark, and of course it was not completely dark. The stars were out
- in vaguely unfamiliar constellations, and the ocean glowed gently. It was cool, now, but her motion kept her
- warm.
- She saw the somber hump of rock and knew that her bearings were good. Only a little way beyond this spot....
- Now, cautiously, she began to call. 'Black—black, I don't have any weapon... black, if you're there, I
- want to talk with you... black, where are you?..."
- For somewhere was the second black. The men had not found it—found him. They had followed the traces, but
- the man from the sea had eluded them in the brush. Tomorrow they were going to burn the forest here, to drive
- him out.
- He had to be here somewhere, Hume had explained, for in the chase the man's face-plate had been knocked out. It
- had fallen to the ground, and Hume had it. He had hurled it into the fire with gloved hands so that it could
- never be used again. The black could not go under the sea again without it.
- Neither could he get far inland, for the second line of defense was canine. The big, vicious dogs would be
- released if they winded him, and the black surely knew that. They were cunning that way, Hume had explained.
- They knew enough to stay clear of the hounds. He would not venture out of the shoreline foliage.
- Tomorrow, the fire...
- "Black," she called again. "I have the other faceplate...."
- It had been a grisly task, in the dark, prying out the plate from the helmet of the corpse. But what else could
- she do? She could not let them kill another man.
- For an hour she tramped up and down the beach, not daring to call too loudly lest the others hear. There was no
- answer. Then she cut into the forest, hurting her feet again but keeping on, still calling. She could think of
- nothing else to do.
- And finally blind purpose prevailed. Somewhere in the night she had an answer.
- "I hear you, white."
- It was a woman's voice.
- And Beatryx found her, lying in the hollow between two fallen trunks. The woman had a tiny electric lantern she
- had kept hooded until now—until she was sure that the calling voice was not a trap. By its abruptly
- unfettered light Beatryx saw that the woman had removed her useless helmet and much of the rest of the
- underwater outfit. She lay on her side, her rather attractive dark head propped against her elbow.
- "You have to move," Beatryx said urgently. "They're going to set fire to the forest. They're going to—"
- "One place is as good as another," the woman replied philosophically.
- "You don't understand. Tomorrow morning—"
- "Tomorrow morning you be gone from here, white. And don't tell them you saw me, or they'll kill you too. I
- can't move."
- "But I brought you the face-plate. From the dead man. So you can go back under the water. That's why I—"
- "White."
- The tone stopped her. The woman angled the light of the lantern so that it illuminated the area around her
- feet.
- Then Beatryx understood. Both flippers were off, and one black ankle was swollen grotesquely. The woman could
- not walk.
- "I'll help you get to the water," Beatryx said quickly. "You can swim slowly, can't you? Using your hands and
- one foot?"
- "I could." But the tone was fatalistic. Obviously the woman did not intend to try. "Where would I go in the
- sea, what would I do, and my husband dead on land?"
- Her husband!
- What would Beatryx do if Harold were dead? If some stranger had casually mentioned the fact and offered his
- belongings for her use? There would not be much point in going on. Why should this woman feel any differently?
- "I am Dolora," the woman said. "The lady of sorrows."
- "I am Beatryx. But I don't bring any joy to you." How stupid her name seemed now! And how pitiful the delayed
- introduction, abreast of tragedy.
- Dolora carefully removed a capsule from a sealed pocket in her suit and swallowed it.
- "Your foot?" Beatryx inquired sympathetically. "For the pain?"
- "For the pain, yes."
- "How did this happen?" Beatryx asked after a pause. "Why do they hate you? Why do you come from the ocean?"
- And Dolora explained: In the time of the Traveler Siege the whites of this planet had embarked upon conquest
- and plunder, recognizing no law but force. The blacks of the neighboring less-technological world had been
- defeated and subjugated. Great numbers of them had been brought to this world as slaves.
- "But you are both human!" Beatryx protested. "How could—"
- "We are of the same stock, yes," Dolora said, misunderstanding the nature of her objection. "There must have
- been a prior siege, before the dawn of history, and one world colonized the other. We could not have evolved
- independently. But this world is not so good for us as was our own; its sun is too dim."
- Beatryx had meant to protest the enslavement of one human race by another, rather than the genetic
- probabilities. Now she remembered how similar it had been on Earth, and did not bring the matter up again.
- When the siege ended (Dolora continued) and the Traveler signal was gone, the slaves were stranded on the alien
- world. But, deprived of foreign conquests, the whites returned to planetary matters, and gradually a
- liberalizing sentiment grew among them. In time they formally abolished the institution of slavery. But there
- followed a considerable minority reaction against this, as certain economic interests suffered; and trouble was
- continuous. The blacks had mastered the white technology but were refused admittance into white society.
- At last a compromise was achieved. The blacks were given a country of their own—under the water. They
- built tremendous dome-cities there, with artificial sunlight approximating that of their homeworld, and they
- cultivated the flora and fauna of the sea-floor efficiently. They traded with the landborne whites, shipping up
- ocean produce and metals from undersea mines in exchange for grams and wood.
- The separation was not complete. A few blacks had elected to remain on land in spite of stringent
- discrimination there, and a few whites had joined the undersea kingdom. Both minorities had a difficult time of
- it, being under constant suspicion, though their motives had been high. Periodically some land-blacks would
- give up and seek the sea, and some sea-whites would return to land. These were welcomed by both groups as
- rescued personnel, and encouraged to publish lurid narratives of their hardships among the barbarians.
- Beatryx realized at this point what the whites had taken her for.
- But gradually this supposedly ideal compromise had soured. Too many on each side believed they somehow had the
- worst of the bargain. Politicians forwarded their careers by making a scapegoat of the other culture, and after
- a time polemics became policy. Trade became disrupted, and the blacks found their diet lacking in trace
- elements that only land-grown produce could provide, while the whites' industry suffered for lack of the sea
- metals. It seemed to each that the other was maliciously trying to destroy it.
- White militants made preparations for what they claimed would be an effective solution to the problem: not a
- kind one. But they acted subtly, because the great majority still believed in the double-culture compromise,
- and would protest if the truth were to become known. Meanwhile the black militants were also making their
- moves. They had almost achieved control of their government, and would take military action against the whites
- as soon as the proper power was theirs. They, too, believed in simple solutions.
- At best, somebody was going to be badly hurt. At worst...
- "We don't want this strife either," Dolora said. Her voice had become lower and sadder, as though she were very
- tired, and Beatryx had to strain to hear. "It will be the end. We have to establish lines of communication. To
- put the reasonable blacks in touch with the reasonable whites, acquaint them all with the leadership crisis,
- reintegrate the two societies. This two-culture compromise is sundering the planet...."
- "But why don't you just send a—a message? Telling them? Or talk with—"
- "Governments do not listen very well," Dolora said, her voice a whisper. "Particularly 'conservative'
- governments. And as for talking—that is what the two of us set out to do. We were not the first. For many
- years people like us have been trying, but none has returned, and no one has come to us from the whites. But my
- husband and I—we did not believe that the average white would actually refuse to listen, if approached
- without malevolence. So we came without weapons, spreading out in the hope of making individual contact sooner,
- thinking good intentions were enough—"
- And had met savagery. And Beatryx herself, caught up in the fever, had cried "Kill it!" with the others.
- And thus this girl's well-meaning husband had been butchered, and she pursued through the forest by a killer
- mob—all because the man had seen Beatryx and come to talk with her.
- "But I see now that we were wrong," Dolora whispered. "They do not want to listen. So there is nothing to be
- done."
- Beatryx herself had been so ignorant. She had screamed instead of listening. What could she say?
- "Dolora, I—"
- But the girl was not paying attention. She lay still, her head resting in dry leaves. Asleep?
- Beatryx picked up the lantern and shone it on Dolora. Then she touched the flaccid hand.
- The girl appeared to be dead.
- Now, too late, Beatryx realized the significance of the capsule. Dolora had taken it after she was assured that
- her husband was dead....
- Beatryx looked for something to dig with. It seemed important that the girl be buried before the fire came.
- Then she realized that something more important remained. No whites had gone to the undersea city....
- Tediously she stripped the remainder of the suit from the dead girl's body. She experimented with the various
- attachments and controls, learning how the air supply operated. She fitted in the alternate face-plate. The
- suit was well designed and largely automatic; otherwise, she knew, she could never have succeeded in using it.
- Probably if the face-plate had not been designed to pop out without disturbing the goggles, it would not have
- come loose.
- "You were not wrong, Dolora," she said.
- She put on the suit and all its equipment, sealed herself in, and made her way to the water. It was almost
- morning.
- Beatryx was not a proficient swimmer, but her strong new body and the diving equipment made the endeavor
- possible. She was tired, she was clumsy, she was afraid, but she could do it because she had to. She entered
- the water, her feet stinging as the salt brine pried into the multiple scratches. She submerged, relieved to
- discover that she could breathe well enough, and followed the coastal shelf down. The suit was heavy, holding
- her down, so that she actually walked as much as she swam.
- She pushed forward for what seemed like many hours. Her arms and legs became tremendously weary, and the
- unfamiliar suit chafed, but she kept on. She fought down her mounting and unreasonable fear of sharks,
- stingrays, octopi, huge-clawed crabs, murky black crevices in the ocean floor...
- If she could only reach the dome-city, wherever it was—
- "Ahoy!" The voice startled her. It was coming from her helmet!
- Someone was addressing her over the suit's radio. She had made contact!
- A pair of shapes came out of the murk, bearing search beams. "Identify yourself, stranger! Don't you know this
- is restricted water?"
- "I—I am Beatryx. I—I borrowed this suit so that I could come and tell you—"
- "That's a white!" the voice said, shocked.
- "Kill it!" another voice said, charged with loathing. "Don't let it contaminate our waters."
- "But you don't understand!" Beatryx cried. "You have to listen—"
- Then the powered spear transfixed her, and she died.
- Not the heat of the flame or the coolness of water, this time, but the ambience of atmosphere. First he
- encountered the twins, two handsome young men breathing the fresh air, exuding life and joy. Then the loyal
- water-carrier, walking in mist, whose burden was truth; and if the slowly marching man resembled a portrait of
- Sidney Lanier, this was not surprising. Ivo had tried all his life to assume the task of this man, to carry
- perhaps one of his heavy buckets, but had never quite succeeded. Finally he came to the balance: the great
- ornate scales of Libra, out in the open sky, paired dishes swinging gently in the breeze. Upon the one was
- written EQUIVALENCE, and upon the counterweight, JUSTICE.
- Ivo had watched the machinations of the ram with one part of his mind, and the tragedy of the fishes with
- another. They were only dreams, in one sense—yet real information had been conveyed through them, and he
- knew that real resolutions were necessary. He could not act, himself, for the moment he stopped playing the
- symphony everything would stop, in whatever state it existed. Perhaps here, with the scales, was the assistance
- so desperately required concurrently for the flute; here amid the hornlike air of the symphony.
- "There thrust the bold straightforward horn," he began. "To battle for his lady lorn..."
- And the scales replied in that voice of the horn: "Is Honor gone into his grave? Hath Faith become a catiff
- knave, And Selfhood turned into a slave, To work in Mammon's cave, Fair Lady?"
- And Ivo read the print behind the scales, written in vapors in the atmosphere, certain that everything would be
- all right.
- But a hundred million years is a long time, and civilization developed again after the passing of the Traveler.
- Some cultures dwindled in importance, unable to adapt again to purely intellectual contact; some overcame their
- setback and achieved new elevation. The net long-range effect of the siege could be construed as a selection:
- those cultures unfit for galactic contact eliminated themselves by their own violence. Unfortunately, they took
- with them a similar number of those that were not suicidally violent. Nevertheless civilization, once it
- recovered, went on to a new height, for there was the spur of the potential demonstrated by the Traveler.
- But suppose the Traveler itself returned, to wreak devastation again? Certain evidences suggested that there
- had been prior sieges, possibly many of them; perhaps civilization had risen, flourished and perished many
- times, leaving not even a memory. Were the cultures of this period simply to disappear at such time as the
- Traveler laid siege again? Or could something be done to stop a recurrence?
- Plans were made. Theory was perfected, special stations were constructed. A select cadre was trained and
- maintained from generation to generation and millennium to millennium. If the Traveler came again, this galaxy
- was ready.
- And it did come, as projected—one hundred million years after the earlier siege. Dissolution proceeded
- where it touched, as species far too young to remember or appreciate the devastation of the last siege embarked
- upon trade and its corollary, conquest. Some of these did not know about the Plan, however—and sought in
- their navet to prevent it. A number of stations were disrupted....
- Harold Groton came out of it as he had before: not with nausea or alarm, but simply a feeling of stress, of
- internal acceleration. The sensation did not bother him; in a manner of speaking he had been rehatched and
- matured in minutes and hours, and in another sense he had retraced the entire evolutionary experience of the
- hive in the same period. It was the nature of the reconstitution.
- He leapfrogged out of the chamber and looked around. The room was unfamiliar, but elegant. A daylight-emulating
- ceiling of muted yellow, richly muraled walls depicting hive activities, resilient flooring, uniquely styled
- furniture—a very plush accommodation.
- There was a triple-refraction mirror—one of many, he noticed—at hand, and he positioned himself
- before it to assess his condition before dressing. He did not recall undertaking a melting cycle this time,
- though; in fact, he had been—
- Small-thought ceased abruptly.
- The image in the mirror was man-sized, as far as he could tell. The creature was basically tripodal, so that
- two small feet offset one very large center foot. Perambulation was by leapfrog: the center leg provided most
- of the power, the side legs incidental support, somewhat like a one-legged man on crutches. He was able to
- stand on the center leg alone and spin about in a small circle, but the pair of legs were less stable. Walking
- human-fashion was impossible; the side legs acted in concert when supporting weight unless he concentrated
- directly on them, much as had the toes of his erstwhile human foot. Offsetting the third leg in front was a
- mound that tapered into the torso.
- The upper limbs were also triple, with the third arm rising from what he thought of as the chest area. Unlike
- the third leg, this limb was slender and delicate. Evidently this species had evolved from six-legged stock,
- modified for an upright posture. Three eyes decorated the head, and each saw in a different color and fashion,
- making an impressive composite picture. He closed one eye and found that the image differed substantially; much
- could be learned by using only one or two eyes at a time, and analyzing the result and filtered view. There
- were three ears on the back of the head, and these were also very good in concert, each responding to a
- different range. He was sure he could detect much more intricate and extended sound than ever as an Earthman.
- It was a good body, in good condition; he could sense its general health. He realized that this was to be his
- home for the duration: this alien body. The experience was novel but not alarming.
- "Drone!" an imperious inhuman voice called from the adjacent room, sonically assaulting all three ears.
- "Immediately, mistress," he replied on the center frequency, and perambulated hastily in that direction. He had
- supposed walking would be awkward, but for this creature it was not. Observing it in action, he suspected that
- if this body were to engage in a foot race on even terms with his human form, this one would win.
- The language employed, like the body, was alien to anything in his prior experience, yet he handled both with
- expertise. He had not intended to respond: his body had done that automatically. Was this the way of Ivo's gift
- of tongues at Tyre?
- The female he approached was similar in construction to himself, but larger and adapted for reproduction. He
- presumed that she laid eggs, perhaps thousands of them. Her swollen midsection was certainly geared for it. Yet
- her form was the essence of sex appeal by the definition of this species. He was of this species now, and he
- felt himself becoming interested, despite his human background. Well, other cultures, other ways.
- "Groom me for presentation," she snapped (her mandibles making it literal), not bothering to give a reason.
- Groton rebelled at the tone—but his body was already active, rushing to a cabinet, unsealing the waxy
- fastening easily, taking out a brushlike device, and approaching the female with due deference.
- This time he was sure the process was involuntary. This body he occupied was strongly conditioned. Unless he
- exercised conscious control all the time, it went about its business as usual.
- He/it played the brush over the fur of her thorax, some electrical interaction making the pelt brighten and
- fluff out with each pass. Groton let the task continue while he explored his situation internally. There ought
- to be an explanation somewhere, a mind belonging to this body—
- There was. As easily as his intention to search had come, the object was realized.
- He was the Drone: consort to the Queen. He was expected to do nothing other than cater to the whims of his
- mistress. In return, he received respect and the best of all physical things—so long as he retained her
- favor.
- "Fetch a new brush," she said. She did not explain what objection she had to this one. Why should she? The
- Drone did not need to know. He needed only to obey.
- He was in the hall and swinging toward the supply depot before he could assert himself. Perhaps it was just as
- well; what could his human mind have done except aggravate an untenable situation?
- "One static brush for the Queen," he snapped at the clerk, his own mandibles clicking as he addressed the
- inferior. This was the first worker he had seen: an apparently neuter creature, similar in outline to himself
- but only two-thirds his size.
- The worker affected not to hear him, going about its ruminating without a pause. This was unprecedented
- contempt—yet there was nothing he could do. He was a Drone going out of favor, and the workers knew it.
- Soon he would be cast off entirely, and the neuters would have the sadistic pleasure of ignoring him while he
- starved to death. He was unable to provide for himself, if the workers did not make food available; he and the
- Queen were royalty, requiring service for life. His body tensed in hopeless fury.
- Groton-human viewed the situation more dispassionately. He saw that it was conditioning, not physical
- capability, that made the Drone dependent. He did not appreciate the insult either, but realized that there was
- a more practical danger. If he delayed unduly in fulfilling this mission, the Queen's short temper would vent
- itself upon him immediately—as this insolent worker hoped. The creature was maliciously hastening his
- demise.
- It had not been like this a year ago, he remembered with the Drone's mind. Then, flush with the Queen's favor,
- he had been an object of virtual worship. The neuters had gone out of their way to do him little favors. It had
- seemed that he had complete control of the situation.
- Fond illusion! He saw himself now as the vehicle he was, to be used by both Queen and workers, possessing no
- personal value to either apart from convenience. An ambulatory reservoir of egg-fertilizer. He had known it
- would inevitably come to this, for all Queens were fickle—but, dronelike, he had refused to accept it for
- himself.
- Groton did not consider himself to be a man of violence, but the emotion of the despised being that was the
- Drone affected the more analytical human mind, and brought forth an atypical response. Atypical for both
- beings. The Drone was a creature of emotion, as befitted the royal consort; Groton was a man of action. The
- combination converted impotency to potency, perhaps in more than figurative terms.
- He swung the two side arms over the counter and caught the worker by the shoulders. He lifted, and the light
- creature dangled in the air.
- Groton held it there for a moment, letting it feel the great physical strength of the Drone—a strength
- that could crush it easily. No words were necessary. The worker's cud drooled from its mouth in its
- astonishment and shock. The Drone had done the unthinkable: it had acted for itself. It would hardly be more
- astonishing for a neuter to impregnate the Queen.
- He set it down, and in a moment he had the brush and was returning to his mistress. It would be a long time
- before that worker allowed its courtesy to slip again—and the message would spread.
- Expectations of this drone's downfall were premature.
- Unfortunately, setting back one predacious worker did not alter the fundamental situation. The Queen was tiring
- of him, and unless he acted to preserve himself in her esteem, his fate was assured. A simple demonstration of
- muscle was sufficient to faze a simple worker—but not the Queen.
- The Drone body and mind quivered with reaction and fear. The act it had just participated in was plainly beyond
- its nature, and it did not yet realize what agency was responsible. Once possessed of a fine intellect, it had
- largely succumbed to apathy, protecting itself from injury by ignoring it. Even the momentary surges of emotion
- were generally well disciplined, externally.
- Groton calmed it, discovering that it reacted as subserviently to his control as to that of the Queen. But now
- it knew—and he felt its mixed elation and alarm.
- If he had to occupy another creature's body, this one had been an obvious choice. The Drone had a good
- physique, a position of enormous potential influence—and very little genuine will-power. Yet that did not
- explain why he, Harold Groton, had been selected to enter this picture. How had his quest for information about
- the nature of galactic civilization been diverted into such a channel?
- Probably some answers were in the Drone's mind—but it would be a tedious chore digging them out and
- organizing the information for his own comprehension. There was a hundred times the store of facts he
- needed—relevant only to the Drone's life, not his own.
- The Queen glanced at him with a single eye to hint at her displeasure at his slight tardiness, but did not make
- an issue of it. He had performed within tolerance—this time.
- The communication screen came alive before he finished the grooming. "Mistress," the pictured neuter said
- respectfully, keeping its third eye lidded in respect for royalty.
- "Crisis already?" the Queen demanded.
- "A Felk battlemoon has materialized four twis distant."
- Groton felt the reaction of his host. A twi was a unit of spatial measurement equivalent to about eighty-five
- light-seconds. The Felks—enemies—were within six light-minutes.
- "So soon! So close!" the Queen exclaimed angrily. "How did they know?"
- But she did not wait for an answer. Obviously there had been a leak, and the Felks had followed this expedition
- in. They could not have traced it in space so rapidly, since this would require years by lightspeed
- observation.
- The Queen was already traveling down the hall at a pace that pressed even the trailing Drone hard. She was a
- magnificent specimen of life, large and sleek and strong, one who had been not merely born to command, but
- evolved for it.
- The supervisory workers were already assembled in the royal hall. "Show me your deployment," the Queen snapped,
- having no need of query or courtesy.
- A sphere of light appeared, bright dots within it. A map of space, Groton realized, that covered a volume half
- a light-hour in diameter. A sun, several planets, and two free moons showed within it: the Queen's battlemoon
- and the Felks'.
- A sun? No, the Drone memory corrected him: that was merely the identifier for their point of focus, the
- scheduled location of the station. There was no sun within two light-years.
- The magnification increased in response to an imperative gesture by the Queen, and the pattern of ships
- appeared. The Queen's moon was englobed by dreadnoughts—but already similar armor was emerging from the
- enemy moon.
- "What kind of disposition is that?" the Queen demanded. "They will penetrate it in hours."
- "Our tactician was lost in the last engagement," the leading officer-worker reminded her carefully. "We did not
- pause to pick up a replacement."
- "Naturally not. I would not tolerate an alien in my hive. Where is the next tactician-egg? Hasn't it been
- hatched yet?"
- Almost, the Queen reminded Groton of someone. Would her next expostulation be against the need to take care of
- every detail herself?
- "I am it," the officer said, answering her question. "But the enemy has surprised us and I lack experience."
- The Queen brooded over the sphere. "My Drone could make a better deployment," she said.
- The officer very nearly dared to show its ire at the disparagement. "Perhaps your Drone should assume tactical
- command."
- The Drone-mind suffered a flare of rage at the well-turned sarcasm. The Drone would never have implemented it
- or even expressed it in the presence of the Queen; but Groton, caught off-guard by the ferocity of the emotion,
- did.
- "The Drone will assume command," he said, with the resonance of triple-range vocal chords.
- The Queen turned, about to rebuke him—such rebuke possessing the force of exile—but changed her
- mind. "Yes—he will. You tactician—attach yourself to him as apprentice. It should be an intriguing
- experience."
- Thus had a single incontinent outburst netted him stellar responsibility. The whim of the Queen was cruel.
- Desperately, Groton assessed his resources. The Drone-mind was cowering in horror, as a man might who had just
- broken wind vociferously while saluting his country's flag. He had to detach himself from its emotional state
- and suppress that mind almost entirely to prevent being overwhelmed by cowardice. This meant taking over most
- of its remaining functions and dispensing with its store of information. He became the Drone.
- Yet it seemed to him that the joke was not as farfetched as the Drone's diminished status had encouraged the
- neuters to believe. The Drone had spent several years in close attendance upon the Queen, and surely had
- overheard many of her directives. The Drone had a good mind and excellent information; it was its timidity and
- dependence on the Queen that made the notion of command ludicrous.
- Neither Queen nor workers knew that a determined human personality had taken control. The Drone had strong
- emotions and weak initiative; Groton had mild emotions and strong will. The combination could have meant
- weakness in both departments—but fortunately that was not the case. This worm could turn, as the
- experience with the supply depot worker had shown.
- The Queen was gone, leaving him to his mess.
- The tactician-worker waited beside him as directed. Groton perceived the distress caused by this ultimate
- indignity—but the Queen's word really was law. The officer, like himself, was captive to its own
- indiscretion. The Queen had her own ways of dealing with insolence—and the remaining workers had had
- another lesson.
- "What is the immediate objective?" Groton asked the officer, determined to do his best, whatever became of it.
- "To drive off the enemy, so that the station can be installed and activated, and the mines placed," it replied.
- "And the mines will prevent subsequent attacks?"
- "Yes."
- "How does the Felk armament compare to ours?"
- "It is superior. In number, not in kind. We suffered losses in prior placements."
- "How much time do we have?"
- "Time for what?"
- Groton perceived another weakness of the worker-mind. "How much time do we have before the enemy breaks through
- and destroys the station?"
- "About six hours—unless we can outmaneuver them or frighten them away." The time had been given in alien
- units, but Groton had no difficulty in comprehending.
- He studied the map-sphere. "You plan to wait for them to attack?"
- "Yes."
- "Why?"
- "How else can we observe the nature of their thrust?" Orders or no, the officer had little respect for the
- Drone. Groton was reminded of a somewhat similar experience many years ago. Then it had been high school
- students. Now, as then, he had no higher appeal, contrary to the theoretical situation; he had to handle the
- matter by himself or be washed out.
- "Yet," he said, "with their ships massed and traveling at high velocity, our scattered forces cannot hope to
- stop them all. And one ship should be sufficient to blast the station."
- The neuter did not bother to reply.
- "You have no manuals of strategy?"
- "Of course not. A tactician learns by experience."
- The military mind! "Provided he lives."
- "Yes," the officer agreed. "My predecessor—"
- "And the Felks are similarly organized? No study of the lessons of history?"
- "I assume so. How else should it be?"
- How else indeed!
- It appeared that a noncombative but practical-minded Earthman was as well equipped to handle galactic battle
- tactics as the galactic commands were.
- "All right. Relay this directive: All ships, repeat all ships, to proceed immediately to the Felk battlemoon,
- there to attack without englobement."
- The officer, true to its nature, relayed the command. Groton heard the controller giving directions to
- individual ships. Then, thinking about it, the officer objected. "What?"
- "You wouldn't be familiar with the dictum 'The best defense is a good offense'?"
- "Certainly not."
- "Well, chalk it up to experience, once you see it happen. We know we can't stop their attack, if we wait for it
- to develop, nor can we hope to overcome the enemy in a normal encounter—but our ships do have an
- advantage of several hours in deployment. We can hit the Felk before the Felk hits us."
- "But with no defense—"
- "Wait and see." Inwardly, Groton prayed that his audacious gamble paid off. He was not, ordinarily a gambling
- man. He was exchanging almost certain defeat for a fifty-fifty chance at victory—but had he been a real
- tactician, he might have known how to play for two- or three-to-one odds in his favor. "Now you and I will
- board the fleet flagship," he finished.
- That made another stir. It seemed that commanders of naval operations generally ensconced themselves safely
- within the base moon and jumped to another location in space when the battle went against them. No wonder
- losses could be heavy!
- He had no time to concern himself with the details of the ship he boarded. It was a standard cruiser, heavy on
- armament, slow on maneuver, but capable of high velocity under sustained acceleration.
- Three hours later they were closer to the enemy moon than to their own. The Felk fleet was still emerging,
- though about half of it was now positioned around its base.
- "Form our ships into three wedges," Groton said. "Send them in simultaneously from three directions." And it
- was done.
- The enemy fleet deployed to counter this move. "Why don't they mass and attack our station?" the officer asked,
- baffled.
- "Would you attack the enemy home-base—if your ships were needed to save your own hide?"
- "Hide?"
- "Carapace. Chitin integument. Personal dignity."
- "Oh. Yes. Self-preservation."
- An underling-worker reported: "Felk commander has a message for Queen commander."
- "Is that safe to accept?"
- "Yes," the officer replied. "The Felks are reputed to be honorable in battle."
- "Let's see it then. Maybe he wants to negotiate."
- "Negotiate?"
- "Don't you ever bargain for some settlement short of total victory?"
- "Bargain?"
- Groton shrugged and watched the communications screen. A picture of a two-eyed creature with a caved-in face
- formed, manlike in its way. Do we look that ugly? he asked himself, already acclimatized to the shell-gloss
- outlines of the hive personnel.
- The Felk commander spoke in whistles, pursing its flaccid lips, but there was a running translation.
- "Commander, I am impressed by your technique." There was no opportunity for normal dialogue, since there was
- almost a minute's delay owing to lightspeed limitation of communications. By the time a rapid conversation was
- feasible, they would be virtually on top of the enemy moon. "I did not anticipate such initiative on the part
- of the Queen's forces. From the facility with which you are adjusting formation, I suspect that you, commander,
- are aboard one of the ships in the area. This demonstrates courage, and gives a tactical advantage over me,
- since my communications delay is much greater than yours. I am authorized to offer you a generous commission in
- our navy, if you will defect to our side."
- Groton stood before the silent screen, amazed at the audacity of it, "He's losing—so he offers his enemy
- a commission!"
- "Felks are adroit," the officer agreed indifferently. "That's how we lost my predecessor."
- "He defected?"
- "He tried to. But the Queen overheard and cut off his head. The mission was successful."
- Groton gained respect for the Queen. She, at least, had unquestioned loyalty to her side. Of course, she was
- her side, largely....
- Still, the notion of blatantly buying off the opposition.... "Well, beam back a picture of me," he said hotly.
- "Nothing else. We'll see if the Felks figure to bribe away the Queen's Drone."
- He had his answer in two minutes. "As it happens," the Felk commander whistled, "we hold captive a Queen of
- your species, obtained as the result of a singularly fortunate maneuver. Unfortunately her Drone died. She has
- been very lonely for a year, though we permit her a reasonable retinue of her neuters, hatched from the few
- remaining eggs she has in storage. I suspect she would not tire of a serviceable mate for a very long time,
- knowing she could not obtain another. As you know, the favor extended to individual Drones is normally of short
- duration—two or three years. I can arrange to send you to her."
- Again Groton was astonished. Would this creature stop at nothing? The Drone's memory verified that the Felks
- had overrun an outpost some time ago—one staffed by a Queen—and that a Queen could not raise her
- own Drone from an egg. Incest did not exist, in this culture.
- The Drone-mind clamored for attention. The offer, it developed was attractive, particularly to one who faced
- the prospect of early retirement by his present Queen. A Drone could live as long as a Queen could—if
- permitted. That amounted to decades. Felks did not lie; the offer was valid.
- Sorry, Groton said to the Drone. Then, to the officer: "Tell the Felk to look to his defenses. This commander
- is not about to be bought off by the boudoir."
- In the interval between messages, the officer fidgeted, then spoke. "Request permission to voice an opinion."
- The third eye was now lidded.
- "Granted, provided it is brief."
- "I had thought it was an insult to serve under Drone command. I was mistaken."
- "We all make mistakes," Groton said, touched but not forgetting that it would be a mistake to betray any
- personal softness. The mission was not yet over. More and more he appreciated the lessons of that hectic
- school-teaching session of his earlier life. Then it had been merely his pride and self-confidence that took
- beatings; now the lives of thousands were at stake.
- The third message showed that the Felk had not given up. "You evince a handsome loyalty to your Queen. But have
- you properly considered the nature of your loyalty to your species, and to other technological species? Surely
- you are intelligent enough to perceive that this station and the others in your program will hurt all of us.
- All we ask is the right to travel—yet only one species in a thousand is to be permitted this, if the
- stations function. Neither your species nor mine is among the select. Why cooperate as the tool of the
- destroyer?"
- The destroyer! Suddenly the meaning of all this settled into focus. He was participating in the origin of the
- destroyer station—perhaps the very one that had blanked out Earth's finest minds. Would blank, for what
- he experienced now had to be history at least fifteen thousand years past. His mystic journey had finished on
- target; there could be no more significant event.
- And he was on the wrong side.
- Or was he? He had learned, in his human existence, to consider things carefully. Surely the Queen had not gone
- to the immense trouble and danger of setting up an interference that would prevent her own kind from using the
- spaceways, without very good reason. He should understand that reason, before making his own decision.
- Meanwhile there was the practical problem of the enemy fleet. If he did not destroy it, it would destroy him,
- making his personal decision less relevant than his indecision. Unless he defected... but that would doom the
- station, and might be a mistake.
- "Send this reply," he said. "MESSAGE RECEIVED. SUGGEST YOU WITHDRAW."
- The officer obeyed, then came back to question the directive. "Do you expect the Felk to retreat merely because
- you ask him to?"
- "We'll see."
- In due course they saw. The Felk ships decelerated, looped about, and drew in toward their base. As time passed
- they docked within their moon in orderly fashion.
- "A ruse!" the officer said.
- "Yet you told me the Felk were honorable."
- The officer looked confused.
- More time passed. The last enemy ship docked while Groton held his own fleet back, suspending fire. For three
- hours they globed the moon at a safe distance. Then it vanished.
- The release of its gravitational influence jolted the Queen's fleet, sending ships tumbling outward. Space had
- been drawn into a knot and rent, and had healed itself. There was no doubt the Felk force had withdrawn.
- "He will pop back on the opposite side, close to the destroyer station," the officer predicted. "He didn't say
- he wouldn't, anyway."
- But the Felk did not return. In the course of the following twelve hours the workships finished laying their
- mines and activating the mines' perceptors and trackers. The area was impregnable. A mine could not travel, but
- it was supreme in its area of space. Anything that approached, even an entire fleet, would be blasted, unless
- it carried the nullifying code-signal. The Queen's fleet possessed this, of course—but its nature was a
- secure secret known only to the Queen.
- The Queen's moon detached the destroyer station and let the ships adjust its position. As it warmed up, its
- tremendous field of gravity took hold, hauling the moon into orbit around it, though it was two miles in
- diameter compared to the moon's two thousand. Child's-play, for this technology; gravity could be turned on and
- off as though it were a magnetic field. Probably the station had reclined in null-G aboard the moon, so as not
- to be crushed in storage. To think that the entire fabulous layout that was the destroyer-complex was no more
- than an installation problem to the Queen...!
- Then the destroyer signal was cut in, and Groton knew that it was spreading out in a sphere whose radius
- expanded at lightspeed. Any battlemoon that transferred in would not transfer out again—and the six mines
- would finish whatever stayed.
- "Request permission to ask a question."
- Groton understood the hive signals now. This was something important to the officer. "Granted."
- "By what reasoning did you determine that the Felk would leave upon request? I saw nothing in your conversation
- to indicate such a response." It paused. "I wish to learn, for I note that you accomplished the mission without
- loss of ships, when I surely would have failed."
- This was not a question Groton particularly wanted to answer, but he felt an obligation to give a serious
- response to a serious query. "Put yourself in the place of the Felk commander, he said, seeing a discreet way
- to handle the matter.
- "Defect to the Felk?"
- Oops! "No—I mean to imagine that your situation was his. You emerge from spacefold to set up your attack,
- and instead you find the enemy, whose force is inferior to yours, attacking you. What would you do?"
- The officer concentrated, adjusting to this unfamiliar mode of thinking. "I would wait for further
- developments," it said at last. "I would want to ascertain what advantage the enemy had that made him so bold."
- "Precisely. And if he maneuvers with such facility and confidence that you find yourself at a disadvantage in
- spite of your superior resources?"
- It thought some more. "I would attempt to subvert its commander." Then its center arm lifted in the gesture of
- sudden illumination, and its center eye blinked. "That is what the Felk did!"
- "Right. And if you could not buy off the enemy strategist?"
- "I would attempt to negotiate honorably." It paused again, now translating from actuality. "I
- would—appeal to that officer's loyalty to its species, and attempt to convince it that our causes were
- one. But—not too obviously, for its honor should not be impugned."
- "And if he agreed to consider the matter?"
- "If my position were already too bad to recover, I would have to leave the decision up to it. Perhaps that
- commander would—change its mind—once left to its own devices." It looked at him. "May I—"
- "You may not inquire. Perhaps you can decide for yourself what my decision will be."
- The officer remained silent, accepting it. Groton hoped the mental effort would do it good and that it would be
- a better tactician in the future. It certainly had come a long way in the past hours.
- And what was his decision to be? Here was his chance to change history, perhaps even to give his
- species—mankind—freedom of space travel. In one sense this adventure might be a dream, a vision;
- but in another he was certain it was real. Now he understood why Ivo had been unwilling to dismiss his Tyre
- episode out of hand. It was likely that the body that remained at the starting point was the mockup; the better
- portion of reality was here.
- Should he act now, sabotage the destroyer station before it could blank out the thousand traveling species for
- every one it promoted? He could fire a volley from his flagship that would wreck the station mechanism. What
- right did the Queen have to repress a major section of the galaxy in such fashion?
- He refused to act without information. That was the way of prejudice, and could only stir up catastrophe. If he
- wanted to know the motivation of the Queen, he would have to ask her.
- She was waiting for him as the operation closed down. "Drone, that was a creditable byplay. I had expected to
- have to retreat to one of our alternate locales during the enemy's commitment, perhaps even to leave you
- behind, but you surprised me by prevailing. What came over you?"
- He tried to say "Sometimes the worm does turn," but it came out, in this situation, as "Upon occasion the
- annelid completes a circuit."
- "You seem to have demonstrated your point. It would not be expedient to adopt a new Drone at this stage," she
- said. "Here to me, my cherished."
- Realizing her intent, Groton tried to resist. He was human whatever his present body, and infidelity was not in
- his nature. How would he face Beatryx, if—?
- But the Drone-body was already advancing to its destiny. The Queen was mistress, the dual concept a single one
- in this society. She was wife and monarch, never to be denied in either capacity. The Drone motor response, in
- this instance, was involuntary. Groton could observe but not control.
- From the hump before his middle leg a member of specific purpose telescoped out. His legs and arms reached to
- embrace her in the fashion peculiar to this association, and the act of intimacy precipitated itself.
- It lasted a long time, this fertilizing of several score eggs, and afterward, exhausted, he slept. His body had
- been drained in a fashion far more literal than that of human intercourse.
- When he woke, Groton was tired but in control again—and gifted with a unique appreciation of the meaning
- of rape.
- "Drone!" the Queen's voice came—and once more he was on his feet at her behest. His control extended only
- to the extent she permitted it; he could not disobey a direct order.
- "Groom me," she said as he arrived. Nothing had changed.
- "What is the reason for the destroyer?" he inquired as he worked, relieved that he could communicate to this
- extent.
- "The Horven knows," she said. "Shall I send you to it in my stead?" Then, as was her wont, she made her
- decision immediately. "Yes. Groom yourself, feed yourself, and go. I have eggs to lay."
- Obediently he turned the brush on his own fur, less handsome than hers, and set about procuring a meal of the
- royal nectar.
- Who or what was the Horven? The Drone had never been curious, and consequently knew very little on this
- subject. The Horven was a member of a civilized species of long standing—a species that did not deign to
- trade with others, or even to communicate with them. Yet one was resident within this moon.
- He searched the Drone's memory. Three times before, the Queen had descended into the depths of the Horven
- apartments, after setting up destroyer stations. On her return, the moon had begun the transmission cycle
- leading to the emplacement of the next unit. Did she have to make a report? Receive orders? This was an
- unacceptable concept to the Drone. The Queen bowed to no creature.
- Why, then, these regular journeys? What passed between them, the Queen and the strange alien? He was about to
- find out.
- The Queen put him aboard the hanging descent-car with something almost like affection. "Do not linger, male-
- thing."
- The capsule was translucent; distorted images entered to tantalize him. The polished metal walls of the upper
- landing gave way to bleak stone as the unit swung along at a rapid pace. Sometimes it seemed he was traveling
- through natural caverns; at other times the walls were so close as to resemble a tunnel. Once light blazed, as
- though he were navigating a fiery hell.
- He gathered that the Horven liked its privacy.
- What was he supposed to say to it? He had no idea.
- At least he knew that one could make such a visit and return intact. Whatever business the one species had with
- the other, it was not physically dangerous. Still, the Drone-mind within him gibbered with fear.
- Was it right to use this body so callously? He had control, and he had exercised it ruthlessly. How would he
- feel, if an alien intellect had taken over his own body and suppressed the higher centers of his brain?
- "I believe this is a temporary phenomenon," he said to the Drone. "When I have finished my business here, you
- will have your body back."
- And was surprised to pick up a fiercer burst of terror than any before.
- The capsule halted before he had a chance to ascertain the reason for this reaction. Its side panel opened and
- the vehicle tilted to disgorge him.
- He looked about. He was in a spacious hall, and standing on a circular platform. A manlike figure was before
- him, dressed in an enveloping robe. Its head was inhuman in a manner he could not quite define. It was as
- though his three eyes were unable to focus on it. Had they been able, he was sure he would have discovered
- truly alien features—alien in ways his imagination had never hitherto touched on. Somehow his eyes ceased
- to track whenever he looked at it, whether he used one or two or three at once. The effect was frustrating in
- much the way an Earth-blackout was: the direct glance at a given object was less productive than a peripheral
- view.
- "Welcome, Harold," the creature addressed him. Its voice, like its face, was undefined; perhaps it had spoken
- telepathically.
- "I'm not sure I—"
- It gestured benignly with a blurred extremity. "Certainly we know you, Harold. We most appreciate your
- difficult excursion from hence. You are the only Earthman to participate in our venture, and we comprehend the
- peculiar courage required."
- Groton had not been aware of any exercise of courage, and in any event this development was contrary to
- anything he could have expected, let alone feared. "You know where I—when I come from?"
- "Approximately one hundred million years hence, in the Third Siege. We have a number of volunteers from that
- period, since the cultures of that time have a superior perspective on history."
- "I thought I was a messenger from the Queen. I'm wearing the body of her consort."
- "So you are," the Horven said, as though just noticing. "That means that the last unit is in place and
- activated, and we can begin on the next. I shall initiate the cycle."
- "You handle the gravity compression? I thought the Queen—"
- "Once the unit has been activated, the ordinary species cannot attune to the Traveler," the Horven explained
- gently. "Several hundred personnel must be discorporated, which means they must be assessed by the Traveler. I
- will handle juxtaposition."
- Of course! The destroyer blocked off that macroscopic band, as Ivo had observed, making it impossible for most
- minds to draw on the intergalactic knowledge. Ivo had set it up, for the human party; the Horven—
- "You are the one-in-a-thousand!" Groton exclaimed. "The species that is immune to the destroyer."
- The Horven donned a surprisingly Earthlike helmet and touched a panel. "There will be several shifts," it said.
- "This will take some time, but it only occupies a portion of my intellect. Please do not interrupt your
- discourse."
- The Queen's workers, Groton realized, would be lining up and passing through Traveler introductions, exactly as
- he and Beatryx and Afra had while Ivo guided them past the lurking destroyer. But the Horven must be handling
- them a score at a time! "You—you built the destroyer!"
- "We—with companion species—designed it," the Horven admitted. "We cannot construct or emplace the
- individual units."
- "Why are you doing this? Why are you reserving true space travel for yourselves?"
- "It must be." Lights were flickering within the helmet, and Groton wondered what circuitry was being utilized.
- A lead to the macroscope, naturally, and trunk lines to the upper regions....
- "Wait! I need to get back upstairs before the cycle begins." Shifts there might be, but if he missed the last
- one it would be the end, for him.
- "For what purpose? Your destiny is with us."
- "It is?" He was confused.
- "We have weighted the repressive side of the scales. The destroyers have been installed. Now we must balance
- the other side, or the task remains half-complete. Another representative will replace me here; you and I
- travel to Horv."
- "And I am supposed to—to participate in the other side too? When I'm not even certain I agree with this
- side?"
- "I apologize for my neglect," the Horven said. "I forgot that you have not been adequately informed, since your
- species evolved many millions of years after mine passed.
- "The Traveler destroyed the civilization of our galaxy once, and perhaps many times. This travel-power is too
- great for juvenile species; it only releases and amplifies their destructive impulses. Therefore we of the
- Second Civilization, rising from the ruins of the First, have had to take defensive measures against this
- Second Siege. Only we who have left violence behind can safely travel from star to star. In this manner we may
- preserve galactic civilization until the Siege is over."
- At last it was beginning to fall into place. Now he remembered a fragment of—history?—he had heard
- or read at some point, that reinforced this explanation. "The destroyer—only destroys evil minds?"
- "Not evil minds, no. To be savage is not to be evil. It is a necessary phase in the evolution of a mature
- species. But until it passes, that species must be protected from itself. It must be confined to its planet of
- origin and that planet's immediate environs. It does not have the discretion to indulge in galactic
- contacts—apart from purely communicatory, of course. Maturity requires an extended apprenticeship."
- "And you Horven are one of the mature species?" He had thought to put irony into his tone, but it misfired; he
- was already convinced that the Horven was mature. "Why do you make younger species do your bidding? Why not
- simply place the destroyer-units yourselves?"
- "Because there is insufficient violence in our nature. We can conceive of suppressive strategy, though with
- discomfort, but cannot implement it. We could not survive the destroyer ourselves, if such pacifism diminished
- in us."
- Thus this temporary cooperation between forward-looking juveniles and inactive seniles. Were they correct? Was
- this necessary to save civilization?
- He thought about the incalculable violence of human history, and was not prepared to deny the need for this
- step. Man had always been willing, even eager, to spend much more effort on calamitous war than on any peaceful
- pursuit. Governments had spent billions of dollars, francs, rubles for war every year, while allowing their own
- less fortunate citizens to starve. Man in space would be the same—except that the stakes would be larger.
- "I am a member of a juvenile species," he said.
- "Of the juvenile stage in your species evolution, yes. No species is inherently young or old. It may be that
- the climax of mankind will be a far greater thing than that of the Horven. Possibly some visitor from the
- Fourth Siege will know. We hope the measures we have taken here will enable your species to achieve such
- distinction."
- "I hope so too," Groton said fervently. Then, remembering: "What is the other side of the scale? If this side
- is the forced preservation of galactic civilization?"
- "Exploration, comprehension, knowledge. The nature of the Traveler, and the reason for its infliction upon us.
- The civilization that developed such technique is as far beyond the Horven as the Horven is beyond the Queen's
- hive. Surely its purpose was not to extinguish our progress."
- "Why don't you just pay the source a visit and find out?"
- "That was attempted during the First Siege. But our predecessors were unable to map intergalactic convolutions
- prior to exploration there, and intergalactic ventures were unsuccessful."
- "What happened to them?"
- "They never returned. Some survived, but their travel mechanisms were inoperative."
- "How could you learn about them, then?"
- "Their traces were picked up subsequently on the macroscope."
- "But that could take millions of years, if they were in intergalactic space!"
- "Yes. It was the Second Civilization that recorded the signals, and they only succeeded in this because they
- were specially attuned and alert. The macroscope is hardly effective beyond our own galaxy, ordinarily. By the
- time the signals had been identified, it was far too late to come to the assistance of their originators, even
- had travel been feasible at that time. But these casualties did assist in the mapping of deep space in a
- general way, and provide clues as to the nature of its dynamics. We believe we can now achieve the other
- galaxies in our cluster."
- Intergalactic travel! "So you mean to discover the truth about the origin of the Traveler," Groton said. He
- realized that this was a similar quest to the one the party of human beings had embarked on. They had seen the
- destroyer as their enemy, when in fact it was their friend (though a stern one!); Earth might have been ravaged
- many times by other aggressor species, except for that protection, and the sapience of man might never have had
- the opportunity to develop. The true enemy was the Traveler—but this too was only conjecture, until its
- rationale was known.
- "Your invitation tempts me," Groton said. "The prospect of such explorations is fascinating. But my essential
- loyalty is with my own. I can't simply—"
- "You are not among your own. I assure you, the Queen's ire at losing her present Drone will pass quickly. The
- King is the game, for us. Though of course we can arrange to have you occupy a different body, and return this
- one to—"
- No! No! the Drone-mind screamed. Do not send me back alone!
- "Oh, I see," the Horven said. "Thoughtless of me. Of course you would be unable to cope with the revised
- situation." It was addressing the Drone directly. "But it would not be kind to keep you in subservience
- here—"
- The other Queen!
- "Yes, we could do that," the Horven agreed. "You realize you would be captive of the Felk, however—"
- The Drone was more than willing to take that chance.
- "You have no objection to assuming some other form?" the Horven inquired of Groton. "We cannot act unless all
- parties are amenable. It would be quite unlike your normal one."
- "The horoscope does not specify species," Groton murmured. What was he getting into?
- The Horven continued to wear the helmet, but Groton was sure it was simultaneously setting about preparations
- for the other transfer. "There are still horoscopes in your time?"
- "Still? You mean you practice astrology here?"
- "That depends on what you mean by the term. I don't know enough about your conception either to believe or
- disbelieve in it, let alone practice it. If you would clarify—"
- "It—I—" Groton found himself at a loss for words, never having anticipated this turn of
- conversation. He finally had to settle for a concrete example, his well-versed summaries having fled his mind.
- "Well, I was born on October 11, 1940, at Key West, Florida. That means—but you don't know Earth
- chronology or geography!"
- "I comprehend your meaning, nevertheless. Go on."
- "The time was 4:10 p.m., Eastern Standard. That's important for the house structure. So the configuration of
- the signs and planets at that moment—well, I'm a Libra personality, sun in the seventh house, moon in
- Aquarius, Mercury—"
- "If you will provide an exact listing, I will transpose to my framework," the Horven said. "I perceive that
- your astrology does approximate one of our disciplines, but of course your local viewpoint does not coincide."
- "You can convert my terms to your chart?" This was as marvelous an accomplishment as any he had witnessed here.
- "We Horven specialize in orderly intellectualization. One of the tools we have developed is a unified-
- orientation conception of horoscopy that enables us to apply the details of any local system in the galaxy to
- our own framework. A precise interpolation would take much time, of course, since we have to compensate in your
- case for a sizable time differential, but we can certainly make a crude alignment now."
- For the next hour they compared notes, oblivious to all else except for the Horven's continued helmet-
- transaction. It needed no chart on which to post information, keeping complete data in its head.
- "My tentative plotting indicates that you will enter a new cycle of experience at a life duration of about
- forty-two of your years," the Horven remarked at last.
- "Mine also," Groton said. "My sun passes out of Scorpio at that point." He stopped. "Ouch! That's now!"
- "Of course, since you are coming with us."
- Very neat. "But my wife—"
- "Provide me her configuration, and we shall see how she fits into this picture."
- Groton did so, though he felt increasingly uneasy about it. This being, this representative of a mature
- species, was frighteningly intelligent in obscure ways.
- "I am sorry," the Horven said then. "This is not an aspect that would normally be evidenced in your more
- limited framework; but mine is, if I may say so without giving offense, somewhat more advanced. Your wife is
- dead."
- The words struck with a physical impact. "But—"
- "Your astrology cannot pinpoint such an event specifically, but ours can. Even after making due allowance for
- error introduced in transposition, the probability is virtually conclusive. Her skein terminates abruptly."
- Groton remained stunned, not yet ready to believe it "How—when—?"
- "On that I cannot yet provide exact details, but can say that there were ironic elements. She perished as the
- result of her own decision, in an effort to do what she believed was proper. She was mistaken, but it was a
- noble demise. As for when—in this framework, approximately ninety-eight million years ago. In
- yours—ten minutes."
- "I must go back to her!"
- The Horven removed the helmet. "It is better that you do not."
- Groton looked into the indefinite countenance and knew with terrible certainty that truth had emerged. The life
- he had known was over; his return could only wreak havoc. He was committed to a new existence—alone.
- The mellow music of the bassoon welled up as he explored the final triad. Ivo saw his resources falling away.
- The horn had failed him after all; it had departed, never to return. Only one hope remained—yet in this
- concurrency, it was impossible for him to affect its theme.
- On the ground stood a fair young woman. She cast a smile at him as though it were a handful of soil, seeking to
- assimilate him into her world, but he passed her by. Next was a massive bull stroking the sod with its hoof,
- epitome of power yet not aggressive. Last was the goat: a gentle doe, horned and bearded after the nature of
- her kind, and with a fine udder. Surely the symbol had been of a virile male-goat, a buck, most indefatigable
- of animals! Perhaps it was, elsewhere; but this was what he saw, and he would not deny it.
- She contemplated him, the gaze of one eye suggesting DISCRIMINATION, and the gaze of the other—and he
- paused to verify this, taken aback—LOVE. He stood before Capricorn, responding to the bleat of the
- bassoon and the ambience of earth, and could not speak.
- She said: "Music is love in search of a word."
- Then he saw behind her, written upon an erosion-ragged mountain cliff, as it were a palimpsest:
- There was some initial difficulty emplacing the suppressors—popularly known as "destroyers"—as many
- immature cultures were unable to appreciate the long-range purpose of these devices. The mission was
- nevertheless accomplished. Although galactic communications were necessarily inhibited during the Second Siege,
- civilization itself suffered stasis instead of abolition.
- In fifteen to twenty thousand years the fields of the several destroyers overlapped each other, and crews were
- dispatched to place their defenses on standby. As more time passed, these units became repositories for
- galactic artifacts, and even assumed museum-status. As individual species came of age and thus were immune to
- the interference signal, they tended to visit the stations, and sometimes to leave examples of their own
- cultures for display. No untended immatures were able to visit the stations, because of the nature of the
- broadcasts, so selectivity was no problem.
- The Second Siege, like the First, endured about a million years. This time civilization rebounded almost
- immediately, no worlds having been ravaged or cultures destroyed by other than natural means.
- The destroyer network was considered to be only a holding action, not a solution. The major thrust was of a
- different nature. The first concerted extragalactic exploration was undertaken, and entire civilized planets
- made the jump into deep space. Chief among the advanced species participating were the Ngslo, the Horven and
- the Dooon. Their objective was the realization of the true nature of the Traveler and its reason for being.
- They departed—and did not return.
- The ultimate nature of the Traveler was not discovered until the Third Civilization picked up reports from the
- surviving explorers, many millions of light-years removed. The truth, as brought out by the dispatch from Horv,
- was remarkable, and it changed the entire complexion of galactic intercourse.
- Afra felt the impetus shoving her into an alternate existence. She felt the compulsion of the music, the
- fascination of galactic history, so much more vast than anything she had studied before. There was a period of
- timelessness, of drifting to melody; then the surroundings firmed and she was standing in—
- A supermarket.
- Ahead of her was an aisle bordered by towering promontories of canned goods: on one side beans—lima,
- pinto, kidney, navy, great northern, vegetarian, pork &, black-eyed peas. On the other side, other
- vegetables—potatoes, canned sliced white; corn, whole kernel; corn, cream-style; tomatoes, stewed; peas,
- baby; peas, dried; beets, cut. To one side beyond the near islands were the fresh vegetable bins, leafy green,
- round red, puffy white. To the other side was the main portion of the store, neat hanging signposts identifying
- the aisles; there were pyramidding displays of canned fruit juice, boxed powdered milk, cartoned cigarettes,
- bagged charcoal and the eleventh volume of a cheap coupon-encyclopedia.
- Shoppers moved with their wire push-baskets, their noisy children running free to sneeze into the wilting
- lettuce, splatter bottles of grape-juice on the worn tiles, and eat bananas before they were weighed and
- marked, dropping the peels behind the larger boxes of detergent where the cleanup crews wouldn't discover them
- for days. Harried housewives changed their minds about half-gallon cardboard containers of ice cream and left
- them melting on the racks of chewing gum by the cash registers. Pot-bellied, sun-baked men ambled along in
- shorts and the hairs on their chests, picking up six-packs of beer. Freshly nubile girls clustered titteringly
- near the magazine rack, ignoring the PLEASE DO NOT READ IN STORE sign.
- Afra stood there, absorbing it all. This was not the kind of vision she had anticipated. The market was
- ordinary, the people typical. Everything was routine middle-class, and there was nothing alien or even outr
- about it, apart from its slightly old-fashioned aspect. Certainly it illuminated the "truth" about the Traveler
- signal in no obvious way.
- She turned about, seeking the exit. It was her conjecture that this vision would endure for an established
- period, and that whatever was to be manifested would be manifested regardless of her own actions. All she could
- do was wait it out, and act to preserve her equanimity.
- Her eye fixed on a man standing in the nearest checkout line. He was muffled up as though braced against a
- storm, though the temperature within the store was comfortable, and he wore a tall silk hat tilted at a rakish
- angle. His hand was buried in a pocket as though he were searching for small change, and there was something
- familiar about him.
- And she was screaming and running down the aisle away from that sight, terrified. She lurched into the bean
- shelf, hurting her shoulder and sending cans toppling down about her and bouncing to the floor and rolling
- across the aisle. People turned to look at the commotion, surprised.
- "No!" she cried shrilly. "I reject it! I refuse—"
- So negative was her reaction that the scene itself wavered, losing its reality. She knew it was a vision, and
- she had a strong will and a fundamental aversion, and it was enough. The setting could not hold her any more
- than a nightmare could hold the sleeper who once consciously realized that it was dream-fabric and rejected it.
- The room in the destroyer station came into view, the other people floating in their places. She had broken
- out.
- Harold and Beatryx appeared to be conscious also, until she saw that they were not reacting to tangible events.
- Their eyes moved, their limbs worked, and now and then one of them would speak—but they paid no attention
- to her or to each other. They were deep in vision.
- Ivo still played his instrument. His hands did all of it; he did not need to blow into any type of mouthpiece.
- The sounds were a medley of instruments, an entire orchestra, but with four predominating: the violin, the
- flute, the French horn and the bassoon. She could even pick out the individual themes. Strongest, for her, was
- that of the bassoon, though she knew it to be a difficult instrument to play effectively. Once someone had told
- her a story of a bassoonist who had gone crazy because of the reaction of his body to the reed vibration, tight
- lip-compression and extended breath pressure; he had suffered from chronic suffocation during long passages
- because he never had enough time to breathe out, and so his brain had been starved of oxygen. She had rejected
- this notion even in childhood, but knew that the bassoon in certain respects defied the conventional laws of
- sound, and that standard fingering did not guarantee proper notes.
- She remembered hearing—minutes ago? hours?—one of the distinctive bassoon passages that composers
- were fond of; they were typically enamored of the coloring of this instrument's tone, and of the clownlike
- propensities of its upper register. She had experienced both a short while ago, when she had been a—
- A goat?
- She shrugged away the suggestion. Evidently music did have power—the power to project the members of the
- present company into individual visions. Was Ivo himself having a vision? He was playing—yet his eyes
- moved and his lips parted as though in speech, without a sound. A partial vision, perhaps.
- She had escaped the nightmare planned for her, but did not seem to be much better off. She was with the others
- physically, but in effect alone. What had gone wrong? Surely she should have entered an illumination of history
- or philosophy, not a supermarket!
- Beatryx spoke: first an embarrassed laugh, then words. "I am not fair! I'm almost forty!"
- Almost. Harold had of course made up one of his horoscopes on her, saying something about a "seesaw" planetary
- typing. From that, ironically, he was able to conclude that Beatryx was the proper wife for him. Was he right?
- It did seem so. And what did he have to say about Afra's own marital propensities, determined by her moment of
- birth? She had never admitted it to him, but she was quite curious.
- As though in answer to his wife, Harold said: "One static brush for the Queen."
- Ivo went on playing, and from his weird instrument the music of the symphony projected throughout the chamber.
- Afra continued to respond to the passages of the bassoon, neither loud nor sharp yet truly penetrating in their
- fashion. Almost, as she watched, she could make out the outline of the unique woodwind within the framework of
- his moving hands. Eight feet of tubing, narrowing and folding back upon itself, with the tilted slender
- mouthpiece containing the double reed, and with holes to govern the notes. The theme was expressive,
- distinctive, evocative, expert, soulful; it moved her, drew her down into—
- She yanked herself out, refusing to reenter that vision.
- "It's very nice," Beatryx said. "But—"
- "The Drone will assume command," Harold replied.
- A pause. "Thank you so much."
- Afra watched and listened, confining the encompassing music to the background of her awareness. They were
- participating, and she was not, and that bothered her—but her own vision was unacceptable. Could she
- enter one of theirs?
- "What is the immediate objective?" Harold asked. Afra arched an eyebrow at him. "The immediate objective? To
- find out exactly what is—"
- "And the mines will prevent subsequent attacks?"
- "That depends what—"
- "How does the Felk armament compare to ours?"
- Afra shrugged. "I don't think you're paying proper attention, Harold."
- "How much time do we have?"
- She looked at Beatryx and at Ivo. "We may have forever, Harold, if we don't get out of here before we starve.
- If we can starve in vision-land. Dreaming may be entertaining, but, as Frost said—"
- "How much time do we have before the enemy breaks through and destroys the station?"
- "Really, Robert Frost is hardly an enemy. He—"
- "You plan to wait for them to attack?"
- "As Frost said: 'The dreams are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I
- sleep, And—' "
- "Why?"
- "Harold, you don't ask 'why?' to a poem!"
- "Yet with their ships massed and traveling at high velocity, our scattered forces cannot hope to stop them all.
- And one ship should be sufficient to blast the station."
- "Of course Frost said 'woods' rather than 'dreams' but I thought I'd—"
- "You have no manuals of strategy?"
- "No I don't, damn you! I stick to simple sex appeal."
- "Provided he lives."
- "Provided you live. You are impossible, Harold."
- "And the Felks are similarly organized? No study of the lessons of history?"
- She turned away from him, finding the amusement shallow. The mellow bassoon theme surrounded her again, and she
- fought it off again. She could even make out the rosewood length of the instrument, the distinctive circle of
- ivory around the top opening. Despite the bizarre circumstance she was moved by the poignant beauty of Ivo's
- music. He had taken this alien contraption and produced—a symphony, each theme, each instrument of which
- was discrete and perfect. He was a skilled bassoonist, as well as a remarkable flutist. If only she had known
- about his musical gifts earlier!
- Beatryx looked unhappy. "Here?" she inquired.
- Afra wondered what it was that so disturbed the woman; then, observing her actions, began to understand.
- Inadequate sanitary facilities, in that particular vision. She went to help Beatryx, so as to spare her
- embarrassment when she came out of it. It turned out to be the motions only, and a little later the older woman
- slept.
- Time passed.
- Harold talked again, of ships and tactics and negotiations. Never, oddly, of astrology. She would have been
- happier if he had.
- Afra practiced swimming in the air, and made her way away from the others. She searched for the boundaries of
- the chamber, but the mist became dense—"lovely, dark and deep," she thought—and in this free-fall
- state she had no internal sense of direction. She realized that she could lose herself here, from even that
- pseudo-companionship the others provided, and did not relish the prospect.
- She returned to the group, fixed her eyes on Ivo and his mythical band, and allowed herself to drift toward
- sleep. When this was over, there would be—oh, important matters—to discuss with him.
- His—well, his talents, and... his...
- Nothing had changed when she woke.
- "I really don't know anything about campsites," Beatryx was saying.
- Several hours had passed, certainly—yet she was not hungry or otherwise in distress, physically. It was
- as though bodily processes had ceased for the duration, except as suggested (but not consummated) in the
- visions for verisimilitude. Somehow consciousness, direct or indirect, persisted in each person in spite of
- this stasis. Another marvel of galactic science? Why not.
- Ivo still played. She wondered how his steadily agile hands were enduring. No fatigue either, here? At any
- rate, the visions were likely to end when the music finished. Then what?
- Their mission—her mission—had brought them to this dread place, yet the climax was oddly
- insubstantial. Where was the enemy? Where the denouement? She had not really expected to struggle bloodily
- against a horde of ravening monsters; but this?
- More hours passed. Harold slept. Beatryx went through a mysterious episode of terror, crying "Kill it!" and
- after subsiding from that, "That's a man!" Then she was very quiet.
- Harold talked to someone or something evidently inhuman, unhuman. Portions of his dialogue were revealing. "You
- are the one-in-a-thousand! The species that is immune to the destroyer... You—you built the destroyer!...
- Why are you doing this? Why are you reserving true space travel for yourselves?" Then: "And I am supposed
- to—to participate in the other side too? When I'm not even certain I agree with this side?"
- Waking or dreaming, at least Harold seemed to know which side he was on. He was putting up, in his fashion, a
- good fight. Afra, in his (assumed) position, would have deleted the polite qualifications and told somebody to
- go to hell sideways.
- "The destroyer—only destroys evil minds?"
- Afra was forming more of the picture. Evil minds—like that of Bradley Carpenter? Surely Harold would not
- succumb to casuistry of that ilk.
- But certain other bits he uttered stirred the beginnings of a profound doubt in her. Had they misjudged the
- destroyer, after all this? Impossible—yet...
- Beatryx began to speak again. She was talking with someone about fire, and water, and humanity. Before that she
- had spent considerable time calling "Black—black—where are you?" Afra had had to tune out the
- plaintive repetition. Now they were talking together, and Harold was finally on the subject of astrology. It
- was difficult to follow both conversations simultaneously, and she had to settle for snatches from one or the
- other.
- Then: "You were not wrong, Dolora."
- Beatryx went through an inexplicable series of contortions, then was walking or swimming strenuously, while
- Harold continued blithely discoursing on astrological technology. Then a sudden outburst: "But you don't
- understand! You have to listen—"
- Her voice was cut off by an inarticulate noise, and Beatryx doubled over, her face twisted in agony.
- Afra paddled over as rapidly as she could, aware that a new and ugly element had been added. A crisis of some
- sort was at hand.
- Ivo went on playing.
- Beatryx was lying quietly by the time she got there. Afra tried to lift the older woman, but in the null-G only
- wrestled herself around. It was pointless, anyway—position made no difference, when there was no weight
- to support. She was acting without thinking, and to no avail.
- Suddenly she realized that Beatryx was not breathing.
- Afra clasped the woman's head, poked a finger in her mouth to clear it of any possible obstruction, and applied
- the kiss of life: mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
- There was no immediate response, but she kept on, exhaling into Beatryx's lungs, breaking to inhale herself
- while hugging the inert chest to force out the air. Again, she could not depend on gravity to assist.
- As she labored in such measured desperation, hearing Ivo's bassoon and Harold's intermittent remarks in the
- background, scenes of their association illuminated her vision.
- Beatryx, at the torus-station, carrying a platter of food in to their first meal as a foursome: She and Harold,
- Afra and Ivo... and Brad too, then. Beatryx, beside her as Joseph blasted into space with the macroscope.
- Beatryx, trying to comprehend a difficult concept during an early discussion. Beatryx, declaring "Meeting come
- to order!" Beatryx in spacesuit, tentatively exploring the Schn-moonlet of Triton.
- Beatryx, always ameliorative. Unimportant flashes—yet so poignant now, as Afra realized how important the
- quiet presence and support of the older woman had been to her.
- Older? Beatryx had never looked so young as she did at this moment....
- Still she did not breathe—and there was no heartbeat.
- Beatryx, tending her garden on Triton. Beatryx, waxing hysterical in Afra's defense, during that mock, not-so-
- mock trial.
- "Tryx, Tryx!" she cried. "You were the only one who understood—"
- It was no use. Beatryx was dead.
- Afra wrenched away and launched herself at Harold. She took hold of his shoulders and shook, rocking herself
- more violently than him. "Wake up! Wake up!"
- Harold did not respond.
- "Harold—your wife is dead!" she cried in his ear, slapping him.
- Now he began to react. "But—"
- "She just died and I can't—I can't—you've got to do something! Wake up!"
- He looked stunned. "How—when—?"
- Hastily Afra explained, continuing to shake him so that he could not relapse.
- His eyes widened. "I must go back to her!"
- Then, gradually, he went limp, and nothing she could do revived him. The dream had reclaimed him.
- Afra looked around in a fever of desperation—and saw Ivo, still playing. It was time for the music to
- end.
- She went to Ivo and yanked the instrument from his grasp.
- The orchestra stopped, the sound dying away from all the misty reaches of the hall.
- The floor reappeared beneath them, and walls around them, much closer than she had supposed, and doors in front
- and back. Weight returned.
- She watched Ivo, waiting for his awareness. He sat for a moment, eyes unfocused. Then he raised his head with a
- sharpness of decision that was not typical and looked directly at her.
- "Thanks, doll," he said.
- "Ivo—something terrible has happened. Beatryx—" He stood up smoothly, flexing his fingers as though
- they were stiff. "I know. A black shot her with a speargun. Silly woman."
- Afra stared at him.
- "And your engineer—he's in stasis on the way to deep space. He's beyond the reach of this toy, now. It'll
- be years before he comes out of it, if he ever does. That cuts it down to two, baby."
- She backed away. "You're not Ivo! You're—" He picked up the orchestral instrument.
- "Ivo—Ivon—Ivan—Johan—John—Sean—Shane—Schn! You broke the chain,
- blue-eyes. You interfered—again!—and Ivo-at-the-idiot-end lost out, just as Brad did. You do have a
- talent for that. Now—"
- A memory—something important—nudged the surface of her awareness, but she had no time for it now.
- Afra raced toward the door, not pausing to consider where she might be going or why.
- "Not so hasty, dish," Schn called after her. "I am not finished with you." He lifted the musical device and
- held it dramatically before him. "In fact, I have not yet begun to fight."
- She had almost reached the door, and could see a lighted hall beyond. It was not the one they had entered by.
- She reached toward it—
- And rebounded from a pliant rail.
- The recoil threw her to the floor. She landed on her fanny, facing back toward the center of the room.
- It was not a room any more. It was a stadium, filled by faces peering up, none distinguishable, and by crowd
- noises that remained in the background. She perched on a raised platform enclosed by resilient cord. It was a
- square: the type of arrangement known as a boxing or wrestling ring.
- Schn was entering at the far corner, dressed in fighting trunks and laced footwear. His muscular torso shone
- brown in the glare of the overhead light, and his eyes and teeth were brilliant.
- Her glance caught him in that pose: a pugilist entering the ring. It was, as she saw it, the moment of supreme
- power for him; he dominated. There was nothing she could do to stop him or even inhibit him, whatever he
- intended.
- As though recognizing the strength of the image, he paused, head inside the ring, one foot outside, the rope
- held up by one hand. "You don't understand, do you, stupid," he said. "You don't know what any of this means.
- Hell, you purebred clod, you can't even face your own symbol."
- She pulled herself up, but hesitated to climb out of the rope enclosure until she knew what Schn was planning,
- and what other barriers he was able to conjure. It just might be safer in the ring than out.
- He did not move immediately, and in that interim of tension she assessed herself. She was dressed as she had
- been: culottes halted above the knee, snap-slippers designed to fit within the large space-suit shoes, elastic
- blouse, ribbon tie-down for her hair. The outfit was brief, for the sake of mobility and air-circulation within
- the space suit, and attractive, for the sake of appearances outside. She cared about those appearances and
- didn't mind admitting it, and she had had special reason to be presentable at this time.
- Now Beatryx was dead and Harold gone, and Ivo had given way grotesquely to Schn. Beatryx, looking raptly at
- alien pictures. Harold, fascinated by strange machines. Ivo—
- Her aspirations of yesterday were meaningless. She could not even spare attention for proper grief, though that
- would come the moment this chase abated.
- Her assessment was now in terms of physical fitness: the clothing she wore would not encumber her in any way,
- and she had the health to move quickly and with stamina. She knew from fairly intimate observation that the
- Ivo/Schn physique was not particularly impressive. The apparent musculature of his present body was a function
- of the illusion, the waking vision he had somehow simulated for them both. She had no doubt that Schn, with
- his multiple and devastating skills, could overcome her readily if he once caught her—but he might not be
- able to catch her.
- She confined her assessment to those physical terms. She did not question his mental superiority. Emotionally
- he might be a child, or at best an adolescent; intellectually he was the leading genius mankind had produced.
- He had been talking while she considered these things. He seemed to be showing off his knowledge: bragging, now
- that he had the opportunity.
- "No, you don't comprehend at all." Schn repeated. "So I'll have to lecture you on the fine points, or you
- won't appreciate any of it. Too bad you're such a puny audience, but you're the only part of it that's real."
- Afra waited with one hand on the rope, ready to dive out of the ring the moment he entered. She knew she was in
- trouble, but she was also aware that unreasoned flight would get her nowhere she wanted to go. That had already
- been demonstrated. Somehow Schn had the power to form a setting that physically inhibited her—and she
- would be well advised to discover exactly how he did it. This time it had been a square formed of rope; next
- time it might be worse.
- "The key," Schn said, "is this tool of the galactics." He held the instrument aloft, the one Ivo had played,
- and she realized that it must have been in his hand all the time. She had not noticed it before, since the
- ring. "And 'key' is exactly what I mean. The key to the inner sanctum; the key to history; the key to
- personality. Call it the symbolizer. SYMBOLIC = SYMBOL PRIME = S′. It transmutes reality to symbols and
- vice versa, and thereby makes plain the truth. I recognized it for what it was immediately, of course." He
- snickered. "Ivo thought it was a flute! He tried to play Sidney Lanier on it!"
- And succeeded, she thought, knowing better than to interrupt now. She was recovering confidence in herself; if
- she maintained the proper spirit, she would be supreme over this situation, somehow. Schn had been overrated.
- "Actually, it is a teaching device," he continued. "By bringing to life the symbolic essence of a situation or
- personality, it instructs the participant and viewer. Of course it is necessary to interpret the symbols
- correctly, but anyone with a smattering of—yet you lack even that, naturally."
- "Lack what?" she asked, wiling to cooperate in order to keep the dialogue going. He was teasing her,
- childishly; she knew that, but already she had a valuable hint. If she could get the galactic
- instrument—S prime—away from him—
- "Astrology," he said. "You have closed your mind to it, and that makes it ideal for my purpose. So the symbolic
- ascendant means nothing to you."
- She waited, refusing this time to rise to the bait. Schn, obviously, had dipped into Ivo's memory and picked
- up her continuing debate with Harold. He was trying to annoy her—and that could mean that his power would
- be diminished if she refused to react. The sophisticated response to his exertions was best.
- "The ascendant is the overall indication of personality; the rising sign for each individual. My own ascendant
- falls at Aries 21, and the symbol for that position is A PUGILIST ENTERING THE RING, as you can readily
- perceive if you concentrate. This indicates full confidence in my own powers—justified, of
- course—and a complete lack of personal sensitiveness. Thus the galactic machine has dramatized my basic
- personality and graphically illustrated the power inherent in me."
- "That isn't the way Harold described astrology," Afra murmured, wishing this time that she had taken the
- trouble to learn more about it, whether she believed in it or not. Its rules were evidently governing this
- game.
- "Harold was an engineer, not an astrologer. His approach was too conventional and conservative, though last I
- saw of him he was getting disabused in a hurry. Those old galactics really had their sciences worked out."
- He was still toying with her. If she tried to defend Harold, she would be defending his hobby as well, and so
- be on exceedingly tenuous ground. "What about Ivo?"
- Schn gazed at her speculatively across the ring, but did not challenge the shift in topic. "Ah yes, Ivo.
- There's someone really confused, for all that I invented him. He oriented on something from each of you, not
- really knowing the proper use of S-prime, and came up with a mlange that must have made the galactic creators
- wince. Harold Groton's astrology, Sidney Lanier's poetry, darlin' Afra Glynn's supposed intellectual
- discrimination and Tryx Groton's suicidal sympathy—all tied in with a galactic history text that the
- instrument put out as a kind of sideshow attraction. Fascinating juxtaposition, I admit. I was a fiery ram,
- 'Aspiration' astrologically, 'Trade' poetically, and the strings musically. I engaged in First Siege
- internecine power politics. I had a good thing going, too—until you torpedoed Ivo for me."
- Suddenly the goat image made sense to her, and the evocative music of the bassoon. These had been her symbols,
- in the combined context. And love—where the poem had specified Trade for him, it had specified Love for
- her. And she had felt it—
- "What is my symbol?" she inquired, genuinely curious now. "My—ascendant."
- "You don't want to know it, cutie. You are afraid of it, neurotic that you are."
- "Am I? Or is it that you are afraid to animate my symbol, instead of yours? Would that give me dominance?"
- "Lady, I'll gladly match symbols with you planet by planet. That would put us on an even footing, in spite of
- my inordinate superiority in overt life. But you would achieve parity only if you are able to face your own
- nature when you see it objectively—and you aren't. Your ascendant controls you, and probably your planets
- do too. It is a contest you would lose by your own prejudice."
- "I'll take that chance—if you will. I don't think you know how to compete, on an even basis."
- He smiled, the vicious grin of the warrior tasting blood. "Calling my bluff, Glynn?"
- She smiled back, as maliciously as he, though she was afraid of him. "Yes, prettyboy. And if you cheat, you
- lose." She wasn't sure what to expect, or whether Schn would really bind himself to the outcome of a fair
- competition, but if it nullified the advantage of his intellect...
- "Take it, child," he said, touching the instrument. "Your ascendant is Taurus 15—A MAN MUFFLED UP, WITH A
- RAKISH SILK HAT."
- And she was back in the supermarket, the same one she had fled, and she was facing the man beside the checkout
- counter. She had asked for it—and she was terrified.
- Something obscure happened. People backed away from the cash register. The muffled man looked up, around,
- pausing a moment as though considering. It seemed that he was looming over Afra, and she was very small, very
- fragile. Something remarkable was about to happen—
- The large man moved.
- There was the sound of a gun being fired.
- She wrenched herself out of it—and was out of the rope enclosure and passing through the door she had
- originally been running toward. She had escaped one vision only to return to another—unless she could
- also escape Schn and the galactic, the demonic, S′ device.
- This room was thoroughly finite, at least, and well lighted. Banks of what appeared to be electronic equipment
- stood against the walls, and there were a number of screens flashing what she took to be broadcast patterns.
- This was, by her reckoning, a communications center. That suggested some kind of occupation of the station, at
- least at intervals. Automatic machinery would not be set up for viewing like this.
- Schn was there ahead of her. He sat on a podium in the center of the room, behind a table whose white cloth
- extended down to touch the floor. He wore a high turban and stared into a shiny crystal ball. "Man," he said
- grandiosely, "has the capacity to bring the entire universe within the purview of his mind."
- She had either to retreat into the original chamber or to pass directly by him. Neither alternative appealed,
- so she temporized. "I thought you were supposed to be a pugilist."
- "That, my dear, as I so tediously explained, was the ascendant. Now we are with the sun, and it behooves us to
- be more acute. My sun is in Aries 19, and so I am as you see me: A CRYSTAL GAZER. So it is written in the most
- authoritative text." He stared into the ball. "I see that the referee has graded the first round on the ten-
- point must system: ten points to Fire, no points to Earth, who washed out. An excellent start—though it
- would be more entertaining if you were to at least put up some show of competition."
- So she hadn't lost yet! "How do I know that's an honest score?"
- He shoved the ball in her direction. "Witness."
- She stepped up to look into it. Inside was a great-horned ram copulating with a frightened doe.
- "Miscegenation is all I see," she said. Then, saying it, she realized that the animals too were symbols: the
- ram of Aries and the goat of Capricorn. Schn had played his little prank on her. Two different
- species—somewhat as the two of them were of different races. A bald proposition, a dirty joke—or a
- threat. He had said that her own prejudice would cost her victory....
- "Too bad nature forbids it," she said in reply to his mocking gaze. She resented the implication that this was
- the only use for her—to submit to the sexual assault of the male—knowing it to be a conventional
- objection of womankind but still stirred by it. There was that about Schn that fascinated her in ways Ivo had
- not; yet she was not about to encourage his casual lewdness. In her mind was the remark Ivo had made about
- childhood sexual activity at their project: homo, hetero and group. She would contest the issue more fiercely
- in the coming rounds.
- It was amazing what a difference the mind made. Schn did not resemble Ivo at all, though the body was the
- same.
- "Yes, you would lecture on nature," he remarked, as though that proved something. "Your symbol for Capricorn 12
- is A STUDENT OF NATURE LECTURING."
- "How do you know?" she demanded, nettled again in spite of her disbelief in the personal relevance of such
- things.
- "Dear little Ivo studied your horoscope. Now all that information is mine." He grinned. "You are, you see, in
- my power. That chart has you laid out and nakedly displayed, and I can sample any part of you I desire.
- Fortunately I don't desire your mind."
- She controlled her mounting irritation. "How much do you expect to accomplish, depending on astrology?" Again,
- she had to keep him talking, while waiting for an opportunity to gain some advantage. Genius he might be, but
- his youthful arrogance might defeat him yet.
- "There are many ways to view existence," Schn said. "Symbols are useful for minds of any potential, and
- astrology is an organized system of symbols as valid as any. I would accept it as readily as, say, religion. Of
- course, no symbol has validity apart from the values and qualities assigned to it by the user. What alternative
- would you prefer for your nuptial?"
- "What makes you think the ram is so damned attractive to the doe?"
- "What makes you think the ram is trying to be?"
- "You imagine your word is my command?"
- "Sister, there is no other functioning homo-sapiens man within fifty thousand light-years, and you can't
- penetrate the destroyer field by yourself. I can. The question is, am I to be obliged, however clumsily, on my
- way home, or do I travel alone?"
- Could he travel alone? Even if he turned off the destroyer broadcast—a thing he might not be able to do,
- assuming it had safeguards against interference—he would not succeed in freeing the spaceways of its
- effect. Earth was in the field of another station, and in any event it would require at least fifteen thousand
- years for the destroyer to clear itself, limited as it was by light velocity.
- Yet he was in control of his body and Ivo's experience now. That meant he had found a way around the destroyer
- memory—and, therefore, the destroyer itself.
- Or so he wanted her to believe.
- "I don't believe you," she said. "I don't think you can go home without my help. Otherwise you wouldn't be
- chasing me now, or trying so hard to impress me."
- "Or winning rounds against you. Maybe I'm too softhearted to leave you here alone. Are you calling my bluff
- again?" he inquired scornfully.
- Suddenly she was afraid again, and could not answer. Ivo's body had been possessed by a demon. How important
- was this peculiar contest, and how badly was she losing? Evidently the verbal interchange was part of it, and
- she was at a disadvantage there. Brad had always been able to twist around her statements and confuse her, and
- Schn had the same ability.
- On the other hand, if she should somehow win—and theoretically she had an equal chance to do so, if she
- could only marshal her complete resources—what would be her victory? A liaison with Schn?
- "You always were slow to get the message," he said. "I sent you an obvious one as soon as Brad lost out, but
- naturally you fouled it up."
- "You sent me a message!"
- "Surely you didn't think I needed to send Ivo one? I had to borrow his hand to type it."
- Her curiosity had been aroused, and she didn't care that this was what he had intended. "Then why didn't you
- just tell him what you wanted?"
- "He wouldn't listen."
- That simple? That all the mystery and confusion engendered by the obscure missives had been Ivo's fault? Again,
- she doubted it.
- "Why, you wonder, did I not address the message to you? And, I explain—for you are exceedingly interested
- in explanations at the moment, your symbol says—I found it necessary to be circumspect. Ivo was almost
- always on guard, and only in rare moments of negligence was I able to assume control of so much as a single
- limb. He happened to pass the teletype section while in a condition of shock from the Senator's demise and
- Brad's discommodation, and I froze him unaware and set up the message. But I didn't dare to do it in any style
- he comprehended, or mention you at all, or he would have snapped right out of it then. I had very little time,
- so I just jotted down the opening line of Lanier's "The Marshes of Glynn" in polyglot, sticking to languages
- you could interpret. I thought you'd be smart enough to follow that up and get the real message."
- "Well, I wasn't and I didn't," she snapped. "So what was the 'real message'?"
- "The terminal couplet of the poem, stupid. 'And I would I could know what swimmeth below when the tide comes in
- / On the length and the breadth of the marvelous marshes of Glynn.' Anybody with a note of savvy could see that
- what swam below Ivo's Glynn was Schn, and of course a Georgia girl would be familiar with the poem. Once you
- fluttered your pale pink eyelashes and told him to give over—"
- "What makes you so sure I would have told him?"
- "Back in that hour you fancied you were enamored of Brad Carpenter. You thought Schn would help you get him
- back. You were charmingly nave. Still are, too."
- She remembered. Had she known the truth then, she would have sacrificed Ivo... foolishly. It had taken the
- phenomenal chain of events of the ensuing period to change her thinking—and her values.
- "After that, Ivo was on to the polyglot dodge, so I had to try other stuff. He wasn't exactly bright, but he
- did know enough not to get taken twice on the same boat, and he was stubborn as hell. The problem was to
- identify him without alerting him, and there were not many opportunities. Fortunately he never did catch on to
- the fact the messages were not intended for him, so the arrow-address gimmick got through."
- "So you made a Neptune-symbol to send us so far out we'd be dependent on you to get us home again—"
- "Obliged to cry uncle, yes. Neptune is the planet of obligation, if we accept the view of your engineer's main
- authority on the subject. Traditionally, of course, Neptune is allied with liquids, gases, mystery, illusion,
- dreams, deceit—but that simple hint passed you by, naturally. At least Groton, duffer that he was, began
- to catch on that—"
- "And a shorthand message once we were there," she said, cutting him off. She was furious with herself for not
- delving beyond the superficial, at the time of that message. Liquids and gases—as in the melting process?
- Could Schn actually have foreseen that? Mystery, illusion—as in the whereabouts of Schn behind the
- illusion of Ivo. A multileveled communiqu indeed, and she had missed it. Brad would have grasped all of it....
- "But why did you want to take over if you couldn't help Brad?" she asked him then. "Surely you didn't care
- about the world crisis?"
- "There was an entertaining situation developing. Why else?"
- She stared at him, aghast at his indifference, but he met her gaze levelly. "Brad's mind gone and a United
- States Senator dead, the very future of the macroscope project in peril—and you found it amusing?"
- "Entertaining. There's a distinction, had you but the wit to grasp it, chick. The challenge of a signal from
- space that could stupefy and kill—"
- "Why did the Senator die? No one else did."
- "The rules of the game require me to remind you that every serious question I answer seriously is gaining me
- points."
- "And any you can't or won't answer will gain me points." She hoped.
- He shrugged. "More people would have died had more been exposed. Your others were all mature, sedate,
- pacifistic scientists who had largely come to terms with reality. The destroyer activates a neural feedback
- that varies directly with intelligence and inversely with maturity. Thus an intelligent mature person is
- unaffected, or an unintelligent immature person. But an intelligent immature one is hit with all the voltage of
- the disparity between those qualities. The Senator was a primitive genius (I use the term loosely)—so he
- died. Brad was a medium-mature genius, as were the other scientists."
- "And what are you?" she inquired bitterly.
- "I'm like the Senator, only more so. I'm smarter and less mature than he was. That was part of the challenge:
- to handle that alien signal, when its direct impact on me would have fried my brain—almost literally. I
- dare say I'm the brightest primitive ever to be spawned on Earth."
- She was not going to debate that. "You plan to do a lot of maturing in the next few hours—or whenever you
- decide to toddle off home?"
- "Hardly. I'm happy the way I am. No point in going the way Brad did. I could, incidentally, have saved his
- life, there on Triton, had I been on hand. Not that you would have wanted me to."
- "What?" Afra knew that he was trying to shock her again. He was succeeding. He was also leading her on to more
- questions and so eroding her competitive position farther. Yet her recognition of this process did not halt it;
- she had to know. She was hooked on the bits of knowledge he injected.
- "No, I don't mean you were in love with Ivo then. You still were fixed on Brad, for what that was worth. But
- you wouldn't have wanted him to live."
- She continued to stare at him, at his mercy.
- Now his eyes dropped to the ball. "I see," he murmured, "I see the evolution of man, from a speck of protoplasm
- to maturity. I see the free-swimming larvae of the echinoderms developing into the radially-symmetrical forms
- of adulthood. But I also see neoteny: the larval form preempting the reproductive capacity, and so bypassing
- maturity. I see a long evolution of such ambitious larval forms, extending even beyond the sea and onto land
- where true maturity becomes not merely impractical but impossible. Thus, instead of mature starfish, larval
- Man."
- "Are you trying to suggest—"
- "You knew we derive from the Echinoderm superphylum. You know the characteristics of that type of life. What
- did you suppose would happen, when you interfered with the evolutionary reconstitution? By abolishing the
- timing mechanism, you permitted the subject to run its full course—without benefit of the proper terminal
- environment."
- "Oh, Brad!" she cried in anguish.
- "But you wouldn't have cared to marry a starfish, however mature. So—you arranged to kill him."
- "I didn't know!"
- "Sweetie, ignorance of the law is never an excuse—particularly the law of nature, and most particularly
- when you are supposed to be a student of nature lecturing."
- "But—"
- "But even proper attention would not have reconstituted his blasted mind. Recycling can't extirpate tissue
- damage; it merely reshapes what's there. He would have made a very stupid starfish."
- "Stop it!" she cried.
- "You stop it. You know how—if you have the courage."
- And she was in the supermarket again, still terrified.
- The sound of the gun's explosion was fresh in her ears. There was a struggle occurring at the counter. The
- checkout girl screamed, a man fell. The silk hat rolled across the floor toward Afra. It was huge, and it grew
- larger as it came, swelling as though to crush her beneath its turning mass.
- She screamed and ran. She crashed into the bean shelf, hurting her shoulder and sending cans toppling
- heavily... somehow aware that this had happened before, but unable to stop. People turned to stare, but she
- ignored them, crying "No! No! No!"
- Somehow her unguided rush took her through a door at the rear, and she was hustling through a winter chamber
- with hanging slabs of raw meat, stumbling among tremendous boxes. A man with a cleaver loomed over her, and she
- saw the dark blood on it, and she screamed again and crashed through another door.
- Then she was in a narrow alley, running between steaming garbage cans. The door behind her burst open and a man
- charged out. "Little girl!" he bellowed. "Little girl! Come back here!"
- He was twice her size in every direction, and his skin was dark, his teeth great and white, and she fled.
- There were trucks with baked black rubber tires taller than she was, and an ambience of gasoline odors and
- growling motors and the choking fog of exhausts, and she was trapped between them and the black man. She
- screamed again and dashed for yet another door, symbol of escape. It was closed. Desperately she reached up to
- grasp the handle and pull down the stiff latch, while the black pursuer closed in.
- Suddenly it opened and she burst inside. These were strange quarters: tables of alien contour, bed-pallets of
- singular discomfort, toilet facilities embarrassingly foreign to biped anatomy. Yet they were obviously
- quarters, intended to be of comfort for resident creatures of established form, if not for man.
- Afra went through the rooms of this complex, wondering whether the owners were present or when they might
- return. Obviously someone ran this station, or at least attended it periodically, and this was where the
- caretakers reclined in comfort during their off-hours.
- One room terminated in a low wall, emptiness above it. She found that it was a balcony. It overlooked a
- courtyard of fair size, and green shrubbery sprouted from planters about its nether perimeter. This suggested
- that the caretakers were not so different from human beings in the things that mattered. This was essentially
- Earth-air, Earth-gravity, human-comfort temperature, and the decor was harmonious to manlike tastes. There had
- to be strong biological resemblances between the species, however many eyes or ears or antennae either had.
- Noise; and into the court below marched a troop of men, a motley mob. They were in blue-collar working
- clothes—overalls, protective helmets, grime. Some were white in the face, some black, some yellow; most
- were composite shades.
- She discovered that she had with her a huge shopping bag, evidently acquired at the supermarket, and she was
- holding it in her arms as she tried to lean over the rail for a better view. The balcony had been constructed
- with adults in mind, and she had a hard time of it. It did not occur to her to put down the shopping bag; that
- was filled with nameless but wonderfully promising things. Things that her mother would undoubtedly fashion
- mysteriously into chocolate cake, raspberry ice cream and crisp pin-wheel cookies. She could not let that bag
- go, even for a moment.
- But as she poked her head over, so that one pigtail flopped against the rail, the men beneath spotted her. A
- rolling cry went up. "We want REPRESENTATION!" the workers cried.
- "Well, send up your represen—repre—somebody!" she called back, not expecting her soprano voice to
- be heard in all that clamor.
- A single man entered behind her. "I am he," he said, startling her. She began to cry, but stopped in a moment,
- realizing that it could do no good.
- The man was Schn, tremendous.
- "I thought you were a crystal gazer," she remarked in an attempt to conceal her lingering tears. She was not,
- actually, as surprised as she might have been.
- "That was back at Aries 9," he said. "The sun. The ref scored it 10 to 2, favor of the crystal gazer,
- incidentally. This is the moon: Gemini 21 for me, Capricorn 19 for you. I see you are dressed for the part."
- "The part?" This adult conversation was difficult.
- "Your symbol. A CHILD OF ABOUT FIVE WITH A HUGE SHOPPING BAG."
- "I'm seven," she corrected him primly. Then she reacted to her own statement. "I am?"
- She was. No wonder adults appeared so large.
- "And you called me immature!" he exclaimed, laughing. "What a fine time you had analyzing me, after I injected
- a little excitement into Ivo's determined mundanity. You—a card-carrying WASP—wanted to
- psychoanalyze me in absentia. Little appreciating the inherence of aggression in the human species, the factor
- that brought it to dominance on Earth. Well, call me a BLASP, you who think in terms of acronyms."
- "A what?"
- "A black Anglo-Saxon Protestant. Or a brown Mongolian Catholic, or a yellow Hottentot Moslem. I represent all
- of them; I am all of them, as you see by my symbol outside. And perhaps it is fitting, precious, that your name
- is Afra. That's very close to Afram, or Afro-American, the convenient designation for—"
- "A whole group. A whole—labor demonstration?"
- "Exactly. I am Man's universal spirit, and I reject all property and private rights as invalid limitations,
- other than purely social. I tell you that right and justice only prevail when properly dramatized—when
- the issue is forced. And I attack this problem, as I do all problems, with courage."
- "And not a trace of false modesty," she murmured. Yet she felt the need to help the demonstrating workers,
- whatever their problem might be. She wanted to be a part of the group, to participate, to conform, even in
- rebellion. "What do you want, speci—anyway?" Her stature as a five- or seven-year-old child (physically
- five, mentally seven?), though it prevented her from getting out the entire word "specifically," was not any
- more incongruous than the rest of this bizarre sequence.
- "I want freedom," Schn said, menacing in his emphasis. "I want security. I want power. I want equality. I, the
- hapless peoples of the world, want everything you have now."
- "Me—the modern white?"
- "Yes. You have the good life. I want the right to ravage the world as you have done. I want to destroy as much
- as you have done. I want to drive myself to the brink of extinction as you have done, you smug white turd. You
- little bitch, I mean to take—"
- And she was fleeing his madness again, whether in the station or on the streets of Macon she could not tell,
- nor did it make a difference.
- Outside was an ocean shore, and the day was windy. Ancient Indian women sat facing outward, their quick hands
- fashioning useful artifacts. Afra peered up and down and found no hiding place, knowing the pursuer was not far
- behind. He could quickly catch her here, unless—
- Near at hand lay a blanket, woven of many colors but only half complete. She plumped herself down, full-size
- now, and composed her aging features. She took up the blanket and its attached apparatus and became one of the
- artisans.
- Schn did not appear. Afra became interested in the blanket, noticing the fineness of its warp and weft, and
- the skill of her own wrinkled brown hands as they manipulated the strands. She discovered in this dull routine
- an excellence of self-expression, a meeting of human needs. She found that she could accept this calm,
- unhurried work, and take special pleasure from it. She was preserving an art, and this was a worthwhile thing
- to do, no matter how far beyond it the machines of civilization went. The old ways were not inferior, when the
- larger framework of existence was considered. There was reward in simple diligence.
- Over the troubled waters flew a white dove. She watched it with minor interest, expecting it to be confused in
- the general turbulence of wave and cloud, but it was not. Its direction was clear, its mission firm. It flew
- low over the surf, skillfully reconciling the difficulties of gust and spray and maintaining its orientation. A
- clever bird.
- It sailed over the beach toward her, and came to rest only a few feet away. She could smell the tangy spume it
- carried on its feathers, now fluffing dry. It walked over the sand, cocking its head forward at each step in
- the manner of a chicken. Then it fixed an eye on her.
- "Welcome to Mars, honey," it said.
- Schn! She had been discovered after all, in the way she least expected. "How did you find me?"
- "I had to give you the score, sugar. You did better on Luna, but you flubbed it when you ran out again. No
- problem is solved that way. Ref called it 10 to 5, me."
- "Who is this referee?"
- "Funny thing. My Mars is in Taurus, where your Ascendant is, while your Mars is in Aries. Do you suppose this
- inversion is significant? Mars is the planet of initiative, you know."
- "You are avoiding my questions, pigeon," she remarked. But she knew the answer to the problem. Obviously they
- were still personifying their symbols, and her seeming act of free will had been mere conformity. He knew what
- the symbols were, so still had an advantage over her. He would keep on winning, as long as he could shock her
- or scare her into running. She had to gain the initiative—and this was the obvious place to start.
- She stood up, breaking the spell of the symbol. She was in a large room filled with machinery, and it had been
- the steady sound of its operation that had suggested the breaking of ocean surf. This appeared to be a section
- of the station's power plant, and the generators were keening, rumbling and pulsating with internal potential.
- Somewhere there was probably an atomic furnace utilizing the total conversion of matter into energy, and these
- were merely the units that harnessed and channeled that awesome power.
- Schn was standing before her, still mocking her. Had it been physical capture he desired, he would have had
- her long ago, contest or no contest. It was her mind he was after, despite his denial, and he would not give up
- that chase until the ram had his way or the doe escaped entirely.
- Had there, she wondered, ever been a ewe for him?
- "Do you know the derivation of the Mars symbol?" he inquired. He sketched it in the air: the circle with the
- northeast arrow emerging.
- "Of course. It represents—"
- "Not that cute little fib you tried to hand the engineer. Surely you realized the phallic essence of that
- pictograph? And Venus—" he described that symbol also in the air—"Venus is about as direct an image
- of the female apparatus—"
- "It depends on your viewpoint," she said, interrupting him. But she hadn't thought of the symbols in this way,
- in spite of their normal application to designate male or female.
- Schn was in effect jabbing at her now, keeping her off-balance while he set up for his pugilistic KO. The
- ascendant evidently influenced his entire mode of play. Similarly, her own ascendant was a continuing liability
- that she had to face and reconcile, if she were ever to match him on an even basis. How many planets, how many
- rounds remained before the terminus? Seven?
- "And did you realize that innocent little Ivo thought you were having an affair with Harold Groton?"
- She tried to halt her reaction, but it was as though he had knocked her breath out of her. "What?"
- "Ivo failed utterly to comprehend your capricious Capricorn ways, and he labored under his own bumbling
- reverse-prejudice. White girl, white man, and all that suggestive dialogue—"
- "But that was only because Harold understood how I'd—" She paused, then went on brokenly. "How I had let
- Brad go and—and—"
- "And presented your fickle heart to Ivo—without bothering to inform him. So you just waltzed around with
- the engineer, enjoying the sensation, waiting for some romantic moment to let Ivo discover what was in store
- for him, totally insensitive to his interim feelings. Oh, lass, that was your finest hour. It was beautiful!
- How the irony of that little contretemps delighted me! But you know, he almost caught on at one point. Luckily,
- I succeeded in diverting him before it became conscious."
- She turned a horrified glance on him. "You—you actually—?"
- "Be practical, doll. Why should I match Mars to Venus, or give the water-carrier his goat? If Ivo had known how
- you really felt, he never would have yielded to me. As it was, the thing was near. Only his depression and the
- sudden breaking of the theme while he was in harness—"
- "Oh, Ivo!" she exclaimed with the sharpest pang yet.
- "A little late for regrets, cutie. Ivo no longer exists, unless you count his special memories, that are now
- part of my own experience. He has no more reality than I did while he was in control. You will have to settle
- for his body."
- She was running again, routed again, and it was Macon. She knew that the man behind must inevitably catch up,
- for there was no place to hide, no one to protect her. Her father was gone; she had seen him fall when the gun
- fired, there in his great overcoat; and his hat, not really silk, had rolled gruesomely toward her as though it
- were his severed head....
- Now the black murderer was almost upon her, seeking to kill her too. In a moment his hands would fall heavily
- on her frail body and tear her apart—
- She tripped and fell headlong on the cold pavement. He came up, his giant body looming over hers, and, as in a
- nightmare, she could not move.
- "Got you!" he exclaimed.
- It was an Easter sunrise service. Jesus Christ had died and had risen again, and she was present to give
- thanks, this lovely anniversary of this holy occasion. Yet her heart was heavy, for no miracle of this nature
- had come into her own life. Twice, three times her warning might have saved a life, the life of someone dear to
- her—a warning she had been too confused or self-centered to provide.
- She had lost, again—yet somehow she had acquired a spiritual resource, an immortal strength to bear
- whatever had happened. This dawn ceremony—
- She was near a tree, in this open country gathering for worship. It was a spreading live-oak, the moss
- festooned upon it elegantly, and on the bark of the most proximate branch nestled a large and rather handsome
- cocoon. As she watched, momentarily distracted from the service, the chrysalis opened and a butterfly emerged,
- damp and gleaming. It spread its new wings, waiting for them to dry, and it was a beautiful creature unlike any
- other.
- Iridescence traveled along its vanes. "They don't call me Schn for nothing," it said to her.
- She snapped out of it. The room was another mass of machinery in the bowels of the station. Monstrous power
- cables drained into a multi-layered grid whose purpose she could not fathom. It, too, in its way, was
- beautiful; everything during this session seemed to be rainbow.
- "Gravity generator," Schn remarked. "Neat trick, converting electrical power to gravitrons so efficiently. Of
- course they learned it millions of years ago from other species, via the macroscope; no one knows who first
- developed the technology for broadcasting, because the early species were hesitant to use it. Once we return to
- Earth, we'll set up a local station; lots of things that process is good for besides sending information to
- space."
- "Is that all you're interested in? How to make a profit from this?"
- "By no means, babe. I would hardly be wasting my effort on you, in that case. I routed you by six points in
- Mars, by the way."
- That put him ahead 40 to 11, cumulative point score. She had to begin fighting back, or the final rounds would
- be meaningless. "Why are you wasting time on me? Because I'm the only viable girl within fifty thousand light-
- years?"
- "Simplistic thought. You always did view male-female interaction as primarily sexual. That was one of the
- things that put Ivo off. He gave you love, and in exchange you offered pudenda." He paused, but she had no
- comment. "Strange notion, that it is the woman who does the giving, in intellectual or physical love. In truth,
- all she does is acquiesce to the gifts of the man."
- "Assuming she acquiesces at all. Not every gift is attractive."
- "Fortunately, in the human species it is the male who has control. This is one of the reasons Man developed
- intelligence and culture instead of remaining backward. The control of reproduction, and thus of evolution, had
- to be taken away from the female before progress could be made. Some claim that man's capacity for rape makes
- him more evil than those animals that are not up to such activity, but the opposite is true."
- "Of all the—!" But she was failing into his verbal snare again. That was the way of defeat.
- "Even so, sex is overrated. The moment the urge is indulged, it becomes uninteresting. My real passion is for
- knowledge; satisfaction there only begets the desire to know even more. I have an insatiable appetite for
- intellectual experience. A man can sustain himself for a long time, acquiring comprehension, particularly with
- the macroscope."
- He still hadn't admitted his real reason for pursuing her, in that case. Once she knew what he wanted from her,
- she might have the clue to prevail against him, somehow.
- "How did you get around the destroyer?" she inquired, trying another approach. "You claim that exposure to it
- would kill you immediately, but yet you plan to travel."
- "You wouldn't understand the technical medical description, so I'll make it foolishly simple," he said with a
- fine air of condescension. She had learned not to challenge him, and did not. He continued: "The problem was in
- blocking off a memory without experiencing it. I knew it was there, but I did not dare touch any part of it. It
- did not hurt Ivo because his personality was incomplete, acting as an inherent barrier; but the moment I
- absorbed that facet into the rest, the network would be complete, the circuit closed, the dam breached. Yet
- without that portion, I could not control the body, so I had to have it. And, unfortunately, memory is not
- confined to any particular area of the brain. A single impression may be laid down across untold synapses, like
- a thin layer of snow. It really is a generalized acid conversion. So I had to delineate the particular memory
- layer that was the destroyer concept, and isolate it a step at a time, neutralizing it synapse by synapse until
- every avenue had been caulked."
- He walked about the room, happy to be telling of his achievement. "I had to do it by developing spot enzymes
- attuned to, and only to, the acidic configurations typical of the destroyer trace. All without leaving my own
- body or brain. You ever try exerting conscious control over your own enzymes, when you didn't even have it for
- your body? I dare say that was the most remarkable act of surgery ever performed by man."
- Afra was impressed in spite of herself. "You operated on your own brain-chemistry?"
- "It took me six months," he said. "The final step was rephasing the synapses I'd blocked, so that I had access
- to other memories without invoking the destroyer. I didn't want to be stuck with Ivo's superficiality, which
- was what would have happened had I merely hurdled the gap without reestablishing the lines. I wasn't crossing
- over into his world, I was assimilating it into mine, with that one culvert remaining. But that involved mass
- testing and alignment. So I cast him into a historical adventure with a fair variety of experience, where I had
- a certain measure of supervisory control, and set up my alternate connections while that barrage of new signals
- was coming through."
- "All that—just so you could come out and chase a girl around the office?"
- "All that for self-preservation, chick. Ivo was bound to foul up somewhere, and he could have gotten us all
- killed instead of just the two or three he did manage. I don't appreciate having my destiny managed by a moron.
- I had to be ready to step in if he ever got smart enough to cry uncle."
- "Or even a moment before."
- "He didn't always know when he had had enough."
- "If you were able to accomplish something as complex as blocking off a single memory," she said slowly, "why
- didn't you simply block off Ivo while you were at it? You seem to be able to function well enough without him.
- What prevented you from taking control any time you chose?"
- "Honey, if I told you that, I would be in your power forever," he said.
- His attitude suggested that he was lying; and so she believed him.
- The next room contained no heavy machinery. Instead it was laid out rather like a lecture hall, with benches
- lined up before a podium. Afra passed through it and paused before going on. "Did you run out of symbols,
- genius?" she called back. She knew that she had not lost the Venus round by much; perhaps two points.
- Then the benches became occupied—by perching birds. Sparrows, storks, hummingbirds, eagles, parakeets and
- buzzards—all species were represented, crowded together in the close atmosphere, wings rustling, feathers
- drifting, ordure falling. And she was among them, a bird herself, of a type she could not quite identify. She,
- too, was confined within the tremendous cage the room had become.
- Outside, in the area that a moment ago had held the podium, were the human attendees. They were spectacularly
- dressed, as though seeking to out-splendor the avian horde. Each couple was more elegantly garbed than the
- last, and all paraded by without a glance into the aviary. In fact, the people were oblivious to it, far more
- concerned with the display of their own finery.
- She recognized the nature of it at last: this was an Easter promenade, following fittingly the sunrise service
- of the prior vision. But this was as vain an assemblage as she had ever seen. Every member of it seemed to
- crave attention, and to fear for the least fleck of dirt in the vicinity.
- Schn was in it too, resplendent in... a tall silk hat.
- She did not even notice what else he had on. He had gone too far. Furious, she looked about to see in what
- manner she might act. Surely something in this situation could be turned to her advantage. It was merely
- necessary to extend the breadth of her resources.
- She scrambled—it was far too crowded to fly—to the large front gate that separated aves from homo,
- jostling aside the other birds officiously. This should be about where, in station geography, the podium stood.
- There should be a—yes, the catch was a simple one, not intended to withstand the attack of a human-
- brained bird. An ordered prying of the beak, a tuned shove with the wing, and—
- The gate swung open.
- The birds exploded outward, screeching. Feathers, dust and dung enveloped the passing people. There was a grand
- melee, and consternation, as everyone tried to get out of the way of the dirty birds. An albatross, taking off
- clumsily, crashed into Schn's hat and knocked it from his head. Perhaps Afra had done it herself. And the
- lecture room was back.
- The podium had been shoved askew, and Schn stood disheveled beside it. There had indeed been contact, and not
- of his choosing. He had dissolved the vision, this time.
- She held on to the initiative. She sat down on the nearest bench, sure that this would trigger—the
- presentation.
- It did. The illumination dimmed, and in the air of the front of the room a picture appeared. It was the
- Shape—the same subtle, tortuous, flexing color she had seen back near Earth when she glimpsed the
- destroyer-sequence. The same red mass, the same blue dot, as though a blue-white dwarf star were orbiting a red
- giant. The same symbolic agglutination of concepts, building, building—
- She could not withdraw from it; the thing had hold upon her brain. She suspected that Schn was similarly
- transfixed. The destroyer had pounced at last.
- But the emphasis shifted, and suddenly she realized that this was not the mind-ravager. It was the same
- technique, but not the same message—and the message, despite what certain fringe-interests claimed, was
- far more vital than the medium. Instead of oblivion, it brought information. It expanded her horizons. In
- another moment her mind had assimilated its universal language, the galactic gift of tongues, and she saw and
- heard—the lecture.
- Formal galactic history commences with the formation of the first interstellar communication network. Only
- scattered authentic prior evidences exist...
- She absorbed it, entranced. She had not been offered the full history before. This lecture went on to cover the
- expansion of the macroscopic network, spheres of cultural influence, and the onset of the First Siege.
- An illustration, it said. Then the partial concepts became complete, and her full apperceptive mass responded.
- She was on a civilized planet, responding to its gravity, temperature and odors as well as its sights and
- sounds.
- "I can tell you how it comes out," Schn said. His voice interfered with her concentration, and she observed
- the shifting color-shapes that were telling the story, now three-dimensional and almost physical in substance.
- Then her mind became attuned again, and the planet returned. She passed among the ghastly yet ordinary (by
- galactic standards) creatures of this world, conversed with them, and learned about the desperate struggle they
- were engaged in. It was planetary, interplanetary war, and this species was in danger of enslavement or
- destruction.
- She came to understand the reason: the Traveler impulse permitted wars of conquest by immature cultures. It was
- like giving motorboats to hostile islanders previously separated from each other by miles of shark-infested
- shallows and reefs. Transportation without maturity spelled intercultural war—and mutual disaster.
- Physical contacts between the stellar cultures of the galaxy in fact meant chaos, the lecture said, and now she
- agreed emphatically, having seen it in action. More information came, describing the termination of the siege.
- There was another animate, full-perception episode, showing the manner in which linked species had rejoined,
- sharing a planet, but not harmoniously. The creatures, like the last, were completely unhuman, yet she felt
- sympathy for their plight. She felt that she was there as a group of shoreline vigilantes killed an envoy from
- the undersea culture; and she reacted with dismay as she followed an enlightened land-dweller making a return
- quest into the ocean, only to be similarly slain by the border patrol of the other side. War broke out again,
- decimating both species and setting back the civilization of the planet disastrously; but still the mutual hate
- did not abate. Removal of the Traveler had not solved galactic problems; it had only suppressed them painfully.
- Better that it had never come.
- But she learned also the positive side of it: the resurgence of civilization in the absence of the Traveler.
- She followed the positive preparations to alleviate the foreseen Second Siege. The destroyer was put into
- perspective: it was like a hurricane, that prevented the savages from using their modern boats. Many died
- trying—but this was better than what had happened before.
- She saw the other phase of the destroyer project: the quest into the origin and nature of the Traveler signal.
- It had to be assumed that the Traveler was beamed to the other galaxies of the local cluster. Had they gone
- through similar ravages? The macroscope did not provide the answer.
- Yet, the conjecture continued, if the Traveler touched other galaxies, it had the aspect of a universal
- conspiracy to destroy civilization wherever it occurred. If so, it was essential that it be stopped at its
- source.
- Still, journeys to these near galaxies had failed. Six expeditions to Andromeda had never returned. If there
- were a traveler there, a round trip should be possible. If there were not, then high-level macroscopic
- technology should have been developed and retained, and at least a few programs should have been beamed for
- intergalactic communication. Ordinary spherical broadcasts dissipated in the vast intergalactic reaches, but
- beams did not, as the Traveler itself had demonstrated.
- Could it be that the Travelers encountered the other galaxies at different times? The local program appeared to
- originate about three million light-years distant, at a point source, and to expand to saturate the entire
- galaxy and its environs: the globular clusters, the Magellanic clouds, but not Fornax or Sculptor. About thirty
- thousand light-years beyond the rim (arbitrarily assigned; there was no physical discontinuity marking the edge
- of the galaxy) the beam stopped; its total cross section at this stage was about 150,000 light-years. By the
- time the beam might, in its onward travel, intercept another galaxy beyond the Milky Way, it would have spread
- into a tremendous cone-segment far too diffuse for proper effect. It had obviously been tailored to this
- particular locale.
- If other beams were similarly tailored, and if they originated from the same spot in space, it might be that
- they had to take turns. A million years of traveler could be directed at one galaxy; then, while it was on its
- way, the projector could be reoriented to cover another galaxy. Thus direction and distance and schedule would
- determine the status of any particular galaxy.
- After the Second Siege the confirmations began to come in. Civilized planets that had jumped to other galaxies
- and had been stranded there had broadcast back portions of the truth. They had made the transit, but had been
- unable to come out of organic stasis because of the absence of the traveler signal necessary for the
- reconstitution. Thus millions of years had had to pass before a Traveler intercepted the new location of an
- exploring world. At that point reconstitution had occurred, but with losses, since even the gaseous state did
- not have indefinite shelf-life. Then no return was feasible, unless another delay of tens of millions of years
- was undertaken while waiting for the local Third Siege.
- This was the substance of the first report from Horv, stranded in a globular cluster orbiting Andromeda. It was
- almost as though the Travelers had been arranged to prevent intergalactic commerce. But Horven research
- continued, for the same signal that revived the sadly decimated populace now allowed the planet to travel
- freely around Andromeda. In due course the second, more remarkable report was broadcast.
- Meanwhile, one drone moon from the Dooon did reappear in the Milky Way Galaxy, carrying their full report and
- recordings of their Traveler signal. The recordings had no potency in themselves, but were useful for direct
- comparison with similar records of the local Traveler. This established that two different Travelers were
- involved; the "fingerprint" differed in slight but consistent ways. One more fact had replaced conjecture, and
- another item in the tentative map of Traveler activity had been confirmed. Data was now available on three
- local beams—and all had emanated from the same point source.
- No other drone-moon returnees were discovered. Evidently a number had been dispatched, but were either lost in
- the uncharted configurations of jumpspace or had arrived but not been located in or near the Milky Way. A
- continuous and complete scan of the entire volume of the galaxy simply was not feasible, so chance played its
- part.
- Finally, utilizing several of the delayed macroscopic return-messages, the records of the single recovered
- moon, and detailed analysis of the Traveler itself when the Third Siege began, the locals were able to come at
- the complete story.
- It was the dawning of a new era.
- The lecture was over. The convoluting shapes faded, and on the stage a prima donna was singing. Her talent was
- superlative; she seemed to represent the pinnacle of human art, the culmination of individual opportunity. This
- was as close, in a cappella, as one could come to perfection. This was excellence personified.
- Afra considered her human heritage, and that of the galaxy. It was as though six great manifestations of
- culture had occurred, in whatever mode they were considered. The galaxy had gone through three long
- civilizations and three short sieges, the last still in progress, and now was on the brink of the seventh and
- perhaps climactic manifestation. Every individual, every species, every culture was on the threshold. The
- mirror of history provided the reflection of all the past—but that past was a lesser history than what
- was about to be.
- The prima donna was Schn; the symbols paid scant attention to the sex of the individual. Afra was not certain
- of the nature of her own symbol this time, having experienced no transformation other than purely conjectural,
- but the incipient realization of the truth—personal and galactic and universal—was enough. Schn
- might represent the ultimate in Man's prior evolution, juvenile as he was, but he did not represent Man's
- future. Neither did the starfish form that Brad had become; that type of maturity had been cast aside long ago
- as a dead-end attempt for adjustment to a bygone and limited environment. Man was destined for something else.
- Not physically, not technologically, but socially and emotionally. It might be millions of years before he
- achieved it, but that was a mere instant, galactically. The threshold was now, in his realization of his
- potential, in his vision of his own esthetic future.
- With only moderate effort, Afra shifted into station reality. The room had changed; this was another busy
- complex. Machines were turning out the element-display samples and feeding them into conveyor-slots,
- undoubtedly for transport to the several visitors' lounges. Art was being reproduced, and foodstuffs
- manufactured. This section was, in fact, an extensive but comparatively routine station production center.
- Either there was a considerable turnover in samples, implying many visits here, or the displays were replaced
- frequently as a matter of course.
- Schn was present, and he held the S′ device. "Mercury was yours, 10 to 5," he announced. "Your damned
- birds..." He slapped the instrument.
- She had won a round at last! But the vision was upon her:
- The street of Macon, she at age seven, the Negro man standing over her. But now her terror was gone. Six
- manifestations—ascendant, sun, moon, Mars, Venus, Mercury—transmuted to the
- seventh—Jupiter—and the auspices were beneficent. She knew that the Negro had not come to hurt her;
- he was not the gunman. The holdup man had been white.
- "Little girl, you got to come with me. Your daddy's been hurt."
- "I know," she said.
- "I work at the store," he continued, helping her to her feet. "I saw you bolt, and I knew you was scared. But
- it's all right now. Your daddy grabbed that robber and held him, and he's in jail by now I know, but—"
- Her knee was skinned, and her shoulder was bruised from the collision in the store, but these were minor
- injuries. She took the man's hand and began the walk back. "How bad—I mean, my father—"
- "He's not hurt bad. I'm sure. He's a brave man, doing that, stepping into a gun like that. A brave man."
- Afra stepped out of the memory-vision again, independent of its power as well. She did not have to run any
- more.
- Schn was watching her, aware that he was losing ground. He had thought to win the round by throwing her into
- the vision of terror and forcing her to capitulate once more, but this time she had conquered her fear. Her
- liability was gone. Whatever type of conquest he had contemplated was farther from realization now than it had
- been during their initial encounter in the ascendant.
- She was still gaining strength, riding the crest of her victory in Mercury and her release from the continuing
- repression of the ascendant. She was ready to expand her horizons even more, to encompass the ultimate
- information and profit thereby.
- "Did you consider," she demanded of Schn, "the essential paradox of the Traveler? The single fact that makes
- it distinct from all other broadcasts, and makes its very existence proof that its Type III technology is
- qualitative as well as quantitative?"
- "Certainly," he said—but there had been a fractional hesitation that betrayed his oversight. He had
- missed the obvious, as had they all, and worked it out only in this instant of her challenge. Another point for
- her side! "The Traveler, as an impulse moving at light velocity, could never supervise so complex a
- chronological process as melting and reconstitution of an unfamiliar creature, since no memory of prior
- experience could exist in a pattern traveling past the subject at the ultimate velocity. The portion of the
- Traveler that directed the reduction of the epidermis would be twenty-four light-minutes beyond, by the time
- the heart dissolved. And the portion that finished the job would not have been advised when the process
- started—not when it couldn't, relativistically, catch up for that same twenty-four minutes. Information
- cannot travel through the material universe faster than light. So the Traveler could not handle the
- job—yet did. Paradox."
- "You've missed it!" she cried. "Genius, you're blind to the truth. You don't understand the Traveler any more
- than the early galactics did."
- "Ridiculous," he said, irritated. "I can tell you how the melting cycle is accomplished within that limitation.
- Do I have to draw you a picture?"
- "This won't fit on any picture, stupid."
- Schn intercepted a carbon-cube—one of the tremendous diamonds—on its way to some display and set
- it on top of one of the art-machines. He trotted down the hall to procure something resembling chalk, and
- returned to make a sketch on his improvised blackboard. A chalk sketch on a diamond!
- "The beam originates at point A, strikes the subject at point B and goes on to point C, never to return," he
- said, drawing a cartoon figure. She had no doubt he could turn out a work of art if he chose, but the chalk was
- clumsy, the surface slick, and he was preoccupied by the reversal of their competitive fortunes.
- "For the sake of simplicity," he continued, "we'll ignore such refinements as the manufactured melt-beam that
- actually does the work; that's merely an offshoot produced ad hoc when triggered by a suitable situation. The
- point is, the Traveler only touches once and moves on at light velocity. It doesn't stay to see the job
- finished, any more than a river stays to watch the wader crossing it. There's always new water."
- "You're still all wet," she said.
- "But an object in water will set up a stationary ripple," he continued, seemingly unperturbed. She knew he had
- to make his point—or lose points. "Because the impulse is not confined to one direction. In the case of
- our Traveler, the interaction at point B initiates a feedback that meets and prepares the oncoming impulses. So
- an extended interaction is feasible." He drew another figure on a second face of the cube. "Call point D that
- secondary interaction, though it occurs at no fixed place. It does alert the oncoming signal in advance, making
- a type of memory and planning possible.
- "So the melting is actually a function of B—the A-beam modified by the BD feedback. The only time the A-
- beam is encountered directly is during the introduction; and this is the reason for that introduction. Without
- that BD feedback, the melting would be a simple chaotic reduction of flesh leading inevitably to death. As it
- is, when a critical point approaches—such as the need to close down one lung while preserving the
- other—the Traveler knows, and modifies its program accordingly. The same holds for the reconstitution,
- which is hardly the natural reformulation of evolution it appears. It doesn't matter where it occurs, so long
- as the Traveler is present; the beam is geared to react to a given stimulus in the proper way. A very
- sophisticated program, particularly since no part of its component is solid, liquid or even gaseous; but
- effective, as we know."
- "You're talking about details and missing the whole, just as the galactics did," she said. "The old
- trees/forest ignorance. You know what? I think you can't comprehend the Traveler by yourself. You blocked it
- off along with the destroyer-memory! The truth is out of your reach!"
- His face was calm, but she was sure he was furious. "What can you do with your alleged comprehension that I
- can't do with mine? Show me one thing."
- "I can talk to the Traveler," she said.
- "To be sure. I can even talk to my foot. But what kind of a reply do you get?"
- She concentrated all her attention and will-power on this one effort, knowing that her thesis, her one
- superiority over Schn, depended for its proof on the performance. "Traveler," she cried, "Traveler, can you
- hear me?"
- Nothing happened. Schn gazed at her with a fine affectation of pity.
- Was she wrong? She had been so certain—
- "Traveler," she repeated urgently, "do you hear me? Please answer—"
- Y E S
- It came from every direction, that godlike response. It assaulted her senses, scorched her fingers, swelled her
- tongue, blasted her eardrums, lanced into her eyeballs with letters of fire. Was this what Moses had
- experienced on the mountain?
- Schn stood dazed. He had received it.
- "What are you?" she asked, frightened herself but aware that this might be her only opportunity to make this
- contact. Only while she rode the crest—
- And it came at her again, a torrent of information, projected into her mind in the same fashion the melting
- cycle had acted on the cells of her body. The passing portions of the Traveler beam triggered nerve synapses in
- her brain and spoke to her in true telepathy.
- In essence, this: Just as interstellar travel required the reduction of solid life to liquid life, and thence
- to gaseous life, so true intergalactic travel required one further stage: radiation life. The Traveler was not
- a broadcast beam; it was a living, conscious creature. Originally it had evolved from mundane forms, but its
- technology and maturity had enabled it to achieve this unforeseeable level, freeing it of any restraint except
- the limitation of the velocity of radiation through space. Even that could be circumvented by using the
- jumpspace technique—once space had been cartographically explored by lightspeed outriders.
- There was nowhere in the universe this species could not range.
- But very few life-forms ever achieved this level. Why? The Travelers investigated and discovered that in the
- confined vicious cauldron that was the average life-bearing galaxy, the first species to achieve gaseous-state
- jumpspace capacity acted to suppress all others—then stagnated for lack of stimulus. The problem was that
- technology exceeded maturity. Only if more species could be encouraged to achieve true maturity could universal
- civilization become a fact. They needed time—time to grow.
- And so the Travelers became missionaries. Each individual jumped to a set spot in space and underwent the
- transposition to radiation, retaining awareness throughout. Physical synapses became wave-synapses, thought
- occurring from the leading edge backwards, but lucidly. And each individual personally brought jumpspace
- capacity to Type II technologies resident in individual galaxies.
- It was the Milky Way as a whole that was being cultivated. The Traveler beneficence resembled that of the
- destroyer: it seemed cruel, but actually fostered an acceleration of maturity. Species might suffer, but
- galaxies were prodded into growth. Those galaxies that achieved control over their immature elements—so
- strikingly defined by their actions in the face of jumpspace temptation—were on their way to success. The
- Milky Way, after several failures, had finally gained that self-control, and was on the verge of true
- maturity—as an entity. This was the gift of the Traveler: the passport to the universe, and to universal
- civilization.
- "The white man bringing his god to the ignorant natives," Schn muttered. "Big deal." He stepped into the next
- chamber.
- "It is a big deal, even if you're too immature to admit that extragalactic aliens can do things you can never
- hope to do," she cried, pursuing him. "And mankind, too, may share in that distinction, if it survives its own
- adolescence. Not by becoming smarter, but by maturing. We—"
- Schn was in a soldier's uniform, unkempt, and in his hand was a bottle of cheap whisky. If he had a post to
- guard, he was derelict in duty. Somewhere he had made an error, a nondiscriminating decision, and the
- consequence was upon him.
- Afra was in a glorious gown, a golden-haired goddess, as she swept into the room. She observed banks of
- computerlike machinery, and took it for the sensitive, quality-control mechanism of the station, but she was
- intent on her personal opportunity. Schn's deviation was her reward, his faithlessness to the common welfare
- her good fortune—so long as she proceeded with confidence.
- He lifted the bottle to her in a drunken salute. "My candle burneth over," he said. "You won again."
- Then that elusive special memory unlocked itself and emerged from its dungeon of security: something Bradley
- Carpenter had told her. In times of stress it had pushed up, only to retreat before scrutiny. Now at last she
- had it. "Schn is dangerous—make no mistake about that. He has no scruples. But there is a way to bring
- him under control, if the need exists and the time is proper. Now I'm going to describe it to you, but I want
- you to tell no one—particularly not Ivo."
- "Who is Ivo?" she had inquired, for this was before it all had started.
- "He's my contact with Schn. But this is the one thing about Schn he doesn't know. I'm going to implant in you
- a hypnotic block against divulgence."
- And he had done so, skilled as he had been in such matters. She had not remembered it until this
- moment—this moment of discovering Schn in his weakness, knowing that his vulnerability was temporary,
- dictated only by transitory animation of symbols. Schn still led her in points, and she knew what tremendous
- resources he possessed; she would never overcome him if she did not finish him now. Uranus or Neptune might
- swing the pendulum back to him, and with it the initiative and the final victory.
- "Do you remember Yvonne?" she asked him.
- The image vanished. Schn turned on her, the bottle in his hand replaced by S′, and it was as though the
- fire of his essence took physical form. "Brad, you bastard!" he cried. "You told!"
- But he was in his weakness, she in her strength. "You have a memory like mine, one you can't face," she said.
- "It is the reason you could not take over control from Ivo, whatever else you managed. It is the knowledge that
- gives me power over you." But only if the circumstance were appropriate—and that could be a matter of
- definition.
- For there had been a third genius of the project, one falling between Brad and Schn. Yvonne—"The
- Archer"—and there had been intense conflict.
- They were five years old when the culmination came, both having experienced more of life in all areas than had
- most adults, but both remaining children emotionally. It was the classic case of two scorpions in a bottle, two
- nations with nuclear overkill and insufficient patience: two children with the powers of adults. Because they
- were male and female, there was a certain mitigating attraction; but their rivalry was stronger, and when the
- camaraderie ended they put it on the line: a game, a contest, more than physical, more than intellectual, whose
- precise rules no other person comprehended. For a day and a night they had faced each other, locked in a
- private room, and in the end Schn had won and Ivo had committed suicide.
- Then Schn, protecting himself, had operated on the body and made it resemble a mutilated version of his own in
- certain ways that would deceive the outside world. He had arranged an impressive "accident" of conflagratory
- nature that made the deception complete, and had then assumed her place in the project community. Thus he had
- become Ivo, and somehow managed to alter the records to confuse the prying adults. It seemed to them that a
- male child had died, yet the count did not confirm this; instead one male had been mislabeled female. Yet if a
- female had been lost, which one? Schn had gotten away with murder. But he had not confused his contemporaries.
- They were not as clever as he, but they knew him, and they knew the score. They were his peer-group, and it
- operated with unprecedented force. They did not report his crime to the adults, for that was not the peer-code;
- they did pass the word informally and judge him themselves and impose a sentence on him. He became Ivo, then.
- No longer could he masquerade as another person by choice and convenience. For the group had this special power
- over its members, part ethics, part force, part religion, part family: what the group decreed, the individual
- honored. It could not be otherwise, even for Schn.
- The secret had been kept, but he had been punished. Even after the project disbanded, the peer-power remained,
- the inflexible code, a geis on him he could not break.
- Only Ivo himself could set him loose when the need arose—and Ivo had never known the truth, and was
- stubborn to boot. Ivo had thought it was the tedium of daily existence that kept Schn buried originally. He
- had never heard of Ivo.
- As the Traveler disciplined the universe; as the destroyer disciplined the galaxy; as circumstance disciplined
- mankind; so the peer-group disciplined Schn.
- And nothing else! Schn still had the galactic instrument, S′, and this was not Earth-locale, and Afra
- was not a peer of the project. "You cannot get home without me," he said. "The sentence cannot be invoked,
- here; there is still need for me."
- So the grand ploy had failed, and now that pendulum was swinging back, restoring his power, diminishing hers.
- It was her turn to retreat.
- The next room was another highly technical one: a strange conduit admitted something invisible, and stranger
- equipment manipulated it.
- "Conversion," Schn remarked with some of his old confidence. "Channeled gravitrons adapted to macrons for the
- broadcast." He touched S′.
- Five people stood on an Earthscape in the sunshine. A woman and two men faced south; two women—one older,
- one younger—stood fifty feet away, in the trio's line of sight.
- For the first time Afra saw the symbols and remained in doubt as to which one was hers. The woman in the
- northern group might be herself; the men might be Schn and Ivo. One of the southern pair was an old-fashioned
- woman; the other was an up-to-date girl. The one pinched, stiff; the other alert, open-faced. Their clothing
- and manner identified their types—but which of the three women, really, was Afra?
- This seemed to be the time for indecision, and Schn evidently shared the mood. "Am I so bad?" he demanded
- somewhat plaintively. "I never tortured to death an animal, and not many who pass through conventional
- childhood can say that. I never shot a man, and not many who served in the armed forces can say that. All I did
- was play a fair game for high stakes and win. Had I lost, I would have died. I have always abided by the rules
- of the game."
- Then Afra knew that the woman between the two men was Ivo, as she might have been at maturity. Schn was
- bracketed by his past, and by competing demands, and it was not in her to condemn him out of hand.
- But Afra was bracketed too. She had witnessed the history of the galaxy and absorbed its significance. Was she
- now to return to her old, narrow ways and attitudes, or was she to open her mind and personality to change,
- movement, spontaneity? Which woman was she? There was advantage in conventionality, but also in initiative.
- She had never realized before that her own prejudice against Negroes stemmed at least in part from that chase
- in her childhood by a well-meaning supermarket employee. She had remembered that pursuit subconsciously and
- associated it with the sudden, crushing death of her father, fatally wounded that day, and she had somehow
- blamed all Negroes for it. Yet it had been a white man who fired the shot, attempting to hold up the cashier.
- It had been a Negro who had tried to help, even to the extent of expressing an unjustified confidence in her
- father's health. The strongest elements of the experience had been the killing and the Negro, and her
- subconscious had made a connection her conscious had not. No doubt the climate of her upbringing had promoted
- this, too....
- There were no answers for either of them here. They moved to the next room.
- Maintenance: cleaners, repair machines, testing robots. She walked down the aisle, Schn following several
- paces behind. At the far end was a spherical dance of light, communicating in the galactic code. She studied
- it—and understood that it was warning all comers that the next compartment contained the destroyer
- programming mechanism.
- The other chambers had not had warnings; why did this one?
- She was sure she knew. Theoretically, any creature who was able to travel to this station had achieved the
- maturity to be immune to the destroyer concept. But there could be less mature associates, as in the case of
- the species that had actually emplaced this unit; the truly mature individuals were not capable of violence,
- however practical its application. Younger species would have to maintain the equipment and do the work.
- Or—there could be children, recapitulating evolution, poking aggressively into dangerous nooks.
- So—a warning. There could be stray destroyer emanation here.
- "This is the end of the line," she said, showing him the warner. "We have to go back. Why don't we stop this
- foolish contest and try to help each other?" And she wondered whether her distaste for him had dissipated with
- her fear.
- He brightened. "We are prisoners of what we are. These symbolic animations are only projections of our two
- personalities. We are Neptune now, planet of obligation... and such. For you this is A HOUSE RAISING,
- helpfulness, cooperation, joy in common enterprise. That is why you have spoken as you have."
- "Then what is your symbol?"
- "A MAN IN THE MIDST OF BRIGHTENING INFLUENCES."
- She saw that the game was not over, and that he had almost won. Beatryx was dead; Harold was gone; Ivo had been
- replaced by this stranger—and she was ready, in her overwhelming spirit of helpfulness, to give whatever
- she had to offer to the victor. Perhaps there had been a time when she would have felt otherwise; intellect
- told her so. But not at this moment.
- "The score stands at 78 to 69, my favor," he said. "If we stop here, and I agree we might as well—"
- She tried to reach the Traveler again, but that wave of ability had subsided. She might never again achieve the
- peak of awareness and drive necessary to call it forth directly. No help there.
- Without letting herself consciously realize what she was doing in her desperate effort to stave off defeat,
- Afra stepped backward into the destroyer-room.
- "Hey!" Schn called, taken by surprise. He dived for her, astonishingly swift on his feet—but too late.
- Ivo resumed control as the destroyer sequence hit. A rainbow of color/concept threatened to overwhelm his
- perception, building with merciless velocity toward oblivion—but he had had long experience diverting it.
- He deflected the impact and concentrated on Afra.
- She was kneeling on the floor, trying to cover her face, but the emanations were everywhere. They leaked out in
- forms susceptible to reception by ears and skin as well as eyes. There was no physical way to block the
- destroyer off, this close.
- He reached her and clamped both hands on her wrists, hauling her around and up and back through the doorway.
- Her eyes were fixed, her lips parted in the obsessive rapture of assimilation. As they passed from the chamber
- the barrage stopped, sealed off by some unseen shield.
- Afra slumped into unconsciousness. He propped her up against an inactive scrubbing machine and peered anxiously
- into her face. Had he brought her out in time? If he revived her now, would she awaken to personality—or
- mindlessness?
- She had won the game with Schn. Her daring had scored a clean sweep of Pluto, for she had survived where he
- could not. It was the one situation where lesser intelligence was an advantage. The extra minute she had
- withstood the destroyer was the same as a knockout victory.
- Schn had had to have her help, if he were ever to leave the station, since only by burying his own personality
- could he have faced the destroyer. He could have fashioned an idiot personality for the purpose—but then
- the geis on him would have taken effect, keeping him bottled. Only if another person released him could he
- reemerge, in the absence of Ivo. A simple request would have been enough: "Schn—come out!"—but it
- had to be from someone who acted independently. Someone outside the bottle, for the seal could not be broken
- from within. Someone who knew him and knew what the request meant.
- Certainly Schn would never have let Ivo resume control. Not when both knew that Afra was in love with that
- alternate personality. But an idiot—capable only of a directed reception of the Traveler—she would
- have had to banish that. Her temperament would have forced her to uncork the responding mind, even though she
- hated it. And of course she would have felt obligated to honor the terms of the agreement, having lost the
- game.
- But she had won. Ivo was sure of this—because he had been the referee. Had it been otherwise—that
- is, had Schn not arranged to make it fair—the results would not have been binding. A legitimate win for
- Schn would have forced Ivo to return control to him, even after saving him from the destroyer. Ivo, too, was
- bound by the geis, having agreed to arbitrate the contest.
- As it was, that intervention to save their mutual mind had cost Schn all ten points of the final round,
- putting Afra ahead 79 to 78, and it was over. She had won the right to choose her companion on the way home.
- She had made the nature of that choice plain during her dialogue with Schn.
- Provided she retained, literally, the wit to make that decision. Otherwise, she too had lost, and rendered the
- round a tie that was meaningless. A mindless Afra could not serve Schn's purpose.
- Ivo contemplated her face, so lovely in its repose. He had longed for this from the moment he saw her the first
- time. He had traveled the galaxy only to please her.
- The surface of the machine against which she leaned was reflective. He saw in that mirror the head of a man. It
- seemed to smile knowingly at him. He knew, as the gift of one of Schn's conscious thoughts during the contest,
- that this was Afra's symbol in Pluto—A MAN'S HEAD—just as the rainbow he had seen as he took over
- had been Schn's. But whose head was it to be?
- Had all his life been leading to this crisis, this empty vigil with an unconscious girl? If she were gone, what
- was left?
- Ivo held her, afraid to wake her, and remembered.
- There had been the project breakup, thrusting them all abruptly into the massive, confused, tormented
- world—yet most had greeted it as a release and a challenge. They had exploded across the planet, three
- hundred and thirty eager youngsters seeking experience... and had been absorbed by it without a ripple. Brad
- had gone to college; Ivo had followed the melody of the flute, searching out the obscure monuments of the life
- of Sidney Lanier. Quite a number of the others had married nonproject people. All had sworn to keep in touch
- forever, but they were young then, and somehow had forgotten. There had been some almost-random encounters,
- however—enough to circulate news of most. From time to time Ivo had dreamed of a grand convening, a
- project reunion—recognizing the very desire as a reflection of his inadequacy, his poor adjustment to the
- world of the '70's.
- Then Groton, on a hot Georgia street, and adventure had been thrust upon him. Brad needed Schn! Afra, vision
- of love, bait of trap—would he have stepped into it had he not wanted to? The proboscoids of Sung,
- overrunning their world heedlessly, and mankind doing the same. Human organs, black-market. Plump Beatryx, wife
- of an engineer. Image of a school crisis: boy in classroom, cigarette, smirk. Senator Borland, man of ambition,
- power. Destroyer image: one dead, one ruined, one untouched? Sprouts, a winning configuration, S D P S,
- Kovonov, who had meant to go himself....
- Joseph the rocket, accommodations for five. Learning to use the macroscope, that instrument of galactic
- civilization. Astrology: "The complex of your life and the complex of the universe may run in a parallel
- course." UN pursuit. Image of a living cell. The handling—identity confirmation or sexual experience? The
- melting—skull canting, gray-white fluid coursing out eye-socket. Reconstitution—from cell to self
- in four hours.
- Mighty Neptune, sea-storm world of methane. Triton, where Tryx found a bug. Schn, moon of a moon. There he had
- come to appreciate real people, to know the meaning of friendship, its prerogatives and its miseries.
- Terraforming: a joint effort. Poetry, prejudice, a chess analogy. Starfish. Afra's horoscope, the chart that
- defined her. The flip of a bus token. Trial: another case of handling, really. Spacefold diagrams. Visual
- penetration of Neptune—dwarf with the breath of a giant, yet more ancient than Sol. Gravitational radius.
- Tyre. Mattan, talking of superpowers. Baal Melqart, hungry for children. Swords and torches in the night. Aia:
- "We shall have joy in one another, while both being true to our memories." Image of Astarte, milk spurting from
- her breasts. Stench of rotting shellfish, for purple robes. Gorolot, offered an imperious housemaid. Afra,
- volunteering in lieu of Aia, comfortable harbor for ships. All because Schn craved freedom.
- Well, Schn had lost, whether Afra had mind or not.
- Suddenly Ivo could stand the suspense no longer. He put his hands under Afra's arms, drew her to her feet
- against him, and kissed her with all the passion he had suppressed for so long. Try that for handling!
- She woke abruptly. She brought her arms up outside his, wedged her stiffened fingers against his cheeks, and
- shoved back his head. "Get away from me!" she exclaimed angrily.
- Ivo released her with guilty haste. She had not chosen him!
- Then he realized with shivering relief that she thought he was Schn. She had no way to know about the contest
- result and changeover. He opened his mouth to explain.
- "Don't be ridiculous, Ivo," she snapped. "I can tell you two apart easily. Aside from that, I knew Schn
- couldn't get me out of there. It had to be you—or nothing."
- His feeling of stupidity was back in full force. He tried to speak again.
- "You thought if only Schn were gone, everything would be just fine. Boy gets girl, curtain lowers on happy
- sunset. Sorry—when I want a lapdog, I'll whistle."
- What had happened? Her dialogue with Schn had suggested that she was in love with Ivo, but now she was
- treating him with greater contempt than ever before.
- "Schn was right about one thing," she remarked, adjusting her clothing. "You certainly aren't very
- bright—and I do dislike stupidity."
- Was she saying she wanted Schn back? That made no sense to him. But if she didn't want Schn and didn't want
- Ivo—
- Afra faced about and began to walk away, back toward the chamber where the visions had started. Somehow he knew
- that if he let her go, he would never recover her—yet he could not act. He had lost her without ever
- speaking a word.
- Jumps of thousands of light-years, until they stood outside the great disk of the galaxy itself, and
- returned—that he remembered clearly, yet he could not bridge the gap of a few paces between two people
- now. A history of the Solar System, billions of years strong—yet seconds were undoing him. Where had he
- gone wrong?
- Approach to the destroyer complex: "It's tracking us!" His foolish jealousy of Harold Groton, returning his
- concept of the man to the impersonal surname. Afra's excitement at the element display. The final chamber.
- S′. Wheels on wheels, symbols meshing in "The Symphony." Simultaneous yet chronological adventures of
- galactic history. Schn: "That means our daughters get dinked." Beatryx: "You were not wrong, Dolora." Harold:
- "I had thought it was an insult to serve under Drone command." Where had he gone wrong?
- Now Schn had been nullified, Beatryx was dead, Harold was seeking the Traveler, and Afra disliked stupidity.
- Yet he remained, and so did his responsibilities. Where had he heard that? Promises to keep, and miles to go
- before... He had to do something for the gallant Groton couple, sundered so unfairly; then—
- But I love you! he cried subvocally at Afra. Imperious she might be, problems she might have—but
- underneath that surface beauty was an extraordinary woman. She had fought Schn....
- She continued walking, culottes shaping a trim derriere, bright hair flouncing loose.
- Afra, whose Capricorn history segment had slipped somehow, throwing her instead into a savage personal
- conflict. Yet that program error had saved her—and him—from a dream-state that might have endured
- until their bodies disintegrated. The normal person did not emerge from that slumber, as Harold and Beatryx had
- shown. That, apparently, was the final test: only a mind that could survive and finally break the stasis was
- fit to go free again. The human mind lacked that capability. Even Schn had been trapped.
- Strange, fortunate coincidence, that Afra should have been evicted from that clinging mold. And that she alone,
- subsequently, should establish a momentary rapport with the supercreature, the Traveler. The Traveler: nerve
- impulse between galactic cells, whose capabilities spanned from macrocosmic to microcosmic with equal finesse.
- Coincidence? Perhaps the Traveler had touched her intentionally! This was easily within its compass. To nudge
- her just enough to break the trance, and then again to win a vital point from Schn... and it could not touch
- Schn himself—or Ivo!—because of the mind-block against the destroyer-concept Schn had so
- carefully arranged. Afra had been the only one available with an open yet sharp enough mind....
- Why? Why interfere at all, this creature with a galaxy to supervise? Could it have seen some hope in her, in
- humanity? Did it want them to return to Earth with their message of galactic and intergalactic culture? Yet
- Afra could not return to Earth by herself, and she had turned her back on him.
- At least, he thought with transitory irony, he didn't have to worry about Schn interfering. Geis apart, Schn
- could not take over again, since Afra wouldn't cooperate with him and the destroyer fields suffused all the
- galaxy. Schn was barred from space. He, Ivo, could now draw freely on any or all of Schn's talents as
- required without risking his identity. He could get home. He had only to reduce his personality when actually
- dealing with the destroyer, protecting his immunity; at other times he could, literally, be a genius.
- Fat consolation, he thought, watching Afra's dainty feet moving. You can use it to fathom why you lost her.
- Yes—the genius of Schn would clarify that, at least. Ivo reached... sunburst! He understood exactly what
- Afra was doing.
- "Girl," he said clearly.
- She halted. She had not been walking rapidly and had not yet entered the adjacent chamber. She was still, in
- the imagery of the recent contest, in Pluto or Neptune. Obsession, obligation—yet so much more, positive
- as well as negative.
- "What the cloud doeth," he said, "the Lord knoweth; the cloud knoweth not."
- She turned slowly. "I don't understand."
- "It's a quote from Sidney Lanier. The course of the cloud may be predestined, but Man possesses free will." He
- had spoken in Russian.
- Her capitulation was as sudden as her awakening. She skipped across the room and threw herself into his arms.
- "I knew you weren't a cloud, Ivo!" she murmured before she kissed him.
- Further explanation was unnecessary, yet the hard-core Ivo in him ran it through during their extended embrace.
- Afra had wanted neither the omniscient supercilious Schn nor the stodgy ignorant Ivo. She required compromise:
- Ivo's personality with Schn's abilities. For neither identity alone represented the complete man. Schn had
- never grown up, while Ivo had shied away from the exercise of his rightful talents. How could a woman really
- love half of a schizoid personality?
- But the destroyer had shifted the balance and broken the stalemate, making Ivo the artist. He could unify and
- control—and time and experience had made his identity the more fit of the two for human intercourse. A
- child normally grew into an adult—and to abolish the adult Ivo in favor of the child Schn would be a
- foolhardy inequity.
- Thus the personal equation. Boy had not won girl; man had won woman.
- What, now, of Earth? Mankind was a child-culture with adolescent technology; were they to present it with
- devastating adult technology? Or would it be better to stay clear and allow natural selection to function, as
- it did elsewhere in the galaxy?
- "What the artist doeth," he murmured, "the Lord knoweth; knoweth the artist not?"
- Copyright 1969 by Piers Anthony.
- Certain astrological passages used in the text are quoted and/or adapted from ASTROLOGY, How and Why It Works
- by Marc Edmund Jones, copyright 1945, and The Sabian Symbols by Marc Edmund Jones, copyright 1966, both
- published by the Sabian Publishing Society. Reference is also made to Astrology and Its Practiced Application
- by E. Parker, translated from the Dutch by Coba Goedhart: P. Dz. Veen, Publisher, Amersfoort, Holland, 1927.
- ISBN: 0-380-00209-4
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