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- The Rediscovery of Man [029-4.3]
- By: Cordwainer Smith
- Synopsis:
- The Rediscovery of Man The Complete Short Science Fiction of
- Cordwainer Smith is the second book in the
- "NESFA's Choice" series. It brings back into print all of the short
- science fiction of Cordwainer Smith, and includes two never before
- published stories.
- The Rediscovery of Man includes all of Smith's short science fiction,
- including: "Scanners Live in Vain" "The Ballad of Lost C' mell" "The
- Dead Lady of Clown Town" "The Game of Rat and Dragon" "On the Storm
- Planet" It also includes an in-depth introduction to the works of
- Cordwainer Smith by John J. Pierce, a noted authority on Smith's
- work.
- For a complete list of books available from NESFA Press, write to:
- NESFA Press PO Box 809 Framingham, MA 01701-0203
- Copyrights (con't) in "The Colonel Came Back from the Nothing-at-All"
- copyright 1979 by Genevieve Linebarger. First appeared in The
- Instrumentality of Mankind.
- "The Game of Rat and Dragon" copyright 1955 by Galaxy Publishing Co.
- First appeared in Galaxy, October 1956.
- "The Burning of the Brain" copyright 1958 by Quinn Publishing Co. First
- appeared in Worlds of If, October 1958.
- "From Gustible's Planet" copyright 1962 by Digest Productions
- Corporation. First appeared in Worlds of If, July 1962.
- "Himself in Anachron" copyright 1993 by the Estate of Paul Linebarger.
- First appearance.
- "The Crime and the Glory of Commander Suzdal" copyright 1964 by
- ZiffDavis Publishing Co. First appeared in Amawf; Science Fiction, May
- 1964.
- "Golden the Ship Was Oh! Oh! Oh!" copyright 1959 by Ziff-Davis
- Publishing Co. First appeared in Amazing Science Fiction, April
- 1959.
- "The Dead Lady of Clown Town" copyright 1964 by Galaxy Publishing Co.
- First appeared in Galaxy, August 1964.
- "Under Old Earth" copyright 1966 by Galaxy Publishing Co. First
- appeared in Galaxy, February 1966.
- "Drunkboat" copyright 1963 by Ziff-Davis Publishing Co. First appeared
- in Ammazing Science Fiction, October 1963.
- "Mother Hitton's Little Kittons" copyright 1961 by Galaxy Publishing
- Co. First appeared in Galaxy, June 1961.
- "Alpha Ralpha Boulevard," copyright 1961 by Mercury Press, Inc. First
- appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, June 1961.
- "The Ballad of Lost C'mell" copyright 1962 by Galaxy Publishing Co.
- First appeared in Galaxy. October 1962.
- "A Planet Named Shayol" copyright 1961 by Galaxy Publishing Co. First
- appeared in Galaxy, October 1961.
- "On the Gem Planet" copyright 1963 by Galaxy Publishing Co. First
- appeared in Galaxy, October 1963.
- "On the Storm Planet" copyright 1965 by Galaxy Publishing Co. First
- appeared in Galaxy, February 1965.
- "On the Sand Planet" copyright 1965 by Ziff-Davis Publishing Co. First
- appeared in Amazing Stories, December 1965.
- "Three to a Given Star" copyright 1965 by Galaxy Publishing Co. First
- appeared in Galaxy, October 1965.
- "Down to a Sunless Sea" copyright 1975 by Genevieve Linebarger. First
- appeared in The Mu^wwe of Fantasy & Science Fiction, October 1975.
- "War No. 81 -Q" copyright 1993 by the Estate of Paul Linebarger. First
- appeared in The Adjuant, Volume IX, No. 1, June 1928.
- "Western Science Is So Wonderful" copyright 1958 by Quinn Publishing
- Co. First appeared in Worlds of If, December 1958.
- "Nancy" copyright 1959 by Satellite Science Fiction. First appeared in
- Satellite Science Fiction, March 1959 (as
- "The Nancy Routine").
- "The life of Bodidharma" copyright 1959 by Ziff-Davis Publishing Co.
- First appeared in Fantastic, June 1959.
- "Angerhelm" copyright 1959 by Ballantine Books. First appeared in Star
- Science Fiction #6.
- "The Good Friends" copyright 1963 by Galaxy Publishing Co. First
- appeared in Worlds of Tomorrow, October 1963.
- Contents Introduction by John J. Pierce vii Editor's Introduction xv
- Stories of the Instrumentality of Mankind No,No,NotRogov! 3 War
- No.81-Q (rewritten version) 19 Mark Elf 29 The Queen of the Afternoon
- 41 Scanners Live in Vain 65 The Lady Who Sailed The Soul 97 When the
- People Fell 119 Think Blue, Count Two 129 The Colonel Came Back from
- the Nothing-at-All 155 The Game of Rat and Dragon 163 The Burning of
- the Brain 177 From Gustible's Planet 187 Himself in Anachron 193 The
- Crime and the Glory of Commander Suzdal 201 Golden the Ship Was Oh! Oh!
- Oh! 215 The Dead Lady of Clown Town 223 Under Old Earth 289 Drunkboat
- 327 Mother Hitton' s Littul Kittons 355 Alpha Ralpha Boulevard 375 The
- Ballad of Lost C'mell 401 A Planet Named Shayol 419 On the Gem Planet
- 451 On the Storm Planet 475 On the Sand Planet 541 Three to a Given
- Star 567 Down to a Sunless Sea 587
- vi The Rediscovery of Man Other Stories War No. 81-Q (original
- version) 613 Western Science Is So Wonderful 617 Nancy 629 The life of
- Bodidharma 641 Angerhelm 649 The Good Friends 667
- Introduction by John
- J.
- Pierc e It's trite to say, of course, but there has never been another
- science fiction writer like Cordwainer Smith.
- Smith was never a very prolific SF writer, as evidenced by the fact
- that nearly all of his short fiction can be encompassed in a single
- omnibus volume like this. He was never a very popular writer, as
- evidenced by the fact that most of his work has usually been out of
- print. Nor has he been a favorite of the critics, as evidenced by the
- fact that few citations to his SF can be found in journals like Science
- Fiction Studies.
- It is impossible to fit Smith's work into any of the neat categories
- that appeal to most readers or critics. It isn't hard science fiction,
- it isn't military science fiction, it isn't sociological science
- fiction, it isn't satire, it isn't surrealism, it isn't post modernism
- For those who have fallen in love with it over the years, however, it
- is some of the most powerful science fiction ever written. It is the
- kind of fiction that, as C. S. Lewis once wrote, becomes part of the
- reader's personal iconography.
- You may have already read the story of Paul Myron Anthony Linebarger
- (1913-66), the man behind Cordwainer Smith, who grew up in China,
- Japan, Germany, and France, and became a soldier, diplomat, and
- respected authority on Far Eastern affairs.
- He was the son of Paul Myron Wentworth Linebarger, a retired American
- judge who helped finance the Chinese revolution of 1911 and became the
- legal advisor to Sun Yat-sen. It was Sun himself who gave young Paul
- his Chinese name Lin Bah Loh, or "Forest of Incandescent Bliss." (His
- father had been dubbed Lin Bah Kuh, or
- "Forest of 1,000 Victories.") In time, the younger Linebarger became
- the confidant of Chiang Kai-shek, and, like his father, wrote about
- China. Still later, he was in demand at the Department of Asiatic
- Politics at Johns Hopkins University, where he shared his own expertise
- with members of the diplomatic corps. And that isn't counting his
- years as an operative in China during World War II, or
- as a "visitor to small wars" thereafter, from which he became perhaps
- the world's leading authority on psychological warfare.
- He wrote the book on psychological warfare under his own name, as with
- all his non-fiction. But he was very shy about his fiction. He wrote
- two novels, Ria and Carola, both unusual due to their female
- protagonists and international settings, under the name Felix C.
- Forrest, a play on his Chinese name. But when people found out who
- "Forrest" was, he couldn't write any more.
- He tried a spy thriller, Atomsk, as Carmichael Smith, but was found out
- again. He even submitted a manuscript for another novel under his
- wife's name, but nobody was fooled. Although Linebarger wrote at least
- partial drafts of several other novels, he was never able to interest
- publishers, and it appears he never really tried that hard. He might
- have had a distinguished, if minor, career as a novelist it is an odd
- coincidence that Herma Briffault, widow of Robert Briffault, to whose
- novels of European politics Frederik Pohl would later compare Ria and
- Carola, had in fact read Carola in manuscript; only she compared it to
- the work of Jean Paul Sartre!
- Yet it isn't only a matter of happenstance, of opportunities elsewhere
- denied, that Paul M. A. Linebarger became a science fiction writer. In
- fact, he was writing SF before he wrote anything else. From his early
- teens, he turned out an incredible volume of juvenile SF, under titles
- like
- "The Books of Futurity" some bad imitations of Edgar Rice Burroughs,
- others clumsily satirical or incorporating Chinese legends or folklore.
- One of these efforts contained, as an imaginary "review," the genesis
- of
- "The life ofBodidharma," published over 20 years later in its final
- form. At the age of 15, he even had an SF story published
- "War No. 81- Q," which appeared in The Adjutant, the official organ of
- his high school cadet corps in Washington, DC, in June 1928. Because
- he used the name of his cousin, Jack Bearden, for the hero, Bearden
- decided to get back with a story of his own,
- "The Notorious C39"; but Bearden's story actually made it into Amazing
- Stories. More than 30 years later, Linebarger rewrote
- "War No. 81-Q" for his first collection of Cordwainer Smith SF
- stories. You Will Never Be the Same, but it didn't make the cut.
- Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Linebarger continued to write short
- fiction some SF, some fantasy, some contemporary or Chinese historical.
- The manuscripts, including those of the earliest Cordwainer Smith
- stories, were eventually bound in a red-leather volume now in the hands
- of a daughter living in Oregon. Most of these stories were apparently
- never submitted for publication, but Linebarger did send two of the
- fantasies "Alauda Dalma" and
- "The Archer and the Deep" to Unknown in 1942. (If you don't recognize
- the titles, it is because Unknown turned them
- ix down: the latter didn't fare any better with Judith Merril in
- 1961.) Then in 1945, recently returned from China and facing idle hours
- in some sort of desk job at the Pentagon, he wrote another of the
- manuscripts included in the bound volume, the one that was to put him
- on the literary map "Scanners Live in Vain."
- You doubtless know that it was
- "Scanners" which introduced the Instrumentality of Mankind, although
- only as a shadowy background to the bizarre tale of the cyborged space
- pilots who are dead though they live, and would rather kill than live
- with a new discovery that has made their sacrifice and its attendant
- rituals obsolete. Yet however shadowy, that background with its
- references to the Beasts and the manshonyaggers and the Unforgiven, and
- the implications of some terrible dark age from which humanity has only
- just emerged suggests a long period of gestation for the story and,
- possibly, the existence of earlier stories with the same background.
- Only there is no evidence of any such thing; to the contrary, at least
- some of the background appears to date back to a note Linebarger wrote
- to himself January 7, 1945, for a projected story,
- "The Weapons," set in a "future or imaginary world" in which humanity
- must always be on guard against old weapons, "perpetual and automatic,"
- surviving from some old and forgotten war. In that note, we can see
- the genesis of the manshonyaggers, the German killing machines (from
- menschenjager, or hunter of men) first referred to in "Scanners Live in
- Vain."
- Can Paul Linebarger have thought up an entire future history in the
- time it took to write
- "Scanners Live in Vain"? It is probably a lot more complicated than
- that; it may well be that a number of ideas that had been floating
- around in his head for years, without ever being set down on paper,
- suddenly gel led when he had the inspiration for the story. It didn't
- take long for the universe of "Scanners Live in Vain" to take shape,
- however, for the story had been written within a few months of that
- note for
- "The Weapons."
- On July 18, 1945, it was submitted to John W. Campbell, Jr. at
- Astounding Science Fiction who rejected it as "too extreme."
- That proved to be the first of several rejections, until
- "Scanners Live in Vain" finally found a home at Fantasy Book in 1950.
- The only related story that Linebarger wrote before then was
- "Himself in Anachron," dated 1946. Never published in a magazine, it
- was later slated (like the revised
- "War No. 81-Q") for inclusion in You Will Never Be the Same, under the
- title
- "My Love Is Lost in the Null of Nought" or
- "She Lost Her Love in the Null of Nought,"
- but Linebarger wasn't able to deliver a revised manuscript in time.
- Although he may have written such a revision at a later date, none can
- be found in his literary papers, and the present version was adapted by
- his widow Genevieve from the 1946 draft.
- The career of Cordwainer Smith might have
- been stillborn, with only one published and one unpublished story to
- show for it.
- Fortunately, Smith soon had a few champions, most notably Frederik
- Pohl, who didn't have the foggiest idea who the author was but knew a
- stellar performance when he saw one. By including
- "Scanners Live in Vain" in an anthology, Pohl rescued it from the
- obscurity of Fantasy Book, and that led a few years later to
- Linebarger's submission of
- "The Game of Rat and Dragon" to Galaxy: the rest, as they say, is
- history. A great deal may not be told until the hoped-for publication
- of a biography of Linebarger by Alan C. Elms, who has done exhaustive
- interviews with his friends and family as well as researching all his
- papers.
- Among other things. Elms has the low-down on how it happened that the
- young Linebarger knew L. Ron Hubbard. (It wasn't a mere fluke that one
- of Linebarger's own unpublished works was Pathematics, his revisionist
- take on Hubbard's Dianetics.) It is important to understand some
- crucial facts about his life that have previously been overlooked: for
- example, although he was a devout Episcopalian late in life, he was
- only a nominal Methodist (his father's church) at the time he wrote
- "Scanners Live in Vain." He originally joined the Episcopal Church as
- a compromise with his second wife, who was raised as a Catholic.
- Only about 1960 did he become a believer in any deep sense, and only
- then did the religious imagery and Christian message become strong in
- his SF works. The change in spiritual orientation that marks his later
- work is thus a genuine change, not merely a change of emphasis. There
- are also all kinds of details about the life of Paul M. A. Linebarger,
- his family and friends, that bear on his work as we shall see when
- Elms' researches bear fruit.
- The strictly literary history, however, is fascinating in itself.
- In spite of such major gaps as the loss of Linebarger's main notebook
- for the Instrumentality saga in 1965, and the apparent disappearance of
- the dicta belts on which his widow recalled that he had recorded notes
- for or even drafts of stories never committed to paper, it is possible
- to reconstruct a lot of this literary history from Linebarger's
- literary papers, now at the University of Kansas (although some,
- including more juvenilia, and such oddities as an early poem titled
- "An Ode to My Buick,"
- mistakenly ended up at the Hoover Institution at Stanford, the
- repository for papers relating to his military, diplomatic, and
- scholarly career). Among these literary papers are any number of
- variant (mostly partial) manuscripts for stories already familiar to
- us, false starts for stories never completed, notebooks with ideas for
- stories never written, and miscellaneous correspondence.
- The story of the Instrumentality saga has been told before: the Ancient
- Wars, the Dark Age, the renaissance of humanity in the time of the
- scanners, the romantic age of exploration by sail ship the discoveries
- of
- xi plano forming and stroon that bind together the myriad worlds and
- usher in a bland Utopia of ease and plenty, the twin revolutions of the
- under people Holy Insurgency and the Instrumentality's Rediscovery of
- Man. The stories in this volume tell it all better than any summary
- can. Smith had it all worked out, of course; he even offered to supply
- a chronology for You Will Never Be the Same, which would undoubtedly
- have been far superior to the one I supplied for The Best of Cordwainer
- Smith for Del Rey Books.
- But the saga was never conceived as a seamless whole, however much
- Linebarger worked to develop the overall framework that would embrace
- both his original conception and his later one.
- His working method seemed to be to develop several strands of thought
- and weave them together, or perhaps let them weave themselves together.
- This is first evident in the genesis of "Scanners," in which ideas of a
- future dark age, automatic weapons, the Vomact family, the scanners
- themselves, and even the Instrumentality suddenly come together.
- Subsequent stories developed that background. Both
- "Mark Elf and the original two chapter fragment of
- "The Queen of the Afternoon" backtracked to the end of the Dark Age
- (the latter made no mention of the under people in that version, nor
- did it hint at any Christian themes).
- "The Game of Rat and Dragon" took the saga forward to the heroic age of
- plano forming and the vision of the far future in "No, No, Not Rogov!"
- hinted at a secular apotheosis for human history. Both
- "When the People Fell" and
- "The Burning of the Brain" are snapshots of different periods in the
- same history, as well as compelling stories in themselves.
- In 1958, Linebarger began writing a novel called Star-Craving Mad,
- which was his first attempt at what eventually became Norstrilia. But
- the initial version of the story is far different from that we know
- today. There is no Rediscovery of Man, nor any Holy Insurgency. Lord
- Jestocost and
- "Arthur McBan CLI" both figure here, but in different guises: Jestocost
- is simply a cruel but shrewd tyrant, whose name ("cruelty" in Russian)
- has none of the ironic meaning we now associate with it; while McBan is
- a man of action who comes to the aid of the under people only for the
- love of C'mell. And the rebellion of the under people is nothing more
- than an uprising of the oppressed, like the French Revolution to which
- it is compared. The E'telekeli appears, but as a future Jacobite
- rather than a spiritual sage. Linebarger was developing an ironic
- theme, but it had to do with true men having in advert-cntly created a
- race of supermen in the form of the under people
- Linebarger apparently wasn't satisfied with the way the story was
- going, for it was abandoned after a few chapters. Several other false
- starts over the next year failed to get Star-Craving Mad moving again,
- and a severe illness which Genevieve Linebarger later remembered as the
- genesis of Norstrilia may have actually been the genesis of a spiritual
- rebirth that changed the entire thrust of the
- Instrumentality saga. As in the case of
- "Scanners Live in Vain," however, Paul Linebarger was evidently
- thinking along several lines at once before they all came together.
- Even in the original draft of Star-Craving Mad there is one hint of the
- Rediscovery of Man, but it remains only a hint.
- C'mell's father C'mackintosh is not an athlete, but a "licensed robber"
- at a "savage park" in Mississippi: such parks are a means for humanity
- to "keep the peace within its own troubled and complex soul," but they
- are apparently a longstanding institution, not a revolutionary
- development. In an early false start for
- "The Ballad of Lost C'mell," Lord Redlady has unleashed ancient
- diseases on Earth, but not as part of a spiritual revolution: the idea
- to discourage invasions by developing immunities among Earthmen to
- pathogens that can then be used as weapons against outsiders. In
- another false start, for a story called
- "Strange Men and Doomed Ladies," Lord Jestocost proposes to end the
- policy of euthanasia for "spoiled" people such as the crippled, the
- sickly, the stupid, and even the overly-brilliant: "Let them be, and
- let us see." But this seems to be an isolated idea, unrelated to any
- grand plan.
- The false start for
- "The Ballad of Lost C'mell" ("Where Is the Which of the What She Did")
- also opens with a prologue that recounts the entire history of Earth.
- Our times are the Second Ancient Days; they came before the First
- Ancient Days, but were discovered later. The First Ancient Days came
- either before or after the Long Nothing (a summary of the chronology
- contradicts the narrative). Civilization was restored by the Dwellers,
- who brought the cities back into shape around the ruins left by the
- Daimoni, including Earthport Gulosan. It was during the time of the
- Dwellers that humanity discovered Space3 and overcame the rule of the
- perfect men. But that was all long before the time of C'mell. The
- Originals, invaders from space, overcame the Dwellers, but were later
- overthrown by an alliance of true men and under people Then came the
- Bright, who "did things with music and dance, with picture and word,
- which had never been done before." They also built the peace square at
- An-fang, and (another contradiction) had something to do with the "fall
- of the perfect men and the temporary rule of Lord Redlady." Then came
- a time of troubles, the High Cruel Years, followed by another invasion
- by the Pure ("men of earth who had been gone too long"), who still rule
- Earth at the time of the story.
- Although the Dwellers may be the true men of
- "Mark Elf,"
- and the rule of the Bright may have something to do with the Bright
- Empire mentioned in Norstrilia, nothing in the canon of stories we know
- seems to relate to the Originals or the High Cruel Years or the Pure.
- Linebarger was apparently reshaping his vision of the far future almost
- to the moment he wrote
- "Alpha Ralpha Boulevard," in which it all crystallized. (The
- "Where Is the
- xiii Which of the What She Did" fragment has the narrator recalling
- that "the most blessed of computers burned out on Alpha Ralpha
- Boulevard," but assigns this to the long-past age of the Dwellers.)
- During the same period, Linebarger was reshaping
- "The Colonel Came Back from the Nothing-at-All," a then-unpublished
- story about the discovery of plano forming into the story of Arthur
- Rambo's mystical experience in Space3. The story went through several
- partial drafts (one titled
- "Archipelagoes of Stars"), which used different approaches capturing
- the poetic experience of Arthur Rambau. One version quotes Rambau's Le
- Bateau Ivre itself, as a prophecy of Space3, and asks,
- "How knew it he, all the fine points of it? ... He an ancient was!"
- Another draft opens, "They put him into a box, a box. They shot him to
- the end of time . . . Then, when it was all over, people discovered
- that another man, also a singer, had written it all down in the Most
- Ancient World." The final version, of course, is far more subtle; it
- was typical of Linebarger to make his stories less straightforward and
- more allusive in such details.
- Although most of the background for the Instrumentality saga was
- contained in a notebook that Linebarger accidentally left in a
- restaurant in Rhodes in 1965, another notebook begun during the last
- year of his life contains ideas for several stories that were never
- written. Because they are notes to himself, they can be as cryptic as
- the lyrics of a David Lynch song. But some are clear enough, as far as
- they go, including those for
- "The Robot, the Rat, and the Copt," which was originally conceived as a
- single story but later was a cycle of four stories, like the Casher
- O'Neill series.
- We know from references in published stories that the Robot, the Rat,
- and the Copt were to bring back a Christian revelation from Space3, but
- the notes don't add much to that, except to confirm that this new
- dimension is where Christ "had really been and always was experienced."
- The rat was to have been named R'obert, however, and there was to have
- been a Coptic planet. (A list of Coptic names including Shenuda or
- "God Jves" appear in an entirely different notebook, a ring binder
- titled
- "New Science Fiction by Cordwainer Smith," which also includes most of
- the 'alse starts and first drafts already referred to.) Some of the
- ideas seem relatively trivial: a forlorn suitor has the crushed lead of
- his true love, killed in an accident, regrown on Shayol, and re
- implanted with her personality; a Go-Captain who has a mysterious (but
- unspecified) experience in space is treated as a madman on his
- conserva-I've home world Another story was to have been set on a
- remote, prosperous world where one parents gamble on the futures of
- their newly-issued children; this would evidently have shed more light
- on the sequential system of child-raising by one-parents, two-parents,
- and three-parents aluded to in
- "Under Old Earth." Another note is simply a name: the Lord
- y of Man Sto Dva, presumably a successor to the Lord Sto Odin of
- "Under Old Earth."
- But the most intriguing note is undoubtedly one for a story called
- "How the Dream Lords Died." Set in AD. 6111, it would have involved
- the use of 12,000 slave brains by the Dream Lords in an attempt to
- explore other times telepathically, like the Eighteenth Men of the
- distant future in Olaf Stapledon's Last and First Men. The Dream Lords
- were clearly among the "others in the earth" after the fall of the
- Ancient World, alluded to in Norstrilia, and this note is the only
- reference to any story to have been set during that time well before
- "Mark Elf." Coupled with the titling of
- "The Queen of the Afternoon" (set, like
- "Mark Elf,"
- at the very end of the new dark ages), it suggests that a new cycle of
- stories,
- "The Lords of the Afternoon," may have been related to the dark ages.
- Shortly before his death, Linebarger told his friend Arthur Burns he
- was planning a story cycle of that name; Burns conjectured that it
- would take place in the period of
- "Under Old Earth," and most time lines have shown the series taking
- place in that period.
- The year given for
- "How the Dream Lords Died," naturally knocks the time-line used in The
- Best of Cordwainer Smith and The Instrumentality of Mankind into a
- cocked hat. The dark ages must have lasted much longer than listed
- there, and the rest of the future history thus must have been
- compressed into a much shorter time. We will probably never know much
- more about Linebarger's intentions; even his wife doesn't seem to have
- been privy to them. In
- "The Saga of the Third Sister," a (deservedly) unpublished sequel to
- "The Queen of the Afternoon," she involved Karia vom Acht in the quest
- of the Robot, the Rat, and the Copt, even though that story was
- obviously intended to have come millennia later. In working on Paul's
- unfinished manuscript for
- "The Queen of the Afternoon" itself, she insisted on anachronistic
- references to under people and softened the characterizations of Juli
- vom Acht and the true men. Incidentally, it isn't clear from Paul's
- original material whether Juli's arrival on Earth was actually to have
- come after Carlotta's, rather than before.
- But enough of the history behind the history. You already know the
- story of the Instrumentality is more than history: it is poetry, and
- romance, and myth, and unlike any other SF series or future history. It
- is almost impossible to imagine anyone except Linebarger writing
- stories set in the universe of Cordwainer Smith, as others have written
- stories about Isaac Asimov's robots or Larry Niven's kzinti. It would
- probably be close to blasphemy, in the realm of the arts, for anyone
- else to even try. Like the rarest vintage wine, the work of Cordwainer
- Smith cannot be duplicated. We must be grateful that we can still
- savor the true vintage of these pages.
- Editor's Introduction This volume contains all the short science
- fiction written by Cordwainer Smith (Dr. Paul Linebarger). It
- contains all the stories included in The Best of Cordwainer Smith, The
- Instrumentality of Mankind, and Quest of the Three Worlds. The latter
- book, while marketed as a novel, is actually a collection of four short
- works. This collection also includes the story
- "Down to a Sunless Sea," published by The Magazine of Fantasy & Science
- Fiction under the name
- "Cordwainer Smith," but actually written by Genevieve Linebarger,
- Paul's wife. She was the coauthor with Paul on several other stories,
- most notably
- "The Lady Who Sailed The Soul."
- The current volume contains two previously unpublished short pieces.
- "Himself in Anachron" was completed by Genevieve Linebarger after
- Paul's death, and is also scheduled for publication in The Last
- Dangerous Visions.
- "War No. 81-Q," is a complete rewrite of a story Linebarger wrote
- while in high school. (The original version was published in The
- Instrumentality of Mankind and is also included here.) In many cases,
- there were a number of differences between the original magazine
- version of the story and the versions published later in various
- collections of Smith's work. Sometimes, whole sentences or paragraphs
- were added to the book version. In general, we used the book versions,
- since these seemed to be the more complete. For the four stories in
- Quest of the Three Worlds, we also used the versions that appeared in
- the "novel."
- In one case,
- "Scanners Live in Vain," we had the original manuscript. We discovered
- that Fantasy Book, which published the story, dropped several lines and
- made a number of other minor changes; subsequent publications followed
- the Fantasy Book version. The text contained here is the first
- publication of that story with the complete text of the original.
- In addition to the short fiction contained here. Smith produced one SF
- novel: Norstrilia. Norstrilia was originally published as two short
- novels,
- "The Boy Who Bought Old Earth" and
- "The Store of Heart's Desire," which were then reprinted in two
- volumes. The Planet Buyer and The Underpeople, respectively.
- Only later were they combined into one volume as Norstrilia. However,
- unlike the stories that make up Quest of the Three Worlds, these two
- stories were never intended as shorter works: they are truly a novel
- split in two, while Quest of the Three Worlds is really four
- independent stories (which share the same central character), cobbled
- together to form a novel. Norstrilia, therefore, is not included in
- this collection.
- One final note on contents: most of Smith's science fiction is set in a
- common future, that of the Instrumentality of Mankind.
- This book is arranged in two sections. In the first section, the
- Instrumentality stories are arranged in internal chronological order
- (as best as can be determined from the stories). The second section
- contains the non-Instrumentality stories, arranged in order of original
- publication.
- James
- A.
- Mann North boro,
- MA
- April Acknowledgments This book was put together through the efforts of
- many volunteers. Frank and Lisa Richards scanned in most of the
- book.
- Tony Lewis made the contractual arrangements for the stories and the
- cover. Greg Thokar arranged for printing, provided some stylistic
- guidance, and gave a thorough consistency check to the final book. Mark
- Olson helped typeset a number of the stories, proofed parts of the
- book, and provided general support. George Flynn copy edited almost
- the entire book, comparing many stories to both book and magazine
- versions. Priscilla Olson also proofed and copy edited large pieces of
- the book. Aron Insinga, Tim Szczesuil, Ann Crimmins, and Gay Ellen
- Dennett proofed several stories. Tom Whitmore provided the original
- manuscript of "Scanners Live in Vain" and the cover letter reprinted on
- page 64.
- Laurie Mann helped enter proof corrections, typed some of the material
- that could not be scanned, and provided general moral support. Thanks
- to you all.
- Stories of the Instrumentality of Mankind
- No, No, Not Rogov!
- That golden shape on the golden steps shook and fluttered like a bird
- gone mad like a bird imbued with an intellect and a soul, and,
- nevertheless, driven mad by ecstasies and terrors beyond human
- understanding ecstasies drawn momentarily down into reality by the
- consummation of superlative art. A thousand worlds watched.
- Had the ancient calendar continued this would have been ad.
- 13,582. After defeat, after disappointment, after ruin and
- reconstruction, mankind had leapt among the stars.
- Out of meeting inhuman art, out of confronting non-human dances,
- mankind had made a superb esthetic effort and had leapt upon the stage
- of all the worlds.
- The golden steps reeled before the eyes. Some eyes had retinas. Some
- had crystalline cones. Yet all eyes were fixed upon the golden shape
- which interpreted The Glory and Affirmation of Man in the Inter- World
- Dance Festival of what might have been
- AD. 13,582.
- Once again mankind was winning the contest. Music and dance were
- hypnotic beyond the limits of systems, compelling, shocking to human
- and inhuman eyes. The dance was a triumph of shock the shock of
- dynamic beauty.
- The golden shape on the golden steps executed shimmering intricacies of
- meaning. The body was gold and still human. The body was a woman, but
- more than a woman. On the golden steps, in the golden light, she
- trembled and fluttered like a bird gone mad.
- The Ministry of State Security had been positively shocked when they
- found that a Nazi agent, more heroic than prudent, had almost reached
- N. Rogov.
- Rogov was worth more to the Soviet armed forces than any two air
- of Man armies, more than three motorized divisions. His brain was a
- weapon, a weapon for the Soviet power.
- Since the brain was a weapon, Rogov was a prisoner. He didn't mind.
- Rogov was a pure Russian type, broad-faced, sandy haired blue-eyed,
- with whimsey in his smile and amusement in the wrinkles of the tops of
- his cheeks.
- "Of course I'm a prisoner," Rogov used to say.
- "I am a prisoner of State service to the Soviet peoples. But the
- workers and peasants are good to me. I am an academician of the All
- Union Academy of Sciences, a major general in the Red Air Force, a
- professor in the University of Kharkov, a deputy works manager of the
- Red Flag Combat Aircraft Production Trust. From each of these I draw a
- salary."
- Sometimes he would narrow his eyes at his Russian scientific colleagues
- and ask them in dead earnest,
- "Would I serve capitalists?"
- The affrighted colleagues would try to stammer their way out of the
- embarrassment, protesting their common loyalty to Stalin or Beria, or
- Zhukov, or Molotov, or Bulganin, as the case may have been.
- Rogov would look very Russian: calm, mocking, amused. He would let
- them stammer.
- Then he'd laugh. Solemnity transformed into hilarity, he would explode
- into bubbling, effervescent, good-humored laughter.
- "Of course I could not serve the capitalists. My little Anastasia
- would not let me."
- The colleagues would smile uncomfortably and would wish that Rogov did
- not talk so wildly, or so comically, or so freely.
- Even Rogov might wind up dead. Rogov didn't think so. They did. Rogov
- was afraid of nothing.
- Most of his colleagues were afraid of each other, of the Soviet system,
- of the world, of life, and of death.
- Perhaps Rogov had once been ordinary and mortal like other people, and
- full of fears.
- But he had become the lover, the colleague, the husband of Anastasia
- Fyodorovna Cherpas.
- Comrade Cherpas had been his rival, his antagonist, his competitor, in
- the struggle for scientific eminence in the daring Slav frontiers of
- Russian science. Russian science could never overtake the inhuman
- perfection of German method, the rigid intellectual and moral
- discipline of German teamwork, but the Russians could and did get ahead
- of the Germans by giving vent to their bold, fantastic imaginations.
- Rogov had pioneered the first rocket launchers of 1939. Cherpas had
- finished the job by making the best of the rockets radio-directed.
- Rogov in 1942 had developed a whole new system of photo mapping Comrade
- Cherpas had applied it to color film. Rogov, sandy-haired, blue-
- eyed, and smiling, had recorded his criticisms of Comrade Cherpas's
- naivete and unsoundness at the top-secret meetings of Russian
- scientists during the black winter nights of 1943.
- Comrade Cherpas, her butter-yellow hair flowing down like living water
- to her shoulders, her unpainted face gleaming with fanaticism,
- intelligence, and dedication, would snarl her own defiance at him,
- deriding his Communist theory, pinching at his pride, hitting his
- intellectual hypotheses where they were weakest.
- By 1944 a Rogov-Cherpas quarrel had become something worth traveling to
- see.
- In 1945 they were married.
- Their courtship was secret, their wedding a surprise, their partnership
- a miracle in the upper ranks of Russian science.
- The emigre press had reported that the great scientist, Peter Kapitza,
- once remarked,
- "Rogov and Cherpas, there is a team.
- They're Communists, good Communists; but they're better than that!
- They're Russian, Russian enough to beat the world. Look at them.
- That's the future, our Russian future!" Perhaps the quotation was an
- exaggeration, but it did show the enormous respect in which both Rogov
- and Cherpas were held by their colleagues in Soviet science.
- Shortly after their marriage strange things happened to them.
- Rogov remained happy. Cherpas was radiant.
- Nevertheless, the two of them began to have haunted expressions, as
- though they had seen things which words could not express, as though
- they had stumbled upon secrets too important to be whispered even to
- the most secure agents of the Soviet State Police.
- In 1947 Rogov had an interview with Stalin. As he left Stalin's office
- in the Kremlin, the great leader himself came to the door, his forehead
- wrinkled in thought, nodding,
- "Da, da, da. " Even his own personal staff did not know why Stalin was
- saying
- "Yes, yes, yes," but they did see the orders that went forth marked
- only by safe hand, and to be read and returned, not retained, and
- furthermore stamped
- FOR AUTHORIZED EYES ONLY AND UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES TO BE COPIED.
- Into the true and secret Soviet budget that year by the direct personal
- order of a noncommittal Stalin, an item was added for "Project
- Telescope." Stalin tolerated no inquiry, brooked no comment.
- A village which had had a name became nameless.
- A forest which had been opened to the workers and peasants became
- military territory.
- Into the central post office in Kharkov there went a new box number for
- the village of Ya. Ch.
- Rogov and Cherpas, comrades and lovers, scientists both and Russians
- both, disappeared from the everyday lives of their colleagues. Their
- faces
- of Man were no longer seen at scientific meetings. Only rarely did
- they emerge.
- On the few times they were seen, usually going to and from Moscow at
- the time the All Union budget was made up each year, they seemed
- smiling and happy. But they did not make jokes.
- What the outside world did not know was that Stalin in giving them
- their own project, granting them a paradise restricted to themselves,
- had seen to it that a snake went with them in the paradise. The snake
- this time was not one, but two personalities Gausgofer and Gauck.
- Stalin died.
- Beria died too less willingly.
- The world went on.
- Everything went into the forgotten village ofYa. Ch. and nothing came
- out.
- It was rumored that Bulganin himself visited Rogov and Cherpas. It was
- even whispered that Bulganin said as he went to the Kharkov airport to
- fly back to Moscow,
- "It's big, big, big.
- There'll be no cold war if they do it. There won't be any war of any
- kind. We'll finish capitalism before the capitalists can ever begin to
- fight. If they do it. If they do it." Bulganin was reported to have
- shaken his head slowly in perplexity and to have said nothing more but
- to have put his initials on the unmodified budget of Project Telescope
- when a trusted messenger next brought him an envelope from Rogov.
- Anastasia Cherpas became a mother. Their first boy looked like his
- father. He was followed by a little girl. Then another little boy.
- The children didn't stop Cherpas's work. They had a large dacha and
- trained nursemaids took over the household.
- Every night the four of them dined together.
- Rogov, Russian, humorous, courageous, amused.
- Cherpas, older, more mature, more beautiful than ever but just as
- biting, just as cheerful, just as sharp as she had ever been.
- But then the other two, the two who sat with them across the years of
- all their days, the two colleagues who had been visited upon them by
- the all-powerful word of Stalin himself.
- Gausgofer was a female: bloodless, narrow-faced, with a voice like a
- horse's whinny. She was a scientist and a policewoman, and competent
- at both jobs. In 1917 she had reported her own mother's whereabouts to
- the Bolshevik Terror Committee. In 1924 she had commanded her father's
- execution. He had been a Russian German of the old Baltic nobility and
- he
- No, No, Not Rogov! 7 ^ had tried to adjust his mind to the new
- system, but he had failed.
- In 1930 she had let her lover trust her a little too much. He had been
- a Roumanian Communist, very high in the Party, but he had whispered
- into her ear in the privacy of their bedroom, whispered with the tears
- pouring down his face; she had listened affectionately and quietly and
- had delivered his words to the police the next morning.
- With that she had come to Stalin's attention.
- Stalin had been tough. He had addressed her brutally.
- "Comrade, you have some brains. I can see you know what Communism is
- all about. You understand loyalty. You're going to get ahead and
- serve the Party and the working class, but is that all you want?" He
- had spat the question at her.
- She had been so astonished that she gaped.
- The old man had changed his expression, favoring her with leering
- benevolence. He had put his forefinger on her chest.
- "Study science. Comrade. Study science. Communism plus science
- equals victory. You're too clever to stay in police work."
- Gausgofer took a reluctant pride in the fiendish program of her German
- namesake, the wicked old geographer who made geography itself a
- terrible weapon in the Nazi anti-Soviet struggle.
- Gausgofer would have liked nothing better than to intrude on the
- marriage ofCherpas and Rogov.
- Gausgofer fell in love with Rogov the moment she saw him.
- Gausgofer fell in hate and hate can be as spontaneous and miraculous as
- love with Cherpas the moment she saw her.
- But Stalin had guessed that too.
- With the bloodless, fanatic Gausgofer he had sent a man named B.
- Gauck.
- Gauck was solid, impassive, blank-faced. In body he was about the same
- height as Rogov. Where Rogov was muscular, Gauck was flabby. Where
- Rogov's skin was fair and shot through with the pink and health of
- exercise, Gauck's skin was like stale lard, greasy, gray-green, sickly
- even on the best of days.
- Gauck's eyes were black and small. His glance was as cold and sharp as
- death. Gauck had no friends, no enemies, no beliefs, no enthusiasm.
- Even Gausgofer was afraid of him.
- Gauck never drank, never went out, never received mail, never sent
- mail, never spoke a spontaneous word. He was never rude, never kind,
- never friendly, never really withdrawn: he couldn't withdraw any more
- than the constant withdrawal of all his life.
- Rogov had turned to his wife in the secrecy of their bedroom soon after
- Gausgofer and Gauck came and had said,
- "Anastasia, is that man sane?"
- Cherpas intertwined the fingers of her
- beautiful, expressive hands. She who had been the wit of a thousand
- scientific meetings was now at a loss for words. She looked up at her
- husband with a troubled expression.
- "I don't know, Comrade ... I just don't know . .."
- Rogov smiled his amused Slavic smile.
- "At the least then I don't think Gausgofer knows either."
- Cherpas snorted with laughter and picked up her hairbrush.
- "That she doesn't. She really doesn't know, does she? I'll wager she
- doesn't even know to whom he reports."
- That conversation had receded into the past. Gauck, Gausgofer, the
- bloodless eyes and the black eyes they remained.
- Every dinner the four sat down together.
- Every morning the four met in the laboratory.
- Rogov's great courage, high sanity, and keen humor kept the work
- going.
- Cherpas's flashing genius fueled him whenever the routine overloaded
- his magnificent intellect.
- Gausgofer spied and watched and smiled her bloodless smiles; sometimes,
- curiously enough, Gausgofer made genuinely constructive suggestions.
- She never understood the whole frame of reference of their work, but
- she knew enough of the mechanical and engineering details to be very
- useful on occasion.
- Gauck came in, sat down quietly, said nothing, did nothing.
- He did not even smoke. He never fidgeted. He never went to sleep. He
- just watched.
- The laboratory grew and with it there grew the immense configuration of
- the espionage machine.
- In theory what Rogov had proposed and Cherpas seconded was imaginable.
- It consisted of an attempt to work out an integrated theory for all the
- electrical and radiation phenomena accompanying consciousness, and to
- duplicate the electrical functions of mind without the use of animal
- material.
- The range of potential products was immense. The first product Stalin
- had asked for was a receiver, if possible, capable of tuning in the
- thoughts of a human mind and of translating those thoughts into either
- a punch-tape machine, an adapted German Hellschreiber machine, or
- phonetic speech. If the grids could be turned around and the
- brain-equivalent machine could serve not as a receiver but as a
- transmitter, it might be able to send out stunning forces which would
- paralyze or kill the process of thought.
- At its best, Rogov's machine would be designed to confuse human
- thought over great distances, to select human targets to be confused,
- and to maintain an electronic jamming system which would jam straight
- into the human mind without the requirement of tubes or receivers.
- He had succeeded in part. He had given himself a violent headache in
- the first year of work.
- In the third year he had killed mice at a distance of ten kilometers.
- In the seventh year he had brought on mass hallucinations and a wave of
- suicides in a neighboring village. It was this which impressed
- Bulganin.
- Rogov was now working on the receiver end. No one had ever explored
- the infinitely narrow, infinitely subtle bands of radiation which
- distinguished one human mind from another, but Rogov was trying, as it
- were, to tune in on minds far away.
- He had tried to develop a telepathic helmet of some kind, but it did
- not work. He had then turned away from the reception of pure thought
- to the reception of visual and auditory images.
- Where the nerve ends reached the brain itself, he had managed over the
- years to distinguish whole pockets of micro-phenomena, and on some of
- these he had managed to get a fix.
- With infinitely delicate tuning he had succeeded one day in picking up
- the eyesight of their second chauffeur and had managed, thanks to a
- needle thrust in just below his own right eyelid, to "see" through the
- other man's eyes as the other man, all unaware, washed their Zis
- limousine 1,600 meters away.
- Cherpas had surpassed his feat later that winter and had managed to
- bring in an entire family having dinner over in a nearby city. She had
- invited B. Gauck to have a needle inserted into his cheekbone so that
- he could see with the eyes of an unsuspecting spied-on stranger. Gauck
- had refused any kind of needles, but Gausgofer had joined in the
- work.
- The espionage machine was beginning to take form.
- Two more steps remained. The first step consisted of tuning in on some
- remote target, such as the White House in Washington or the NATO
- Headquarters outside of Paris. The machine itself could obtain perfect
- intelligence by eavesdropping on the living minds of people far away.
- The second problem consisted of finding a method of jamming those minds
- at a distance, stunning them so that the subject personnel fell into
- tears, confusion, or sheer insanity.
- Rogov had tried, but he had never gotten more than thirty kilometers
- from the nameless village of Ya. Ch.
- One November there had been seventy cases of hysteria, most of them
- ending in suicide, down in the city of Kharkov several hundred
- kilometers away, but Rogov was not sure that his own machine was doing
- it.
- Comrade Gausgofer dared to stroke his sleeve. Her white lips smiled
- of Man and her watery eyes grew happy as she said in her high, cruel
- voice,
- "You can do it. Comrade. You can do it."
- Cherpas looked on with contempt. Gauck said nothing.
- The female agent Gausgofer saw Cherpas's eyes upon her, and for a
- moment an arc of living hatred leapt between the two women.
- The three of them went back to work on the machine.
- Gauck sat on his stool and watched them.
- The laboratory workers never talked very much and the room was quiet.
- It was the year in which Eristratov died that the machine made a
- breakthrough. Eristratov died after the Soviet and People's
- democracies had tried to end the cold war with the Americans.
- It was May. Outside the laboratory the squirrels ran among the trees.
- The leftovers from the night's rain dripped on the ground and kept the
- earth moist. It was comfortable to leave a few windows open and to let
- the smell of the forest into the workshop.
- The smell of their oil-burning heaters and the stale smell of
- insulation, of ozone, and of the heated electronic gear was something
- with which all of them were much too familiar.
- Rogov had found that his eyesight was beginning to suffer because he
- had to get the receiver needle somewhere near his optic nerve in order
- to obtain visual impressions from the machine. After months of
- experimentation with both animal and human subjects he had decided to
- copy one of their last experiments, successfully performed on a
- prisoner boy fifteen years of age, by having the needle slipped
- directly through the skull, up and behind the eye. Rogov had disliked
- using prisoners, because Gauck, speaking on behalf of security, always
- insisted that a prisoner used in experiments had to be destroyed in not
- less than five days from the beginning of the experiment. Rogov had
- satisfied himself that the skull-and-needle technique was safe, but he
- was very tired of trying to get frightened, unscientific people to
- carry the load of intense, scientific attentiveness required by the
- machine.
- Rogov recapitulated the situation to his wife and to their two strange
- colleagues.
- Somewhat ill-humored, he shouted at Gauck,
- "Have you ever known what this is all about? You've been here years.
- Do you know what we're trying to do? Don't you ever want to take part
- in the experiments yourself? Do you realize how many years of
- mathematics have gone into the making
- of these grids and the calculation of these wave patterns? Are you
- good for anything?"
- Gauck said, tonelessly and without anger,
- "Comrade Professor, I am obeying orders. You are obeying orders, too.
- I've never impeded you."
- Rogov almost raved.
- "I know you never got in my way. We're all good servants of the Soviet
- State. It's not a question of loyalty.
- It's a question of enthusiasm. Don't you ever want to glimpse the
- science we're making? We are a hundred years or a thousand years ahead
- of the capitalist Americans. Doesn't that excite you? Aren't you a
- human being? Why don't you take part? Will you understand me when I
- explain it?"
- Gauck said nothing: he looked at Rogov with his beady eyes.
- His dirty-gray face did not change expression. Gausgofer exhaled
- loudly in a grotesquely feminine sigh of relief, but she too said
- nothing. Cherpas, her winning smile and her friendly eyes looking at
- her husband and two colleagues, said,
- "Go ahead, Nikolai. The comrade can follow if he wants to."
- Gausgofer looked enviously at Cherpas. She seemed inclined to keep
- quiet, but then had to speak. She said,
- "Do go ahead, Comrade Professor."
- Said Rogov,
- "Kharosho, I'll do what I can. The machine is now ready to receive
- minds over immense distances." He wrinkled his lip in amused scorn.
- "We may even spy into the brain of the chief rascal himself and find
- out what Eisenhower is planning to do today against the Soviet people.
- Wouldn't it be wonderful if our machine could stun him and leave him
- sitting addled at his desk?"
- Gauck commented,
- "Don't try it. Not without orders."
- Rogov ignored the interruption and went on.
- "First I receive.
- I don't know what I will get, who I will get, or where they will be.
- All I know is that this machine will reach out across all the minds of
- men and beasts now living and it will bring the eyes and ears of a
- single mind directly into mine. With the new needle going directly
- into the brain it will be possible for me to get a very sharp fixation
- of position. The trouble with that boy last week was that even though
- we knew he was seeing something outside of this room, he appeared to be
- getting sounds in a foreign language and did not know enough English or
- German to realize where or what the machine had taken him to see."
- Cherpas laughed.
- "I'm not worried. I saw then it was safe. You go first, my husband.
- If our comrades don't mind ?"
- Gauck nodded.
- Gausgofer lifted her bony hand breathlessly up to her skinny throat and
- said,
- "Of course, Comrade Rogov, of course. You did all the work. You must
- be the first."
- Rogov sat down.
- A white-smocked technician brought the machine over to him.
- It was
- of Man mounted on three rubber-tired wheels and it resembled the small
- X-ray units used by dentists. In place of the cone at the head of the
- X-ray machine there was a long, incredibly tough needle. It had been
- made for them by the best surgical-steel craftsmen in Prague.
- Another technician came up with a shaving bowl, a brush, and a straight
- razor. Under the gaze of Gauck's deadly eyes he shaved an area four
- centimeters square on the top of Rogov head.
- Cherpas herself then took over. She set her husband's head in the
- clamp and used a micrometer to get the skull fittings so tight and so
- clear that the needle would push through the dura mater at exactly the
- right point.
- All this work she did deftly with kind, very strong fingers.
- She was gentle, but she was firm. She was his wife, but she was also
- his fellow scientist and his fellow colleague in the Soviet State.
- She stepped back and looked at her work. She gave him one of their own
- very special smiles, the secret gay smiles which they usually exchanged
- with each other only when they were alone.
- "You won't want to do this every day. We're going to have to find some
- way of getting into the brain without using this needle. But it won't
- hurt you."
- "Does it matter if it does hurt?" said Rogov.
- "This is the triumph of all our work. Bring it down."
- Gausgofer looked as though she would like to be invited to take part in
- the experiment, but she dared not interrupt Cherpas.
- Cherpas, her eyes gleaming with attention, reached over and pulled down
- the handle, which brought the tough needle to within a tenth of a
- millimeter of the right place.
- Rogov spoke very carefully.
- "All I felt was a little sting. You can turn the power on now."
- Gausgofer could not contain herself. Timidly she addressed Cherpas.
- "May I turn on the power?"
- Cherpas nodded. Gauck watched. Rogov waited. Gausgofer pulled down
- the bayonet switch.
- The power went on.
- With an impatient twist of her hand, Anastasia Cherpas ordered the
- laboratory attendants to the other end of the room.
- Two or three of them had stopped working and were staring at Rogov,
- staring like dull sheep. They looked embarrassed and then they huddled
- in a white-smocked herd at the other end of the laboratory.
- The wet May wind blew in on all of them. The scent of forest and
- leaves was about them.
- The three watched Rogov.
- Rogov's complexion began to change. His face became flushed. His
- breathing was so loud and heavy they could hear it several meters
- away. Cherpas fell on her knees in front of him, eyebrows lifted in
- mute inquiry.
- Rogov did not dare nod, not with a needle in his brain. He said
- through flushed lips, speaking thickly and heavily, "Do not stop
- now."
- Rogov himself did not know what was happening. He thought he might see
- an American room, or a Russian room, or a tropical colony. He might
- see palm trees, or forests, or desks. He might see guns or buildings,
- wash-rooms or beds, hospitals, homes, churches. He might see with the
- eyes of a child, a woman, a man, a soldier, a philosopher, a slave, a
- worker, a savage, a religious one, a Communist, a reactionary, a
- governor, a policeman. He might hear voices; he might hear English, or
- French, or Russian, Swahili, Hindu, Malay, Chinese, Ukrainian,
- Armenian, Turkish, Greek. He did not know.
- Something strange was happening.
- It seemed to him that he had left the world, that he had left time. The
- hours and the centuries shrank up as the meters and the machine,
- unchecked, reached out for the most powerful signal which any humankind
- had transmitted. Rogov did not know it, but the machine had conquered
- time.
- The machine reached the dance, the human challenger, and the dance
- festival of the year that was not AD. 13,582, but which might have
- been.
- Before Rogov's eyes the golden shape and the golden steps shook and
- fluttered in a ritual a thousand times more compelling than hypnotism.
- The rhythms meant nothing and everything to him. This was Russia, this
- was Communism. This was his life indeed it was his soul acted out
- before his very eyes.
- For a second, the last second of his ordinary life, he looked through
- flesh-and-blood eyes and saw the shabby woman whom he had once thought
- beautiful. He saw Anastasia Cherpas, and he did not care.
- His vision concentrated once again on the dancing image, this woman,
- those postures, that dance!
- Then the sound came in music which would have made a Tchaikovsky weep,
- orchestras which would have silenced Shostakovich or Khachaturian
- forever, so much did it surpass the music of the twentieth century.
- The people-who-were-not-people between the stars had taught mankind
- many arts. Rogov's mind was the best of its time, but his time was
- far, far behind the time of the great dance. With that one vision
- Rogov went firmly and completely mad. He became blind to the sight of
- Cherpas, Gausgofer, and Gauck. He forgot the village of Ya. Ch. He
- forgot himself. He was like a fish, bred in stale fresh water, which
- is thrown for the first time into a living stream. He was like an
- insect emerging from the chrysalis. His twentieth-century mind could
- not hold the imagery and the impact of the music and the dance.
- of Man But the needle was there and the needle transmitted into his
- mind more than his mind could stand.
- The synapses of his brain flicked like switches. The future flooded
- into him.
- He fainted. Cherpas leapt forward and lifted the needle.
- Rogov fell out of the chair.
- It was Gauck who got the doctors. By nightfall they had Rogov resting
- comfortably and under heavy sedation. There were two doctors, both
- from the military headquarters. Gauck had obtained authorization for
- their services by dint of a direct telephone call to Moscow.
- Both the doctors were annoyed. The senior one never stopped grumbling
- at Cherpas.
- "You should not have done it, Comrade Cherpas. Comrade Rogov should
- not have done it either. You can't go around sticking things into
- brains. That's a medical problem. None of you people are doctors of
- medicine. It's all right for you to contrive devices with the
- prisoners, but you can't inflict things like this on Soviet scientific
- personnel. I'm going to get blamed because I can't bring Rogov back.
- You heard what he was saying. All he did was mutter,
- "That golden shape on the golden steps, that music, that me is a true
- me, that golden shape, that golden shape, I want to be with that golden
- shape," and rubbish like that. Maybe you've ruined a first-class brain
- forever " He stopped himself short as though he had said too much.
- After all, the problem was a security problem and apparently both Gauck
- and Gausgofer represented the security agencies.
- Gausgofer turned her watery eyes on the doctor and said in a low, even,
- unbelievably poisonous voice,
- "Could she have done it.
- Comrade Doctor?"
- The doctor looked at Cherpas, answering Gausgofer.
- "How?
- You were there. I wasn't. How could she have done it? Why should she
- do it? You were there."
- Cherpas said nothing. Her lips were compressed tight with grief. Her
- yellow hair gleamed, but her hair was all that remained, at that
- moment, of her beauty. She was frightened and she was getting ready to
- be sad. She had no time to hate foolish women or to worry about
- security; she was concerned with her colleague, her lover, her husband,
- Rogov.
- There was nothing much for them to do except to wait. They went into a
- large room and tried to eat.
- The servants had laid out immense dishes of cold sliced meat, pots
- of caviar, and an assortment of sliced breads, pure butter genuine
- coffee, and liquors.
- None of them ate much.
- They were all waiting.
- At 9:15 the sound of rotors beat against the house.
- The big helicopter had arrived from Moscow.
- Higher authorities took over.
- VI
- The higher authority was a deputy minister, a man by the name of V.
- Karper.
- Karper was accompanied by two or three uniformed colonels, by an
- engineer civilian, by a man from the headquarters of the Communist
- Party of the Soviet Union, and by two doctors.
- They dispensed with the courtesies. Karper merely said,
- "You are Cherpas. I have met you. You are Gausgofer. I have seen
- your reports. You are Gauck."
- The delegation went into Rogov's bedroom. Karper snapped, "Wake
- him."
- The military doctor who had given him sedatives said "Comrade, you
- mustn't " Karper cut him off.
- "Shut up." He turned to his own physician, pointed at Rogov.
- "Wake him up."
- The doctor from Moscow talked briefly with the senior military doctor.
- He too began shaking his head. He gave Karper a disturbed look. Karper
- guessed what he might hear. He said, "Go ahead. I know there is some
- danger to the patient, but I've got to get back to Moscow with a
- report."
- The two doctors worked over Rogov. One of them asked for his bag and
- gave Rogov an injection. Then all of them stood back from the bed.
- Rogov writhed in his bed. He squirmed. His eyes opened, but he did
- not see them. With childishly clear and simple words Rogov began to
- talk: ". . . that golden shape, the golden stairs, the music, take me
- back to the music, I want to be with the music, I really am the music
- .
- . ." and so on in an endless monotone.
- Cherpas leaned over him so that her face was directly in his line of
- vision.
- "My darling! My darling, wake up. This is serious."
- It was evident to all of them that Rogov did not hear her, because he
- went on muttering about golden shapes.
- For the first time in many years Gauck took the initiative. He spoke
- of Man directly to the man from Moscow, Karper.
- "Comrade, may I make a suggestion?"
- Karper looked at him. Gauck nodded at Gausgofer.
- "We were both sent here by orders of Comrade Stalin. She is senior.
- She bears the responsibility. All I do is double-check."
- The deputy minister turned to Gausgofer. Gausgofer had been staring at
- Rogov on the bed; her blue, watery eyes were tearless and her face was
- drawn into an expression of extreme tension.
- Karper ignored that and said to her firmly, clearly, commandingly,
- "What do you recommend?"
- Gausgofer looked at him very directly and said in a measured voice,
- "I do not think that the case is one of brain damage. I believe that
- he has obtained a communication which he must share with another human
- being and that unless one of us follows him there may be no answer."
- Karper barked,
- "Very well. But what do we do?"
- "Let me follow into the machine."
- Anastasia Cherpas began to laugh slyly and frantically. She seized
- Karper's arm and pointed her finger at Gausgofer. Karper stared at
- her.
- Cherpas slowed down her laughter and shouted at Karper, "The woman's
- mad. She has loved my husband for many years.
- She has hated my presence, and now she thinks that she can save him.
- She thinks that she can follow. She thinks that he wants to
- communicate with her. That's ridiculous. I will go myself!"
- Karper looked about. He selected two of his staff and stepped over
- into a corner of the room. They could hear him talking, but they could
- not distinguish the words. After a conference of six or seven minutes
- he returned.
- "You people have been making serious security charges against each
- other. I find that one of our finest weapons, the mind of Rogov, is
- damaged. Rogov's not just a man. He is a Soviet project." Scorn
- entered his voice.
- "I find that the senior security officer, a policewoman with a notable
- record, is charged by another Soviet scientist with a silly
- infatuation. I disregard such charges. The development of the Soviet
- State and the work of Soviet science cannot be impeded by
- personalities. Comrade Gausgofer will follow. I am acting tonight
- because my own staff physician says that Rogov may not live and it is
- very important for us to find out just what has happened to him and
- why."
- He turned his baneful gaze on Cherpas.
- "You will not protest, Comrade. Your mind is the property of the
- Russian State. Your life and your education have been paid for by the
- workers. You cannot throw these things away because of personal
- sentiment. If there is anything to be found Comrade Gausgofer will
- find it for both of us."
- The whole group of them went back into the laboratory. The frightened
- technicians were brought over from the barracks. The lights were
- turned on and the windows were closed. The May wind had become
- chilly.
- The needle was sterilized.
- The electronic grids were warmed up.
- Gausgofer's face was an impassive mask of triumph as she sat in the
- receiving chair. She smiled at Gauck as an attendant brought the soap
- and the razor to shave a clean patch on her scalp.
- Gauck did not smile back. His black eyes stared at her. He said
- nothing. He did nothing. He watched.
- Karper walked to and fro, glancing from time to time at the hasty but
- orderly preparation of the experiment.
- Anastasia Cherpas sat down at a laboratory table about five meters away
- from the group. She watched the back of Gausgofer's head as the needle
- was lowered. She buried her face in her hands.
- Some of the others thought they heard her weeping, but no one heeded
- Cherpas very much. They were too intent on watching Gausgofer.
- Gausgofer's face became red. Perspiration poured down the flabby
- cheeks. Her fingers tightened on the arm of her chair.
- Suddenly she shouted at them,
- "That golden shape on the golden steps."
- She leapt to her feet, dragging the apparatus with her.
- No one had expected this. The chair fell to the floor. The needle
- holder, lifted from the floor, swung its weight sidewise.
- The needle twisted like a scythe in Gausgofer's brain. Neither Rogov
- nor Cherpas had ever expected a struggle within the chair.
- They did not know that they were going to tune in on ad. 13,582.
- The body of Gausgofer lay on the floor, surrounded by excited
- officials.
- Karper was acute enough to look around at Cherpas.
- She stood up from the laboratory table and walked toward him. A thin
- line of blood flowed down from her cheekbone.
- Another line of blood dripped down from a position on her cheek, one
- and a half centimeters forward of the opening of her left ear.
- With tremendous composure, her face as white as fresh snow, she smiled
- at him.
- "I eavesdropped."
- Karper said,
- "What?"
- "I eavesdropped, eavesdropped," repeated Anastasia Cherpas.
- "I found out where my husband has gone. It is not somewhere in this
- world. It is something hypnotic beyond all the limitations of our
- science. We have made a great gun, but the gun has fired upon us
- before we could fire it. You may think you will change my mind,
- Comrade Deputy Minister, but you will not.
- "I know what has happened. My husband is never coming back. And I am
- not going any further forward without him.
- "Project Telescope is finished. You may try to get someone else to
- finish it, but you will not."
- Karper stared at her and then turned aside.
- Gauck stood in his way.
- "What do you want?" snapped Karper.
- "To tell you," said Gauck very softly, "to tell you, Comrade Deputy
- Minister, that Rogov is gone as she says he is gone, that she is
- finished if she says she is finished, that all this is true. I
- know."
- Karper glared at him.
- "How do you know?"
- Gauck remained utterly impassive. With superhuman assurance and
- perfect calm he said to Karper,
- "Comrade, I do not dispute the matter. I know these people, though I
- do not know their science. Rogov is done for."
- At last Karper believed him. Karper sat down in a chair beside a
- table. He looked up at his staff.
- "Is it possible?"
- No one answered.
- "I ask you, is it possible?"
- They all looked at Anastasia Cherpas, at her beautiful hair, her
- determined blue eyes, and the two thin lines of blood where she had
- eavesdropped with small needles.
- Karper turned to her.
- "What do we do now?"
- For an answer she dropped to her knees and began sobbing, "No, no, not
- Rogov! No, no, not Rogov!"
- And that was all that they could get out of her. Gauck looked on.
- On the golden steps in the golden light, a golden shape danced a dream
- beyond the limits of all imagination, danced and drew the music to
- herself until a sigh of yearning, yearning which became a hope and a
- torment, went through the hearts of living things on a thousand
- worlds.
- Edges of the golden scene faded raggedly and unevenly into black. The
- gold dimmed down to a pale gold-silver sheen and then to silver, last
- of all to white. The dancer who had been golden was now a forlorn
- white-pink figure standing, quiet and fatigued, on the immense white
- steps. The applause of a thousand worlds roared in upon her.
- She looked blindly at them. The dance had overwhelmed her, too. Their
- applause could mean nothing. The dance was an end in itself. She
- would have to live, somehow, until she danced again.
- War No. 81-Q^ (Rewritten Version) For a few bnet happy centuries, war
- was made into an enormous game. Then the world population passed the
- thirty billion point. Acting Chief Minister Chatterji presented the
- "Rightful Proportions" formula to the world authorities, and war turned
- from a game into realities. When it was over, hideous new creepers
- covered the wreckage of cities, saints and morons camped in the
- overpasses of disused highways, and a few man hunting machines scoured
- the world in search of surviving weapons.
- Long before real war set mankind back a thousand ages, the nations
- played with their formulae of "safe war." Wars were easily declared,
- safely fought, won or lost with noblesse oblige, and accepted as
- decisive. Wars were rare enough to sweep all other events from the
- television screens, beautiful enough to warrant the utmost in scenic
- decoration, and tough enough to call for champions with perfect
- eyesight and no nerves at all. The weapons were dirigibles armed with
- missiles, counter missiles and feinting screens; they had been revived
- because they were slow enough to show well on the viewscreens, hard
- enough to demand a skillful fight. A whole class of warriors developed
- to manage these men who trained on the ski-slopes and underwater
- beaches of the world' s resorts and who then, tanned and fit, sat in
- control rooms and managed the ships from their own home bases. The
- kinescopes were paired up so that pictures of the battle alternated
- with scenes of the warriors sitting in their controls, the foreheads
- wrinkled with worry, their gasps of dismay or smiles of triumph showing
- plainly, and the whole drama of human emotion revealed in their
- performance of a licensed
- of Man War came near between Tibet and America.
- Tibet had been liberated from the Goonhogo, the central Chinese
- government, only with generous American help and with the threat (was
- it bluff? was it death?) trembling in the rocket pits around Lake
- Erie. No one ever found out whether the Americans would have risked
- real war, because the Chinese did not force a show of strength. The
- Americans had been supported by the Reunion of India and the Federated
- Congos on the floor of the world assembly, and there were political
- debts to be settled when the Tibetan liberation came true. The Congo
- asked for support on Saharan claims, which was easy enough, since this
- was a matter of voting in the assembly, but the Reunion of India asked
- for the largest solar power-collector, to reach eighty miles along the
- southern crest of the Himalayas. The Americans hesitated, and then
- built it under lease from Tibet, keeping title in their own hands. Just
- before the first surges of power were due to pour down into the Bengal
- plains, Tibetan soldiers entered the control rooms with a warrant from
- the Tibetan ministry of the interior seizing the plant, Tibetan
- technicians hooked in new cables which had been flown from the Goonhogo
- base at Teli in Yiinnan, and the Tibetans announced they had leased the
- entire power output to their recent enemies, the Goonhogo of China.
- Even in politics, where gratitude is seldom expected, such bleak
- ingratitude was hard to bear. The Americans had just freed the
- Tibetans from the Chinese, and now the Tibetans seized the reward which
- America had built for Indian help on Tibetan territory. Legally, the
- deal was tight. The solar accumulators were on Tibetan soil, and under
- the system of "sovereignty" which prevailed at that time, any nation
- could do what it pleased on its own territory and get off scot-free.
- Some Americans were so furious that they clamored for a real war
- against the Goonhogo of China. The president himself remarked mildly
- that it did not seem right to fight an antagonist merely because he
- showed himself cleverer than we.
- Congress voted a licensed war.
- The president had no further choice. He had to declare war on Tibet.
- He put a request for the permit in to the world secretariat.
- The license came back for
- "War No. 81-Q," since someone in the world secretariat figured that
- Tibet should not pay for any but the smallest-size war. The Americans
- had asked for a class-A war, which would have lasted up to four full
- days. The world secretariat refused a review of the case.
- There was nothing left to do.
- America was at war.
- The president sent for Jack Reardon.
- Reardon was the best licensed warrior America had.
- "Morning, Jack," said the president.
- "You haven't fought for two years, when Iceland beat us. Do you feel
- up to it now?"
- "Fitter than ever, sir," said Jack. He hesitated and then went on,
- "Please don't mention Iceland, sir. Nobody has ever beaten Sigurd
- Sigurdssen. Lucky for us that he's retired."
- "I wouldn't have called you if I just meant to reproach you. I know
- you did the best that anyone could do short of the great Sigurd
- himself. That's why you're here. How do you think we should run
- it?"
- "There's not much choice on ships, not with a class-Q war.
- They had better all five be the new Mark Zeros. Since we challenged, I
- think the Tibetans will choose the cheapest war they can. They don't
- want to run up a big bill on themselves. The Goonhogo would help them,
- but the Chinese would be around two days later, asking for payment."
- "I didn't know," said the President with a gentle smile, "that you were
- also an expert on international affairs."
- Reardon looked uncomfortable.
- "Sorry, sir," he muttered.
- "That's all right," said the president.
- "I had it figured the same way. They will take the Kerguelen islands
- then?"
- "Probably," said Reardon, "and our picture people are going to be
- furious. But the French keep those islands cheap. It's the only way
- they can hold it in the market as a war zone."
- The president's manner changed completely. Instead of being a
- civilized old gentleman who had recently had his breakfast, he acted
- like the shrewd, selfish politician who had beaten all his competitors
- for the job and who had then found that his country needed a president
- much more than he had ever needed a presidency. He looked Reardon in
- the face, staring sharply and deeply into his eyes, and then asked, in
- a formal, solemn tone: "Jack, this may be the biggest question of your
- life. How do you want to fight it?"
- Reardon stiffened.
- "I thought it would be out of place to make up a list of team mates,
- sir. I thought perhaps you would have a list " "I don't mean that at
- all," said the president.
- "Do you prefer to fight it alone?"
- "Alone, sir?"
- "Don't play modest with me, Reardon,"said the president.
- "You're the best man we have. As a matter of fact, you're the only
- first-class man we have. There are some youngsters coming up, but
- there aren't any more in your class "
- of Man Reardon forgot himself, so technical was the subject, and
- interrupted the president: "Boggs is good, sir. He's had six fights as
- a mercenary in these little African wars."
- "Reardon," said the president, "you interrupted me."
- "I beg your pardon, sir," stammered Reardon.
- "Boggs has nothing to do with it. I've seen him too, you know.
- Even if I add him, that only makes two pilots who are first-class."
- Reardon looked straight at the president, his face begging for
- permission to speak.
- The president smiled faintly: "Okay, what is it?"
- "How about filling in the team with mercenaries, sir?"
- "Mercenaries!" shouted the president.
- "Good lord, no! That would be the worst possible thing we could do.
- We'd look like fools all over the world. I played with real war to get
- Tibet free, and the Goonhogo of China gave in just because some of the
- people in the Goonhogo thought that Americans were still tough.
- Hire one mercenary and it's all gone. We have the posture of America
- to preserve. Will you or won't you?"
- Reardon looked genuinely puzzled,
- "Will I what, sir?"
- "You fool," said the president, "can you fight the war alone or can't
- you? You know the rules."
- Reardon knew them. For using a single pilot, the nation obtained a
- tremendous advantage. Two enemy ships down and his nation won, no
- matter how many ships he himself lost. There hadn't been a one-pilot
- war since the great Sigurd Sigurdssen defeated Federated Europe,
- Morocco, Japan, and Brazil in one two-three-four order, thirty-two
- years ago. After that no one had challenged Iceland to a class-Q war.
- Iceland went on declaring licensed wars on the slightest provocation;
- the Icelanders had accumulated enough credit to fight a hundred wars.
- The challenged powers all chose the largest, most complicated wars they
- could, trying to swamp Sigurd in a maze of teamwork.
- Reardon stared out of the window. The president let him think.
- At last he spoke, and his voice was heavy with conviction, "I can try
- it, sir. They've given us the chance by demanding a class-Q war. But
- I'm no Sigurd and you know it, sir."
- "I know it, Reardon," said the president seriously, "but perhaps none
- of us not even you yourself know what your very best performance can
- be. Will you do it, Reardon, for the country, for me, for yourself?"
- Reardon nodded. Fame and victory looked very bleak to him at that
- The formalities came through with no trouble.
- Tibet and America both claimed the Himalayan Escarpment Solar Banks.
- They agreed that the title should yield through war.
- The Universal War Board granted a war permit, subject to strict and
- clear conditions: 1. The war was to be fought only at the times and
- places specified.
- 2. No human being was to be killed or injured, directly or indirectly,
- by any performance of the machines of war. Emotional injury was not to
- be considered.
- 3. An appropriate territory was to be leased and cleared.
- Provisions should be made for the maximum removal of wildlife,
- particularly birds, which might be hurt by the battle.
- 4. The weapons were to be winged dirigibles with a maximum weight of
- 22,000 tons, propelled by non-nuclear engines.
- 5. All radio channels were to be strictly monitored by the U.W.B. and
- by both parties. At any complaint of jamming or interference the war
- was to be brought to a halt.
- 6. Each dirigible should have six non-explosive missiles and thirty
- non-explosive counter missiles
- 7. The U.W.B. was to intercept and to destroy all stray missiles and
- real weapons before the missiles left the war zone, and each party,
- regardless of the outcome of the war, was to pay the U.W.B. directly
- for the interception and destruction of stray missiles.
- 8. No living human beings were to be allowed on the ships, in the war
- zone, or on the communications equipment which relayed the war to the
- world's televisions. (The last remembered casualties of "safe war" had
- been video crews who had ridden their multi copter into the blazing
- guns of a combat dirigible before the pilot, thousands of miles away,
- could see them and stop his guns.) 9. The "stipulated territory" was to
- be the War Territory ofKerguelen, to be leased by both parties from the
- Fourteenth French Republic, as agent for Federated Europe, at the price
- of four million gold livres the hour.
- 10. Seating for the war, apart from video rights belonging to the
- combatants, should remain the sole property of the lessor of the War
- Territory of Kerguelen.
- With these arrangements, the French off-lifted their sheep from the
- island ranges of Kerguelen the weary sheep were getting thoroughly used
- to being lifted from their grazing land to Antarctic lighters every
- time a war occurred and the scene was ready.
- Reardon planned to work from Omaha; he supposed that his Tibetan
- counterparts would be stationed in Lhasa, but since Tibet had not been
- an independent power for many generations, he wondered what mercenaries
- they might obtain. They might get Sung from Peking; he had six battles
- more than Reardon and was a dependable fighter.
- The French sold out their seats and view-spots around Kerguelen very
- easily. The usual smugglers sold telescopes which would allegedly give
- perfect non-copyright views of the war and, as usual, most of them did
- not work; the purchasers merely had a cruise out of Durban, Madras, or
- Perth in vain.
- The warships were ready. The American ones were gold in color, stubby
- wings sticking out from the sides of their cigar shaped bodies, the
- ancient American eagle surrounded by red, white and blue circles on
- their sides. The five Tibetan ships turned out to be old Chinese
- Goonhogo models on rental. The emblem of China had been painted out
- and the prayer-wheel of Tibet shone fresh with new paint. The Chinese
- mechanics were expert to the point of trickiness; the American member
- of the umpire team insisted on inspection of all ten ships before he
- signed for the entry into the War Territory of Kerguelen.
- The minute of opening was noon, local time. Reardon started with a
- real advantage. Positions had been chosen at random by the umpires and
- he was facing into a strong west wind, while the enemy ships had to
- hold back lest they be blown out of the territory.
- Some fool in a swivel chair had named the American airships for
- characters out of Shakespeare, so that Reardon found himself managing
- the Prospero, the Ariel, the Oberon, the Caliban, and the
- 77<fl/ita.TheTibetans had not taken the time to re-name the Chinese
- ships, which had the titles of old dynasties: the Han, the Yuan, the
- Ching, the Chin, and the Ming.
- Reardon kept his ships lined up close to the spectators, so that the
- Tibetans could not fire missiles at him without shooting out of the
- Territory and being penalized. He glanced up at the board in Omaha to
- see his antagonists, who had come on the tele screen
- Sung was there, all right; so, too, was Baartek, a famous mercenary who
- flew under the flag of Liechtenstein and looked for quarrels wherever
- he could find them. The other three were strangers. One of them,
- wearing Tibetan clothes, was a girl.
- "That's a good Chinese propaganda trick," thought Reardon.
- "Trust the Goonhogo never to miss a bet!"
- The Chinese got the displeasure of the spectators by casting a smoke
- screen. There really wasn't much else they could do, with their
- dirigibles
- I
- pumping awkwardly in reverse against the wind. When the smoke screen
- neared his ships, Reardon jumped. He put the Prospero on manual, made
- three wild guesses, and sprang.
- The Prospero came ruined out of the other side of the smoke wall. Two
- missiles had pierced her and Reardon doubted that the salvage crew
- would get much of her by the time the war ended.
- But he had almost won the war. He had rammed both the Han and the
- Ming. He used the eyes of the Arielto watch them.
- The crippled Ming fought for position over the cold, cold waters of the
- deep South Indian Ocean. Reardon suspected that Baartek had taken
- over. She fired suddenly; he twisted the Ariel. Sheets of flame
- behind his ship told him that the U.W.B.
- had intercepted the missiles with live weapons, to keep them from
- harming the massed spectators. The flashes went on for so long that
- his viewscreens shone with a quivering, milky white.
- There were going to be a lot of headaches among those spectators who
- watched those interception flashes too long, thought he. Baartek
- obviously did not care what his Tibetan employers paid in penalty
- money. Yet the Ariel had gotten away so easily!
- The Han, meanwhile, though falling, had attacked the Caliban, which
- lost its left wing and began drifting downward.
- Reardon shot a reproachful glance at the robot who had been managing
- the ship for him, and decided not to take time to curse the robot
- programmers who had guessed events so poorly.
- The face and voice of the U.W.B. umpire appeared on all screens.
- "The Caliban, American. The Han, Tibetan. Take both of them off the
- field. Suspend fire and remove."
- Under the scoring system, Reardon had just lost the winning of the war.
- All he needed to do was to down two enemy ships and keep one of his own
- in the air for the period of the war, and he had won. But the Ming,
- now on the whitecaps and breaking up, was the first of his victories;
- the Han was to have been the other. Now he had to start over again.
- He put the Ariel on robot and took over the Titania himself.
- One of the enemy ships began creeping toward him along the line of the
- spectators. It could not fire at him, because the Territory was
- rectangular and the Titania was too close to a corner. He could not
- fire at it unless he got the Titania down with her belly almost in the
- water; then his stray shots would escape into space.
- He and the enemy started their dive at the same time.
- His command screen blanked out. The face of the president appeared on
- the screen. Only the president had that kind of overriding priority.
- "How's it going, my boy? Doesn't look too good, does it?"
- Reardon wanted to scream,
- "Get off, you fool!"
- But it was the president; one does not scream at presidents.
- He forced himself to speak politely, though he knew his face had gone
- white with rage.
- "Please, sir, get off the screen. It's all right, sir. Thank you."
- The president got off the screen and Reardon found himself back on the
- Titania just as the enemy cut her in two.
- In a wild rage, but a controlled rage, he took over the Ariel, letting
- the ruined Titania go to the waves below.
- He spat a smoke screen himself, and it rushed toward him. He rose to
- the top of it just in time to see two Chinese ships go looking for him.
- He dived back in. The smoke was thinning. He struck for the lever
- which fired a time-on-target, all missiles reaching for the same
- instant. But he thought of that fool of a president and he struck the
- wrong lever: DESTRUCT.
- The Ariel blew up in a pretty show of fireworks. There were two other
- orange clouds near her. The video eye on the foredeck of the Ariel
- showed him that he had technically won the war. The other two ships
- went down with him.
- He switched to the Oberon, his last remaining ship. There were still
- two Chinese to his one. They were the Ching and the Yuan.
- The umpire came on,
- "You hit 'destruct." That is not allowed as a weapon in a licensed
- war."
- "It was an error," snapped Reardon.
- "You can look at your tape of me. You can see that I was reaching for
- 'time-on-target'.
- " There was a moment of silence while the blank screens buzzed. Then
- the umpire came back on, speaking to Baartek and Sung but letting
- Reardon listen in.
- "The rules don't really cover this," said the umpire.
- "It was a mistake, but your ships were taking a chance in getting that
- close to him. He was coming after you from the top. I rule it a net
- gain."
- Now all he had to do was to stay alive for the next sixty-seven minutes
- alive meaning with a ship in the field.
- He began creeping along the line of the spectators, so close that some
- of them backed up. Many voices called for the umpire, but Reardon made
- sure that he had his hundred meters' tolerance.
- The Ching and the Yuan both lined up on him. He had to use emergency
- jets to dip in order to escape their missiles. He thought that the
- Ching had four left and the Yuan three, but the battle had gone so
- fast, with so much in smoke, that he could not be absolutely sure. It
- was like some of the old card games: sometimes even the best players
- lost command of a complete recollection of the cards.
- He dived again.
- The Chinese ships followed.
- A missile clipped the elevator vane of his right wing.
- Reardon took advantage of it. He turned the Oberon sideways, like a
- crippled ship, and let it drop toward the water.
- War No. 81-( The Yuan followed for a look and he gave it to her. He
- cut a hole in her that he could see daylight through. She drifted
- toward the spectators, out of control. There was a bright flash from
- the protective weapons of the U.W.B. and she was gone.
- The Oberon touched water and as she touched, Reardon rammed the engines
- into full reverse. He fired two of his precious missiles directly into
- the water itself. An enormous cloud of steam arose and the Oberon rose
- faster than an airship had ever risen before. He could not see where
- he was going, because his video was still looking at the waves and he
- was rising in reverse, but he watched his damage-control screen and he
- set his audio on HIGH.
- The impact came.
- The Oberon crunched into something that could only be the Ching.
- Reardon increased the thrust, cutting his ship in a sharp turn, still
- in reverse. He fired backwards into the ship he had rammed and pushed
- it inexorably back toward the water. The two ships, in collision, had
- not yet burst into flame.
- Damage control suddenly lit up like a Christmas tree. The whole back
- of his ship was gone.
- Using his fingertips and stroking the controls as lightly as he
- possibly could, he called for ASCEND. All he could see was the open
- sky above and the spectator craft, looking odd since they seemed to sit
- sidewise in the air, on the left of his pattern. The Oberon came loose
- from something.
- He had sunk the Ching without ever seeing it.
- The umpire came on the board.
- "Your ship's clear of the water.
- The other one is out. War is over, sixty-one minutes ahead of time.
- Victory is declared for America. Tibet has lost."
- In a different tone, the umpire said,
- "Congratulations, my boy.
- The enemy pilots wish to congratulate you, too. May they?"
- Before Reardon could say yes or no, his screen blanked out.
- The president had used his priority again.
- Reardon saw with amusement that the old gentleman was weeping.
- "You've done it, lad, you've done it. I always knew you would."
- Reardon forced his face into a smile of approval and sat waiting for
- the screen to show him the faces of his friendly enemies. Baartek was
- sure to insist on a dinner; he always did.
- Mark Elf The years rolled by; the Earth lived on, even when a
- stricken and haunted mankind crept through the glorious ruins of an
- immense past.
- I. Descent of a Lady Stars wheeled silently over an early summer sky,
- even though men had long ago forgotten to call such nights by the name
- of June.
- Laird tried to watch the stars with his eyes closed. It was a ticklish
- and terrifying game for a tele path at any moment he might feel the
- heavens opening up and might, as his mind touched the image of the
- nearer stars, plunge himself into a nightmare of perpetual falling.
- Whenever he had this sickening, shocking, ghastly, suffocating feeling
- of limitless fall, he had to close his mind against telepathy long
- enough to let his powers heal.
- He was reaching with his mind for objects just above the Earth,
- burnt-out space stations which flitted in their multiplex orbits,
- spinning forever, left over from the wreckage of ancient atomic wars.
- He found one.
- Found one so ancient it had no surviving cryotronic controls.
- Its design was archaic beyond belief; chemical tubes had apparently
- once lifted it out of Earth's atmosphere.
- He opened his eyes and promptly lost it.
- Closing his eyes he groped again with his seeking mind until he found
- the ancient derelict. As his mind reached for it again the muscles of
- his jaw tightened. He sensed life within it, life as old as the
- archaic machine itself.
- In an instant, he made contact with his friend Tong Computer.
- He poured his knowledge into Tong's mind. Keenly interested, Tong shot
- back at him an orbit which would cut the mildly parabolic pattern of
- the old device and bring it back down into Earth's atmosphere.
- of Man Laird made a supreme effort.
- Calling on his unseen friends to aid him, he searched once more through
- the rubbish that raced and twinkled unseen just above the sky. Finding
- the ancient machine, he managed to give it a push.
- In this fashion, about sixteen thousand years after she left Hitler's
- Reich, Carlotta vom Acht began her return to the Earth of men.
- In all those years, she had not changed.
- Earth had.
- The ancient rocket tipped. Four hours later it had begun to graze the
- stratosphere, and its ancient controls, preserved by cold and time
- against all change, went back into effect. As they thawed, they became
- activated.
- The course flattened out.
- Fifteen hours later, the rocket was seeking a destination.
- Electronic controls which had really been dead for thousands of years,
- out in the changeless time of space itself, began to look for German
- territory, seeking the territory by feedbacks which selected
- characteristic Nazi patterns of electronic communications scramblers.
- There were none.
- How could the machine know this? The machine had left the town of
- Pardubice, on April 2, 1945, just as the last German hideouts were
- being mopped up by the Red Army. How could the machine know that there
- was no Hitler, no Reich, no Europe, no America, no nations? The
- machine was keyed to German codes.
- Only German codes.
- This did not affect the feedback mechanisms.
- They looked for German codes anyway. There were none. The electronic
- computer in the rocket began to go mildly neurotic. It chattered to
- itself like an angry monkey, rested, chattered again, and then headed
- the rocket for something which seemed to be vaguely electrical. The
- rocket descended and the girl awoke.
- She knew she was in the box in which her daddy had placed her. She
- knew that she was not a cowardly swine like the Nazis whom her father
- despised. She was a good Prussian girl of noble military family. She
- had been ordered to stay in the box by her father. What daddy told her
- to do she had always done. That was the first kind of rule for her
- kind of girl, a sixteen-year-old of the Junker class. The noise
- increased.
- The electronic chattering flared up into a wild medley of clicks.
- She could smell something perfectly dreadful burning, something awful
- and rotten like flesh. She was afraid that it was herself, but she
- felt no pain.
- "Vadi, Vadi, what is happening to me?" she cried to her father.
- (Her father had been dead sixteen thousand and more years.
- Obviously enough, he did not answer.)
- The rocket began to spin. The ancient leather harness holding her
- broke loose. Even though her section of the rocket was no bigger than
- a coffin, she was cruelly bruised.
- She began to cry.
- She vomited, even though very little came up. Then she slid in her own
- vomit and felt nasty and ashamed because of something which was a
- terribly simple human reaction.
- The noises all met in a screaming, shrieking climax. The last thing
- she remembered was the firing of the forward decelerators.
- The metal had become fatigued so that the tubes not only fired forward;
- they blew themselves to pieces sidewise as well.
- She was unconscious when the rocket crashed. Perhaps that saved her
- life, since the least muscular tension would have led to the ripping of
- muscle and the crack of bone.
- II. A Moron Found Her His metals and plumes beamed in the moonlight as
- he scampered about the dark forest in his gorgeous uniform. The
- government of the world had long since been left to the Morons by the
- True Men, who had no interest in such things as politics or
- administration.
- Carlotta's weight, not her conscious will, had tripped the escape
- handle.
- Her body lay half in, half out of the rocket.
- She had gotten a bad burn on her left arm where her skin touched the
- hot outer surface of the rocket.
- The Moron parted the bushes and approached.
- "I am the Lord High Administrator of Area Seventy-three," he said,
- identifying himself according to the rules.
- The unconscious girl did not answer. He rose up close to the rocket,
- crouching low lest the dangers of the night devour him, and listened
- intently to the radiation counter built in under the skin of his skull
- behind his left ear. He lifted the girl dextrously, flung her gently
- over his shoulder, turned about, ran back into the bushes, made a
- right-angle turn, ran a few paces, looked about him un decidedly and
- then ran (still uncertain, still rabbit-like) down to the brook.
- He reached into his pocket and found a burn-balm. He applied a thick
- coating to the burn on her arm. It would stay, killing the pain and
- protecting the skin, until the burn was healed.
- He splashed cool water on her face. She awakened.
- "Wo bin which?" said she in German.
- On the other side of the world, Laird, the tele path had forgotten for
- the moment about the rocket. He might have understood her, but he was
- not there. The forest was around her and the forest was full of life,
- fear, hate, and pitiless destruction.
- The Moron babbled in his own language.
- She looked at him and thought that he was a Russian.
- Said she in German,
- "Are you a Russian? Are you a German?
- Are you part of General Vlasov's army? How far are we from Prague? You
- must treat me courteously. I am an important girl..."
- The Moron stared at her.
- His face began to grin with innocent and consummate lust.
- (The True Men had never felt it necessary to inhibit the breeding
- habits of Morons. It was hard for any kind of human being to stay
- alive between the Beasts, the Unforgiven, and the Menschenjagers. The
- True Men wanted the Morons to go on breeding, to carry reports, to
- gather up a few necessaries, and to distract the other inhabitants of
- the world enough to let the True Men have the quiet and contemplation
- which their exalted but weary temperaments demanded.) This Moron was
- typical of his kind. To him food meant eat, water meant drink, woman
- meant lust.
- He did not discriminate.
- Weary, confused, and bruised though she was, Carlotta still recognized
- his expression.
- Sixteen thousand years ago she had expected to be raped or murdered by
- the Russians. This soldier was a fantastic little man, plump and
- grinning, with enough medals for a Soviet colonel general. From what
- she could see in the moonlight, he was clean shaven and pleasant, but
- he looked innocent and stupid to be so high-ranking an officer.
- Perhaps the Russians were all like that, she thought.
- He reached for her.
- Tired as she was, she slapped him.
- The Moron was mixed up in his thoughts. He knew that he had the right
- to capture any Moron woman whom he might find.
- Yet he also knew that it was worse than death to touch any woman of the
- True Men. Which was this this thing this power this entity who had
- descended from the stars?
- Pity is as old and emotional as lust. As his lust receded, his
- elemental human pity took over. He reached in his jerkin pocket for a
- few scraps of food.
- He held them out to her.
- She ate, looking at him trustfully, very much the child.
- Suddenly there was a crashing in the woods.
- Carlotta wondered what had happened.
- Mark Elf When she first saw him, his face had been full of concern.
- Then he had grinned and had talked. Later he had become lustful.
- Finally he had acted very much the gentleman. Now he looked blank,
- brain and bone and skin all concentrated into the act of listening
- listening for something else, beyond the crashing, which she could not
- hear. He turned back to her.
- "You must run. You must run. Get up and run. I tell you, run!"
- She listened to his babble without comprehension.
- Once again he crouched to listen.
- He looked at her with blank horror on his face. Carlotta tried to
- understand what was the matter, but she could not riddle his meaning.
- Three more strange little men dressed exactly like him came crashing
- out of the woods.
- They ran like elk or deer before a forest fire. Their faces were blank
- with the exertion of running. Their eyes looked straight ahead so that
- they seemed almost blind. It was a wonder that they evaded the trees.
- They came crashing down the slope, scattering leaves as they ran. They
- splashed the waters of the brook as they stomped recklessly through it.
- With a half-animal cry Carlotta's Moron joined them.
- The last she saw of him, he was running away into the woods, his plumes
- grinning ridiculously as his head nodded with the exertion of
- running.
- From the direction from which the Morons had come, an unearthly creepy
- sound whistled through the woods. It was whistling, stealthy and low,
- accompanied by the very quiet sound of machinery.
- The noise sounded like all the tanks in the world compressed into the
- living ghost of a tank, into the heart of a machine which survived its
- own destruction and, spirit like haunted the scenes of old battles.
- As the sound approached Carlotta turned toward it. She tried to stand
- up and could not. She faced the danger. (All Prussian girls, destined
- to be the mothers of officers, were taught to face danger and never to
- turn their backs on it.) As the noise came close to her she could hear
- the high crazy inquiry of soft electronic chatter. It resembled the
- sonar she had once heard in her father's laboratory at the Reich's
- secret office's project Nordnacht.
- The machine came out of the woods.
- And it did look like a ghost.
- III. The Death of All Men Carlotta stared at the machine. It had legs
- like a grasshopper, a body like a ten-foot turtle, and three heads
- which moved restlessly in the moonlight.
- From the forward edge of the top shell a hidden arm leapt forth,
- seeming to strike at her, deadlier than a cobra, quicker than a jaguar,
- more silent than a bat flitting across the face of the moon.
- "Don't!" Carlotta screamed in German. The arm stopped suddenly in the
- moonlight.
- The stop was so sudden that the metal twanged like the string of a
- bow.
- The heads of the machine all turned toward her.
- Something like surprise seemed to overtake the machine. The whistling
- dropped down to a soothing purr. The electronic chatter burst up to a
- crescendo and then stopped. The machine dropped to its knees.
- Carlotta crawled over to it.
- Said she in German,
- "What are you?"
- "I am the death of all men who oppose the Sixth German Reich," said the
- machine in fluted singsong German.
- "If the Reichsangehoriger wishes to identify me, my model and number
- are written on my carapace."
- The machine knelt at a height so low that Carlotta could seize one of
- the heads and look in the moonlight at the edge of the top shell. The
- head and neck, though made of metal, felt much more weak and brittle
- than she expected. There was about the machine an air of immense
- age.
- "I can't see," wailed Carlotta.
- "I need a light."
- There was the ache and grind of long-unused machinery.
- Another mechanical arm appeared, dropping flakes of near crystallized
- dirt as it moved. The tip of the arm exuded light, blue, penetrating,
- and strange.
- Brook, forest, small valley, machine, even herself, were all lit up by
- the soft penetrating blue light which did not hurt her eyes.
- The light even gave her a sense of well-being. With the light she
- could read. Traced on the carapace just above the three heads was this
- inscription:
- WAFFENAMT DES SECHSTEN DEUTSCH EN
- REICHES BURG EISENHOWER, AD. 2495
- MENSCHENJAGER MARK ELF
- "What does
- "Man-hunter, Model Eleven' mean?"
- "That's me," whistled the machine.
- "How is it you don't know me if you are a German?"
- "Of course, I'm a German, you fool!" said Carlotta.
- "Do I look like a Russian?"
- "What is a Russian?" said the machine.
- 3^ Carlotta stood in the blue light wondering, dreaming, dreading
- dreading the unknown which had materialized around her.
- When her father, Heinz Horst Ritter vom Acht, professor and doctor of
- mathematical physics at project Nordnacht, had fired her into the sky
- before he himself awaited a gruesome death at the hands of the Soviet
- soldiery, he had told her nothing about the Sixth Reich, nothing about
- what she might meet, nothing about the future. It came to her mind
- that perhaps the world was dead, that the strange little men were not
- near Prague, that she was in Heaven or Hell, herself being dead, or if
- herself alive, was in some other world, or her own world in the future,
- or things beyond all human ken, or problems which no mind could solve
- ... She fainted again.
- The Menschenjager could not know that she was unconscious and addressed
- her in serious high-pitched singsong German.
- "German citizen, have confidence that I will protect you. I am built
- to identify German thoughts and to kill all men who do not have true
- German thoughts."
- The machine hesitated. A loud chatter of electronic clicks echoed
- across the silent woods while the machine tried to compute its own
- mind. It was not easy to select from the long unused store of words
- for so ancient and so new a situation. The machine stood in its own
- blue light. The only sound was the sound of the brook moving
- irresistibly about its gentle and un living business. Even the birds
- in the trees and the insects round about were hushed into silence by
- the presence of the dreaded whistling machine.
- To the sound-receptors of the Menschenjager, the running of the Morons,
- by now some two miles distant, came as a very faint pitter-patter.
- The machine was torn between two duties, the long-current and familiar
- duty of killing all men who were not German, and the ancient and
- forgotten duty of succoring all Germans, whoever they might be. After
- another period of electronic chatter, the machine began to speak again.
- Beneath the grind of its singsong German there was a curious warning, a
- reminder of the whistle which it made as it moved, a sound of immense
- mechanical and electronic effort.
- Said the machine,
- "You are German. It has been long since there has been any German
- anywhere. I have gone around the world two thousand three hundred and
- twenty-eight times. I have killed seventeen thousand four hundred and
- sixty-nine enemies of the Sixth German Reich for sure, and I have
- probably killed forty two thousand and seven additional ones. I have
- been back to the automatic restoration center eleven times. The
- enemies who call themselves the True Men always elude me. One of them
- I have not killed for more than three thousand years. The ordinary men
- whom some call the Unforgiven are the ones I kill most of all, but
- frequently I
- of Man catch Morons and kill them, too. I am fighting for Germany,
- but I cannot find Germany anywhere. There are no Germans in Germany.
- There are no Germans anywhere. I accept orders from no one but a
- German. Yet there have been no Germans anywhere, no Germans anywhere,
- no Germans anywhere ..."
- The machine seemed to get a catch in its electronic brain because it
- went on repeating no Germans anywhere three or four hundred times.
- Carlotta came to as the machine was dreamily talking to itself,
- repeating with sad and lunatic intensity, no Germans anywhere.
- Said she,
- "I'm a German."
- "... no Germans anywhere, no Germans anywhere, except you, except you,
- except you."
- The mechanical voice ended in a thin screech.
- Carlotta tried to come to her feet.
- At last the machine found words again.
- "What do I do now?"
- "Help me," said Carlotta firmly, This command seemed to tap an operable
- feedback in the ancient cybernetic assembly.
- "I cannot help you, member of the Sixth German Reich. For that you
- need a rescue machine. I am not a rescue machine. I am a hunter of
- men, designed to kill all the enemies of the German Reich."
- "Get me a rescue machine then," said Carlotta.
- The blue light went off, leaving Carlotta standing blinded in the dark.
- She was shaky on her legs. The voice of the Menschenjager came to
- her.
- "I am not a rescue machine. There are no rescue machines.
- There are no rescue machines anywhere. There is no Germany anywhere.
- There are no Germans anywhere, no Germans anywhere, no Germans
- anywhere, except you. You must ask a rescue machine. Now I go. I
- must kill men. Men who are enemies of the Sixth German Reich. That is
- all I can do. I can fight forever. I shall find a man and kill him.
- Then I shall find another man and kill him. I depart on the work of
- the Sixth German Reich."
- The whistling and clicking resumed.
- With incredible daintiness, the machine stepped as lightly as a cat
- across the brook. Carlotta listened intently in the darkness.
- Even the dry leaves of last year did not stir as the Menschenjager
- moved through the shadow of the fresh leafy trees.
- Abruptly there was silence.
- Carlotta could hear the agonized clickety-clack of the computers in the
- Menschenjager. The forest became a weird silhouette as the blue light
- went back on.
- The machine returned.
- Standing on the far side of the brook, it spoke to her in the dry,
- high-fluted singing German voice.
- "Now that I have found a German I will report to you once every
- hundred years. That is correct. Perhaps that is correct. I do not
- know. I was built to report to officers. You are not an officer.
- Nevertheless you are a German. So I will report every hundred years.
- Meanwhile, watch out for the Kaskaskia Effect."
- Carlotta, sitting again, was chewing some of the dry cubic food scraps
- which the Moron had left behind. They tasted like a mockery of
- chocolate. With her mouth full, she tried to shout to the
- Menschenjager,
- "Was ist das?"
- Apparently the machine understood, because it answered, "The Kaskaskia
- Effect is an American weapon. The Americans are all gone. There are
- no Americans anywhere, no Americans anywhere, no Americans anywhere "
- "Stop repeating yourself," said Carlotta.
- "What is that effect you are talking about?"
- "The Kaskaskia Effect stops the Menschenjagers, stops the True Men,
- stops the Beasts. It can be sensed, but it cannot be seen or measured.
- It moves like a cloud. Only simple men with clean thoughts and happy
- lives can live inside it. Birds and ordinary beasts can live inside
- it, too. The Kaskaskia Effect moves about like clouds. There are more
- than twenty-one and less than thirty-four Kaskaskia Effects moving
- slowly about this planet Earth. I have carried other Menschenjagers
- back for restoration and rebuilding, but the restoration center can
- find no fault. The Kaskaskia Effect ruins us. Therefore, we run away
- .
- . . even though the officers told us to run from nothing. If we did
- not run away, we would cease to exist. You are a German. I think the
- Kaskaskia Effect would kill you. Now I go to hunt a man. When I find
- him I will kill him." The blue light went off.
- The machine whistled and clicked its way into the dark silence of the
- wooded night.
- IV. Conversation with the Middle-Sized Bear Carlotta was completely
- adult.
- She had left the screaming uproar of Hitler Germany as it fell to ruins
- in its Bohemian outposts. She had obeyed her father, the Ritter vom
- Acht, as he passed her and her sisters into missiles which had been
- designed as personnel and supply carriers for the First German National
- Socialist Moon Base.
- He and his medical brother, Professor Doctor Joachim vom Acht, had
- harnessed the girls securely in their missiles. Their uncle the Doctor
- had given them shots.
- Karia had gone first, then Juli, and then Carlotta.
- Then the barbed-wire fortress of Pardubice and the monotonous grind of
- Wehrmacht trucks trying to escape the air strikes of the Red Air Force
- and the American fighter-bombers died in the one night, and this
- mysterious "forest in the middle of nothing-at-all" was born in the
- next night.
- Carlotta was completely dazed.
- She found a smooth-looking place at the edge of the brook.
- The old leaves were heaped high here. Without regard for further
- danger, she slept.
- She had not been asleep more than a few minutes before the bushes
- parted again.
- This time it was a bear. The bear stood at the edge of the darkness
- and looked into the moonlit valley with the brook running through it.
- He could hear no sound of Morons, no whistle of manshonyagger, as he
- and his kind called the hunting machines. When he was sure all was
- safe, he twitched his claws and reached delicately into a leather bag
- which was hanging from his neck by a thong. Gently he took out a pair
- of spectacles and fitted them slowly and carefully in front of his
- tired old eyes.
- He then sat down next to the girl and waited for her to wake up.
- She did not wake until dawn.
- Sunlight and bird song awakened her.
- (Could it have been the probing of Laird's mind, whose far-reaching
- senses told him that a woman had magically and mysteriously emerged
- from the archaic rocket and that there was a human being unlike all the
- other kinds of mankind waking at a brook side in a place which had once
- been called Maryland?) Carlotta awoke, but she was sick.
- She had a fever.
- Her back ached.
- Her eyelids were almost stuck together with foam. The world had had
- time to develop all sorts of new allergenic substances since she had
- last walked on the surface of the Earth. Four civilizations had come
- and vanished. They and their weapons were sure to leave
- membrane-inflaming residue behind.
- Her skin itched.
- Her stomach felt upset.
- Her arm was numb and covered with some kind of sticky black. She did
- not know it was a burn covered by the salve which the Moron had given
- her the previous night.
- Her clothes were dry and seemed to be falling off her in shreds.
- She felt so bad that when she noticed the bear, she did not even have
- strength to run.
- She just closed her eyes again.
- Lying there with her eyes closed she wondered all over again where she
- was.
- Said the bear in perfect German,
- "You are at the edge of the Unselfing Zone. You have been rescued by a
- Moron. You have stopped a Menschenjager very mysteriously. For the
- first time in my own life I can see into a German mind and see that the
- word manshonyagger should really be Menschenjager, a hunter of men.
- Allow me to introduce myself. I am the Middle-Sized Bear who lives in
- these woods."
- The voice not only spoke German, but it spoke exactly the right kind of
- German. The voice sounded like the German which Carlotta had heard
- throughout her life from her father. It was a masculine voice,
- confident, serious, reassuring. With her eyes still closed she
- realized that it was a bear who was doing the talking.
- With a start, she recalled that the bear had been wearing spectacles.
- Said she, sitting up,
- "What do you want?"
- "Nothing," said the bear mildly.
- They looked at each other for a while.
- Then said Carlotta,
- "Who are you? Where did you learn German? What's going to happen to
- me?"
- "Does the Fraulein," asked the bear, "wish me to answer the questions
- in order?"
- "Don't be silly," said Carlotta.
- "I don't care what order.
- Anyhow, I'm hungry. Do you have anything I could eat?"
- The bear responded gently,
- "You wouldn't like hunting for insect grubs. I have learned German by
- reading your mind. Bears like me are friends of the True Men and we
- are good tele paths
- The Morons are afraid of us, but we are afraid of the manshonyaggers.
- Anyhow, you don't have to worry very much because your husband is
- coming soon."
- Carlotta had been walking down toward the brook to get a drink. His
- last words stopped her in her tracks.
- "My husband?" she gasped.
- "So probably that it is certain. There is a True Man named Laird who
- has brought you down. He already knows what you are thinking, and I
- can see his pleasure in finding a human being who is wild and strange,
- but not really wild and not really strange. At this moment he is
- thinking that you may have left the centuries to bring the gift of
- vitality back among mankind. He is thinking that you and he will have
- wonderful children. Now he is telling me not to tell you what I think
- he thinks, for fear that you will run away."
- The bear chuckled.
- Carlotta stood, her mouth agape.
- "You may sit in my chair," said the Middle-Sized Bear, "or you can wait
- here until Laird comes to get you. Either way you will be taken care
- of Man of. Your sickness will heal. Your ailments will go away. You
- will be happy again. I know this because I am one of the wisest of all
- known bears."
- Carlotta was angry, confused, frightened, and sick again. She started
- to run.
- Something as solid as a blow hit her.
- She knew without being told that it was the bear's mind reaching out
- and encompassing hers.
- It hit boom! and that was all.
- She had never before stopped to think of how comfortable a bear's mind
- was. It was like lying in a great big bed and having mother take care
- of one when one was a very little girl, glad to be petted and sure of
- getting well.
- The anger poured out of her. The fear left her. The sickness began to
- lighten. The morning seemed beautiful.
- She herself felt beautiful as she turned Out of the blue sky, dropping
- swiftly but gracefully, came the figure of a bronze young man. A happy
- thought pulsed against her mind. That is Laird, my beloved. He is
- coming. He is coming. I shall be happy forever after.
- It was Laird.
- And so she was.
- The Queen of the Afternoon Above all, as she began to awaken, she
- wished for her family.
- She called to them,
- "Mutti, Vati, Carlotta, Karia! Where are you?" But of course she
- cried it in German since she was a good Prussian girl. Then she
- remembered.
- How long had it been since her father had put her and her two sisters
- into the space capsules? She had no idea. Even her father, the Ritter
- vom Acht, and her uncle. Professor Doctor Joachim vom Acht who had
- administered the shots in Parbudice, Germany, on April 2, 1945 could
- not have imagined that the girls would remain in suspended animation
- for thousands of years. But so it was.
- Afternoon sunlight gleamed orange and gold on the rich purple shades of
- the Fighting Trees. Charls looked at the trees, knowing that as the
- sunset moved from orange to red and as darkness crept over the eastern
- horizon, they would once again glow with quiet fire.
- How long was it since the trees were planted Fighting Trees, the True
- Men called them for the express purpose of sending their immense roots
- down into the earth, seeking out the radioactives in the soil and the
- waters beneath, concentrating the poisonous wastes into their hard
- pods, then dropping the waxy pods until, at some later time, the waters
- which came from above the earth, and those yet in the earth, would once
- more be clean?
- Charls did not know.
- One thing he did know. To touch one of the trees, to touch it
- directly, was certain death.
- He wanted very much to break a twig but he did not dare. Not only was
- it tambu, but he feared the sickness. His people had made much
- progress in the last few generations, enough so that at times they did
- not fear to face True Men and to argue with them. But the sickness was
- not something with which one could argue.
- At the thought of a True Man, an unaccountable thickness gripped him in
- the throat. He felt sentimental, tender, fearful; the yearning that
- gripped
- of Man him was a kind of love, and yet he knew that it could not be
- love since he had never seen a True Man except at a distance.
- Why, Charls wondered, was he thinking so much about True Men? Was
- there, perhaps, one nearby?
- He looked at the setting sun, which was by now red enough to be looked
- at safely. Something in the atmosphere was making him uneasy. He
- called to his sister.
- "Oda, Oda!"
- She did not answer.
- Again he called.
- "Oda, Oda!"
- This time he heard her coming, plowing recklessly through the
- under-brush. He hoped she would remember to avoid the Fighting Trees.
- Oda was sometimes too impatient.
- Suddenly there she was before him.
- "You called me, Charls? You called me? You've found something? Shall
- we go somewhere together? What do you want?
- Where are mother and father?"
- Charls could not help laughing. Oda was always like that.
- "One question at a time, little sister. Weren't you afraid you would
- die the burning death, going through the trees like that? I know you
- don't want to believe in the tambu, but the sickness is real."
- "It isn't," she said. She shook her head.
- "Maybe it was once ... I guess it really was once" granting him a
- concession "but do you, yourself, know of anybody who has died from the
- trees for a thousand years?"
- "Of course not, silly. I haven't been alive a thousand years."
- Oda's impatience returned.
- "You know what I mean. And anyway, I decided the whole thing is silly.
- We all accidentally brush against the trees. So one day I ate a pod.
- And nothing happened."
- He was appalled.
- "You ate a pod?"
- "That's what I said. And nothing happened."
- "Oda, one of these days you're going to go too far."
- She smiled at him.
- "And now I suppose you are going to say that the oceans' beds were not
- always filled with grass."
- He was indignant.
- "No, of course I know better than that. I know that the grass was put
- into the oceans for the same reason that the Fighting Trees were
- planted to eat up all the poisons that the Old Ones left in the days of
- the Ancient Wars."
- How long they would have bickered he did not know, but just then his
- ears caught an unfamiliar noise. He knew the sound the True Men made
- as they sped on their mysterious errands in the upper air. He knew the
- ominous buzz that the Cities gave off should he approach them too
- closely. He knew also the clicking noises that the few remaining
- manshonyaggers
- made as they crept through the Wild, alert for any non-German to kill.
- Poor blind machines, they were so easy to outsmart.
- But this noise, this noise was different. It was nothing he had ever
- heard before.
- The whistling sound rose and throbbed against the upper reaches of his
- hearing. It had a curiously spiral quality about it as though it
- approached and receded, all the while veering toward him. Charls was
- filled with terror, feeling threatened beyond all understanding.
- Now Oda heard it too. Their quarrel forgotten, she seized his arm.
- "What is it, Charls? What could it be?"
- His voice was hesitant and full of wonder.
- "I don't know."
- "Are the True Men doing something, something new that we never heard
- before? Do they want to hurt us, or enslave us? Do they want to catch
- us? Do we want to be caught? Charls, tell me, do we want to be
- caught? Could it be the True Men coming? I seem to smell True Man.
- They did come once before and caught some of us and took them away and
- did strange things to them, so that they looked like True Men, didn't
- they, Charls? Could it be the True Men again?"
- In spite of his fear, Charls had a certain amount of impatience with
- Oda. She talked so much.
- The noise persisted and intensified. Charls sensed that it was
- directly over his head, but he could see nothing.
- Oda said,
- "Charls, I think I see it. Do you see it, Charls?"
- Suddenly he too saw the circle a dim whiteness, a vapor train that
- increased in size and volume. Concomitantly the sound increased, until
- he felt his eardrums would burst. It was nothing ever before seen in
- his world.... A thought struck him. It was as hard as a physical blow;
- it sapped his courage and manhood as nothing before had ever done; he
- did not feel young and strong any more. He could hardly frame his
- words.
- "Oda, could that be " "Be what?"
- "Could it be one of the old, old weapons from the Ancient Past? Could
- it be coming back to destroy us all, as the legends have always
- foretold? People have always said they would come back...." His voice
- trailed off.
- Whatever the danger, he knew that he was completely helpless, helpless
- to protect himself, helpless to protect Oda.
- Against the ancient weapons there was no defense. This place was no
- safer than that place, that place no better than this. People still
- had to live their lives under the threat of weapons from long, long
- ago. This was the first time that he personally had met the threat,
- but he had heard of it. He reached for Oda's hand.
- of Man Oda, singularly courageous now that there was real danger, drew
- him over onto the bank, away from the cenote. With half his mind he
- wondered why she seemed to want to move away from the water. She
- tugged at his arm, and he sat down beside her.
- Already, he knew, it was too late to go looking for their parents or
- others of their pack. Sometimes it took a whole day to round up the
- entire family the thing was coming down relentlessly, and Charls felt
- so drained of energy that he stopped talking. He thought at her: Let's
- just wait it out here, and she squeezed his hand as she thought back:
- Yes, my brother.
- The long box in the circle of light continued to descend, inexorable.
- It was odd. Charls could feel a human presence, but the mind was
- strangely closed to him. He felt a quality of mind that he had never
- felt before. He had read the minds of True Men as they flew far
- overhead; he knew the minds of his own people; he could distinguish the
- thoughts of most of the birds and beasts; it was no trouble to detect
- the crude electronic hunger of the mechanical mind of a
- manshonyagger.
- But this this being had a mind that was raw, elemental, hot.
- And closed.
- Now the box was very near. Would it crash in this valley or the next?
- The screams from within it were extremely shrill.
- Charls's ears hurt and his eyes smarted from the intensity of heat and
- noise. Oda held his hand tightly.
- The object crashed into the ground.
- It ripped the hillside just across the cenote. Had Oda not
- instinctively moved away from the cenote, the box would have hit them,
- Charls realized.
- Charls and Oda stood up cautiously.
- Somehow the box must have decelerated: It was hot, but not hot enough
- to make the broken trees around it burst into flame.
- Steam rose from the crushed leaves.
- The noise was gone.
- Charls and Oda moved to within ten man-lengths of the object. Charls
- framed his clearest thought and flung it at the box: Who are you?
- The being within obviously did not perceive him as he was.
- There came forth a wild thought, directed at living beings in
- general.
- Fools, fools, help me! Get me out of here!
- Oda caught the thought, as did Charls. She stepped in mentally and
- Charls was astonished at the clarity and force of her inquiry. It was
- simple but beautifully strong and hard. She thought the one idea:
- How?
- From the box there came again the frantic babble of demand: The
- handles, you fools. The handles on the outside. Take the handles and
- let me out!
- Charls and Oda looked at each other. Charls was not sure that he
- really wanted to let this creature "out." Then he thought further.
- Maybe the unpleasantness that radiated from the box was simply the
- result of imprisonment. He knew that he himself would hate to be
- encased like that.
- Together Charls and Oda risked the broken leaves, walking gingerly up
- to the box itself. It was black and old; it looked like something the
- elders called "iron" and never touched. They saw the handles, pitted
- and scarred.
- With the ghost of a smile, Charls nodded to his sister. Each took a
- handle and lifted.
- The sides of the box crackled. The iron was hot but not unbearably so.
- With a rusty shriek, the ancient door flew open.
- They looked into the box.
- There lay a young woman.
- She had no fur, only long hair on her head.
- Instead of fur, she had strange, soft objects on her body but as she
- sat up, these objects began to disintegrate.
- At first the girl looked frightened; then, as she glanced at Oda and
- Charls, she began to laugh. Her thought came through, clearly and
- rather cruelly: guess I don't have to worry about modesty in front of
- puppy dogs.
- Oda did not seem to mind the thought but Charls's feelings were hurt.
- The girl said words with her mouth but they could not understand them.
- Each of them took an elbow and led her to the ground.
- They reached the edge of the cenote and Oda gestured to the strange
- girl to sit down. She did, and made more words.
- Oda was as puzzled as Charls, but then she began to smile.
- Spieking had worked before, when the girl was in the box. Why not now?
- The only thing was, this odd girl did not seem to know how to control
- her thoughts. Everything she thought was directed at the world at
- large at the valley, at the sunset sky, at the cenote. She did not
- seem to realize that she was shouting every thought aloud.
- Oda put her question to the young woman: Who are you?
- The hot, strange mind flung back quickly: Juli, of course.
- At this point Charls intervened. There's no "of course" about it, he
- spieked.
- What am I doing ? the girl's thoughts ran. I'm in mental telepathy
- with puppy-dog people.
- Embarrassed, Charls and Oda watched her as her thoughts splashed out.
- "Doesn't she know how to close off her thoughts?" Charls wondered. And
- why had her mind seemed so closed when she was in the box?
- of Man Puppy-dog people. Where can I be if I'm mixed up with puppy
- dog people? Can this be Earth? Where have I been? How long have I
- been gone? Where is Germany? Where are Carlotta and Karia? Where are
- Daddy and Mother and Uncle Joachim?
- Puppy-dog people!
- Charls and Oda felt the sharp edge of the mind that was so recklessly
- flinging all these thoughts. There was a kind of laughter that was
- cruel each time she thought puppy-dog people.
- They could feel that this mind was as bright as the brightest minds of
- the True Men but this mind was different. It did not have the
- singleness of devotion or the wary wisdom that saturated the minds of
- the True Men.
- Then Charls remembered something. His parents had once told him of a
- mind that was something like this one.
- Juli continued to pour out her thoughts like sparks from a fire, like
- raindrops from a big splash. Charls was frightened and did not know
- what to do; and Oda began to turn away from the strange girl.
- Then Charls perceived it. Juli was frightened. She was calling them
- puppy-dog people to cover her fear. She really did not know where she
- was.
- He mused, not directing his thought at Juli: Just because she's
- frightened, it doesn't mean she has the right to think sharp, bright
- things at us.
- Perhaps it was his posture that betrayed his attitude; Juli seemed to
- catch the thought.
- Suddenly she burst into words again, words that they could not
- understand. It sounded as though she were begging, asking, pleading,
- expostulating. She seemed to be calling for specific persons or
- things. Words poured forth, and these were names that the True Men
- used. Was it her parents? Her lover? Her siblings?
- It had to be someone she had known before entering that screaming box,
- where she had been captive in the blue of the sky for... for how
- long?
- Suddenly she was quiet. Her attention had shifted.
- She pointed to the Fighting Trees.
- The sunset had so darkened that the trees were beginning to light up.
- The soft fire was coming to life as it had during all the years of
- Charls's life and those of his forefathers.
- As she pointed, Juli made words again. She kept repeating them. It
- sounded like v-a-s-i-s-d-a-s.
- Charls could not help being a little irritated. Why doesn't she just
- think? It was odd that they could not read her mind when she was using
- the words.
- Again, although Charls had not aimed the question at her, Juli seemed
- to catch it. From her there came a flame of thought, a single idea,
- that leapt like a fountain of fire from that tired little female
- head:
- What is this world?
- Then the thought shifted focus slightly. Vati, Vati, where am I?
- Where are you? What has become of me? There was something forlorn and
- desolate to it.
- Oda put out a soft hand toward the girl. Juli looked at her and some
- of the harsh, fearful thoughts returned. Then the sheer compassion
- ofOda's posture seemed to catch Juli's attention, and with relaxation
- came complete collapse. The great and terrifying thought disappeared.
- Juli burst into tears. She put her long arms about Oda. Oda patted
- her back and Juli sobbed even harder.
- Out of the sobbing came a funny, friendly thought, loving and no longer
- contemptuous: Dear little puppy dogs, dear little puppy dogs, please
- help me. You are supposed to be our best friends ..
- . do help me now. .. .
- Charls perked up his ears. Something or someone was coming over the
- top of the hill.
- Certainly a thought as big and as sharp as Juli's could attract all
- living forms within kilometers. It might even catch the attention of
- the aloof but ominous True Men.
- A moment later Charls relaxed. He recognized the stride of his
- parents. He turned to Oda.
- "Hear that?"
- She smiled.
- "It's father and mother. They must have heard that big thought the
- girl had."
- Charls watched with pride as his parents approached. It was a
- well-justified pride. Bil and Kae both appeared, as they were,
- sensitive and intelligent. In addition, their fur was well-matched.
- Bil's beautiful caramel coat had spots of white and black only along
- his cheekbones and nose and at the tip of his tail; Kae was a uniform
- fawn-beige with which her beautiful green eyes made a striking
- contrast.
- "Are you both all right?" Bil asked as they approached.
- "Who is that? She looks like a True Man. Is she friendly? Has she
- hurt you? Was she the one who was doing all that violent thinking?
- We could feel it clear across the hillside."
- Oda burst into a giggle.
- "You ask as many questions as I do, Daddy,"
- Charls said,
- "All we know is that a box came from the sky and that she was in it.
- You heard that shrieking noise as it came down first, didn't you?"
- Kae laughed.
- "Who didn't hear it?"
- "The box hit right over there. You can see where it hurt the
- hillside."
- The area where the box had landed was black and forbidding.
- Around it the fallen Fighting Trees gleamed in tangled confusion on the
- ground.
- Bil looked at Juli and shook his head.
- "I don't see why she wasn't killed if it hit that hard."
- Juli began to speak in words again, but at last she seemed to
- understand. Shouting her language would not help any. Instead, she
- thought: Please, dear little puppy dogs. Please help me. Please
- understand me.
- Bil kept his dignity but he noticed with dismay that his tail was
- wagging of its own accord. He realized that the urge was
- uncontrollable. He felt both resentful and happy as he thought back at
- her: Of course we understand you and we'll try to help you; but please
- don't think your thoughts so hard or so recklessly.
- They hurt our minds when they are so bright and sharp.
- Juli tried to turn down the intensity of her thought. She pleaded:
- Take me to Germany.
- The four Unauthorized Men mother, father, daughter, and son looked at
- each other. They had no idea of what a Germany might be.
- It was Oda who turned to Juli, girl to girl, and spieked: Think some
- Germany at us so we can know what it is.
- There came forth from the strange girl images of unbelievable beauty.
- Picture after clear picture emerged until the little family was almost
- blinded by the magnificence of the display. They saw the whole ancient
- world come to life. Cities stood bright in a green-encircled world.
- There were no aloof and languid True Men; instead, all the people they
- saw in Juli's mind resembled Juli herself. They were vital, sometimes
- fierce, forceful; they were tall, erect, long-fingered; and of course
- they did not have the tails of the Unauthorized Men. The children were
- pretty beyond belief.
- The most amazing thing about this world was the tremendous number of
- people in it. The people were thicker than the birds of passage, more
- crowded than the salmon at running time.
- Charls had thought himself a well-traveled young man. He had met at
- least four dozen other persons besides his own family, and he had seen
- True Men in the skies above him hundreds of times. He had often
- witnessed the intolerable brightness of Cities and had walked around
- them more than once until, each time, he had been firmly assured that
- there was no way for him to enter.
- He thought his valley a good one. In a few more years he would be old
- enough to visit the nearby valleys and to look for a wife for
- himself.
- But this vision that came from Juli's mind ... he could not imagine how
- so many people could live together. How could they all greet each
- other in the mornings? How could they all agree on anything? How
- could they all ever become still enough to be aware of each other's
- presence, each other's needs?
- There came a particularly strong, bright image. Smallwheeled boxes
- were hurtling people at insensate speed up and down smooth, smooth
- roads.
- "So that's what roads were for," he gasped to himself.
- Among the people he saw many dogs. They were nothing like the
- creatures ofCharls's world. They were not the long, otter-like animals
- whom the Unauthorized Men despised as lowly kindred; nor were they like
- the Unauthorized Men themselves, and they were certainly not like those
- modified animals who in appearance were almost indistinguishable from
- True Men. No, these dogs of Juli's world were bounding, happy
- creatures with few responsibilities. There seemed to be an
- affectionate relationship between them and the people there. They
- shared laughter and sorrow.
- Juli had closed her eyes as she tried to bring Germany to them.
- Concentrating hard, now she brought into the picture of beauty and
- happiness something else fearful flying things that dropped fire;
- thunder and noise; a most unpleasant face, a screaming face with a dab
- of black fur above the mouth; a licking of flame in the night; a
- thunder of death machines. Across this thunder there was the image of
- Juli and two other girls who resembled her; they were moving with a
- man, obviously their father, toward three iron boxes that looked like
- the one Juli had landed in. Then there was darkness.
- That was Germany.
- Juli slumped to the ground.
- Gently the four of them probed at her mind. To them it was like a
- diamond, as clear and transparent as a sunlit pool in the forest, but
- the light it shot back to them was not a reflection. It was rich and
- bright and dazzling. Now that it was at rest, they could see deeply
- into it. They saw hunger, hurt, and loneliness.
- They saw a loneliness so great that each of them in turn tried to think
- of a way to assuage it. Love, they thought, what she needs is love,
- and her own kind. But where would they find an Ancient One? Would a
- True Man answer?
- Bil said,
- "There's only one thing to do. We've got to take her to the house of
- the Wise Old Bear. He has communications with the True Men."
- Oda cried out,
- "But she hasn't done anything wrong!"
- Her father looked at her.
- "Darling, we don't know what this is.
- She's an Ancient One come back to this world after a sleep in space
- itself. It's been thousands of years since her world lived; I think
- she's beginning to realize that, and that's what put her into shock. We
- need help. Our people may once have been dogs, and that's what she
- thinks we are. We can't let that bother us. But she needs a house,
- and the only unauthorized house that I know of belongs to the Wise Old
- Bear."
- Charls looked at his parents. His eyes were troubled.
- "What is this business about dogs? Is that why we feel so mixed up
- when we think about True Men? I'm confused about her too. Do you
- suppose I really want to belong to her?"
- "Not really," his father said.
- "That's just a feeling left over from long, long ago. We lead our own
- lives now. But this girl, she's too big a problem for us. We will
- take her to the Bear. At least he has a house."
- Juli was still unconscious, and to them she was so big. Each took a
- limb and with difficulty they managed to carry her. Within less than a
- tenth of a night they had reached the house of the Wise Old Bear.
- Fortunately they had not met any manshonyaggers or other dangers of the
- forest.
- At the door of the house of the Wise Old Bear they gently laid the girl
- on the ground.
- Bil shouted,
- "Bear, Bear, come out, come out!"
- "Who is there?" a voice boomed from within.
- "Bil and his family. We have an Ancient with us. Come out.
- We need your help."
- The light that had been streaming from the doorway with a yellow glare
- was suddenly reduced to endurable proportions as the immense bulk of
- the Bear loomed in the doorway before them.
- He pulled his spectacles from a case attached to his belt, put them on
- his nose, and squinted at Juli.
- "Bless my soul," he said.
- "Another one. Where on earth did you get an ancient girl?"
- Pompous but happy, Charls spoke up.
- "She came out of the sky in a screaming box."
- The Bear nodded wisely.
- Then Bil spoke up.
- "You said 'another one." What did you mean?"
- The Bear winced slightly.
- "Forget I said that," he told them.
- "I forgot for a moment that you are not True Men. Please forget it."
- Bil said,
- "You mean it's something Unauthorized Men are not supposed to know
- about?"
- The Bear nodded unhappily.
- Understanding, Bil said,
- "Well, if you can ever tell us about it, will you, please?"
- "Of course," the Bear replied.
- "And now I think I'd better call my housekeeper to take care of her.
- Herkie, Herkie, come here."
- A blonde woman appeared, peering anxiously. Obviously there was
- something the matter with her blue eyes but she seemed to be
- functioning adequately.
- Bil backed away from the door.
- "That's an Experimental person," he said.
- "That's a cat!"
- The Bear was completely uninterested.
- "So it is, but you can see that her eyes are imperfect. That's why she
- is allowed to be my housekeeper and why her name isn't prefaced by a
- C'."
- Bil understood. The errors True Men made in trying to breed
- Underpersons were often destroyed but occasionally one was allowed to
- live if it seemed able to function at some necessary task. The Bear
- had connections with True Men. If he needed a housekeeper, an
- imperfect modified animal provided an ideal solution.
- Herkie bent over Julia's still form. She peered in puzzlement at
- Julia's face. Then she looked up at the Bear.
- "I don't understand," she said.
- "I don't see how it could be."
- "Later," the Bear said.
- "When we are alone."
- Herkie strained to see into the darkness and perceived the dog
- family.
- "Oh, I see," she said.
- Bil and Charls were embarrassed. Oda and Kae did not seem to notice
- the slight.
- Bil waved his hand.
- "Well, good-bye. I hope you can take care of her all right."
- "Thank you for bringing her," the Bear said.
- "The True Men will probably give you a reward."
- In spite of himself, Bil felt his tail beginning to wag again.
- "Will we ever see her again?" Oda asked.
- "Do you think we'll ever see her again? I love her, I love her. . .
- ."
- "Perhaps," her father answered.
- "She will know who saved her, and I think she will seek us out."
- Juli awoke slowly. Where am I? What is this place? She had a partial
- return of memory. The puppy-dog people. Where are they? She felt
- conscious of someone at her bedside. She looked up into clouded blue
- eyes staring anxiously into hers.
- "I'm Herkie," the woman said.
- "I'm the Bear's housekeeper." Juli felt as though she had awakened in
- a mental hospital. It was all so impossible. Puppy-dog people and now
- a bear And surely the blonde woman with the bad eyes was not a human?
- Herkie patted her hand.
- "Of course you're confused," she said. Juli was taken aback.
- "You're talking! You're talking and I understand you. You're talking
- German. We're not just communicating telepathically."
- "Of course," Herkie said.
- "I speak true Doych. It's one of the Bear's favorite languages."
- "One of. .." Juli broke off.
- "It's all so confusing."
- Again Herkie patted her hand.
- "Of course it is."
- Juli lay back and looked at the ceiling. I must be in some other
- world.
- No, Herkie thought at her, but you 've been gone a long time.
- The Bear came into the room.
- "Feeling better?" he asked.
- Juli merely nodded.
- "In the morning we will decide what to do," he said.
- "I have some connections with the True Men, and I think that we had
- best take you to the Vomact."
- Juli sat up as if hit by a bolt of lightning.
- "What do you mean, 'the Vomacht'? That is my name, vom Acht!"
- "I thought it might be," the Bear said. Herkie, peering at her from
- the bedside, nodded wisely.
- "I was sure of it," she said. Then,
- "I think you need some good hot soup and a rest. In the morning it
- will all straighten itself out."
- The tiredness of years seemed to settle in Juli's bones. I do need to
- rest, she thought. I need to get things sorted out in my mind. So
- suddenly that she did not even have a chance to be startled by it, she
- was asleep.
- Herkie and the Bear studied her face.
- "There's a remarkable resemblance," the Bear said. Herkie nodded in
- agreement.
- "It's the time differential I'm worried about. Do you think that will
- be important?"
- "I don't know," Herkie replied.
- "Since I'm not human, I don't know what bothers people." She
- straightened and stretched to her full length.
- "I know!" she said.
- "I do know! She must have been sent here to help us with the
- rebellion!"
- "No," the Bear said.
- "She has been too long in Time for her arrival to have been
- intentional. It is true that she may help us, she may very well help
- us, but I think that her arrival at this particular time and place is
- fortuitous rather than planned."
- "Sometimes I think I understand a particular human mind,"
- Herkie said, "but I'm sure you're correct. I can hardly wait for them
- to meet each other!"
- "Yes," he said, "although I'm afraid that it's going to be rather
- traumatic. In more than one way."
- When Juli awoke after her deep sleep, she found a thoughtful Herkie
- awaiting her.
- Juli stretched and her mind, still uncontrolled, asked: Are you really
- a cat?
- Yes, Herkie thought back at her. But you are going to have to
- discipline that thought process of yours. Everyone can read your
- thoughts.
- I'm sorry, Juli spieked, but I'm just not used to all this telepathy.
- "I know." Herkie had switched to German.
- "I still don't understand how you know German," Juli said.
- "It's rather a long story. I learned it from the Bear. I think,
- perhaps, you had better ask him how he learned it."
- "Wait a minute. I'm beginning to remember what happened before I fell
- asleep. The Bear mentioned my name, my family name, vom Acht."
- Herkie switched the subject.
- "We've made you some clothes.
- We tried to copy the style of those you had on, but they were coming to
- pieces so badly that we are not sure we got the new ones right."
- She looked so anxious to please that Juli reassured her immediately. If
- they fit, I'm sure they'll be just fine.
- Oh, they fit, Herkie spieked. We measured you. Now, after your bath
- and meal, you will dress and the Bear and I will take you to the City.
- Underpersons like me are not ordinarily allowed in the City, but this
- time I think that an exception will be made.
- There was something sweet and wise in the face with the clouded blue
- eyes. Juli felt that Herkie was her friend. I am, Herkie spieked, and
- Juli was once more made aware that she must learn to control her
- thoughts, or at least the broadcasting of them.
- You'll learn, Herkie spieked. It just takes some practice.
- They approached the City on foot, the Bear leading the way, Juli behind
- him, and Herkie bringing up the rear. They encountered two
- manshonyaggers along the road but the Bear spoke true Doych to them
- from some distance and they turned silently and slunk away.
- Juli was fascinated.
- "What are they?" she asked.
- "Their real name is
- "Menschenjager' and they were invented to kill people whose ideas did
- not accord with those of the Sixth German Reich. But there are very
- few of them still functional, and so many of us have learned Doych
- since . . . since .. ."
- "Yes?"
- "Since an event you'll find out about in the City. Now let's get on
- with it."
- They neared the City wall and Juli became conscious of a buzzing sound,
- and of a powerful force that excluded them. Her hair stood on end and
- she felt a tingling sensation of mild electrical shock. Obviously
- there was a force field around the City.
- "What is it?" she cried out.
- "Just a static charge to keep back the Wild," the Bear said
- soothingly.
- "Don't worry, I have a damper for it."
- He held up a small device in his right paw, pushed a button on it, and
- immediately a corridor opened before them.
- When they reached the City wall, the Bear felt carefully along the
- upper ridge. At a certain point he paused, then reached for a
- strange-looking key that hung from a cord around his neck.
- Juli could see no difference between this section of the wall and any
- other but the Bear inserted his key into a notch he had located and a
- section of the barrier swung up. The three passed through and silently
- the wall fell back into position.
- The Bear hurried them along dusty streets. Juli saw a number of
- people but most of them seemed to her aloof, austere, uncaring.
- They bore little resemblance to the lusty Prussians she remembered.
- Eventually they arrived at the door of a large building that looked old
- and imposing. Beside the door there was an inscription. The Bear was
- hurrying them through the entryway.
- Oh, please, Mr. Bear, may I stop to read it?
- Just plain Bear is all right. And yes, of course you may. It may even
- help you to understand some of the things that you are going to learn
- today.
- The inscription was in German, and it was in the form of a poem. It
- looked as though it had been carved hundreds of years earlier (as
- indeed it had. Juli could not know that at this time).
- Herkie looked up.
- "Oh, the first..."
- "Hush," said the Bear.
- Juli read the poem to herself silently.
- Youth Fading, fading, going Flowing Like life blood from our veins. .
- . .
- Little remains.
- The glorious face Erased, Replaced By one which mirrors tears, The
- years Gone by.
- Oh, Youth, Linger yet a while!
- Smile Still upon us The wretched few Who worship You.... "I don't
- understand it," said Juli.
- "You will," the Bear said.
- "Unfortunately, you will."
- An official in a bright green robe trimmed with gold approached.
- "We have not had the honor of your presence for some time," he said
- respectfully to the Bear.
- "I've been rather busy," the Bear replied.
- "But how is she?"
- Juli realized with a start that the conversation was not telepathic but
- was in German. How do all these people know German ? She unthinkingly
- flung her thought abroad.
- Hush came back the simultaneous warnings from Herkie and the Bear.
- Juli felt thoroughly admonished.
- "I'm sorry," she almost whispered.
- "I don't know how I'll ever learn the trick."
- Herkie was immediately sympathetic.
- "It is a trick," she said, "but you're already better at it than you
- were when you arrived.
- You just have to be careful. You can't fling your thoughts
- everywhere."
- "Never mind that now," the Bear said and he turned to the
- green-uniformed official.
- "Is it possible to have an audience? I think it's important."
- "You may have to wait a little while," the official said, "but I'm sure
- she will always grant audience to you. " The Bear looked a little smug
- at that, Juli noticed.
- They sat down to wait and from time to time Herkie patted Juli's arm
- reassuringly.
- It was actually not long before the official reappeared.
- "She will see you now," he said.
- He led them through a long corridor to a large room at the end of which
- was a dais with a chair.
- "Not quite a throne," Juli thought to herself. Behind the chair stood
- a young and handsome male, a True Man. In the chair sat a woman, old,
- old beyond imagining; her wrinkled hands were claws, but in the
- haggard, wrinkled face one could still detect some trace of beauty.
- Juli's sense of bewilderment grew. She knew this person, but she did
- not. Her sense of orientation, already splintered by the events of the
- past "day," almost disintegrated. She grabbed Herkie's hand as if it
- were the only familiar element in a world she could not understand.
- The woman spoke. Her voice was old and weak, but she spoke in
- German.
- "So, Juli, you have come. Laird told me he was bringing you in. I am
- so happy to see you, and to know that you are all right."
- Juli's senses reeled. She knew, she knew, but she could not believe.
- Too much had changed, too much had happened, in the short time that she
- had returned to life.
- Gasping, tentatively, she whispered,
- "Carlotta?"
- Her sister nodded.
- "Yes, Juli, it is I. And this is my husband.
- Laird." She nodded her head toward the handsome young man behind
- her.
- "He brought me in about two hundred years ago, but unfortunately as an
- Ancient I cannot undergo the rejuvenation process that has been
- developed since we left the Earth."
- Juli began to sob.
- "Oh, Carlotta, it's all so hard to believe.
- And you're so old! You were only two years older than I."
- "Darling, I've had two hundred years of bliss. They couldn't
- rejuvenate me but they could at least prolong my life. Now, it is not
- from purely altruistic purposes that I have had Laird bring you in.
- Karia is still out there, but since she was only sixteen when she was
- suspended, we thought that you would be better suited to the task.
- "In fact, we really didn't do you any favor in bringing you in because
- now you too will begin to age. But to be forever in suspended
- animation is not any life either."
- "Of course not," Juli said.
- "And anyway, if I had lived a normal life, I would have aged."
- Carlotta leaned over to kiss her.
- "At least we're together at last," Juli sighed.
- "Darling," Carlotta said, "it is wonderful to have even this little
- time together. You see, I'm dying. There comes a point when, with all
- technology, the scientists cannot keep a body alive.
- And we need help, help with the rebellion."
- "The rebellion?"
- "Yes. Against the Jwindz. They were Chinesians, philosophers. Now
- they are the true rulers of the Earth, and we so they believe are
- merely their Instrumentality, their police force. Their power is not
- over the body of man but over the soul. That is almost a forgotten
- word here now. Say 'mind' instead. They call themselves the Perfect
- Ones and have sought to remake man in their own image. But they are
- remote, removed, bloodless.
- "They have recruited persons of all races, but man has not responded
- well. Only a handful aspire to the kind of esthetic perfection the
- Jwindz have as their goal. So the Jwindz have resorted to their
- knowledge of drugs and opiates to turn True Man into a tranquilized,
- indifferent people to make it easy to govern them, to control
- everything that they do. Unfortunately some of our" she nodded toward
- Laird "descendants have joined them.
- "We need you, Juli. Since I came back from the ancient world, Laird
- and I have done what we could to free True Men from this form of
- slavery, because it is slavery. It is a lack of vitality, a lack of
- meaning to life. We used to have a word for it in the old days.
- Remember?
- "Zombie." " "What do you want me to do?"
- During the entire conversation between the sisters, Herkie, the Bear,
- and Laird had remained silent.
- Now Laird spoke.
- "Until Carlotta came to us, we were drifting along,
- uncaring, in the power of the Jwindz. We did not know what it was,
- really, to be a human being. We felt that our only purpose in life was
- to serve the Jwindz: If they were perfect, what other function could we
- perform? It was our duty to serve their needs to maintain and guard
- the cities, to keep out the Wild, to administer the drugs. Some of the
- Instrumentality even preyed upon the Unauthorized Men, the Unforgiven,
- and, as a last resort, the True Men, to supply their laboratories.
- "But now many of us no longer believe in the perfection of the Jwindz
- or perhaps we have come to believe in something more than human
- perfection. We have been serving men. We should have been serving
- mankind.
- "Now we feel that the time has come to put an end to this tyranny.
- Carlotta and I have allies among some of our descendants and among some
- of the Unforgiven and, as you have seen, even among the Unauthorized
- Men and other animal-derived persons.
- I think there must still be a connection from the time that human
- beings had 'pets' in the old days."
- Juli looked about her and realized that Herkie was quietly purring.
- "Yes," she said,
- "I see what you mean."
- Laird continued,
- "What we want to do is to set up a real Instrumentality not a force for
- the service of the Jwindz, but one for the service of man. We are
- determined that never again shall man betray his own image. We will
- establish the Instrumentality of Mankind, one benevolent but not
- manipulative."
- Carlotta nodded slowly. Her aged face showed concern.
- "I will die in a few days and you will marry Laird. You will be the
- new Vomact. With any luck by the time you are as old as I am, your
- descendants and some of mine should have freed the Earth from the power
- of the Jwindz."
- Juli again felt completely disoriented.
- "I'm to marry your husband?"
- Again Laird spoke.
- "I have loved your sister well for more than two hundred years. I
- shall love you too, because you are so much like her. Do not think
- that I am being disloyal. She and I have discussed this for some time
- before I brought you in. If she were not dying, I should continue to
- be faithful to her. But now we need you."
- Carlotta concurred.
- "It is true. He has made me very happy, and he will make you happy
- too, through all the years of your life.
- Juli, I could not have had you brought in had I not had some plan for
- your future. You could never be happy with one of those drugged,
- tranquilized True Men. Trust me in this, please. It is the only thing
- to do."
- Tears formed in Juli's eyes.
- "To have found you at last and then to lose you after such a short time
- . . ."
- Herkie patted her hand and Juli looked up to see sympathetic tears in
- her clouded blue eyes.
- It was three days later that Carlotta died. She died with a smile on
- her face and Laird and Juli each holding one of her hands. She spoke
- at the last and pressed their hands.
- "I'll see you later. Out among the stars."
- Juli wept uncontrollably.
- They postponed the wedding ceremony for seven days of mourning. For
- once the City gates were opened and the static fields of electricity
- cut off because even the Jwindz could not control the feelings of the
- animal-derived persons, the Unauthorized Men, even some of the True
- Men, toward this woman who had come to them from an ancient world.
- The Bear was particularly mournful.
- "I was the one who found her, you know, after you brought her in," he
- said to Laird.
- "I remember."
- So that's what the Bear meant when he said 'another one," Bil said.
- Charls and Oda, Bil and Kae were among the mourners. Juli saw them and
- thought. My dear little puppy-dog people, but this time the thought
- was loving and not contemptuous.
- Oda's tail wagged. I've thought of something, she spieked at Juli. Can
- you meet me down by the cenote in two days' time?
- Yes, thought Juli, proud of herself at being sure, for the first time,
- that her thought had gone only to the person for whom it was meant. She
- knew that she had been successful when she glanced at Laird's face and
- saw that he had not read her thought.
- When she met Oda at the cenote, Juli did not know what was expected of
- her nor what she herself expected.
- You must be very careful in directing your thoughts, Oda spieked. We
- never know when some of the Jwindz are overhead.
- I think I'm learning, Juli spieked. Oda nodded.
- What my idea was, it was to make use of the Fighting Trees.
- The True Men are still afraid of the sickness. But, you see, I know
- that the sickness is gone. I got so tired of brushing past the trees
- and always worrying about it that I decided to test it out, and I ate a
- pod from one of the Fighting Trees and nothing happened.
- I've never been afraid of them since. So if we met there, we rebels,
- in a grove of the Fighting Trees, the officials of the Jwindz, would
- never find us. They 'd be afraid to hunt for us there.
- Juli's face lightened. That's a very good idea. May I consult with
- Laird?
- Certainly. He has always been one of us. And your sister was too.
- Juli was sad again. I feel so alone.
- No. You have Laird, and you have us, and the Bear, and his
- housekeeper. And in time there will be others. Now we must part.
- Juli returned from her meeting with Oda at the cenote to find Laird
- deep in conference with the Bear and a young man who bore a singular
- resemblance to Laird and to the youthful Carlotta that Juli
- remembered.
- Laird smiled at her.
- "This is your great-nephew," he said, "my grandson."
- Juli's perspective of time and age received another jolt. Laird
- appeared to be no older than his grandson. How do I fit in to this?
- she wondered, and accidentally broadcast the thought.
- "I know that all of this must be difficult for you to comprehend,"
- Laird said, taking her hand.
- "Carlotta had some difficulty in adjusting too. But try, please try,
- my dear, because we need you so desperately and I, I particularly, have
- already become dependent on you. I could not face Carlotta's loss
- without you."
- Juli felt a vague sense of embarrassment.
- "What is my" she could not say it "what is his name?"
- "I beg your pardon. He is named Joachim for your uncle."
- Joachim smiled and then gave her a brief hug.
- "You see," he said, "the reason we need your help with the rebellion is
- the cult that was built up around your sister, my grandmother. When
- she returned to earth as an Ancient One, there was a kind of cult set
- up about her. That is why she was The Vomact' and why you must also
- be. It is a rallying point for those of us who oppose the power of the
- Jwindz. Grandmother Carlotta had a mini kingdom here, and even the
- Jwindz could not keep people from coming to pay her court. You must
- have realized that at the mourning session for her."
- "Yes, I could see that she had a great deal of respect from many kinds
- of people. If she was in favor of a rebellion, I am sure she must have
- been correct. Carlotta was always a most upright person. And now I
- must tell you about the plan that Oda proposes." She proceeded to do
- so.
- "It might work," the Bear said.
- "True Men have been very careful about observing the tambu of the
- Fighting Trees. In fact, I may even have an improvement on Oda's
- idea." He began to get excited and dropped his spectacles. Joachim
- picked them up.
- "Bear," he said, "you always do that when you're excited." "I think it
- means I have a good idea," the Bear said.
- "Look, why don't we use the manshonyaggers?"
- The others looked at him in bewilderment and Laird said slowly,
- "I think I may see what you're getting at. The manshonyaggers,
- although there are not many of them left, respond only to German and "
- "And the leaders of the Jwindz are Chinesian, too proud to have learned
- another language," the Bear broke in, smiling.
- "Yes. So if we establish headquarters in the Fighting Trees and let it
- be known that the new Vomact is there "
- of Man "And surround the grove with manshonyaggers " They were
- breaking in upon each other as the idea began to take shape. The
- excitement grew.
- "I think it will work," Laird said.
- "I think so too," Joachim reassured him.
- "I will get together the Band of Cousins and after you're established
- in the Fighting Trees, we'll make a raid on the drug center and bring
- the tranquilizers to the grove, where we can destroy them."
- "The Band of Cousins?" Juli asked.
- "Carlotta's and my descendants who have not joined the Instrumentality
- of the Jwindz," Laird told her.
- "Why would any of them have joined?"
- Laird shrugged.
- "Greed, power, all kinds of very human motives. Even an illusion of
- physical immortality. We tried to give our children ideals but the
- corruption of power is very great.
- You must know that."
- Remembering a howling, hateful face with a black mustache above the
- mouth, a face from her own time and place, Juli nodded.
- Herkie and the Bear, Charls and Oda, Bil and Kae accompanied Juli into
- the grove of Fighting Trees. At first Bil and Kae were reluctant. It
- was only after Oda's confession of having eaten a pod that they agreed
- to go, and then Bil's reaction was that of a typical father.
- "How could you take such a chance?" he asked Oda.
- Her eyes were bright and her tail wagged furiously.
- "I just had to," she said.
- He glanced at Herkie.
- "Now if she had done it. . ."
- Herkie drew herself up to her full height.
- "I think that the relationship of curiosity and cats has, perhaps, been
- a little exaggerated," she said.
- "Actually, we're generally rather careful."
- "I didn't mean to be disrespectful," Bil said hastily, and Herkie saw
- his tail droop.
- "It's a common misconception," she said kindly, and Bil's tail
- straightened.
- When they reached the center of the grove, they spread a picnic and
- gathered around. Juli was hungry. In the City she had been offered
- synthetic food, no doubt healthful and full of vitamins but not
- satisfying to the appetite of an Ancient Prussian girl. The
- animal-derived persons had brought real-food and Juli ate happily.
- The Bear, in particular, noticed her enjoyment.
- "You see," he said, "that's how they did it."
- "Did what?" asked Juli, her mouth full of bread.
- "How they drugged the majority of True Men. True Men were so
- accustomed to living on synthetic foodstuffs that when the Jwindz
- introduced tranquilizers into the synthetics, True Men never knew the
- difference. I hope that if the Band of Cousins succeeds in capturing
- the drug supply, the withdrawal symptoms for the True Men will not be
- too severe."
- Bil looked up.
- "That's something we should consider," he said.
- "If there are severe withdrawal symptoms, a number of the True Men may
- be tempted to join the Jwindz in an attempt to recover the drugs."
- The Bear nodded.
- "That's what I was thinking," he said.
- It was several days before Laird, Joachim, and the Band of Cousins
- joined them. By this time Juli had become almost accustomed to the
- daylight darkness under the thick leaves and branches of the Fighting
- Trees, and the soft-glowing illumination at night.
- Laird greeted her affectionately.
- "I have missed you," he said simply.
- "Already I have grown very attached to you."
- Juli blushed and changed the subject.
- "Did you or, rather, the Band of Cousins succeed?"
- "Oh, yes. There was very little difficulty. The officials of the
- Jwindz had grown quite careless since they have had the minds of most
- True Men under their control for generations. It was only a matter of
- Joachim's pretending to be tranquilized, and he had free access to the
- drug room. Over a period of days he managed to transfer the entire
- supply to the Cousins and to substitute placebos. I wonder when that
- will be discovered."
- "As soon as the first withdrawal symptoms occur, I should think,"
- Joachim ventured.
- Something that had been nagging at the back of Juli's mind surfaced.
- "You have your grandson here, and the Band of Cousins. But where are
- your and Carlotta's own children?
- Obviously you had some."
- His face saddened.
- "Of course. But since they were half Ancient they could not only not
- be rejuvenated, but the combination of the chemistry made it such that
- their lives could not even be prolonged. They all died in their
- seventies and eighties. It was a great sadness to Carlotta and me. You
- too, my dear, if we have children, must be prepared for that. By the
- time of the next generation, however, the Ancient blood is sufficiently
- diluted that rejuvenation may take place. Joachim is a hundred and
- fifty years old."
- "And you? And you?" she said.
- He looked at her.
- "This is very hard on you, isn't it? I'm over three hundred years
- old."
- Juli could not disbelieve but neither could she quite comprehend. Laird
- was so handsome and youthful; Carlotta had been so old.
- She tried to shake the cobwebs from her mind.
- "What do we do with
- the tranquilizers now that we have them?"
- Oda had approached at the latter part of the conversation. Her eyes
- sparkled and her tail wagged madly.
- "I have an idea," she announced.
- "I hope it's as good as your last one," Laird said.
- "I hope so too. Look, why don't we just feed the tranquilizers back to
- the officials? The Jwindz probably will never notice. Then we won't
- have to worry about fighting them. They could just gradually die off
- or maybe ... do you think ... we could send them out into space? To
- another planet?"
- Laird nodded slowly.
- "You do have good ideas. Yes, to feed the tranquilizers back to them .
- . . but how?"
- "We work well together," the Bear said, indicating Oda.
- "She has an idea and it triggers another one in my mind." Carefully he
- put on his spectacles.
- "I have here a map of the terrain in this vicinity. Except for the
- cenote there is no water for many kilometers in any direction. If we
- dropped the tranquilizers all of them into the cenote, and then if one
- of the Cousins could prepare the synthetic food of the Jwindz's
- officials so it was very spicy I think that the problem would be
- solved."
- Laird said,
- "We do have one of the Cousins who has infiltrated the Jwindz. But
- what would induce them to drink the water?"
- Charls had joined the group.
- "I have heard," he said, "of an ancient spice people used to like which
- eventually produced thirst. It used to be found in the oceans, before
- they were filled with grass. But some of it remains on the banks of
- the sea. I believe that it was called 'salt." " "Now that you mention
- it, I've heard of that too." The Bear nodded wisely.
- "So that is what we need to do.
- "Salt." We introduce it into their food, then we entice them to the
- grove with the knowledge that the new Vomact is here together with the
- heart of a rebellion. It's risky but I think it's the best idea, or
- combination of ideas, yet" Laird agreed.
- "It's as you say, risky, but it may work, and they're not likely to
- execute any of us if it doesn't. They'll just tranquilize us. I think
- that we have a better than even chance of winning. And if True Man is
- not revitalized, not freed from this bondage of tranquility and apathy,
- I believe that the entire breed will be extinguished within a few
- hundred years. They have come to the point that they care about
- nothing."
- All worlds know how the plan was carried out. It was exactly as the
- Bear had foretold. The thirsty officials of the Jwindz, their food
- highly salted, drank eagerly from the water of the cenote and were
- quickly tranquilized. They put up no opposition to the members of the
- rebellion who soon thereafter emerged from the shelter of the Fighting
- Trees.
- Joachim was sad.
- "One of my brothers had joined them," he said.
- Laird laid a comforting arm across his shoulder.
- "Well, he's only tranquilized. We may be able to help him as he comes
- out of it."
- "Perhaps, but it violates all my principles."
- "Don't be too high-minded, Joachim. Principles are fine, but there is
- such a thing as rehabilitation."
- And this was the way that the Instrumentality of Mankind was
- established. In time it would govern many worlds. Juli, by virtue of
- being the Vomact, became one of the first Ladies of the
- Instrumentality. Laird, as her husband, was one of the first Lords.
- Juli lived to see some of her descendants among the first great
- Scanners in Space. She was very proud of them, and she was very old.
- Laird, of course, was as young as ever. All of her animal descended
- friends had long since died. She missed them, although Laird was ever
- faithful.
- At last, so old that she had difficulty in moving, Juli called Laird to
- her. She looked up into his handsome face.
- "My darling, you have made me very happy, just as you did Carlotta. But
- now I am old and, I think, dying. You are still so young and vital. I
- wish it were possible for me to undergo the rejuvenation, but since it
- isn't possible, I think we should call in Karla."
- He responded so rapidly that her feelings were somewhat hurt.
- "Yes, I think that we should call in Karla."
- He turned away from her momentarily.
- She said, with a hint of tears in her voice,
- "I know that you will make her happy and love her very much."
- His silence continued for a moment before he turned back to her.
- She saw suddenly that there were lines in his face, lines she had never
- seen before.
- "What is happening to you?" she asked.
- "My darling and last love," he said,
- "I will be losing you twice. I cannot bear it. I have asked the
- physician for medicine to counteract the rejuvenation. In an hour I
- shall be as old as you.
- We are going together. And somewhere out there we will meet Carlotta
- and we will hold hands, the three of us, among the stars.
- Karla will find her own man and her own fate."
- Together they sat and watched the descent of Karla's spacecraft.
- scanners Live in Vain Martel was angry. He did not even adjust his
- blood away from anger. He stamped across the room by judgment, not by
- sight. When he saw the table hit the floor, and could tell by the
- expression on Luci's face that the table must have made a loud crash,
- he looked down to see if his leg were broken. It was not. Scanner to
- the core, he had to scan himself. The action was reflex and automatic.
- The inventory included his legs, abdomen, Chestbox of instruments,
- hands, arms, face, and back with the mirror. Only then did Martel go
- back to being angry. He talked with his voice, even though he knew
- that his wife hated its blare and preferred to have him write.
- "I tell you, I must cranch. I have to cranch. It's my worry, isn't
- it?"
- When Luci answered, he saw only a part of her words as he read her
- lips: "Darling ... you're my husband . .. right to love you . . .
- dangerous ... do it... dangerous . . . wait.. . ."
- He faced her, but put sound in his voice, letting the blare hurt her
- again: "I tell you, I am going to cranch."
- Catching her expression, he became rueful and a little tender: "Can't
- you understand what it means to me? To get out of this horrible prison
- in my own head?
- To be a man again hearing your voice, smelling smoke? To feel again to
- feel my feet on the ground, to feel the air move against my face? Don't
- you know what it means?"
- Her wide-eyed worrisome concern thrust him back into pure annoyance. He
- read only a few of the words as her lips moved: "... love you . . .
- your own good . .
- . don't you think I want you to be human? .
- . . your own good . . . too much ... he said ... they said ..."
- When he roared at her, he realized that his voice must be particularly
- bad. He knew that the sound hurt her no less than did the words: "Do
- you think I wanted you to marry a Scanner? Didn't I tell you we're
- almost as low as the haber mans We're dead, I tell you. We've got to
- be dead to do our work. How can anybody go to the Upand-Out? Can you
- dream what raw Space is? I warned you. But you married me. All
- right, you married a
- man. Please, darling, let me be a man. Let me hear your voice, let
- me feel the warmth of being alive, of being human. Let me!"
- He saw by her look of stricken assent that he had won the argument. He
- did not use his voice again. Instead, he pulled his tablet up from
- where it hung against his chest. He wrote on it, using the pointed
- fingernail of his right forefinger the talking nail of a Scanner in
- quick clean cut script: Pis, dring, whrs crnching wire ?
- She pulled the long gold-sheathed wire out of the pocket of her apron.
- She let its field sphere fall to the carpeted floor.
- Swiftly, dutifully, with the deft obedience of a Scanner's wife, she
- wound the Cranching Wire around his head, spirally around his neck and
- chest. She avoided the instruments set in his chest. She even avoided
- the radiating scars around the instruments, the stigmata of men who had
- gone Up and into the Out. Mechanically he lifted a foot as she slipped
- the wire between his feet. She drew the wire taut.
- She snapped the small plug into the High Burden control next to his
- Heart-Reader.
- She helped him to sit down, arranging his hands for him, pushing his
- head back into the cup at the top of the chair. She turned then,
- full-face toward him, so that he could read her lips easily. Her
- expression was composed: "Ready, darling?"
- She knelt, scooped up the sphere at the other end of the wire, stood
- erect calmly, her back to him. He scanned her, and saw nothing in her
- posture but grief which would have escaped the eye of anyone but a
- Scanner. She spoke: he could see her chest-muscles moving. She
- realized that she was not facing him, and turned so that he could see
- her lips: "Ready at last?"
- He smiled a yes.
- She turned her back to him again. (Luci could never bear to watch him
- go Underthe-Wire.) She tossed the wire-sphere into the air. It caught
- in the force-field, and hung there. Suddenly it glowed. That was all.
- All except for the sudden red stinking roar of coming back to his
- senses.
- Coming back, across the wild threshold of pain When he awakened under
- the wire, he did not feel as though he had just cranched.
- Even though it was the second cranching within the week, he felt fit.
- He lay in the chair. His ears drank in the sound of air touching
- things in the room. He heard Luci breathing in the next room, where
- she was hanging up the wire to cool. He smelt the thousand-and-one
- smells that are in anybody's room: the crisp freshness of the
- germ-burner, the
- sour-sweet tang of the humidifier, the odor of the dinner they had
- just eaten, the smells of clothes, furniture, of people themselves.
- All these were pure delight. He sang a phrase or two of his favorite
- song: Here's to the haber man Up and Out! Up oh! and Out oh! Up and
- Out!.
- . .
- He heard Luci chuckle in the next room. He gloated over the sounds of
- her dress as she swished to the doorway.
- She gave him her crooked little smile.
- "You sound all right.
- Are you all right, really?"
- Even with this luxury of senses, he scanned. He took the flash-quick
- inventory which constituted his professional skill. His eyes swept in
- the news of the instruments. Nothing showed off scale, beyond the
- Nerve Compression hanging in the edge of Danger. But he could not
- worry about the Nerve-box. That always came through cranching. You
- couldn't get under the wire without having it show on the Nerve-box.
- Some day the box would go to Overload and drop back down to Dead. That
- was the way a haber man ended. But you couldn't have everything.
- People who went to the Up-and-Out had to pay the price for Space.
- Anyhow, he should worry! He was a Scanner. A good one, and he knew
- it. If he couldn't scan himself, who could? This cranching wasn't too
- dangerous. Dangerous, but not too dangerous.
- Luci put out her hand and ruffled his hair as if she had been reading
- his thoughts, instead of just following them: "But you know you
- shouldn't have! You shouldn't!"
- "But I did!" He grinned at her.
- Her gaiety still forced, she said: "Come on, darling, let's have a good
- time. I have almost everything there is in the icebox all your
- favorite tastes. And I have two new records just full of smells. I
- tried them out myself, and even I liked them. And you know me "
- "Which?"
- "Which what, you old darling?"
- He slipped his hand over her shoulders as he limped out of the room.
- (He could never go back to feeling the floor beneath his feet, feeling
- the air against his face, without being bewildered and clumsy. As if
- crunching was real, and being a haber man was a bad dream. But he was
- a haber man and a Scanner.
- "You know what I meant, Luci . . . the smells, which you have. Which
- one did you like, on the record?"
- "Well-1-1," said she, judiciously, "there were some lamb chops that
- were the strangest things " He interrupted: "What are lambtchots?"
- "Wait till you smell them. Then guess. I'll tell you this much.
- It's a smell hundreds and hundreds of years old. They found about it
- in the old books."
- "Is a lambtchot a Beast?"
- "I won't tell you. You've got to wait," she laughed, as she helped him
- sit down and spread out his tasting dishes before him.
- He wanted to go back over the dinner first, sampling all the pretty
- things he had eaten, and savoring them this time with his now living
- lips and tongue.
- When Luci had found the Music Wire and had thrown its sphere up into
- the force-field, he reminded her of the new smells.
- She took out the long glass records and set the first one into a
- transmitter.
- "Now sniff!"
- A queer, frightening, exciting smell came over the room. It seemed
- like nothing in this world, nor like anything from the Upand-Out. Yet
- it was familiar. His mouth watered. His pulse beat a little faster;
- he scanned his Heartbox. (Faster, sure enough.) But that smell, what
- was it? In mock perplexity, he grabbed her hands, looked into her
- eyes, and growled: "Tell me, darling! Tell me, or I'll eat you up!"
- "That's just right!"
- "What?"
- "You're right. It should make you want to eat me. It's meat."
- "Meat. Who?"
- "Not a person," said she, knowledgeably, "a Beast. A Beast which
- people used to eat. A lamb was a small sheep you've seen sheep out in
- the Wild, haven't you? and a chop is part of its middle here!" She
- pointed at her chest.
- Martel did not hear her. All his boxes had swung over toward Alarm,
- some to Danger. He fought against the roar of his own mind, forcing
- his body into excess excitement. How easy it was to be a Scanner when
- you really stood outside your own body, haber man-fashion, and looked
- back into it with your eyes alone.
- Then you could manage the body, rule it coldly even in the enduring
- agony of Space. But to realize that you were a body, that this thing
- was ruling you, that the mind could kick the flesh and send it roaring
- off into panic! That was bad.
- He tried to remember the days before he had gone into the Haberman
- Device, before he had been cut apart for the Up-and Out Had he always
- been subject to the rush of his emotions from his mind to his body,
- from his body back to his mind, confounding him so that he couldn't
- scan? But he hadn't been a Scanner then.
- He knew what had hit him. Amid the roar of his own pulse, he knew. In
- the nightmare of the Up-and-Out, that smell had forced its way through
- to him, while their ship burned off Venus and the haber mans fought
- the
- collapsing metal with their bare hands. He had scanned them: all were
- in Danger. Chestboxes went up to Overload and dropped to Dead all
- around him as he had moved from man to man, shoving the drifting
- corpses out of his way as he fought to scan each man in turn, to clamp
- vises on unnoticed broken legs, to snap the Sleeping Valve on men whose
- instruments showed that they were hopelessly near Overload. With men
- trying to work and cursing him for a Scanner while he, professional
- zeal aroused, fought to do his job and keep them alive in the Great
- Pain of Space, he had smelled that smell. It had fought its way along
- his rebuilt nerves, past the Haberman cuts, past all the safeguards of
- physical and mental discipline. In the wildest hour of tragedy, he had
- smelled aloud. He remembered it was like a bad crunching, connected
- with the fury and nightmare all around him. He had even stopped his
- work to scan himself, fearful that the First Effect might come,
- breaking past all haber man cuts and ruining him with the Pain of
- Space. But he had come through. His own instruments stayed and stayed
- at Danger, without nearing Overload. He had done his job, and won a
- commendation for it. He had even forgotten the burning ship.
- All except the smell.
- And here the smell was all over again the smell of meat with-fire ..
- .
- Luci looked at him with wifely concern. She obviously thought he had
- cranched too much, and was about to haber man back. She tried to be
- cheerful: "You'd better rest, honey."
- He whispered to her: "Cut off that smell."
- She did not question his word. She cut the transmitter. She even
- crossed the room and stepped up the room controls until a small breeze
- flitted across the floor and drove the smells up to the ceiling.
- He rose, tired and stiff. (His instruments were normal, except that
- Heart was fast and Nerves still hanging on the edge of Danger.) He
- spoke sadly: "Forgive me, Luci. I suppose I shouldn't have cranched.
- Not so soon again. But darling, I have to get out from being a haber
- man How can I ever be near you? How can I be a man not hearing my own
- voice, not even feeling my own life as it goes through my veins? I love
- you, darling. Can't I ever be near you?"
- Her pride was disciplined and automatic: "But you're a Scanner!"
- "I know I'm a Scanner. But so what?"
- She went over the words, like a tale told a thousand times to reassure
- herself: "You are the bravest of the brave, the most skillful of the
- skilled. All Mankind owes most honor to the Scanner, who unites the
- Earths of mankind. Scanners are the protectors of the haber mans They
- are the judges in the Up-and Out They make men live in the place where
- men need desperately to die. They are the most honored of Mankind, and
- even the Chiefs of the Instrumentality are delighted to pay them
- homage!"
- With obstinate sorrow he demurred: "Luci, we've heard that all before.
- But does it pay us back " " "Scanners work for more than pay. They are
- the strong guards of Mankind." Don't you remember that?"
- "But our lives, Luci. What can you get out of being the wife of a
- Scanner? Why did you marry me? I'm human only when I crunch. The
- rest of the time you know what I am. A machine.
- A man turned into a machine. A man who has been killed and kept alive
- for duty. Don't you realize what I miss?"
- "Of course, darling, of course " He went on: "Don't you think I
- remember my childhood? Don't you think I remember what it is to be a
- man and not a haber man
- To walk and feel my feet on the ground? To feel decent clean pain
- instead of watching my body every minute to see if I'm alive? How will
- I know if I'm dead? Did you ever think of that, Luci? How will I know
- if I'm dead?"
- She ignored the unreasonableness of his outburst. Pacify ingly, she
- said: "Sit down, darling. Let me make you some kind of a drink. You're
- over-wrought."
- Automatically he scanned.
- "No, I'm not! Listen to me. How do you think it feels to be in the
- Up-and-Out with the crew tied-for Space all around you? How do you
- think it feels to watch them sleep? How do you think I like scanning,
- scanning, scanning month after month, when I can feel the Pain-of-Space
- beating against every part of my body, trying to get past my Haberman
- blocks? How do you think I like to wake the men when I have to, and
- have them hate me for it? Have you ever seen haber mans fight strong
- men fighting, and neither knowing pain, fighting until one touches
- Overload? Do you think about that, Luci?"
- Triumphantly he added: "Can you blame me if I cranch, and come back to
- being a man, just two days a month?"
- "I'm not blaming you, darling. Let's enjoy your cranch. Sit down now,
- and have a drink."
- He was sitting down, resting his face in his hands, while she fixed the
- drink, using natural fruits out of bottles in addition to the secure
- alkaloids. He watched her restlessly and pitied her for marrying a
- Scanner; and then, though it was unjust, resented having to pity her.
- Just as she turned to hand him the drink, they both jumped a little
- when the phone rang. It should not have rung. They had turned it off.
- It rang again, obviously on the emergency circuit.
- Stepping ahead of Luci, Martel strode over to the phone and looked into
- it. Vomact was looking at him.
- The custom of Scanners entitled him to be brusque, even with a Senior
- Scanner, on certain given occasions. This was one.
- Before Vomact could speak, Martel spoke two words into the plate, not
- caring whether the old man could read lips or not:
- "Cranching. Busy."
- He cut the switch and went back to Luci.
- The phone rang again.
- Luci said, gently,
- "I can find out what it is, darling. Here, take your drink and sit
- down."
- "Leave it alone," said her husband.
- "No one has a right to call when I'm cranching. He knows that. He
- ought to know that."
- The phone rang again. In a fury, Martel rose and went to the plate. He
- cut it back on. Vomact was on the screen. Before Martel could speak,
- Vomact held up his Talking Nail in line with his Heartbox. Martel
- reverted to discipline: "Scanner Martel present and waiting, sir."
- The lips moved solemnly: "Top emergency."
- "Sir, I am under the wire."
- "Top emergency."
- "Sir, don't you understand?" Martel mouthed his words, so he could be
- sure that Vomact followed,
- "I... am ... under . . . the . .
- . wire. Unfit ... for... Space!"
- Vomact repeated: "Top emergency. Report to your central Tiein."
- "But, sir, no emergency like this " "Right, Martel. No emergency like
- this, ever before. Report to Tie-in." With a faint glint of
- kindliness, Vomact added: "No need to de-cranch. Report as you are."
- This time it was Martel whose phone was cut out. The screen went
- gray.
- He turned to Luci. The temper had gone out of his voice. She came to
- him. She kissed him, and rumpled his hair. All she could say was,
- "I'm sorry."
- She kissed him again, knowing his disappointment.
- "Take good care of yourself, darling. I'll wait."
- He scanned, and slipped into his transparent air coat At the window he
- paused, and waved. She called,
- "Good luck!" As the air flowed past him he said to himself, "This is
- the first time I've felt flight in in eleven years. Lord, but it's
- easy to fly if you can feel yourself live!"
- Central Tie-in glowed white and austere far ahead. Martel peered. He
- saw no glare of incoming ships from the Up-and-Out, no shuddering flare
- of Space-fire out of control. Everything was quiet, as it should be on
- an off-duty night.
- And yet Vomact had called. He had called an emergency higher than
- Space. There was no such thing. But Vomact had called it.
- of Man When Martel got there, he found about half the Scanners
- present, two dozen or so of them. He lifted the Talking Finger.
- Most of the Scanners were standing face to face, talking in pairs as
- they read lips. A few of the old, impatient ones were scribbling on
- their Tablets and then thrusting the Tablets into other people's faces.
- All the faces wore the dull dead relaxed look of a haber man When
- Martel entered the room, he knew that most of the others laughed in the
- deep isolated privacy of their own minds, each thinking things it would
- be useless to express in formal words. It had been a long time since a
- Scanner showed up at a meeting cranched.
- Vomact was not there: probably, thought Martel, he was still on the
- phone calling others. The light of the phone flashed on and off; the
- bell rang. Martel felt odd when he realized that of all those present,
- he was the only one to hear that loud bell. It made him realize why
- ordinary people did not like to be around groups of haber mans or
- Scanners. Martel looked around for company.
- His friend Chang was there, but was busy explaining to some old and
- testy Scanner that he did not know why Vomact had called. Martel
- looked further and saw Parizianski. He walked over, threading his way
- past the others with a dexterity that showed he could feel his feet
- from the inside, and did not have to watch them. Several of the others
- stared at him with their dead faces, and tried to smile. But they
- lacked full muscular control and their faces twisted into horrid masks.
- (Scanners knew better than to show expression on faces which they could
- no longer govern. Martel added to himself, I swear I'll never smile
- unless I'm cranched.) Parizianski gave him the sign of the talking
- finger. Looking face to face, he spoke: "You come here cranched?"
- Parizianski could not hear his own voice, so the words roared like the
- words on a broken and screeching phone; Martel was startled, but knew
- that the inquiry was well meant. No one could be better-natured than
- the burly Pole.
- "Vomact called. Top emergency."
- "You told him you were cranched?"
- "Yes."
- "He still made you come?"
- "Yes."
- "Then all this it is not for Space? You could not go Up-and Out You
- are like ordinary men."
- "That's right."
- "Then why did he call us?" Some pre-Haberman habit made Parizianski
- wave his arms in inquiry. The hand struck the back of the old man
- behind them. The slap could be heard throughout the room, but only
- Martel heard it. Instinctively, he scanned Parizianski and the old
- Scanner: they scanned him back. Only then did the old man ask why
- Martel had scanned him. When Martel explained that he was
- Under-the-Wire, the old man moved swiftly away to pass on the news that
- there was a cranched Scanner present at the Tie-in.
- Even this minor sensation could not keep the attention of most of the
- Scanners from the worry about the Top Emergency. One young man, who
- had scanned his first transit just the year before, dramatically
- interposed himself between Parizianski and Martel.
- He dramatically flashed his Tablet at them: Is Vmct mad?
- The older men shook their heads. Martel, remembering that it had not
- been too long that the young man had been haber man mitigated the dead
- solemnity of the denial with a friendly smile.
- He spoke in a normal voice, saying: "Vomact is the Senior of Scanners.
- I am sure that he could not go mad. Would he not see it on his boxes
- first?"
- Martel had to repeat the question, speaking slowly and mouthing his
- words, before the young Scanner could understand the comment. The
- young man tried to make his face smile, and twisted it into a comic
- mask. But he took up his Tablet and scribbled: Yr right.
- Chang broke away from his friend and came over, his half Chinese face
- gleaming in the warm evening. (It's strange, thought Martel, that more
- Chinese don't become Scanners. Or not so strange, perhaps, if you
- think that they never fill their quota of haber mans Chinese love good
- living too much. The ones who do scan are all good ones.) Chang saw
- that Martel was cranched, and spoke with voice: "You break precedents.
- Luci must be angry to lose you?"
- "She took it well. Chang, that's strange."
- "What?"
- "I'm cranched, and I can hear. Your voice sounds all right.
- How did you learn to talk like like an ordinary person?"
- "I practiced with soundtracks. Funny you noticed it. I think I am the
- only Scanner in or between the Earths who can pass for an Ordinary Man.
- Mirrors and soundtracks. I found out how to act."
- "But you don't. . . ?"
- "No. I don't feel, or taste, or hear, or smell things, any more than
- you do. Talking doesn't do me much good. But I notice that it cheers
- up the people around me."
- "It would make a difference in the life of Luci."
- Chang nodded sagely.
- "My father insisted on it. He said,
- "You may be proud of being a Scanner. I am sorry you are not a Man.
- Conceal your defects." So I tried. I wanted to tell the old boy about
- the Up-and-Out, and what we did there, but it did not matter. He
- said,
- "Airplanes were good enough for Confucius, and they are for me too."
- The old humbug! He tries so hard to be a Chinese when he can't even
- read Old Chinese. But he's got wonderful good sense, and for somebody
- going on two hundred he certainly gets around."
- Martel smiled at the thought: "In his airplane?"
- Chang smiled back. This discipline of his facial muscles was amazing;
- a bystander would not think that Chang was a haber man controlling his
- eyes, cheeks, and lips by cold intellectual control. The expression
- had the spontaneity of life.
- Martel felt a flash of envy for Chang when he looked at the dead cold
- faces of Parizianski and the others. He knew that he himself looked
- fine: but why shouldn't he? He was cranched. Turning to Parizianski
- he said, "Did you see what Chang said about his father? The old boy
- uses an airplane."
- Parizianski made motions with his mouth, but the sounds meant nothing.
- He took up his Tablet and showed it to Martel and Chang: Bzz bzz. Ha
- ha. Gd ol' boy.
- At that moment, Martel heard steps out in the corridor. He could not
- help looking toward the door. Other eyes followed the direction of his
- glance.
- Vomactcame in.
- The group shuffled to attention in four parallel lines. They scanned
- one another. Numerous hands reached across to adjust the
- electrochemical controls on Chestboxes which had begun to load up. One
- Scanner held out a broken finger which his counter scanner had
- discovered, and submitted it for treatment and splinting.
- Vomact had taken out his Staff of Office. The cube at the top flashed
- red light through the room, the lines reformed, and all Scanners gave
- the sign meaning. Present and ready!
- Vomact countered with the stance signifying, I am the Senior and take
- Command.
- Talking fingers rose in the counter-gesture, We concur and commit
- ourselves.
- Vomact raised his right arm, dropped the wrist as though it were
- broken, in a queer searching gesture, meaning: Any men around? Any
- haber mans not tied? All clear for the Scanners?
- Alone of all those present, the cranched Martel heard the queer rustle
- of feet as they all turned completely around without leaving
- position,
- looking sharply at one another and flashing their belt lights into the
- dark corners of the great room. When again they faced Vomact, he made
- a further sign: All clear. Follow my words.
- Martel noticed that he alone relaxed. The others could not know the
- meaning of relaxation with the minds blocked off up there in their
- skulls, connected only with the eyes, and the rest of the body
- connected with the mind only by controlling non-sensory nerves and the
- instrument boxes on their chests. Martel realized that, cranched as he
- was, he expected to hear Vomact's voice: the Senior had been talking
- for some time. No sound escaped his lips.
- (Vomact never bothered with sound.) "... and when the first men to go
- Up and Out went to the Moon, what did they find?"
- "Nothing," responded the silent chorus of lips.
- "Therefore they went further, to Mars and to Venus. The ships went out
- year by year, but they did not come back until the Year One of Space.
- Then did a ship come back with the First Effect.
- Scanners, I ask you, what is the First Effect?"
- "No one knows. No one knows."
- "No one will ever know. Too many are the variables. By what do we
- know the First Effect?"
- "By the Great Pain of Space," came the chorus.
- "And by what further sign?" "By the need, oh the need for death."
- Vomact again: "And who stopped the need for death?" "Henry Haberman
- conquered the first effect, in the Year 3 of Space."
- "And, Scanners, I ask you, what did he do?" "He made the haber mans
- "How, 0 Scanners, are haber mans made?"
- "They are made with the cuts. The brain is cut from the heart, the
- lungs. The brain is cut from the ears, the nose. The brain is cut
- from the mouth, the belly. The brain is cut from desire, and pain. The
- brain is cut from the world. Save for the eyes. Save for the control
- of the living flesh." "And how, 0 Scanners, is flesh controlled?"
- "By the boxes set in the flesh, the controls set in the chest, the
- signs made to rule the living body, the signs by which the body lives."
- "How does a haber man live and live?" "The haber man lives by control
- of the boxes." "Whence come the haber mans
- Martel felt in the coming response a great roar of broken voices
- echoing through the room as the Scanners, haber mans themselves, put
- sound behind their mouthings:
- "Habermans are the scum of Mankind. Habermans are the weak, the
- cruel, the credulous, and the unfit. Habermans are the
- sentenced-to-more-than-death. Habermans live in the mind alone.
- They are killed for Space but they live for Space. They master the
- ships that connect the Earths. They live in the Great Pain while
- ordinary men sleep in the cold cold sleep of the transit."
- "Brothers and Scanners, I ask you now: are we haber mans or are we
- not?"
- "We are haber mans in the flesh. We are cut apart, brain and flesh.
- We are ready to go to the Up-and-Out. All of us have gone through the
- Haberman Device."
- "We are haber mans then?" Vomact's eyes flashed and glittered as he
- asked the ritual question.
- Again the chorused answer was accompanied by a roar of voices heard
- only by Martel: "Habermans we are, and more, and more. We are the
- Chosen who are haber mans by our own free will. We are the Agents of
- the Instrumentality of Mankind."
- "What must the others say to us?"
- "They must say to us,
- "You are the bravest of the brave, the most skillful of the skilled.
- All Mankind owes most honor to the Scanner, who unites the Earths of
- Mankind. Scanners are the protectors of the haber mans They are the
- judges in the Up-and Out They make men live in the place where men need
- desperately to die. They are the most honored of mankind, and even the
- Chiefs of the Instrumentality are delighted to pay them homage!" "
- Vomact stood more erect: "What is the secret duty of the Scanner?"
- "To obey the Instrumentality only in accordance with Scanner Law."
- "What is the second secret duty of the Scanner?"
- "To keep secret our law, and to destroy the acquirers thereof."
- "How to destroy?"
- "Twice to the Overload, back and Dead."
- "If haber mans die, what the duty then?"
- The Scanners all compressed their lips for answer. (Silence was the
- code.) Martel, who long familiar with the Code was a little bored with
- the proceedings, noticed that Chang was breathing too heavily; he
- reached over and adjusted Chang's Lungcontrol and received the thanks
- of Chang's eyes. Vomact observed the interruption and glared at them
- both. Martel relaxed, trying to imitate the dead cold stillness of the
- others. It was so hard to do, when you were cranched.
- "If others die, what the duty then?" asked Vomact.
- "Scanners together inform the Instrumentality. Scanners together
- accept the punishment. Scanners together settle the case."
- "And if the punishment be severe?"
- "Then no ships go."
- "And if Scanners not be honored?"
- "Then no ships go."
- "And if a Scanner goes unpaid?"
- "Then no ships go."
- "And if the Others and the Instrumentality are not in all ways at all
- times mindful of their proper obligation to the Scanners?"
- "Then no ships go."
- "And what, 0 Scanners, if no ships go?"
- "The Earths fall apart. The Wild comes back in. The Old Machines and
- the Beasts return."
- "What is the known duty of a Scanner?"
- "Not to sleep in the Up-and-Out."
- "What is the second duty of a Scanner?"
- "To keep forgotten the name of fear."
- "What is the third duty of a Scanner?"
- "To use the wire of Eustace Cranch only with care, only with
- moderation." Several pair of eyes looked quickly at Martel before the
- mouthed chorus went on.
- "To cranch only at home, only among friends, only for the purpose of
- remembering, of relaxing, or of begetting."
- "What is the word of the Scanner?"
- "Faithful though surrounded by death."
- "What is the motto of the Scanner?"
- "Awake though surrounded by silence."
- "What is the work of the Scanner?"
- "Labor even in the heights of the Up-and-Out, loyalty even in the
- depths of the Earths."
- "How do you know a Scanner?"
- "We know ourselves. We are dead though we live. And we Talk with the
- Tablet and the Nail."
- "What is this Code?"
- "This code is the friendly ancient wisdom of Scanners, briefly put that
- we may be mindful and be cheered by our loyalty to one another."
- At this point the formula should have run: "We complete the Code. Is
- there work or word for the Scanners?" But Vomact said, and he
- repeated: "Top Emergency. Top Emergency."
- They gave him the sign. Present and ready!
- He said, with every eye straining to follow his lips: "Some of you know
- the work of Adam Stone?"
- Martel saw lips move, saying: "The Red Asteroid. The Other who lives
- at the edge of Space."
- "Adam Stone has gone to the Instrumentality, claiming success for his
- work. He says that he has found how to Screen Out the Pain of Space.
- He says that the Up-and-Out can be made safe for ordinary men to work
- in, to stay awake in. He says that there need be no more Scanners."
- Beltlights flashed on all over the room as Scanners sought the right to
- speak. Vomact nodded to one of the older men.
- "Scanner Smith will speak."
- Smith stepped slowly up into the light, watching his own feet.
- He turned so that they could see his face. He spoke: "I say that this
- is a lie. I say that Stone is a liar. I say that the Instrumentality
- must not be deceived."
- He paused. Then, in answer to some question from the audience which
- most of the others did not see, he said: "I invoke the secret duty of
- the Scanners."
- Smith raised his right hand for Emergency Attention: "I say that Stone
- must die."
- Martel, still cranched, shuddered as he heard the boos, groans, shouts,
- squeaks, grunts, and moans which came from the Scanners who forgot
- noise in their excitement and strove to make their dead bodies talk to
- one another's deaf ears. Beltlights flashed wildly all over the room.
- There was a rush for the rostrum and Scanners milled around at the top,
- vying for attention until Parizianski by sheer bulk shoved the others
- aside and down, and turned to mouth at the group.
- "Brother Scanners, I want your eyes."
- The people on the floor kept moving, with their numb bodies jostling
- one another. Finally Vomact stepped up in front of Parizianski, faced
- the others, and said: "Scanners, be Scanners! Give him your eyes."
- Parizianski was not good at public speaking. His lips moved too fast.
- He waved his hands, which took the eyes of the others away from his
- lips. Nevertheless, Martel was able to follow most of the message:
- "... can't do this. Stone may have succeeded. If he has succeeded, it
- means the end of Scanners. It means the end of haber mans too. None
- of us will have to fight in the Up-and-Out.
- We won't have anybody else going Under-the-Wire for a few hours or days
- of being human. Everybody will be Other. Nobody will have to cranch,
- never again. Men can be men. The haber mans can be killed decently
- and properly, the way men were killed in the Old Days, without anybody
- keeping them alive. They won't have to
- work in the Up-and-Out! There will be no more Great Pain think of it!
- No . . . more . . . Great. . . Pain! How do we know that Stone is a
- liar " Lights began flashing directly into his eyes. (The rudest
- insult of Scanner to Scanner was this.) Vomact again exercised
- authority. He stepped in front of Parizianski and said something which
- the others could not see.
- Parizianski stepped down from the rostrum. Vomact again spoke: "I
- think that some of the Scanners disagree with our Brother Parizianski.
- I say that the use of the rostrum be suspended till we have had a
- chance for private discussion. In fifteen minutes I will call the
- meeting back to order."
- Martel looked around for Vomact when the Senior had rejoined the group
- on the floor. Finding the Senior, Martel wrote swift script on his
- Tablet, waiting for a chance to thrust the tablet before the senior's
- eyes. He had written: Am crnchd. Rspctfly requst prmissn Iv now, stnd
- by fr orders.
- Being cranched did strange things to Martel. Most meetings that he
- attended seemed formal, hearteningly ceremonial, lighting up the dark
- inward eternities of haber manhood When he was not cranched, he noticed
- his body no more than a marble bust notices its marble pedestal. He
- had stood with them before. He had stood with them effortless hours,
- while the long-winded ritual broke through the terrible loneliness
- behind his eyes, and made him feel that the Scanners, though a
- confraternity of the damned, were none the less forever honored by the
- professional requirements of their mutilation.
- This time, it was different. Coming cranched, and in full possession
- of smell-sound-taste-feeling, he reacted more or less as a normal man
- would. He saw his friends and colleagues as a lot of cruelly driven
- ghosts, posturing out the meaningless ritual of their indefeasible
- damnation. What difference did anything make, once you were a haber
- man Why all this talk about haber mans and Scanners? Habermans were
- criminals or heretics, and Scanners were gentlemen-volunteers, but they
- were all in the same fix except that Scanners were deemed worthy of the
- short time return of the Cranching Wire, while haber mans were simply
- disconnected while the ships lay in port and were left suspended until
- they should be awakened, in some hour of emergency or trouble, to work
- out another spell of their damnation. It was a rare haber man that you
- saw on the street someone of special merit or bravery, allowed to look
- at mankind from the terrible prison of his own mechanified body. And
- yet, what Scanner ever pitied a haber man What Scanner ever honored a
- haber man except perfunctorily in the line of duty? What had the
- Scanners, as a guild and a class, ever done for the haber mans except
- to murder them with a twist of the wrist
- whenever a haber man too long beside a Scanner, picked up the tricks
- of the Scanning trade and learned how to live at his own will, not the
- will the Scanners imposed? What could the Others, the ordinary men,
- know of what went on inside the ships? The Others slept in their
- cylinders, mercifully unconscious until they woke up on whatever other
- Earth they had consigned themselves to. What could the Others know of
- the men who had to stay alive within the ship?
- What could any Other know of the Up-and-Out? What Other could look at
- the biting acid beauty of the stars in open Space?
- What could they tell of the Great Pain, which started quietly in the
- marrow, like an ache, and proceeded by the fatigue and nausea of each
- separate nerve cell, brain cell, touch point in the body, until life
- itself became a terrible aching hunger for silence and for death?
- He was a Scanner. All right, he was a Scanner. He had been a Scanner
- from the moment when, wholly normal, he had stood in the sunlight
- before a Subchief of the Instrumentality, and had sworn: "I pledge my
- honor and my life to Mankind. I sacrifice myself willingly for the
- welfare of Mankind. In accepting the perilous austere Honor, I yield
- all my rights without exception to the Honorable Chiefs of the
- Instrumentality and to the Honored Confraternity of Scanners."
- He had pledged.
- He had gone into the Haberman Device.
- He remembered his Hell. He had not had such a bad one, even though it
- had seemed to last a hundred-million years, all of them without sleep.
- He had learned to feel with his eyes. He had learned to see despite
- the heavy eye plates set back of his eyeballs to insulate his eyes from
- the rest of him. He had learned to watch his skin. He still
- remembered the time he had noticed dampness on his shirt, and had
- pulled out his scanning mirror only to discover that he had worn a hole
- in his side by leaning against a vibrating machine. (A thing like that
- could not happen to him now; he was too adept at reading his own
- instruments.) He remembered the way that he had gone Up-and-Out, and
- the way that the Great Pain beat into him, despite the fact that his
- touch, smell, feeling, and hearing were gone for all ordinary
- purposes.
- He remembered killing haber mans and keeping others alive, and standing
- for months beside the Honorable Scanner-Pilot while neither of them
- slept. He remembered going ashore on Earth Four, and remembered that
- he had not enjoyed it, and had realized on that day that there was no
- reward.
- Martel stood among the other Scanners. He hated their awkwardness when
- they moved, their immobility when they stood still. He hated the queer
- assortment of smells which their bodies yielded unnoticed. He hated
- the grunts and groans and squawks which they emitted from their
- deafness. He hated them, and himself.
- How could Luci stand him? He had kept his chest box reading Danger for
- weeks while he courted her, carrying the Cranching Wire about with him
- most illegally, and going direct from one cranch to the other without
- worrying about the fact that his indicators all crept to the edge of
- Overload. He had wooed her without thinking of what would happen if
- she did say,
- "Yes." She had.
- "And they lived happily ever after." In Old Books they did, but how
- could they, in life? He had had eighteen days under-the wire in the
- whole of the past year! Yet she had loved him. She still loved him.
- He knew it. She fretted about him through the long months that he was
- in the Up-and-Out. She tried to make home mean something to him even
- when he was haber man make food pretty when it could not be tasted,
- make herself lovable when she could not be kissed or might as well not,
- since a haber man body meant no more than furniture. Luci was
- patient.
- And now, Adam Stone! (He let his Tablet fade: how could he leave,
- now?) God bless Adam Stone!
- Martel could not help feeling a little sorry for himself. No longer
- would the high keen call of duty carry him through two hundred or so
- years of the Others' time, two million private eternities of his own.
- He could slouch and relax. He could forget High Space, and let the
- Up-and-Out be tended by Others. He could cranch as much as he dared.
- He could be almost normal almost for one year or five years or no
- years. But at least he could stay with Luci. He could go with her
- into the Wild, where there were Beasts and Old Machines still roving
- the dark places. Perhaps he would die in the excitement of the hunt,
- throwing spears at an ancient steel Manshonjagger as it leapt from its
- lair, or tossing hot spheres at the tribesmen of the Unforgiven who
- still roamed the Wild. There was still life to live, still a good
- normal death to die, not the moving of a needle out in the silence and
- pain of Space!
- He had been walking about restlessly. His ears were attuned to the
- sounds of normal speech, so that he did not feel like watching the
- mouthings of his brethren. Now they seemed to have come to a decision.
- Vomact was moving to the rostrum. Martel looked about for Chang, and
- went to stand beside him. Chang whispered, "You're as restless as
- water in mid-air! What's the matter? Decranching?"
- They both scanned Martel, but the instruments held steady and showed no
- sign of the cranch giving out.
- The great light flared in its call to attention. Again they formed
- ranks. Vomact thrust his lean old face into the glare, and spoke:
- "Scanners and Brothers, I call for a vote." He held himself in the
- stance which meant: I am the Senior and take Command.
- A belt light flashed in protest.
- It was old Henderson. He moved to the rostrum, spoke to Vomact, and
- with Vomact's nod of approval turned full-face to repeat his question:
- "Who speaks for the Scanners Out in Space?"
- No belt light or hand answered.
- Henderson and Vomact, face to face, conferred for a few moments. Then
- Henderson faced them again: "I yield to the Senior in Command. But I
- do not yield to a Meeting of the Confraternity. There are sixty-eight
- Scanners, and only forty-seven present, of whom one is cranched and
- U.D. I have therefore proposed that the Senior in Command assume
- authority only over an Emergency Committee of the Confraternity, not
- over a Meeting. Is that agreed and understood by the Honorable
- Scanners?"
- Hands rose in assent.
- Chang murmured in Martel's ear,
- "Lot of difference that makes! Who can tell the difference between a
- Meeting and a Committee?" Martel agreed with the words, but was even
- more impressed with the way that Chang, while haber man could control
- his own voice.
- Vomact resumed chairmanship: "We now vote on the question of Adam
- Stone.
- "First, we can assume that he has not succeeded, and that his claims
- are lies. We know that from our practical experience as Scanners. The
- Pain of Space is only part of scanning," (But the essential part, the
- basis of it all, thought Martel.) "and we can rest assured that Stone
- cannot solve the problem of Space Discipline."
- "That tripe again," whispered Chang, unheard save by Martel.
- "The Space Discipline of our Confraternity has kept High Space clean of
- war and dispute. Sixty-eight disciplined men control all High Space.
- We are removed by our oath and our haber man status from all Earthly
- passions.
- "Therefore, if Adam Stone has conquered the Pain of Space, so that
- Others can wreck our confraternity and bring to Space the trouble and
- ruin which afflicts Earths, I say that Adam Stone is wrong. If Adam
- Stone succeeds, Scanners live in vain!
- "Secondly, if Adam Stone has not conquered the Pain of Space, he will
- cause great trouble in all the Earths. The Instrumentality and the
- Subchiefs may not give us as many haber mans as we need to operate the
- ships of Mankind. There will be wild stories, and fewer recruits, and,
- worst of all, the discipline of the Confraternity may relax if this
- kind of nonsensical
- heresy is spread around.
- "Therefore, if Adam Stone has succeeded, he threatens the ruin of the
- Confraternity and should die.
- "Therefore, if Adam Stone has not succeeded, he is a liar and a
- heretic, and should die."
- "I move the death of Adam Stone."
- And Vomact made the sign, The Honorable Scanners are pleased to Martel
- grabbed wildly for his belt light Chang, guessing ahead, had his light
- out and ready; its bright beam, voting No, shone straight up at the
- ceiling. Martel got his light out and threw its beam upward in
- dissent. Then he looked around. Out of the forty-seven present, he
- could see only five or six glittering.
- Two more lights went on. Vomact stood as erect as a frozen corpse.
- Vomact's eyes flashed as he stared back and forth over the group,
- looking for lights. Several more went on. Finally Vomact took the
- closing stance: May it please the Scanners to count the vote.
- Three of the older men went up on the rostrum with Vomact.
- They looked over the room. (Martel thought: These damned ghosts are
- voting on the life of a real man, a live man! They have no right to do
- it. I'll tell the Instrumentality! But he knew that he would not. He
- thought of Luci and what she might gain by the triumph of Adam Stone:
- the heart-breaking folly of the vote was then almost too much for
- Martel to bear.) All three of the tellers held up their hands in
- unanimous agreement on the sign of the number: Fifteen against.
- Vomact dismissed them with a bow of courtesy. He turned and again took
- the stance: I am the Senior and take Command.
- Marveling at his own daring, Martel flashed his belt light on.
- He knew that any one of the bystanders might reach over and twist his
- Heartbox to Overload for such an act. He felt Chang's hand reaching to
- catch him by the air coat But he eluded Chang's grasp and ran, faster
- than a Scanner should, to the platform. As he ran, he wondered what
- appeal to make. He wouldn't get time to say much, and wouldn't be seen
- by all of them. It was no use talking common sense. Not now. It had
- to be law.
- He jumped up on the rostrum beside Vomact, and took the stance:
- Scanners, an Illegality!
- He violated good custom while speaking, still in the stance: "A
- Committee has no right to vote death by a majority vote. It takes
- two-thirds of a
- of Man full Meeting."
- He felt Vomact's body lunge behind him, felt himself falling from the
- rostrum, hitting the floor, hurting his knees and his touch-aware
- hands. He was helped to his feet. He was scanned.
- Some Scanner he scarcely knew took his instruments and toned him
- down.
- Immediately Martel felt more calm, more detached, and hated himself for
- feeling so.
- He looked up at the rostrum. Vomact maintained the stance signifying:
- Order!
- The Scanners adjusted their ranks. The two Scanners next to Martel
- took his arms. He shouted at them, but they looked away, and cut
- themselves off from communication altogether.
- Vomact spoke again when he saw the room was quiet: "A Scanner came here
- cranched. Honorable Scanners, I apologize for this. It is not the
- fault of our great and worthy Scanner and friend, Martel. He came here
- under orders. I told him not to de-cranch.
- I hoped to spare him an unnecessary haber man We all know how happily
- Martel is married, and we wish his brave experiment well. I like
- Martel. I respect his judgment. I wanted him here. I knew you wanted
- him here. But he is cranched. He is in no mood to share in the lofty
- business of the Scanners. I therefore propose a solution which will
- meet all the requirements of fairness. I propose that we rule Scanner
- Martel out of order for his violation of rules. This violation would
- be inexcusable if Martel were not cranched.
- "But at the same time, in all fairness to Martel, I further propose
- that we deal with the points raised so improperly by our worthy but
- disqualified brother."
- Vomact gave the sign. The Honorable Scanners are pleased to vote.
- Martel tried to reach his own belt light the dead strong hands held him
- tightly and he struggled in vain. One lone light shone high: Chang's,
- no doubt.
- Vomact thrust his face into the light again: "Having the approval of
- our worthy Scanners and present company for the general proposal, I now
- move that this Committee declare itself to have the full authority of a
- Meeting, and that this Committee further make me responsible for all
- misdeeds which this Committee may enact, to be held answerable before
- the next full Meeting, but not before any other authority beyond the
- closed and secret ranks of Scanners."
- Flamboyantly this time, his triumph evident, Vomact assumed the vote
- stance.
- Only a few lights shone: far less, patently, than a minority of
- one-fourth.
- Vomact spoke again. The light shone on his high calm forehead, on his
- dead relaxed cheekbones. His lean cheeks and chin were
- half-shadowed,
- save where the lower light picked up and spot lighted his mouth, cruel
- even in repose. (Vomact was said to be a descendant of some Ancient
- Lady who had traversed, in an illegitimate and inexplicable fashion,
- some hundreds of years of time in a single night. Her name, the Lady
- Vomact, had passed into legend; but her blood and her archaic lust for
- mastery lived on in the mute masterful body of her descendant. Martel
- could believe the old tales as he stared at the rostrum, wondering what
- untraceable mutation had left the Vomact kith as predators among
- mankind.) Calling loudly with the movement of his lips, but still
- without sound, Vomact appealed: "The Honorable Committee is now pleased
- to reaffirm the sentence of death issued against the heretic and enemy,
- Adam Stone." Again the vote stance.
- Again Chang's light shone lonely in its isolated protest.
- Vomact then made his final move: "I call for the designation of the
- Senior Scanner present as the manager of the sentence. I call for
- authorization to him to appoint executioners, one or many, who shall
- make evident the will and majesty of Scanners. I ask that I be
- accountable for the deed, and not for the means. The deed is a noble
- deed, for the protection of Mankind and for the honor of the Scanners;
- but of the means it must be said that they are to be the best at hand,
- and no more.
- Who knows the true way to kill an Other, here on a crowded and watchful
- Earth? This is no mere matter of discharging a cylindered sleeper, no
- mere question of upgrading the needle of a haber man When people die
- down here, it is not like the Upand-Out. They die reluctantly. Killing
- within the Earth is not our usual business, 0 Brothers and Scanners, as
- you know well. You must choose me to choose my agent as I see fit.
- Otherwise the common knowledge will become the common betrayal whereas
- if I alone know the responsibility, I alone could betray us, and you
- will not have far to look in case the Instrumentality comes searching."
- (What about the killer you choose? thought Martel.
- He too will know unless unless you silence him forever.) Vomact went
- into the stance: The Honorable Scanners are pleased to vote.
- One light of protest shone; Chang's, again.
- Martel imagined that he could see a cruel joyful smile on Vomact's dead
- face the smile of a man who knew himself righteous and who found his
- righteousness upheld and affirmed by militant authority.
- Martel tried one last time to come free.
- The dead hands held. They were locked like vises until their owners'
- eyes unlocked them: how else could they hold the piloting month by
- month?
- Martel then shouted: "Honorable Scanners, this is judicial murder."
- No ear heard him. He was cranched, and alone.
- of Man Nonetheless, he shouted again: "You endanger the
- Confraternity."
- Nothing happened.
- The echo of his voice sounded from one end of the room to the other. No
- head turned. No eyes met his.
- Martel realized that as they paired for talk, the eyes of the Scanners
- avoided him. He saw that no one desired to watch his speech. He knew
- that behind the cold faces of his friends there lay compassion or
- amusement. He knew that they knew him to be cranched absurd, normal,
- man-like, temporarily no Scanner. But he knew that in this matter the
- wisdom of Scanners was nothing.
- He knew that only a cranched Scanner could feel with his very blood the
- outrage and anger which deliberate murder would provoke among the
- Others. He knew that the Confraternity endangered itself, and knew
- that the most ancient prerogative of law was the monopoly of death.
- Even the Ancient Nations, in the times of the Wars, before the Wild
- Machines, before the Beasts, before men went into the Up-and-Out even
- the Ancients had known this. How did they say it? Only the State
- shall kill. The States were gone but the Instrumentality remained, and
- the Instrumentality could not pardon things which occurred within the
- Earths but beyond its authority. Death in Space was the business, the
- right of the Scanners: how could the Instrumentality enforce its law in
- a place where all men who wakened, wakened only to die in the Great
- Pain? Wisely did the Instrumentality leave Space to the Scanners,
- wisely had the Confraternity not meddled inside the Earths. And now
- the Confraternity itself was going to step forth as an outlaw band, as
- a gang of rogues as stupid and reckless as the tribes of the
- Unforgiven!
- Martel knew this because he was cranched. Had he been haber man he
- would have thought only with his mind, not with his heart and guts and
- blood. How could the other Scanners know?
- Vomact returned for the last time to the Rostrum: The Committee has met
- and its will shall be done. Verbally he added: "Senior among you, I
- ask your loyalty and your silence."
- At that point, the two Scanners let his arms go. Martel rubbed his
- numb hands, shaking his fingers to get the circulation back into the
- cold fingertips. With real freedom, he began to think of what he might
- still do. He scanned himself: the cranching held.
- He might have an hour, he might have a day. Well, he could go on even
- if haber man but it would be inconvenient, having to talk with Finger
- and Tablet. He looked about for Chang. He saw his friend standing
- patient and immobile in a quiet corner. Martel moved slowly, so as not
- to attract any more attention to himself than could be helped. He
- faced Chang, moved until his face was in the light, and then
- articulated: "What are we going to do? You're not going to let them
- kill Adam Stone, are you? Don't you realize what Stone's work will
- mean to us, if it
- succeeds? No more scanning. No more Scanners. No more haber mans No
- more Pain in the Up-and-Out. I tell you, if the others were all
- cranched, as I am, they would see it in a human way, not with the
- narrow crazy logic which they used in the meeting. We've got to stop
- them. How can we do it? What are we going to do? What does
- Parizianski think? Who has been chosen?"
- "Which question do you want me to answer?"
- Martel laughed. (It felt good to laugh, even then; it felt like being
- a man.) "Will you help me?"
- Chang's eyes flashed across Martel's face as Chang answered: "No. No.
- No."
- "You won't help?"
- "No."
- "Why not, Chang? Why not?"
- "I am a Scanner. The vote has been taken. You would do the same if
- you were not in this unusual condition."
- "I'm not in an unusual condition. I'm cranched. That merely means
- that I see things the way that the Others would. I see the stupidity.
- The recklessness. The selfishness. It is murder."
- "What is murder? Have you not killed? You are not one of the Others.
- You are a Scanner. You will be sorry for what you are about to do, if
- you do not watch out."
- "But why did you vote against Vomact then? Didn't you too see what
- Adam Stone means to all of us? Scanners will live in vain. Thank God
- for that! Can't you see it?"
- "No."
- "But you talk to me, Chang. You are my friend?"
- "I talk to you. I am your friend. Why not?"
- "But what are you going to do?"
- "Nothing, Martel. Nothing."
- "Will you help me?"
- "No."
- "Not even to save Stone?"
- "Then I will go to Parizianski for help."
- "It will do no good."
- "Why not? He's more human than you, right now."
- "He will not help you, because he has the job. Vomact designated him
- to kill Adam Stone."
- Martel stopped speaking in mid-movement. He suddenly took the stance:
- I thank you, Brother, and I depart.
- At the window he turned and faced the room. He saw that Vomact's eyes
- were upon him. He gave the stance, I thank you.
- Brother, and
- I depart, and added the flourish of respect which is shown when
- Seniors are present. Vomact caught the sign, and Martel could see the
- cruel lips move. He thought he saw the words ". . . take good care of
- yourself . . ." but did not wait to inquire. He stepped backward and
- dropped out the window, Once below the window and out of sight, he
- adjusted his air coat to maximum speed. He swam lazily in the air,
- scanning himself thoroughly, and adjusting his adrenal intake down. He
- then made the movement of release, and felt the cold air rush past his
- face like running water.
- Adam Stone had to be at Chief Downport.
- Adam Stone had to be there.
- Wouldn't Adam Stone be surprised in the night? Surprised to meet the
- strangest of beings, the first renegade among Scanners.
- (Martel suddenly appreciated that it was himself of whom he was
- thinking. Martel the Traitor to Scanners! That sounded strange and
- bad. But what of Martel, the Loyal to Mankind? Was that not
- compensation? And if he won, he won Luci. If he lost, he lost nothing
- an unconsidered and expendable haber man It happened to be himself. But
- in contrast to the immense reward, to Mankind, to the Confraternity, to
- Luci, what did that matter?) Martel thought to himself: "Adam Stone
- will have two visitors tonight. Two Scanners, who are the friends of
- one another." He hoped that Parizianski was still his friend.
- "And the world," he added, "depends on which of us gets there first."
- Multifaceted in their brightness, the lights of Chief Downport began to
- shine through the mist ahead. Martel could see the outer towers of the
- city and glimpsed the phosphorescent periphery which kept back the
- Wild, whether Beasts, Machines, or the Unforgiven.
- Once more Martel invoked the lords of his chance: "Help me to pass for
- an Other!"
- Within the Downport, Martel had less trouble than he thought. He
- draped his air coat over his shoulder so that it concealed the
- instruments. He took up his scanning mirror, and made up his face from
- the inside, by adding tone and animation to his blood and nerves until
- the muscles of his face glowed and the skin gave out a healthy sweat.
- That way he looked like an ordinary man who had just completed a long
- night flight.
- After straightening out his clothing, and hiding his Tablet within his
- jacket, he faced the problem of what to do about the Talking Finger. If
- he kept the nail, it would show him to be a Scanner. He would be
- respected,
- but he would be identified. He might be stopped by the guards whom
- the Instrumentality had undoubtedly set around the person of Adam
- Stone. If he broke the nail but he couldn't! No Scanner in the
- history of the Confraternity had ever willingly broken his nail. That
- would be Resignation, and there was no such thing. The only way out,
- was in the Up-and-Out! Martel put his finger to his mouth and bit off
- the nail. He looked at the now-queer finger, and sighed to himself.
- He stepped toward the city gate, slipping his hand into his jacket and
- running up his muscular strength to four times normal.
- He started to scan, and then realized that his instruments were masked.
- Might as well take all the chances at once, he thought.
- The watcher stopped him with a searching Wire. The sphere thumped
- suddenly against Martel's chest.
- "Are you a Man?" said the unseen voice. (Martel knew that as a
- Scanner in haber man condition, his own field-charge would have
- illuminated the sphere.) "I am a Man." Martel knew that the timbre of
- his voice had been good; he hoped that it would not be taken for that
- ofaManshonjagger or a Beast or an Unforgiven one, who with mimicry
- sought to enter the cities and ports of Mankind.
- "Name, number, rank, purpose, function, time departed."
- "Martel." He had to remember his old number, not Scanner 34.
- "Sunward 4234, 182nd Year of Space. Rank, rising Subchief."
- That was no lie, but his substantive rank.
- "Purpose, personal and lawful within the limits of this city. No
- function of the Instrumentality. Departed Chief Outport 2019 hours."
- Everything now depended on whether he was believed, or would be checked
- against Chief Outport.
- The voice was flat and routine: "Time desired within the city."
- Martel used the standard phrase: "Your Honorable sufferance is
- requested."
- He stood in the cool night air, waiting. Far above him, through a gap
- in the mist, he could see the poisonous glittering in the sky of
- Scanners. The stars are my enemies, he thought: I have mastered the
- stars but they hate me. Ho, that sounds Ancient!
- Like a Book. Too much crunching.
- The voice returned: "Sunward 4234 dash 182 rising Subchief Martel,
- enter the lawful gates of the city. Welcome. Do you desire food,
- raiment, money, or companionship?" The voice had no hospitality in it,
- just business. This was certainly different from entering a city in a
- Scanner's role! Then the petty officers came out, and threw their belt
- lights on their fretful faces, and mouthed their words with
- preposterous deference, shouting against the stone deafness of a
- Scanner's ears. So that was the way that a Subchief was treated:
- matter of fact, but not bad. Not bad.
- of Man Martel replied: "I have that which I need, but beg of the city
- a favor. My friend Adam Stone is here. I desire to see him, on urgent
- and personal lawful affairs."
- The voice replied: "Did you have an appointment with Adam Stone?"
- "No."
- "The city will find him. What is his number?"
- "I have forgotten it."
- "You have forgotten it? Is not Adam Stone a Magnate of the
- Instrumentality? Are you truly his friend?"
- "Truly." Martel let a little annoyance creep into his voice.
- "Watcher, doubt me and call your Subchief."
- "No doubt implied. Why do you not know the number? This must go into
- the record," added the voice.
- "We were friends in childhood. He has crossed the " Martel started to
- say "the Up-and-Out" and remembered that the phrase was current only
- among Scanners.
- "He has leapt from Earth to Earth, and has just now returned. I knew
- him well and I seek him out. I have word of his kith. May the
- Instrumentality protect us!"
- "Heard and believed. Adam Stone will be searched."
- At a risk, though a slight one, of having the sphere sound an alarm for
- non-Man, Martel cut in on his Scanner speaker within his jacket. He
- saw the trembling needle of light await his words and he started to
- write on it with his blunt finger. That won't work, he thought, and
- had a moment's panic until he found his comb, which had a sharp enough
- tooth to write. He wrote: "Emergency none. Martel Scanner calling
- Parizianski Scanner."
- The needle quivered and the reply glowed and faded out: "Parizianski
- Scanner on duty and D.C. Calls taken by Scanner Relay."
- Martel cut off his speaker.
- Parizianski was somewhere around. Could he have crossed the direct
- way, right over the city wall, setting off the alert, and invoking
- official business when the petty officers overtook him in mid-air?
- Scarcely. That meant that a number of other Scanners must have come in
- with Parizianski, all of them pretending to be in search of a few of
- the tenuous pleasures which could be enjoyed by a haber man such as the
- sight of the news pictures or the viewing of beautiful women in the
- Pleasure Gallery.
- Parizianski was around, but he could not have moved privately, because
- Scanner Central registered him on duty and recorded his movements city
- by city.
- The voice returned. Puzzlement was expressed in it.
- "Adam Stone is found and awakened. He has asked pardon of the
- Honorable, and says he knows no Martel. Will you see Adam Stone in the
- morning? The city will bid you welcome."
- Martel ran out of resources. It was hard enough mimicking a man
- without having to tell lies in the guise of one. Martel could only
- repeat: "Tell him I am Martel. The husband ofLuci."
- "It will be done."
- Again the silence, and the hostile stars, and the sense that
- Parizianski was somewhere near and getting nearer; Martel felt his
- heart beating faster. He stole a glimpse at his chest box and set his
- heart down a point. He felt calmer, even though he had not been able
- to scan with care.
- The voice this time was cheerful, as though an annoyance had been
- settled: "Adam Stone consents to see you. Enter Chief Downport, and
- welcome."
- The little sphere dropped noiselessly to the ground and the wire
- whispered away into the darkness. A bright arc of narrow light rose
- from the ground in front of Martel and swept through the city to one of
- the higher towers apparently a hostel, which Martel had never entered.
- Martel plucked his air coat to his chest for ballast, stepped
- heel-and-toe on the beam, and felt himself whistle through the air to
- an entrance window which sprang up before him as suddenly as a
- devouring mouth.
- A tower guard stood in the doorway.
- "You are awaited, sir. Do you bear weapons, sir?"
- "None," said Martel, grateful that he was relying on his own
- strength.
- The guard led him past the check-screen. Martel noticed the quick
- flight of a warning across the screen as his instruments registered and
- identified him as a Scanner. But the guard had not noticed it.
- The guard stopped at a door.
- "Adam Stone is armed. He is lawfully armed by authority of the
- Instrumentality and by the liberty of this city. All those who enter
- are given warning."
- Martel nodded in understanding at the man, and went in.
- Adam Stone was a short man, stout and benign. His gray hair rose
- stiffly from a low forehead. His whole face was red and merry-looking.
- He looked like a jolly guide from the Pleasure Gallery, not like a man
- who had been at the edge of the Up-and Out fighting the Great Pain
- without haber man protection.
- He stared at Martel. His look was puzzled, perhaps a little annoyed,
- but not hostile.
- Martel came to the point.
- "You do not know me. I lied. My name is Martel, and I mean you no
- harm. But I lied. I beg the Honorable gift of your hospitality.
- Remain armed. Direct your weapon against me " Stone smiled: "I am
- doing so," and Martel noticed the small Wirepoint in Stone's capable,
- plump hand.
- "Good. Keep on guard against me. It will give you confidence in
- what
- of Man I shall say. But do, I beg you, give us a screen of privacy. I
- want no casual lookers. This is a matter of life and death."
- "First: whose life and death?" Stone's face remained calm, his voice
- even.
- "Yours and mine, and the worlds'."
- "You are cryptic but I agree." Stone called through the doorway:
- "Privacy, please." There was a sudden hum, and all the little noises
- of the night quickly vanished from the air of the room.
- Said Adam Stone: "Sir, who are you? What brings you here?"
- "I am Scanner Thirty-four."
- "You a Scanner? I don't believe it."
- For answer, Martel pulled his jacket open, showing his chest box Stone
- looked up at him, amazed. Martel explained: "I am cranched. Have you
- never seen it before?"
- "Not with men. On animals. Amazing! But what do you want?"
- "The truth. Do you fear me?"
- "Not with this," said Stone, grasping the Wirepoint.
- "But I shall tell you the truth."
- "Is it true that you have conquered the Great Pain?"
- Stone hesitated, seeking words for an answer.
- "Quick, can you tell me how you have done it, so that I may believe
- you?"
- "I have loaded ships with life."
- "Life?"
- "Life. I don't know what the Great Pain is, but I did find that in the
- experiments, when I sent out masses of animals or plants, the life in
- the center of the mass lived longest. I built ships small ones, of
- course and sent them out with rabbits, with monkeys " "Those are
- Beasts?"
- "Yes. With small Beasts. And the Beasts came back unhurt.
- They came back because the walls of the ships were filled with life. I
- tried many kinds, and finally found a sort of life which lives in the
- waters. Oysters. Oysterbeds. The outermost oysters died in the great
- pain. The inner ones lived. The passengers were unhurt."
- "But they were Beasts?"
- "Not only Beasts. Myself."
- "You!"
- "I came through Space alone. Through what you call the Upand-Out,
- alone. Awake and sleeping. I am unhurt. If you do not believe me,
- ask your brother Scanners. Come and see my ship in the morning. I
- will be glad to see you then, along with your brother Scanners. I am
- going to demonstrate before the Chiefs of the Instrumentality."
- Martel repeated his question: "You came here alone?"
- Adam Stone grew testy: "Yes, alone. Go back and check your Scanners'
- register if you do not believe me. You never put me in a bottle to
- cross Space."
- Martel's face was radiant.
- "I believe you now. It is true. No more Scanners. No more haber mans
- No more cranching."
- Stone looked significantly toward the door.
- Martel did not take the hint.
- "I must tell you that " "Sir, tell me in the morning. Go enjoy your
- cranch. Isn't it supposed to be pleasure? Medically I know it well.
- But not in practice."
- "It is pleasure. It's normality for a while. But listen. The
- Scanners have sworn to destroy you, and your work."
- "What!"
- "They have met and have voted and sworn. You will make Scanners
- unnecessary, they say. You will bring the Ancient Wars back to the
- world, if Scanning is lost and the Scanners live in vain!"
- Adam Stone was nervous but kept his wits about him: "You're a Scanner.
- Are you going to kill me or try?"
- "No, you fool. I have betrayed the Confraternity. Call guards the
- moment I escape. Keep guards around you. I will try to intercept the
- killer."
- Martel saw a blur in the window. Before Stone could turn, the
- Wirepoint was whipped out of his hand. The blur solidified and took
- form as Parizianski.
- Martel recognized what Parizianski was doing: High speed.
- Without thinking of his cranch, he thrust his hand to his chest, set
- himself up to High speed too. Waves of fire, like the Great Pain, but
- hotter, flooded over him. He fought to keep his face readable as he
- stepped in front of Parizianski and gave the sign, Top Emergency.
- Parizianski spoke, while the normally moving body of Stone stepped away
- from them as slowly as a drifting cloud: "Get out of my way. I am on a
- mission."
- "I know it. I stop you here and now. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stone is
- right."
- Parizianski's lips were barely readable in the haze of pain which
- flooded Martel. (He thought: God, God, God of the Ancients! Let me
- hold on! Let me live under Overload just long enough!) Parizianski was
- saying: "Get out of my way. By order of the Confraternity, get out of
- my way!" And Parizianski gave the sign. Help I demand in the name of
- my Duty!
- Martel choked for breath in the syrup-like air. He tried one last
- time: "Parizianski, friend, friend, my friend. Stop. Stop." (No
- Scanner had ever murdered Scanner before.) Parizianski made the sign:
- You are unfit for duty, and I will take over.
- of Man Martel thought, For the first time in the world! as he reached
- over and twisted Parizianski's Brainbox up to Overload.
- Parizianski's eyes glittered in terror and understanding. His body
- began to drift down toward the floor.
- Martel had just strength enough to reach his own Chestbox.
- As he faded into Haberman or death, he knew not which, he felt his
- fingers turning on the control of speed, turning down. He tried to
- speak, to say,
- "Get a Scanner, I need help, get a Scanner..."
- But the darkness rose about him, and the numb silence clasped him.
- Martel awakened to see the face of Luci near his own.
- He opened his eyes wider, and found that he was hearing hearing the
- sound of her happy weeping, the sound of her chest as she caught the
- air back into her throat.
- He spoke weakly: "Still cranched? Alive?"
- Another face swam into the blur beside Luci's. It was Adam Stone. His
- deep voice rang across immensities of Space before coming to Martel's
- hearing. Martel tried to read Stone's lips, but could not make them
- out. He went back to listening to the voice: ". . . not cranched. Do
- you understand me? Not cranched!"
- Martel tried to say: "But I can hear! I can feel!" The others got his
- sense if not his words.
- Adam Stone spoke again: "You have gone back through the Haberman. I
- put you back first. I didn't know how it would work in practice, but I
- had the theory all worked out. You don't think the Instrumentality
- would waste the Scanners, do you? You go back to normality. We are
- letting the haber mans die as fast as the ships come in. They don't
- need to live any more. But we are restoring the Scanners. You are the
- first. Do you understand me? You are the first. Take it easy,
- now."
- Adam Stone smiled. Dimly behind Stone, Martel thought that he saw the
- face of one of the Chiefs of the Instrumentality. That face, too,
- smiled at him, and then both faces disappeared upward and away.
- Martel tried to lift his head, to scan himself. He could not.
- Luci stared at him, calming herself, but with an expression of loving
- perplexity. She said, "My darling husband! You're back again, to
- stay!"
- Still, Martel tried to see his box. Finally he swept his hand across
- his chest with a clumsy motion. There was nothing there.
- The instruments were gone. He was back to normality but still alive.
- In the deep weak peacefulness of his mind, another troubling thought
- took shape. He tried to write with his finger, the way that Luci
- wanted him to, but he had neither pointed fingernail nor Scanner's
- Tablet. He had to
- vj use his voice. He summoned up his strength and whispered:
- "Scanners?"
- "Yes, darling? What is it?"
- "Scanners?"
- "Scanners. Oh, yes, darling, they're all right. They had to arrest
- some of them for going into Highspeed and running away.
- But the Instrumentality caught them all all those on the ground and
- they're happy now. Do you know, darling," she laughed, "some of them
- didn't want to be restored to normality.
- But Stone and the Chiefs persuaded them."
- "Vomact?"
- "He's fine, too. He's staying cranched until he can be restored.
- Do you know, he has arranged for Scanners to take new jobs.
- You're all Deputy Chiefs for Space. Isn't that nice? But he got
- himself made Chief for Space. You're all going to be pilots, so that
- your fraternity and guild can go on. And Chang's getting changed back
- right now. You'll see him soon."
- Her face turned sad. She looked at him earnestly and said: "I might as
- well tell you now. You'll worry otherwise. There has been one
- accident. Only one. When you and your friend called on Adam Stone,
- your friend was so happy that he forgot to scan, and he let himself die
- of Overload."
- "Called on Stone?"
- "Yes. Don't you remember? Your friend."
- He still looked surprised, so she said: "Parizianski."
- The Lady Who Sailed The Soul The story ran how did the story run?
- Everyone knew the reference to Helen America and Mr. Grey-no-more, but
- no one knew exactly how it happened. Their names were welded to the
- glittering timeless jewelry of romance. Sometimes they were compared
- to Heloise and Abelard, whose story had been found among books in a
- long-buried library. Other ages were to compare their life with the
- weird, ugly-lovely story of the Go-Captain Taliano and the Lady Dolores
- Oh.
- Out of it all, two things stood forth their love and the image of the
- great sails, tissue-metal wings with which the bodies of people finally
- fluttered out among the stars.
- Mention him, and others knew her. Mention her, and they knew him. He
- was the first of the inbound sailors, and she was the lady who sailed
- The Soul.
- It was lucky that people lost their pictures. The romantic hero was a
- very young-looking man, prematurely old and still quite sick when the
- romance came. And Helen America, she was a freak, but a nice one: a
- grim, solemn, sad, little brunette who had been born amid the laughter
- of humanity. She was not the tall, confident heroine of the actresses
- who later played her.
- She was, however, a wonderful sailor. That much was true.
- And with her body and mind she loved Mr. Grey-no-more, showing a
- devotion which the ages can neither surpass nor forget.
- History may scrape off the patina of their names and appearances, but
- even history can do no more than brighten the love of Helen America and
- Mr. Grey-no-more. Both of them, one must remember, were sailors.
- II
- The child was playing with a spiel tier She got tired of letting it be
- a chicken, so she reversed it into the fur-bearing position.
- When she extended the ears to the optimum development, the little
- animal
- of Man looked odd indeed. A light breeze blew the animal-toy on its
- side, but the spiel tier good-naturedly righted itself and munched
- contentedly on the carpet.
- The little girl suddenly clapped her hands and broke forth with the
- question, "Mamma, what's a sailor?"
- "There used to be sailors, darling, a long time ago. They were brave
- men who took the ships out to the stars, the very first ships that took
- people away from our sun. And they had big sails. I don't know how it
- worked, but somehow, the light pushed them, and it took them a quarter
- of a life to make a single one way trip. People only lived a hundred
- and sixty years at that time, darling, and it was forty years each way,
- but we don't need sailors any more. " "Of course not," said the child,
- "we can go right away. You 've taken me to Mars and you've taken me to
- New Earth as well, haven't you, mamma? And we can go anywhere else
- soon, but that only takes one afternoon."
- "That's plano forming honey. But it was a long time before the people
- knew how to plano form And they could not travel the way we could, so
- they made great big sails. They made sails so big that they could not
- build them on Earth. They had to hang them out, halfway between Earth
- and Mars. And you know, a funny thing happened... Did you ever hear
- about the time the world froze ? " "No, mamma, what was that?"
- "Well, a long time ago, one of these sails drifted and people tried to
- save it because it took a lot of work to build it. But the sail was so
- large that it got between the Earth and the sun. And there was no more
- sunshine, just night all the time. And it got very cold on Earth. All
- the atomic power plants were busy, and all the air began to smell
- funny. And the people were worried and in a few days they pulled the
- sail back out of the way. And the sunshine came again."
- "Mamma, were there ever any girl sailors?"
- A curious expression crossed over the mother's face.
- "There was one. You
- "II hear about her later on when you are older. Her name was Helen
- America and she sailed The Soul out to the stars. She was the only
- woman that ever did it. And that is a wonderful story."
- The mother dabbed at her eyes with a handkerchief.
- The child said: "Mamma, tell me now. What's the story all about?"
- At this point the mother became very firm and she said: "Honey, there
- are some things that you are not old enough to hear yet. But when you
- are a big girl, I'll tell you all about them."
- The mother was an honest woman. She reflected a moment, and then she
- added, ". .. unless you read about it yourself first."
- Helen America was to make her place in the history of mankind, but she
- started badly. The name itself was a misfortune.
- No one ever knew who her father was. The officials agreed to keep the
- matter quiet.
- Her mother was not in doubt. Her mother was the celebrated she-man
- Mona Muggeridge, a woman who had campaigned a hundred times for the
- lost cause of complete identity of the two genders. She had been a
- feminist beyond all limits, and when Mona Muggeridge, the one and only
- Miss Muggeridge, announced to the press that she was going to have a
- baby, that was first-class news.
- Mona Muggeridge went further. She announced her firm conviction that
- fathers should not be identified. She proclaimed that no woman should
- have consecutive children with the same man, that women should be
- advised to pick different fathers for their children, so as to
- diversify and beautify the race. She capped it all by announcing that
- she, Miss Muggeridge, had selected the perfect father and would
- inevitably produce the only perfect child.
- Miss Muggeridge, a bony, pompous blonde, stated that she would avoid
- the nonsense of marriage and family names, and that therefore the
- child, if a boy, would be named John America, and if a girl, Helen
- America.
- Thus it happened that little Helen America was born with the
- correspondents in the press services waiting outside the delivery room.
- News-screens flashed the picture of a pretty three-kilogram baby.
- "It's a girl." "The perfect child." "Who's the dad?"
- That was just the beginning. Mona Muggeridge was belligerent. She
- insisted, even after the baby had been photographed for the thousandth
- time, that this was the finest child ever born. She pointed to the
- child's perfections. She demonstrated all the foolish fondness of a
- doting mother, but felt that she, the great crusader, had discovered
- this fondness for the first time.
- To say that this background was difficult for the child would be an
- understatement.
- Helen America was a wonderful example of raw human material triumphing
- over its tormentors. By the time she was four years old, she spoke six
- languages, and was beginning to decipher some of the old Martian texts.
- At the age of five she was sent to school. Her fellow schoolchildren
- immediately developed a rhyme: Helen, Helen Fat and dumb Doesn't know
- where Her daddy's from!
- of Man Helen took all this and perhaps it was an accident of genetics
- that she grew to become a compact little person deadly serious little
- brunette. Challenged by lessons, haunted by publicity, she became
- careful and reserved about friendships and desperately lonely in an
- inner world.
- When Helen America was sixteen her mother came to a bad end. Mona
- Muggeridge eloped with a man she announced to be the perfect husband
- for the perfect marriage hitherto overlooked by mankind. The perfect
- husband was a skilled machine polisher.
- He already had a wife and four children. He drank beer and his
- interest in Miss Muggeridge seems to have been a mixture of
- good-natured comradeship and a sensible awareness of her motherly
- bankroll. The planetary yacht on which they eloped broke the
- regulations with an off-schedule flight. The bridegroom's wife and
- children had alerted the police. The result was a collision with a
- robotic barge which left both bodies identifiable.
- At sixteen Helen was already famous, and at seventeen already
- forgotten, and very much alone.
- This was the age of sailors. The thousands of photo reconnaissance and
- measuring missiles had begun to come back with their harvest from the
- stars. Planet after planet swam into the ken of mankind. The new
- worlds became known as the interstellar search missiles brought back
- photographs, samples of atmosphere, measurements of gravity, cloud
- coverage, chemical make-up, and the like. Of the very numerous
- missiles which returned from their two- or three-hundred-year voyages,
- three brought back reports of New Earth, an earth so much like Terra
- itself that it could be settled.
- The first sailors had gone out almost a hundred years before.
- They had started with small sails not over two thousand miles square.
- Gradually the size of the sails increased. The technique of adiabatic
- packing and the carrying of passengers in individual pods reduced the
- damage done to the human cargo. It was great news when a sailor
- returned to Earth, a man born and reared under the light of another
- star. He was a man who had spent a month of agony and pain, bringing a
- few sleep-frozen settlers, guiding the immense light-pushed sailing
- craft which had managed the trip through the great interstellar deeps
- in an objective time-period of forty years.
- Mankind got to know the look of a sailor. There was a plantigrade walk
- to the way he put his body on the ground. There was a sharp, stiff,
- mechanical swing to his neck. The man was neither young nor old. He
- had been awake and conscious for forty years, thanks to the drug which
- made
- possible a kind of limited awareness. By the time the psychologists
- interrogated him, first for the proper authorities of the
- Instrumentality and later for the news releases, it was plain enough
- that he thought the forty years were about a month. He never
- volunteered to sail back, because he had actually aged forty years. He
- was a young man, young in his hopes and wishes, but a man who had burnt
- up a quarter of a human lifetime in a single agonizing experience.
- At this time Helen America went to Cambridge. Lady Joan's College was
- the finest woman's college in the Atlantic world.
- Cambridge had reconstructed its proto historic traditions and the
- neo-British had recaptured that fine edge of engineering which
- reconnected their traditions with the earliest antiquity.
- Naturally enough the language was cosmo polite Earth and not archaic
- English, but the students were proud to live at a reconstructed
- university very much like the archaeological evidence showed it to have
- been before the period of darkness and troubles came upon the Earth.
- Helen shone a little in this renaissance.
- The news-release services watched Helen in the crudest possible
- fashion. They revived her name and the story of her mother. Then they
- forgot her again. She had put in for six professions, and her last
- choice was "sailor." It happened that she was the first woman to make
- the application first because she was the only woman young enough to
- qualify who had also passed the scientific requirements.
- Her picture was beside his on the screens before they ever met each
- other.
- Actually, she was not anything like that at all. She had suffered so
- much in her childhood from Helen, Helen, fat and dumb, that she was
- competitive only on a coldly professional basis. She hated and loved
- and missed the tremendous mother whom she had lost, and she resolved so
- fiercely not to be like her mother that she became an embodied
- antithesis of Mona
- The mother had been horsy, blonde, big the kind of woman who is a
- feminist because she is not very feminine. Helen never thought about
- her own femininity. She just worried about herself.
- Her face would have been round if it had been plump, but she was not
- plump. Black-haired, dark-eyed, broad-bodied but thin, she was a
- genetic demonstration of her unknown father. Her teachers often feared
- her. She was a pale, quiet girl, and she always knew her subject.
- Her fellow students had joked about her for a few weeks and then most
- of them had banded together against the indecency of the press. When a
- news-frame came out with something ridiculous about the long-dead Mona,
- the whisper went through Lady Joan's: "Keep Helen away . . . those
- people are at it again."
- of Man "Don't let Helen look at the frames now. She's the best person
- we have in the non-collateral sciences and we can't have her upset just
- before the tripos ..."
- They protected her, and it was only by chance that she saw her own face
- in a news-frame. There was the face of a man beside her. He looked
- like a little old monkey, she thought. Then she read, "perfect girl
- wants TO BE SAILOR. SHOULD SAILOR HIMSELF DATE PERFECT GIRL?" Her
- cheeks burned with helpless, unavoidable embarrassment and rage, but
- she had grown too expert at being herself to do what she might have
- done in her teens hate the man. She knew it wasn't his fault either.
- It wasn't even the fault of the silly pushing men and women from the
- news services. It was time, it was custom, it was man himself.
- But she had only to be herself, if she could ever find out what that
- really meant.
- Their dates, when they came, had the properties of nightmares.
- A news service sent a woman to tell her she had been awarded a week's
- holiday in New Madrid.
- With the sailor from the stars.
- Helen refused.
- Then he refused too, and he was a little too prompt for her liking. She
- became curious about him.
- Two weeks passed, and in the office of the news service a treasurer
- brought two slips of paper to the director. They were the vouchers for
- Helen America and Mr. Grey-no-more to obtain the utmost in
- preferential luxury at New Madrid. The treasurer said,
- "These have been issued and registered as gifts with the
- Instrumentality, sir. Should they be cancelled? " The executive had
- his fill of stories that day, and he felt humane. On an impulse he
- commanded the treasurer,
- "Tell you what. Give those tickets to the young people. No publicity.
- We'll keep out of it. If they don't want us, they don't have to have
- us. Push it along. That's all.
- Go."
- The tickets went back out to Helen. She had made the highest record
- ever reported at the university, and she needed a rest.
- When the news service woman gave her the ticket, she said, "Is this a
- trick?"
- Assured that it was not, she then asked, "Is that man coming?"
- She couldn't say "the sailor" it sounded too much like the way people
- had always talked about herself and she honestly didn't remember his
- other name at the moment.
- The Lady Who Sailed The Soul______________103 The woman did not
- know.
- "Do I have to see him?" said Helen.
- "Of course not," said the woman. The gift was unconditional.
- Helen laughed, almost grimly.
- "All right, I'll take it and say thanks. But one picture maker mind
- you, just one, and I walk out.
- Or I may walk out for no reason at all. Is that all right?"
- It was.
- Four days later Helen was in the pleasure world of New Madrid, and a
- master of the dances was presenting her to an odd, intense old man
- whose hair was black.
- "Junior scientist Helen America Sailor of the stars Mr.
- Grey-no-more."
- He looked at them shrewdly and smiled a kindly, experienced smile. He
- added the empty phrase of his profession, "I have had the honor and I
- withdraw."
- They were alone together on the edge of the dining room. The sailor
- looked at her very sharply indeed, and then said: "Who are you? Are
- you somebody I have already met? Should I remember you? There are too
- many people here on Earth. What do we do next? What are we supposed
- to do? Would you like to sit down?"
- Helen said one
- "Yes" to all those questions and never dreamed that the single yes
- would be articulated by hundreds of great actresses, each one in the
- actress's own special way, across the centuries to come.
- They did sit down.
- How the rest of it happened, neither one was ever quite sure.
- She had had to quiet him almost as though he were a hurt person in the
- House of Recovery. She explained the dishes to him and when he still
- could not choose, she gave the robot selections for him. She warned
- him, kindly enough, about manners when he forgot the simple ceremonies
- of eating which everyone knew, such as standing up to unfold the napkin
- or putting the scraps into the solvent tray and the silverware into the
- transfer.
- At last he relaxed and did not look so old.
- Momentarily forgetting the thousand times she had been asked silly
- questions herself, she asked him, "Why did you become a sailor?"
- He stared at her in open-eyed inquiry as though she had spoken to him
- in an unknown language and expected a reply.
- Finally he mumbled the answer, "Are you you, too saying that that I
- shouldn't have done it?"
- Her hand went to her mouth in instinctive apology.
- "No, no, no. You see, I myself have put in to be a sailor."
- He merely looked at her, his young-old eyes open with
- observativeness.
- of Man He did not stare, but merely seemed to be trying to understand
- words, each one of which he could comprehend individually but which in
- sum amounted to sheer madness. She did not turn away from his look,
- odd though it was. Once again, she had the chance to note the
- indescribable peculiarity of this man who had managed enormous sails
- out in the blind empty black between un twinkling stars. He was young
- as a boy. The hair which gave him his name was glossy black. His
- beard must have been removed permanently, because his skin was that of
- a middle-aged woman well-kept, pleasant, but showing the unmistakable
- wrinkles of age and betraying no sign of the normal stubble which the
- males in her culture preferred to leave on their faces. The skin had
- age without experience. The muscles had grown older, but they did not
- show how the person had grown.
- Helen had learned to be an acute observer of people as her mother took
- up with one fanatic after another; she knew full well that people carry
- their secret biographies written in the muscles of their faces, and
- that a stranger passing on the street tells us (whether he wishes to or
- not) all his inmost intimacies. If we but look sharply enough, and in
- the right light, we know whether fear or hope or amusement has tallied
- the hours of his days, we divine the sources and outcome of his most
- secret sensuous pleasures, we catch the dim but persistent reflections
- of those other people who have left the imprints of their personalities
- on him in turn.
- All this was absent from Mr. Grey-no-more: he had age but not the
- stigmata of age; he had growth without the normal markings of growth;
- he had lived without living, in a time and world in which most people
- stayed young while living too much.
- He was the uttermost opposite of her mother that Helen had ever seen,
- and with a pang of undirected apprehension Helen realized that this man
- meant a great deal to her future life, whether she wished him to or
- not. She saw in him a young bachelor, prematurely old, a man whose
- love had been given to emptiness and horror, not to the tangible
- rewards and disappointments of human life. He had had all space for
- his mistress, and space had used him harshly. Still young, he was old;
- already old, he was young.
- The mixture was one which she knew that she had never seen before, and
- which she suspected that no one else had ever seen, either. He had in
- the beginning of life the sorrow, compassion, and wisdom which most
- people find only at the end.
- It was he who broke the silence.
- "You did say, didn't you, that you yourself had put in to be a
- sailor?"
- Even to herself, her answer sounded silly and girlish.
- "I'm the first woman ever to qualify with the necessary scientific
- subjects while still young enough to pass the physical ..."
- "You must be an unusual girl," said he mildly. Helen realized, with a
- thrill, a sweet and bitterly real hope that this young-old man from the
- stars had never heard of the "perfect child" who had been laughed at in
- the moments of being born, the girl who had all America for a father,
- who was famous and unusual and alone so terribly much that she could
- not even imagine being ordinary, happy, decent, or simple.
- She thought to herself. It would take a wise freak who sails in from
- the stars to overlook who lam, but to him she simply said, "It's no use
- talking about being 'unusual." I'm tired of this Earth, and since I
- don't have to die to leave it, I think I would like to sail to the
- stars. I've got less to lose than you may think..." She started to
- tell him about Mona Muggeridge but she stopped in time.
- The compassionate gray eyes were upon her, and at this point it was he,
- not she, who was in control of the situation. She looked at the eyes
- themselves. They had stayed open for forty years, in the blackness
- near to pitch-darkness of the tiny cabin. The dim dials had shone like
- blazing suns upon his tired retinas before he was able to turn his eyes
- away. From time to time he had looked out at the black nothing to see
- the silhouettes of his sails, almost blackness against total blackness,
- as the miles of their sweep sucked up the push of light itself and
- accelerated him and his frozen cargo at almost immeasurable speeds
- across an ocean of unfathomable silence. Yet, what he had done, she
- had asked to do.
- The stare of his gray eyes yielded to a smile of his lips. In the
- young-old face, masculine in structure and feminine in texture, the
- smile had a connotation of tremendous kindness. She felt singularly
- much like weeping when she saw him smile in that particular way at her.
- Was that what people learned between the stars? To care for other
- people very much indeed and to spring upon them only to reveal love and
- not devouring to their prey?
- In a measured voice he said,
- "I believe you. You're the first one that I have believed. All these
- people have said that they wanted to be sailors too, even when they
- looked at me. They could not know what it means, but they said it
- anyhow, and I hated them for saying it. You, though you're different.
- Perhaps you will sail among the stars, but I hope that you will not."
- As though waking from a dream, he looked around the luxurious room,
- with the gilt-and-enamel robot-waiters standing aside with negligent
- elegance. They were designed to be always present and never obtrusive:
- this was a difficult esthetic effect to achieve, but their designer had
- achieved it.
- The rest of the evening moved with the inevitability of good music. He
- went with her to the forever-lonely beach which the architects of New
- of Man Madrid had built beside the hotel. They talked a little, they
- looked at each other, and they made love with an affirmative certainty
- which seemed outside themselves. He was very tender, and he did not
- realize that in a genitally sophisticated society, he was the first
- lover she had ever wanted or had ever had. (How could the daughter of
- Mona Muggeridge want a lover or a mate or a child?) On the next
- afternoon, she exercised the freedom of her times and asked him to
- marry her. They had gone back to their private beach, which, through
- miracles of ultra-fine mini-weather adjustments, brought a Polynesian
- afternoon to the high chilly plateau of central Spain.
- She asked him, she did, to marry her, and he refused, as tenderly and
- as kindly as a man of sixty-five can refuse a girl of eighteen. She
- did not press him; they continued the bittersweet love affair.
- They sat on the artificial sand of the artificial beach and dabbled
- their toes in the man-warmed water of the ocean. Then they lay down
- against an artificial sand dune which hid New Madrid from view.
- "Tell me," Helen said, "can I ask again, why did you become a
- sailor?"
- "Not so easily answered," he said.
- "Adventure, maybe. That, at least in part. And I wanted to see Earth.
- Couldn't afford to come in a pod. Now well, I've enough to keep me the
- rest of my life. I can go back to New Earth as a passenger in a month
- instead of forty years be frozen in no more time than the wink of an
- eye, put in my adiabatic pod, linked in to the next sailing ship, and
- wake up home again while some other fool does the sailing."
- Helen nodded. She did not bother to tell him that she knew all this.
- She had been investigating sailing ships since meeting the sailor.
- "Out where you sail among the stars," she said, "can you tell me can
- you possibly tell me anything of what it's like out there?"
- His face looked inward on his soul and afterward his voice came as from
- an immense distance.
- "There are moments or is it weeks you can't really tell in the sail
- ship when it seems worthwhile. You feel . . . your nerve endings
- reach out until they touch the stars. You feel enormous, somehow."
- Gradually he came back to her.
- "It's trite to say, of course, but you're never the same afterward. I
- don't mean just the obvious physical thing, but you find yourself or
- maybe you lose yourself. That's why," he continued, gesturing toward
- New Madrid, out of sight behind the sand dune,
- "I can't stand this. New Earth, well, it's like Earth must have been
- in the old days, I guess. There's something fresh about it. Here
- ..."
- "I know," said Helen America, and she did. The slightly decadent,
- slightly corrupt, too comfortable air of Earth must have had a stifling
- effect on the man from beyond the stars.
- "There," he said, "you won't believe this, but sometimes the ocean's
- too cold to swim in. We have music that doesn't come from machines,
- and pleasures that come from inside our own bodies without being put
- there. I have to get back to New Earth."
- Helen said nothing for a little while, concentrating on stilling the
- pain in her heart.
- "I... I...." she began.
- "I know," he said fiercely, almost savagely turning on her.
- "But I can't take you. I can't! You're too young, you've got a life
- to live and I've thrown away a quarter of mine. No, that's not
- right.
- I didn't throw it away. I wouldn't trade it back because it's given me
- something inside I never had before. And it's given me you."
- "But if " she started again to argue.
- "No. Don't spoil it. I'm going next week to be frozen in my pod to
- wait for the next sail ship. I can't stand much more of this, and I
- might weaken. That would be a terrible mistake. But we have this time
- together now, and we have our separate lifetimes to remember in. Don't
- think of anything else. There's nothing, nothing we can do."
- Helen did not tell him then or ever of the child she had started to
- hope for, the child they would now never have. Oh, she could have used
- the child. She could have tied him to her, for he was an honorable man
- and would have married her had she told him. But Helen's love, even
- then in her youth, was such that she could not use this means. She
- wanted him to come to her of his own free will, marrying her because he
- could not live without her.
- To that marriage their child would have been an additional blessing.
- There was the other alternative, of course. She could have borne the
- child without naming the father. But she was no Mona Muggeridge. She
- knew too well the terrors and insecurity and loneliness of being Helen
- America ever to be responsible for the creation of another. And for
- the course she had laid out there was no place for a child. So she did
- the only thing she could. At the end of their time in New Madrid, she
- let him say a real goodbye.
- Wordless and without tears, she left. Then she went up to an arctic
- city, a pleasure city where such things are well-known, and amidst
- shame, worry, and a driving sense of regret she appealed to a
- confidential medical service which eliminated the unborn child. Then
- she went back to Cambridge and confirmed her place as the first woman
- to sail a ship to the stars.
- The presiding Lord of the Instrumentality at that time was a man named
- Wait. Wait was not cruel but he was never noted for tenderness of
- of Man spirit or for a high regard for the adventuresome proclivities
- of young people. His aide said to him,
- "This girl wants to sail a ship to New Earth. Are you going to let
- her?"
- "Why not?" said Wait.
- "A person is a person. She is well bred well-educated. If she fails,
- we will find out something eighty years from now when the ship comes
- back. If she succeeds, it will shut up some of these women who have
- been complaining." The Lord leaned over his desk: "If she qualifies,
- and if she goes, though, don't give her any convicts. Convicts are too
- good and too valuable as settlers to be sent along on a fool trip like
- that. You can send her on something of a gamble. Give her all
- religious fanatics. We have more than enough. Don't you have twenty
- or thirty thousand who are waiting?"
- He said,
- "Yes, sir, twenty-six thousand two hundred. Not counting recent
- additions."
- "Very well," said the Lord of the Instrumentality.
- "Give her the whole lot of them and give her that new ship. Have we
- named it?"
- "No, sir," said the aide.
- "Name it then."
- The aide looked blank.
- A contemptuous wise smile crossed the face of the senior bureaucrat. He
- said,
- "Take that ship now and name it. Name it The Soul and let The Soul fly
- to the stars. And let Helen America be an angel if she wants to. Poor
- thing, she has not got much of a life to live on this Earth, not the
- way she was born, and the way she was brought up. And it's no use to
- try and reform her, to transform her personality, when it's a lively,
- rich personality. It does not do any good. We don't have to punish
- her for being herself. Let her go. Let her have it."
- Wait sat up and stared at his aide and then repeated very firmly: "Let
- her have it, only if she qualifies."
- Helen America did qualify.
- The doctors and the experts tried to warn her against it. One
- technician said: "Don't you realize what this is going to mean?
- Forty years will pour out of your life in a single month. You leave
- here a girl. You will get there a woman of sixty. Well, you will
- probably still have a hundred years to live after that. And it's
- painful. You will have all these people, thousands and thousands of
- them. You will have some Earth cargo. There will be about thirty
- thousand pods strung on sixteen lines behind you. Then you will have
- the control cabin to live in. We will give
- you as many robots as you need, probably a dozen. You will have a
- mainsail and a foresail and you will have to keep the two of them."
- "I know. I have read the book," said Helen America.
- "And I sail the ship with light, and if the infrared touches that sail
- I go.
- If I get radio interference, I pull the sails in. And if the sails
- fail, I wait as long as I live."
- The technician looked a little cross.
- "There is no call for you to get tragic about it. Tragedy is easy
- enough to contrive. And if you want to be tragic, you can be tragic
- without destroying thirty thousand other people or without wasting a
- large amount of Earth property. You can drown in water right here, or
- jump into a volcano like the Japanese in the old books. Tragedy is not
- the hard part. The hard part is when you don't quite succeed and you
- have to keep on fighting. When you must keep going on and on and on in
- the face of really hopeless odds, of real temptations to despair.
- "Now this is the way that the foresail works. That sail will be twenty
- thousand miles at the wide part. It tapers down and the total length
- will be just under eighty-thousand miles. It will be retracted or
- extended by small servo-robots. The servo-robots are radio-controlled.
- You had better use your radio sparingly, because after all these
- batteries, even though they are atomic, have to last forty years. They
- have got to keep you alive."
- "Yes, sir," said Helen America very contritely.
- "You've got to remember what your job is. You're going because you are
- cheap. You are going because a sailor takes a lot less weight than a
- machine. There is no all-purpose computer built that weighs as little
- as a hundred and fifty pounds. You do.
- You go simply because you are expendable. Anyone that goes out to the
- stars takes one chance in three of never getting there But you are not
- going because you are a leader, you are going because you are young.
- You have a life to give and a life to spare. Because your nerves are
- good. You understand that?"
- "Yes, sir, I knew that."
- "Furthermore, you are going because you'll make the trip in forty
- years. If we send automatic devices and have them manage the sails,
- they would get there possibly. But it would take them from a hundred
- years to a hundred-and-twenty or more, and by that time the adiabatic
- pods would have spoiled, most of the human cargo would not be fit for
- revival, and the leakage of heat, no matter how we face it, would be
- enough to ruin the entire expedition. So remember that the tragedy and
- the trouble you face is mostly work. Work, and that's all it is. That
- is your big job."
- Helen smiled. She was a short girl with rich dark hair, brown eyes,
- and very pronounced eyebrows, but when Helen smiled she was almost a
- child again, and a rather charming one. She said: "My job is work. I
- understand that, sir."
- VIII
- In the preparation area, the make-ready was fast but not hurried. Twice
- the technicians urged her to take a holiday before she reported for
- final training. She did not accept their advice.
- She wanted to go forth; she knew that they knew she wanted to leave
- Earth forever, and she also knew they knew she was not merely her
- mother's daughter. She was trying, somehow, to be herself. She knew
- the world did not believe, but the world did not matter.
- The third time they suggested a vacation, the suggestion was mandatory.
- She had a gloomy two months which she ended up enjoying a little bit on
- the wonderful islands of the Hesperides, islands which were raised when
- the weight of the Earthports caused a new group of small archipelagos
- to form below Bermuda.
- She reported back, fit, healthy, and ready to go.
- The senior medical officer was very blunt.
- "Do you really know what we are going to do to you? We are going to
- make you live forty years out of your life in one month."
- She nodded, white of face, and he went on,
- "Now to give you those forty years we've got to slow down your bodily
- processes.
- After all, the sheer biological task of breathing forty years' worth of
- air in one month involves a factor of about five hundred to one.
- No lungs could stand it. Your body must circulate water. It must take
- in food. Most of this is going to be protein. There will be some kind
- of a hydrate. You'll need vitamins.
- "Now, what we are going to do is to slow the brain down, very much
- indeed, so that the brain will be working at about that
- five-hundred-to-one ratio. We don't want you incapable of working.
- Somebody has got to manage the sails.
- "Therefore, if you hesitate or you start to think, a thought or two is
- going to take several weeks. Meanwhile your body can be slowed down
- some. But the different parts can't be slowed down at the same rate.
- Water, for example, we brought down to about eighty to one. Food, to
- about three hundred to one.
- "You won't have time to drink forty years' worth of water. We
- circulate it, get it through, purify it, and get it back in your
- system, unless you break your link-up.
- "So what you face is a month of being absolutely wide awake, on an
- operating table and being operated on without anesthetic, while doing
- some of the hardest work that mankind has ever found.
- "You'll have to take observations, you'll have to watch your lines with
- the pods of people and cargo behind you, you'll have to adjust the
- The Lady Who Sailed The Soul______________111 sails. If there is
- anybody surviving at destination point, they will come out and meet
- you.
- "At least that happens most of the times.
- "I am not going to assure you you will get the ship in. If they don't
- meet you, take an orbit beyond the farthest planet and either let
- yourself die or try to save yourself. You can't get thirty thousand
- people down on a planet singlehandedly
- "Meanwhile, though, you've got a real job. We are going to have to
- build these controls right into your body. We'll start by putting
- valves in your chest arteries. Then we go on, catheterizing your
- water. We are going to make an artificial colostomy that will go
- forward here just in front of your hip joint. Your water intake has a
- certain psychological value so that about one five-hundredth of your
- water we are going to leave you to drink out of a cup. The rest of it
- is going to go directly into your bloodstream. Again about a tenth of
- your food will go that way. You understand that?"
- "You mean," said Helen,
- "I eat one-tenth, and the rest goes in intravenously?"
- "That's right," said the medical technician.
- "We will pump it into you. The concentrates are there. The re
- constitutor is there.
- Now these lines have a double connection. One set of connections runs
- into the maintenance machine. That will become the logistic support
- for your body. And these lines are the umbilical cord for a human
- being alone among the stars. They are your life.
- "And now if they should break or if you should fall, you might faint
- for a year or two. If that happens, your local system takes over:
- that's the pack on your back.
- "On Earth, it weighs as much as you do. You have already been drilled
- with the model pack. You know how easy it is to handle in space.
- That'll keep you going for a subjective period of about two hours. No
- one has ever worked out a clock yet that would match the human mind, so
- instead of giving you a clock we are giving you an odometer attached to
- your own pulse and we mark it off in grades. If you watch it in terms
- of tens of thousands of pulse beats, you may get some information out
- of it.
- "I don't know what kind of information, but you may find it helpful
- somehow." He looked at her sharply and then turned back to his tools,
- picking up a shining needle with a disk on the end.
- "Now, let's get back to this. We are going to have to get right into
- your mind. That's chemical too."
- Helen interrupted.
- "You said you were not going to operate on my head."
- "Only the needle. That's the only way we can get to the mind.
- Slow it down enough so that you will have this subjective mind
- operating at a rate
- of Man that will make the forty years pass in a month." He smiled
- grimly, but the grimness changed to momentary tenderness as he took in
- her brave obstinate stance, her girlish, admirable, pitiable
- determination.
- "I won't argue it," she said.
- "This is as bad as a marriage and the stars are my bridegroom." The
- image of the sailor went across her mind, but she said nothing of
- him.
- The technician went on.
- "Now, we have already built in psychotic elements. You can't even
- expect to remain sane. So you'd better not worry about it. You'll
- have to be insane to manage the sails and to survive utterly alone and
- be out there even a month. And the trouble is, in that month you are
- going to know it's really forty years. There is not a mirror in the
- place, but you'll probably find shiny surfaces to look at yourself.
- "You won't look so good. You will see yourself aging, every time you
- slow down to look. I don't know what the problem is going to be on
- that score. It's been bad enough on men.
- "Your hair problem is going to be easier than men's. The sailors we
- sent out, we simply had to kill all the hair roots.
- Otherwise the men would have been swamped in their own beards. And a
- tremendous amount of the nutrient would be wasted if it went into
- raising of hair on the face which no machine in the world could cut off
- fast enough to keep a man working. I think what we will do is inhibit
- hair on the top of your head. Whether it comes out in the same color
- or not is something you will find for yourself later. Did you ever
- meet the sailor that came in?"
- The doctor knew she had met him. He did not know that it was the
- sailor from beyond the stars who called her. Helen managed to remain
- composed as she smiled at him to say: "Yes, you gave him new hair. Your
- technician planted a new scalp on his head, remember. Somebody on your
- staff did. The hair came out black and he got the nickname of Mr.
- Grey-no-more."
- "If you are ready next Tuesday, we'll be ready too. Do you think you
- can make it by then, my lady?"
- Helen felt odd seeing this old, serious man refer to her as "lady," but
- she knew he was paying respect to a profession and not just to an
- individual.
- "Tuesday is time enough." She felt complimented that he was an
- old-fashioned enough person to know the ancient names of the days of
- the week and to use them. That was a sign that he had not only learned
- the essentials at the University but that he had picked up the elegant
- inconsequentialities as well.
- Two weeks later was twenty-one years later by the chronometers in the
- cabin. Helen turned for the ten-thousand times-ten-thousandth time to
- scan the sails.
- Her back ached with a violent throb.
- She could feel the steady roar of her heart like a fast vibrator as it
- ticked against the time-span of her awareness. She could look down at
- the meter on her wrist and see the hands on the watch like dials
- indicate tens of thousands of pulses very slowly.
- She heard the steady whistle of air in her throat as her lungs seemed
- shuddering with sheer speed.
- And she felt the throbbing pain of a large tube feeding an immense
- quantity of mushy water directly into the artery of her neck.
- On her abdomen, she felt as if someone had built a fire. The
- evacuation tube operated automatically but it burnt as if a coal had
- been held to her skin, and a catheter, which connected her bladder to
- another tube, stung as savagely as the prod of a scalding-hot needle.
- Her head ached and her vision blurred.
- But she could still see the instruments and she still could watch the
- sails. Now and then she could glimpse, faint as a tracery of dust, the
- immense skein of people and cargo that lay behind them.
- She could not sit down. It hurt too much.
- The only way that she could be comfortable for resting was to lean
- against the instrument panel, her lower ribs against the panel, her
- tired forehead against the meters.
- Once she rested that way and realized that it was two and a half months
- before she got up. She knew that rest had no meaning, and she could
- see her face moving, a distorted image of her own face growing old in
- the reflections from the glass face of the "apparent weight" dial. She
- could look at her arms with blurring vision, note the skin tightening,
- loosening, and tightening again, as changes in temperatures affected
- it.
- She looked out one more time at the sails and decided to take in the
- foresail. Wearily she dragged herself over the control panel with a
- servo-robot. She selected the right control and opened it for a week
- or so. She waited there, her heart buzzing, her throat whistling air,
- her fingernails breaking off gently as they grew.
- Finally she checked to see if it really had been the right one, pushed
- again, and nothing happened.
- She pushed a third time. There was no response.
- Now she went back to the master panel, re-read, checked the light
- direction, found a certain amount of infrared pressure which she should
- have been picking up. The sails had very gradually risen to something
- not
- of Man far from the speed of light itself because they moved fast with
- the one side dulled; the pods behind, sealed against time and eternity,
- swam obediently in an almost perfect weightlessness.
- She scanned; her reading had been correct.
- The sail was wrong.
- She went back to the emergency panel and pressed. Nothing happened.
- She broke out a repair robot and sent it out to effect repairs,
- punching the papers as rapidly as she could to give instructions.
- The robot went out and an instant (three days) later it replied.
- The panel on the repair robot rang forth,
- "Does not conform."
- She sent a second repair robot. That had no effect either.
- She sent a third, the last. Three bright lights,
- "Does not conform," stared at her. She moved the servo-robots to the
- other side of the sails and pulled hard.
- The sail was still not at the right angle.
- She stood there wearied and lost in space, and she prayed: "Not for me,
- God, I am running away from a life that I did not want. But for this
- ship's souls and for the poor foolish people that I am taking who are
- brave enough to want to worship their own way and need the light of
- another star, I ask you, God, help me now." She thought she had prayed
- very fervently and she hoped that she would get an answer to her
- prayer.
- It did not work out that way. She was bewildered, alone.
- There was no sun. There was nothing, except the tiny cabin and herself
- more alone than any woman had ever been before.
- She sensed the thrill and ripple of her muscles as they went through
- days of adjustment while her mind noticed only the matter of minutes.
- She leaned forward, forced herself not to relax, and finally she
- remembered that one of the official busybodies had included a weapon.
- What she would use a weapon for she did not know, It pointed. It had a
- range of two hundred thousand miles. The target could be selected
- automatically.
- She got down on her knees trailing the abdominal tube and the feeding
- tube and the catheter tubes and the helmet wires, each one running back
- to the panel. She crawled underneath the panel for the servo-robots
- and she pulled out a written manual.
- She finally found the right frequency for the weapon's controls.
- She set the weapon up and went to the window.
- At the last moment she thought,
- "Perhaps the fools are going to make me shoot the window out. It ought
- to have been designed to shoot through the window without hurting it.
- That's the way they should have done it."
- She wondered about the matter for a week or two.
- Just before she fired it she turned and there, next to her, stood her
- sailor, the sailor from the stars, Mr. Grey-no-more. He said: "It
- won't work that way."
- He stood clear and handsome, the way she had seen him in New Madrid. He
- had no tubes, he did not tremble, she could see the normal rise and
- fall of his chest as he took one breath every hour or so. One part of
- her mind knew that he was a hallucination. Another part of her mind
- believed that he was real.
- She was mad, and she was very happy to be mad at this time, and she let
- the hallucination give her advice. She re-set the gun so that it would
- fire through the cabin wall, and it fired a low charge at the repair
- mechanism out beyond the distorted and immovable sail.
- The low charge did the trick. The interference had been something
- beyond all technical anticipation. The weapon had cleaned out the
- forever-unidentifiable obstruction, leaving the servo-robots free to
- attack their tasks like a tribe of maddened ants. They worked again.
- They had had defenses built in against the minor impediments of space.
- All of them scurried and skipped about.
- With a sense of bewilderment close to religion, she perceived the wind
- of starlight blowing against the immense sails. The sails snapped into
- position. She got a momentary touch of gravity as she sensed a little
- weight. The Soul was back on her course.
- "It's a girl," they said to him on New Earth.
- "It's a girl. She must have been eighteen herself."
- Mr. Grey-no-more did not believe it.
- But he went to the hospital and there in the hospital he saw Helen
- America.
- "Here I am, sailor," said she.
- "I sailed too." Her face was white as chalk, her expression was that
- of a girl of about twenty. Her body was that of a well-preserved woman
- of sixty.
- As for him, he had not changed again, since he had returned home inside
- a pod.
- He looked at her. His eyes narrowed, and then, in a sudden reversal of
- roles, it was he who was kneeling beside her bed and covering her hands
- with his tears.
- Half-coherently, he babbled at her: "I ran away from you because I
- loved you so. I came back here where you would never follow, or if you
- did follow, you'd still be a young woman, and I'd still be too old. But
- you have sailed The Soul in here and you wanted me."
- The nurse of New Earth did not know about the rules which should be
- of Man applied to the sailors from the stars. Very quietly she went
- out of the room, smiling in tenderness and human pity at the love which
- she had seen. But she was a practical woman and she had a sense of her
- own advancement. She called a friend others at the news service and
- said: "I think I have got the biggest romance in history. If you get
- here soon enough you can get the first telling of the story of Helen
- America and Mr. Grey-no-more. They just met like that. I guess
- they'd seen each other somewhere. They just met like that and fell in
- love."
- The nurse did not know that they had forsworn a love on Earth. The
- nurse did not know that Helen America had made a lonely trip with an
- icy purpose, and the nurse did not know that the crazy image of Mr.
- Grey-no-more, the sailor himself, had stood beside Helen twenty years
- out from nothing-at-all in the depth and blackness of space between the
- stars.
- The little girl had grown up, had married, and now had a little girl of
- her own. The mother was unchanged, but the spiel tier was very, very
- old. It had outlived all its marvelous tricks of adaptability, and for
- some years had stayed frozen in the role of a yellow-haired, blue-eyed
- girl doll. Out of sentimental sense of the fitness of things, she had
- dressed the spiel tier in a bright blue jumper with matching panties.
- The little animal crept softly across the floor on its tiny human
- hands, using its knees for hind feet. The mock-human face looked up
- blindly and squeaked for milk.
- The young mother said,
- "Mom, you ought to get rid of that thing. It's all used up and it
- looks horrible with your nice period furniture."
- "I thought you loved it," said the older woman.
- "Of course," said the daughter.
- "It was cute, when I was a child. But I'm not a child any more, and it
- doesn't even work."
- The spiel tier had struggled to its feet and clutched its mistress's
- ankle. The older woman took it away gently, and put down a saucer of
- milk and a cup the size of a thimble. The spiel tier tried to curtsey,
- as it had been motivated to do at the beginning, slipped, fell, and
- whimpered. The mother righted it and the little old animal-toy began
- dipping milk with its thimble and sucking the milk into its tiny
- toothless old mouth.
- "You remember. Mom " said the younger woman and stopped.
- "Remember what, dear?"
- " You told me about Helen America and Mr. Grey-no-more when that was
- brand new."
- "Yes, darling, maybe I did."
- " You didn't tell me everything," said the younger woman accusingly.
- The Lady Who Sailed The Soul______________117 "Of course not. You
- were a child. " "But it was awful. Those messy people, and the
- horrible way sailors lived. I don't see how you idealised it and
- called it a romance " "But it was. It is," insisted the other.
- "Romance, my foot," said the daughter.
- "It's as bad as you and the worn-out spiel tier She pointed at the
- tiny, living, aged doll who had fallen asleep beside its milk.
- "I think it's horrible.
- You ought to get rid of it. And the world ought to get rid of sailors.
- " "Don't be harsh, darling, " said the mother.
- "Don't be a sentimental old slob, " said the daughter.
- "Perhaps we are," said the mother with a loving sort of laugh.
- Unobtrusively she put the sleeping spiel tier on a padded chair where
- it would not be stepped on or hurt.
- Outsiders never knew the real end of the story.
- More than a century after their wedding, Helen lay dying: she was dying
- happily, because her beloved sailor was beside her. She believed that
- if they could conquer space, they might conquer death as well.
- Her loving, happy, weary dying mind blurred over and she picked up an
- argument they hadn't touched upon for decades.
- "You did so come to The Soul," she said.
- "You did so stand beside me when I was lost and did not know how to
- handle the weapon."
- "If I came then, darling, I'll come again, wherever you are.
- You're my darling, my heart, my own true love. You're my bravest of
- ladies, my boldest of people. You're my own. You sailed for me.
- You're my lady who sailed The Soul."
- His voice broke, but his features stayed calm. He had never before
- seen anyone die so confident and so happy.
- When the People Fell "Can you imagine a rain of people through an
- acid tog? Can you imagine thousands and thousands of human bodies,
- without weapons, overwhelming the unconquerable monsters? Can you "
- "Look, sir," interrupted the reporter.
- "Don't interrupt me! You ask me silly questions. I tell you I saw the
- Goonhogo itself. I saw it take Venus. Now ask me about that!"
- The reporter had called to get an old man's reminiscences about bygone
- ages. He did not expect Dobyns Bennett to flare up at him.
- Dobyns Bennett thrust home the psychological advantage he had gotten by
- taking the initiative.
- "Can you imagine showhices in their parachutes, a lot of them dead,
- floating out of a green sky?
- Can you imagine mothers crying as they fell? Can you imagine people
- pouring down on the poor helpless monsters?"
- Mildly, the reporter asked what showhices were.
- "That's old Chinesian for children," said Dobyns Bennett.
- "I saw the iasf of the nations burst and die, and you want to ask me
- about fashionable clothes and things. Real history never gets into the
- books. It's too shocking. I suppose you were going to ask me what I
- thought of the new striped pantaloons for women!"
- "No," said the reporter, but he blushed. The question was in his
- notebook and he hated blushing.
- "Do you know what the Goonhogo did?"
- "What?" asked the reporter, struggling to remember just what a
- Goonhogo might be.
- "It took Venus," said the old man, somewhat more calmly. Very mildly,
- the reporter murmured,
- "It did?"
- "You bet it did!" said Dobyns Bennett belligerently.
- "Were you there?" asked the reporter.
- "You bet I was there when the Goonhogo took Venus," said the old man.
- "I was there and it's the damnedest thing I've ever seen. You know who
- I am. I've seen more worlds than you can count, boy, and yet when
- of Man the non dies and the needies and the showhices came pouring out
- of the sky, that was the worst thing that any man could ever see.
- Down on the ground, there were the loudies the way they'd always been "
- The reporter interrupted, very gently. Bennett might as well have been
- speaking a foreign language. All of this had happened three hundred
- years before. The reporter's job was to get a feature from him and to
- put it into a language which people of the present time could
- understand.
- Respectfully he said,
- "Can't you start at the beginning of the story?"
- "You bet. That's when I married Terza. Terza was the prettiest girl
- you ever saw. She was one of the Vomacts, a great family of scanners,
- and her father was a very important man. You see, I was thirty-two,
- and when a man is thirty-two, he thinks he is pretty old, but I wasn't
- really old, I just thought so, and he wanted Terza to marry me because
- she was such a complicated girl that she needed a man's help. The
- Court back home had found her unstable and the Instrumentality had
- ordered her left in her father's care until she married a man who then
- could take on proper custodial authority. I suppose those are old
- customs to you, boy " The reporter interrupted again.
- "I am sorry, old man," said he.
- "I know you are over four hundred years old and you're the only person
- who remembers the time the Goonhogo took Venus. Now the Goonhogo was a
- government, wasn't it?"
- "Anyone knows that," snapped the old man.
- "The Goonhogo was a sort of separate Chinesian government. Seventeen
- billion of them all crowded in one small part of Earth. Most of them
- spoke English the way you and I do, but they spoke their own language,
- too, with all those funny words that have come on down to us. They
- hadn't mixed in with anybody else yet. Then, you see, the Waywanjong
- himself gave the order and that is when the people started raining.
- They just fell right out of the sky. You never saw anything like it "
- The reporter had to interrupt him again and again to get the story bit
- by bit. The old man kept using terms that he couldn't seem to realize
- were lost in history and that had to be explained to be intelligible to
- anyone of this era. But his memory was excellent and his descriptive
- powers as sharp and alert as ever. .
- . .
- Young Dobyns Bennett had not been at Experimental Area A very long,
- before he realized that the most beautiful female he had ever seen was
- Terza Vomact. At the age of fourteen, she was fully mature. Some of
- the Vomacts did mature that way. It may have had something to do with
- their being descended from unregistered, illegal people centuries back
- in the past. They were even said to have mysterious connections with
- the lost world back in the age of nations when people could still put
- numbers on the years.
- He fell in love with her and felt like a fool for doing it. She was
- so beautiful, it was hard to realize that she was the daughter of
- Scanner Vomact himself. The scanner was a powerful man.
- Sometimes romance moves too fast and it did with Dobyns Bennett because
- Scanner Vomact himself called in the young man and said,
- "I'd like to have you marry my daughter Terza, but I'm not sure she'll
- approve of you. If you can get her, boy, you have my blessing."
- Dobyns was suspicious. He wanted to know why a senior scanner was
- willing to take a junior technician.
- All that the scanner did was to smile. He said,
- "I'm a lot older than you, and with this new santa clara drug coming in
- that may give people hundreds of years, you may think that I died in my
- prime if I die at a hundred and twenty. You may live to four or five
- hundred. But I know my time's coming up. My wife has been dead for a
- long time and we have no other children and I know that Terza needs a
- father in a very special kind of way. The psychologist found her to be
- unstable. Why don't you take her outside the area? You can get a pass
- through the dome anytime.
- You can go out and play with the loudies."
- Dobyns Bennett was almost as insulted as if someone had given him a
- pail and told him to go play in the sand pile And yet he realized that
- the elements of play in courtship were fitted together and that the old
- man meant well.
- The day that it all happened, he and Terza were outside the dome. They
- had been pushing loudies around.
- Loudies were not dangerous unless you killed them. You could knock
- them down, push them out of the way, or tie them up; after a while,
- they slipped away and went about their business. It took a very
- special kind of ecologist to figure out what their business was. They
- floated two meters high, ninety centimeters in diameter, gently just
- above the land of Venus, eating microscopically. For a long time,
- people thought there was radiation on which they subsisted. They
- simply multiplied in tremendous numbers. In a silly sort of way, it
- was fun to push them around, but that was about all there was to do.
- They never responded with intelligence.
- Once, long before, a loudie taken into the laboratory for experimental
- purposes had typed a perfectly clear message on the typewriter. The
- message had read,
- "Why don't you Earth people go back to Earth and leave us alone? We
- are getting along all " And that was all the message that anybody had
- ever got out of them in three hundred years. The best laboratory
- conclusion was that they had very high intelligence if they ever chose
- to use it, but that their volitional mechanism was so profoundly
- different from the psychology of human
- beings that it was impossible to force a loudie to respond to stress
- as people did on Earth.
- The name loudie was some kind of word in the old Chinesian language. It
- meant the "ancient ones." Since it was the Chinesians who had set up
- the first outposts on Venus, under the orders of their supreme boss the
- Waywonjong, their term lingered on, Dobyns and Terza pushed loudies,
- climbed over the hills, and looked down into the valleys where it was
- impossible to tell a river from a swamp. They got thoroughly wet,
- their air conveners stuck, and perspiration itched and tickled along
- their cheeks.
- Since they could not eat or drink while outside at least not with any
- reasonable degree of safety the excursion could not be called a picnic.
- There was something mildly refreshing about playing child with a very
- pretty girl-child but Dobyns wearied of the whole thing.
- Terza sensed his rejection of her. Quick as a sensitive animal, she
- became angry and petulant.
- "You didn't have to come out with me!"
- "I wanted to," he said, "but now I'm tired and want to go home."
- "You treat me like a child. All right, play with me. Or you treat me
- like a woman. All right, be a gentleman. But don't seesaw all the
- time yourself. I just got to be a little bit happy and you have to get
- middle-aged and condescending. I won't take it."
- "Your father " he said, realizing the moment he said it that it was a
- mistake.
- "My father this, my father that. If you're thinking about marrying me,
- do it yourself." She glared at him, stuck her tongue out, ran over a
- dune, and disappeared.
- Dobyns Bennett was baffled. He did not know what to do. She was safe
- enough. The loudies never hurt anyone. He decided to teach her a
- lesson and to go on back himself, letting her find her way home when
- she pleased. The Area Search Team could find her easily if she really
- got lost.
- He walked back to the gate.
- When he saw the gates locked and the emergency lights on, he realized
- that he had made the worst mistake of his life.
- His heart sinking within him, he ran the last few meters of the way,
- and beat the ceramic gate with his bare hands until it opened only just
- enough to let him in.
- "What's wrong?" he asked the door tender
- The door tender muttered something which Dobyns could not understand.
- "Speak up, man!" shouted Dobyns.
- "What's wrong?"
- "The Goonhogo is coming back and they're taking over."
- "That's impossible," said Dobyns.
- "They couldn't " He checked himself. Could they?
- When the People Fell "The Goonhogo's taken over," the gatekeeper
- insisted.
- "They've been given the whole thing. The Earth Authority has voted it
- to them. The Waywonjong has decided to send people right away. They're
- sending them."
- "What do the Chinesians want with Venus? You can't kill a loudie
- without contaminating a thousand acres of land. You can't push them
- away without them drifting back. You can't scoop them up. Nobody can
- live here until we solve the problem of these things. We're a long way
- from having solved it," said Dobyns in angry bewilderment.
- The gatekeeper shook his head.
- "Don't ask me. That's all I hear on the radio. Everybody else is
- excited too."
- Within an hour, the rain of people began.
- Dobyns went up to the radar room, saw the skies above. The radar man
- himself was drumming his fingers against the desk. He said,
- "Nothing like this has been seen for a thousand years or more. You
- know what there is up there? Those are warships, the warships left
- over from the last of the old dirty wars. I knew the Chinesians were
- inside them. Everybody knew about it. It was sort of like a museum.
- Now they don't have any weapons in them.
- But do you know there are millions of people hanging up there over
- Venus and I don't know what they are going to do!"
- He stopped and pointed at one of the screens.
- "Look, you can see them running in patches. They're behind each other,
- so they cluster up solid. We've never had a screen look like that."
- Dobyns looked at the screen. It was, as the operator said, full of
- blips.
- As they watched, one of the men exclaimed,
- "What's that milky stuff down there in the lower left? See, it's it's
- pouring,"
- he said.
- "It's pouring somehow out of those dots. How can you pour things into
- a radar? It doesn't really show, does it?"
- The radar man looked at his screen. He said,
- "Search me. I don't know what it is, either. You'll have to find out.
- Let's just see what happens."
- Scanner Vomact came into the room. He said, once he had taken a quick,
- experienced glance at the screens,
- "This may be the strangest thing we'll ever see, but I have a feeling
- they're dropping people. Lots of them. Dropping them by the
- thousands, or by the hundreds of thousands, or even by the millions.
- But people are coming down there. Come along with me, you two. We'll
- go out and see it. There may be somebody that we can help."
- By this time, Dobyns's conscience was hurting him badly. He wanted to
- tell Vomact that he had left Terza out there, but he had hesitated not
- only because he was ashamed of leaving her, but because he did not want
- to tattle on the child to her father. Now he spoke.
- "Your daughter's still outside."
- of Man Vomact turned on him solemnly. The immense eyes looked very
- tranquil and very threatening, but the silky voice was controlled.
- "You may find her." The scanner added, in a tone which sent the thrill
- of menace up Dobyns's back,
- "And everything will be well if you bring her back."
- Dobyns nodded as though receiving an order.
- "I shall," said Vomact, "go out myself, to see what I can do, but I
- leave the finding of my daughter to you."
- They went down, put on the extra-long-period converters, carried their
- miniaturized survey equipment so that they could find their way back
- through the fog, and went out. Just as they were at the gate, the
- gatekeeper said,
- "Wait a moment, sir and excellency. I have a message for you here on
- the phone. Please call Control."
- Scanner Vomact was not to be called lightly and he knew it.
- He picked up the connection unit and spoke harshly.
- The radar man came on the phone screen in the gatekeeper's wall.
- "They're overhead now, sir."
- "Who's overhead?"
- "The Chinesians are. They're coming down. I don't know how many there
- are. There must be two thousand warships over our heads right here and
- there are more thousands over the rest of Venus. They're down now. If
- you want to see them hit ground, you'd better get outside quick."
- Vomact and Dobyns went out.
- Down came the Chinesians. People's bodies were raining right out of
- the milk-cloudy sky. Thousands upon thousands of them with plastic
- parachutes that looked like bubbles. Down they came.
- Dobyns and Vomact saw a headless man drift down. The parachute cords
- had decapitated him.
- A woman fell near them. The drop had torn her breathing tube loose
- from her crudely bandaged throat and she was choking in her own blood.
- She staggered toward them, tried to babble but only drooled blood with
- mute choking sounds, and then fell face forward into the mud.
- Two babies dropped. The adult accompanying them had been blown off
- course. Vomact ran, picked them up, and handed them to a Chinesian man
- who had just landed. The man looked at the babies in his arms, sent
- Vomact a look of contemptuous inquiry, put the weeping children down in
- the cold slush of Venus, gave them a last impersonal glance, and ran
- off on some mysterious errand of his own.
- Vomact kept Bennett from picking up the children.
- "Come on, let's keep looking. We can't take care of all of them."
- public habits; but they never suspected that the non dies and the
- needies and the showhices could pour down out of a poisoned sky.
- Only the Goonhogo itself would make such a reckless use of human life.
- Nondies were men and needies were women and showhices were the little
- children. And the Goonhogo was a name left over from the old days of
- nations. It meant something like republic or state or government.
- Whatever it was, it was the organization that ran the Chinesians in the
- Chinesian manner, under the Earth Authority.
- And the ruler of the Goonhogo was the Waywonjong.
- The Waywonjong didn't come to Venus. He just sent his people. He sent
- them floating down into Venus, to tackle the Venusian ecology with the
- only weapons which could make a settlement of that planet possible
- people themselves. Human arms could tackle the loudies, the loudies
- who had been called "old ones" by the first Chinesian scouts to cover
- Venus.
- The loudies had to be gathered together so gently that they would not
- die and, in dying, each contaminate a thousand acres.
- They had to be kept together by human bodies and arms in a gigantic
- living corral.
- Scanner Vomact rushed forward.
- A wounded Chinesian man hit the ground and his parachute collapsed
- behind him. He was clad in a pair of shorts, had a knife at his belt,
- canteen at his waist. He had an air converter attached next to his
- ear, with a tube running into his throat. He shouted something
- unintelligible at them and limped rapidly away.
- People kept on hitting the ground all around Vomact and Dobyns.
- The self-disposing parachutes were bursting like bubbles in the misty
- air, a moment or two after they touched the ground.
- Someone had done a tricky, efficient job with the chemical consequences
- of static electricity.
- And as the two watched, the air was heavy with people. One time,
- Vomact was knocked down by a person. He found that it was two
- Chinesian children tied together.
- Dobyns asked,
- "What are you doing? Where are you going?
- Do you have any leaders?"
- He got cries and shouts in an unintelligible language. Here and there
- someone shouted in English,
- "This way!" or
- "Leave us alone!" or
- "Keep going ...," but that was all.
- The experiment worked.
- Eighty-two million people were dropped in that one day.
- After four hours which seemed barely short of endless, Dobyns found
- Terza in a corner of the cold hell. Though Venus was warm, the
- suffering of the almost-naked Chinesians had chilled his blood.
- Terza ran toward him.
- She could not speak.
- She put her head on his chest and sobbed. Finally she managed to
- say,
- "I've I've I've tried to help, but they're too many, too many, too
- many!" And the sentence ended as shrill as a scream.
- Dobyns led her back to the experimental area.
- They did not have to talk. Her whole body told him that she wanted his
- love and the comfort of his presence, and that she had chosen that
- course of life which would keep them together.
- As they left the drop area, which seemed to cover all of Venus so far
- as they could tell, a pattern was beginning to form. The Chinesians
- were beginning to round up the loudies.
- Terza kissed him mutely after the gatekeeper had let them through. She
- did not need to speak. Then she fled to her room.
- The next day, the people from Experimental Area A tried to see if they
- could go out and lend a hand to the settlers. It wasn't possible to
- lend a hand; there were too many settlers. People by the millions were
- scattered all over the hills and valleys of Venus, sludging through the
- mud and water with their human toes, crushing the alien mud, crushing
- the strange plants. They didn't know what to eat. They didn't know
- where to go. They had no leaders.
- All they had were orders to gather the loudies together in large herds
- and hold them there with human arms.
- The loudies didn't resist.
- After a time-lapse of several Earth days the Goonhogo sent small scout
- cars. They brought a very different kind of Chinesian these late
- arrivals were uniformed, educated, cruel, smug men. They knew what
- they were doing. And they were willing to pay any sacrifice of their
- own people to get it done.
- They brought instructions. They put the people together in gangs. It
- did not matter where the non dies and needies had come from on Earth;
- it didn't matter whether they found their own showhices or somebody
- else's. They were shown the jobs to do and they got to work. Human
- bodies accomplished what machines could not have done they kept the
- loudies firmly but gently encircled until every last one of the
- creatures was starved into nothingness.
- Rice fields began to appear miraculously.
- Scanner Vomact couldn't believe it. The Goonhogo biochemists had
- managed to adapt rice to the soil of Venus. And yet the seedlings came
- out of boxes in the scout cars and weeping people walked over the
- bodies of their own dead to keep the crop moving toward the planting.
- Venusian bacteria could not kill human beings, nor could they dispose
- of human bodies after death. A problem arose and was solved. Immense
- When the People Fell_________________ 127 sleds carried dead men,
- women, and children those who had fallen wrong, or drowned as they
- fell, or had been trampled by others to an undisclosed destination.
- Dobyns suspected the material was to be used to add Earth-type organic
- waste to the soil of Venus, but he did not tell Terza.
- The work went on.
- The non dies and needies kept working in shifts. When they could not
- see in the darkness, they proceeded without seeing keeping in line by
- touch or by shout. Foremen, newly trained, screeched commands. Workers
- lined up, touching fingertips. The job of building the fields kept
- on.
- "That's a big story," said the old man.
- "Eighty-two million people dropped in a single day. And later I heard
- that the Waywonjong said it wouldn't have mattered if seventy million
- of them had died. Twelve million survivors would have been enough to
- make a space head for the Goonhogo. The Chinesians got Venus, all of
- it.
- "But I'll never forget the non dies and the needies and the showhices
- falling out of the sky, men and women and children with their poor
- scared Chinesian faces. That funny Venusian air made them look green
- instead of tan. There they were, falling all around.
- "You know something, young man?" said Dobyns Bennett, approaching his
- fifth century of age.
- "What?" said the reporter.
- "There won't be things like that happening on any world again. Because
- now, after all, there isn't any separate Goonhogo left. There's only
- one Instrumentality and they don't care what a man's race may have been
- in the ancient years. Those were the rough old days, the ones I lived
- in. Those were the days men still tried to do things."
- Dobyns almost seemed to doze off, but he roused himself sharply and
- said,
- "I tell you, the sky was full of people. They fell like water. They
- fell like rain. I've seen the awful ants in Africa, and there's not a
- thing among the stars to beat them for prowling horror. Mind you,
- they're worse than anything the stars contain.
- I' ve seen the crazy worlds near Alpha Centauri, but I never saw
- anything like the time the people fell on Venus. More than eighty two
- million in one day and my own little Terza lost among them.
- "But the rice did sprout. And the loudies died as the walls of people
- held them in with human arms. Walls of people, I tell you, with
- volunteers jumping in to take the places of the falling ones.
- "They were people still, even when they shouted in the darkness. They
- tried to help each other even while they fought a fight that had to be
- fought without violence. They were people still. And they did so win.
- It was crazy and impossible, but they won. Mere human beings did what
- machines and science would have taken another thousand years to do
- ...
- of Man "The funniest thing of all was the first house that I saw a non
- die put up, there in the rain of Venus. I was out there with Vomact
- and with a pale sad Terza. It wasn't much of a house, shaped out of
- twisted Venusian wood. There it was. He built it, the smiling
- half-naked Chinesian non die We went to the door and said to him in
- English,
- "What are you building here, a shelter or a hospital?"
- "The Chinesian grinned at us.
- "No," he said, 'gambling."
- "Vomact wouldn't believe it: "Gambling?"
- " "Sure," said the non die
- "Gambling is the first thing a man needs in a strange place. It can
- take the worry out of his soul."" "Is that all?" said the reporter.
- Dobyns Bennett muttered that the personal part did not count.
- He added,
- "Some of my great-great-great-great-great-grandsons may come along. You
- count those greats. Their faces will show you easily enough that I
- married into the Vomact line. Terza saw what happened. She saw how
- people build worlds. This was the hard way to build them. She never
- forgot the night with the dead Chinesian babies lying in the
- half-illuminated mud, or the parachute ropes dissolving slowly. She
- heard the needles weeping and the helpless non dies comforting them and
- leading them off to nowhere. She remembered the cruel, neat officers
- coming out of the scout cars. She got home and saw the rice come up,
- and saw how the Goonhogo made Venus a Chinesian place."
- "What happened to you personally?" asked the reporter.
- "Nothing much. There wasn't any more work for us, so we closed down
- Experimental Area A. I married Terza.
- "Any time later, when I said to her,
- "You're not such a bad girl!" she was able to admit the truth and tell
- me she was not. That night in the rain of people would test anybody's
- soul and it tested hers. She had met a big test and passed it. She
- used to say to me, "I saw it once. I saw the people fall, and I never
- want to see another person suffer again. Keep me with you, Dobyns,
- keep me with you forever."
- "And," said Dobyns Bennett, "it wasn't forever, but it was a happy and
- sweet three hundred years. She died after our fourth diamond
- anniversary. Wasn't that a wonderful thing, young man?"
- The reporter said it was. And yet, when he took the story back to his
- editor, he was told to put it into the archives. It wasn't the right
- kind of story for entertainment and the public would not appreciate it
- any more.
- Think Blue, Count Two Before the great ships whispered between the
- stars by means of plano forming people had to fly from star to star
- with immense sails huge films assorted in space on long, rigid, cold
- proof rigging. A small space boat provided room for a sailor to handle
- the sails, check the course, and watch the passengers who were sealed,
- like knots in immense threads, in their little adiabatic pods which
- trailed behind the ship. The passengers knew nothing, except for going
- to sleep on Earth and waking up on a strange new world forty, fifty, or
- two hundred years later.
- This was a primitive way to do it. But it worked.
- On such a ship Helen America had followed Mr. Grey-no more On such
- ships, the Scanners retained their ancient authority over space. Two
- hundred planets and more were settled in this fashion, including Old
- North Australia, destined to be the treasure house of them all.
- The Emigration Port was a series of low, square buildings nothing like
- Earthport, which towers above the clouds like a frozen nuclear
- explosion.
- Emigration Port is dour, drab, dreary, and efficient. The walls are
- black-red like old blood merely because they are cheaper to heat that
- way. The rockets are ugly and simple; the rocket pits, as inglorious
- as machine shops. Earth has a few showplaces to tell visitors about.
- Emigration Port is not one of them. The people who work there get the
- privilege of real work and secure professional honors. The people who
- go there become unconscious very soon. What they remember about Earth
- is a little room like a hospital room, a little bed, some music, some
- talk, the sleep, and (perhaps) the cold.
- From Emigration Port they go to their pods, sealed in. The pods go to
- the rockets and these to the sailing ship. That's the old way of doing
- it.
- The new way is better. All a person does now is visit a pleasant
- lounge, or play a game of cards, or eat a meal or two. All he needs is
- half the
- wealth of a planet, or a couple hundred years' seniority marked
- "excellent" without a single break.
- The photonic sails were different. Everyone took chances.
- A young man, bright of skin and hair, merry at heart, set out for a new
- world. An older man, his hair touched with gray, went with him. So,
- too, did thirty thousand others. And also, the most beautiful girl on
- Earth.
- Earth could have kept her, but the new worlds needed her.
- She had to go.
- She went by light-sail ship. And she had to cross space space, where
- the danger always waits.
- Space sometimes commands strange tools to its uses the screams of a
- beautiful child, the laminated brain of a long-dead mouse, the
- heartbroken weeping of a computer. Most space offers no respite, no
- relay, no rescue, no repair. All dangers must be anticipated;
- otherwise they become mortal. And the greatest of all hazards is the
- risk of man himself.
- "She's beautiful," said the first technician.
- "She's just a child," said the second.
- "She won't look like much of a child when they're two hundred years
- out," said the first.
- "But she is a child," said the second, smiling, "a beautiful doll with
- blue eyes, just going tiptoe into the beginnings of grown-up life." He
- sighed.
- "She'll be frozen," said the first.
- "Not all the time," said the second.
- "Sometimes they wake up.
- They have to wake up. The machines de freeze them. You remember the
- crimes on the Old Twenty-two. Nice people, but the wrong combinations.
- And everything went wrong, dirtily, brutally wrong."
- They both remembered Old Twenty-two. The hell-ship had drifted between
- the stars for a long time before its beacon brought rescue. Rescue was
- much too late.
- The ship was in immaculate condition. The sails were set at a correct
- angle. The thousands of frozen sleepers, strung out behind the ship in
- their one-body adiabatic pods, would have been in excellent condition,
- but they had merely been left in open space too long and most of them
- had spoiled. The inside of the ship there was the trouble. The sailor
- had failed or died. The reserve passengers had been awakened. They
- did not get on well with one another. Or else they got on too horribly
- well, in the wrong way. Out between the stars, encased only by a frail
- limited cabin, they had invented new crimes and committed them upon
- each other crimes which a million years of Earth's old wickedness had
- never brought to the surface of man before.
- me, Count Two The investigators of Old Twenty-two had become very
- sick, reconstructing the events that followed the awakening of the
- reserve crew; two of them had asked for blanking and had obviously
- retired from service.
- The two technicians knew all about Old Twenty-two as they watched the
- fifteen-year-old woman sleeping on the table. Was she a woman? Was
- she a girl? What would happen to her if she did wake up on the
- flight?
- She breathed delicately.
- The two technicians looked across her figure at one another and then
- the first one said: "We'd better call the psychological guard. It's a
- job for him."
- "He can try," said the second.
- The psychological guard, a man whose number-name ended in the digits
- Tiga-be las came cheerfully into the room a half-hour later. He was a
- dreamy-looking old man, sharp and alert, probably in his fourth
- rejuvenation. He looked at the beautiful girl on the table and inhaled
- sharply, "What's this for a ship?"
- "No," said the first technician, "it's a beauty contest."
- "Don't be a fool," said the psychological guard.
- "You mean they are really sending that beautiful child into the
- Upand-Out?"
- "It's stock," said the second technician.
- "The people out on Wereld Schemering are running dreadfully ugly, and
- they flashed a sign to the Big Blink that they had to have better
- looking people. The Instrumentality is doing right by them.
- All the people on this ship are handsome or beautiful."
- "If she's that precious, why don't they freeze her and put her in a
- pod? That way she would either get there or she would not. A face as
- pretty as that," said Tiga-be las "could start trouble anywhere. Let
- alone a ship. What's her name number
- "On the board there," said the first technician.
- "It's all on the board there. You'll want the others too. They're
- listed, too, and ready to go on the board."
- "Veesey-koosey," read the psychological guard, saying the words aloud,
- "or five-six. That's a silly name, but it's rather cute." With one
- last look back at the sleeping girl, he bent to his work of reading the
- case histories of the people added to the reserve crew. Within ten
- lines, he saw why the girl was being kept ready for emergencies,
- instead of sleeping the whole trip through. She had a Daughter
- Potential of 999.999, meaning that any normal adult of either sex could
- and would accept her as a daughter after a few minutes of
- relationship.
- She had no skill in herself, no learning, no trained capacities.
- But she could remotivate almost anyone older than herself, and she
- showed a probability of making that remotivated person put up a
- gigantic fight for life. For her sake. And secondarily the
- adopter's.
- That was all, but it was special enough to put her in the cabin.
- She had tested out into the literal truth of the ancient poetic scrap,
- "the fairest of the daughters of old, old Earth."
- When Tiga-be las finished taking his notes from the records, the
- working time was almost over. The technicians had not interrupted him.
- He turned around to look one last time at the lovely girl. She was
- gone. The second technician had left and the first was cleaning his
- hands.
- "You haven't frozen her?" cried Tiga-be las
- "I'll have to fix her too, if the safeguard is to work."
- "Of course you do," said the first technician.
- "We've left you two minutes for it."
- "You give me two minutes," said Tiga-be las "to protect a trip of four
- hundred and fifty years!"
- "Do you need more," said the technician, and it was not even a
- question, except in form.
- "Do I?" said Tiga-be las He broke into a smile.
- "No, I don't.
- That girl will be safe long after I am dead."
- "When do you die?" said the technician, socially.
- "Seventy-three years, two months, four days," said Tiga-be las
- agreeably.
- "I'm a fourth-and-last."
- "I thought so," said the technician.
- "You're smart. Nobody starts off that way. We all learn. I'm sure
- you'll take care of that girl."
- They left the laboratory together and ascended to the surface and the
- cool restful night of Earth.
- Late the next day, Tiga-be las came in, very cheerful indeed.
- In his left hand he held a drama spool, full commercial size. In his
- right hand there was a black plastic cube with shimmering silver
- contact-points gleaming on its sides. The two technicians greeted him
- politely.
- The psychological guard could not hide his excitement and his
- pleasure.
- "I've got that beautiful child taken care of. The way she is going to
- be fixed, she'll keep her Daughter Potential, but it's going to be a
- lot closer to one thousand point double zero than it was with all those
- nines. I've used a mouse-brain."
- "If it's frozen," said the first technician, "we won't be able to put
- it in the computer. It will have to go forward with the emergency
- stores."
- "This brain isn't frozen," said Tiga-be las indignantly.
- "It's been laminated. We stiffened it with celluprime and then we
- veneered it down,
- Think Blue, Count Two about seven thousand layers. Each one has
- plastic of at least two molecular thicknesses. This mouse can't spoil.
- As a matter of fact, this mouse is going to go on thinking forever.
- He won't think much, unless we put the voltage on him, but he'll think.
- And he can't spoil. This is ceramic plastic, and it would take a major
- weapon to break it." "The contacts . . .?
- " said the second technician.
- "They don't go through," said Tiga-be las
- "This mouse is tuned into that girl's personality, up to a thousand
- meters. You can put him anywhere in the ship. The case has been
- hardened. The contacts are just attached on the outside. They feed to
- nickel-steel counterpart contacts on the inside. I told you, this
- mouse is going to be thinking when the last human being on the last
- known planet is dead. And it's going to be thinking about that girl.
- Forever."
- "Forever is an awfully long time," said the first technician, with a
- shiver.
- "We only need a safety period of two thousand years. The girl herself
- would spoil in less than a thousand years, if anything did go wrong."
- "Never you mind," said Tiga-be las "that girl is going to be guarded
- whether she is spoiled or not." He spoke to the cube.
- "You're going along with Veesey, fellow, and if she is an Old
- Twenty-two you'll turn the whole thing into a toddle-garden frolic
- complete with ice cream and hymns to the West Wind." Tigabelas looked
- up at the other men and said, quite unnecessarily, "He can't hear
- me."
- "Of course not," said the first technician, very dryly. They all
- looked at the cube. It was a beautiful piece of engineering.
- The psychological guard had reason to be proud of it.
- "Do you need the mouse any more?" said the first technician.
- "Yes," said Tiga-be las
- "One-third of a millisecond at forty megadynes. I want him to get her
- whole life printed on his left cortical lobe. Particularly her
- screams. She screamed badly at ten months. Something she got in her
- mouth. She screamed at ten when she thought the air had stopped in her
- drop-shaft. It hadn't, or she wouldn't be here. They're in her
- record. I want the mouse to have those screams. And she had a pair of
- red shoes for her fourth birthday. Give me the full two minutes with
- her. I've printed the key on the complete series of Marcia and the
- Moon Men that was the best box drama for teen-age girls that they ran
- last year. Veesey saw it. This time she'll see it again, but the
- mouse will be tied in. She won't have the chance of a snowball in hell
- of forgetting it." Said the first technician,
- "What was that?" "Huh?" said Tiga-be las
- "What was that you just said, that, at the end?" "Are you deaf?"
- "No,"
- said the technician huffily.
- "I just didn't understand what you
- "I said that she would not have the chance of a snowball in hell of
- forgetting it."
- "That's what I thought you said," replied the technician.
- "What is a snowball? What is hell? What sort of chances do they
- make?"
- The second technician interrupted eagerly.
- "I know," he explained.
- "Snowballs are ice formations on Neptune. Hell is a planet out near
- Khufu VII. I don't know how anybody would get them together."
- Tiga-be las looked at them with the weary amazement of the very old.
- He did not feel like explaining, so he said gently: "Let's leave the
- literature till another time. All I meant was, Veesey will be safe
- when she's cued into this mouse. The mouse will outlast her and
- everybody else, and no teen-age girl is going to forget Marcia and the
- Moon Men. Not when she saw every single episode twice over. This girl
- did."
- "She's not going to render the other passengers ineffectual?
- That wouldn't help," said the first technician.
- "Not a bit," said Tiga-be las
- "Give me those strengths again," said the first technician.
- "Mouse one-third millisecond at forty megadynes."
- "They'll hear that way beyond the moon," said the technician.
- "You can't put that sort of stuff into people's heads without a permit.
- Do you want us to get a special permit from the Instrumentality?"
- "For one-third of a millisecond?"
- The two men faced each other for a moment; then the technician began
- creasing his forehead, his mouth began to smile, and they both laughed.
- The second technician did not understand it and Tiga-be las said to
- him: "I'm putting the girl's whole lifetime into one-third of a
- millisecond at top power. It will drain over into the mouse-brain
- inside this cube. What is the normal human reaction within one third
- millisecond?"
- "Fifteen milliseconds " The second technician started to speak and
- stopped himself.
- "That's right," said Tiga-be las
- "People don't get anything at all in less than fifteen milliseconds.
- This mouse isn't only veneered and laminated; he's fast. The
- lamination is faster than his own synapses ever were. Bring on the
- girl."
- The first technician had already gone to get her.
- The second technician turned back for one more question.
- "Is the mouse dead?"
- "No. Yes. Of course not. What do you mean? Who knows?"
- said Tiga-be las all in one breath.
- The younger man stared but the couch with the beautiful girl had
- already rolled into the room. Her skin had chilled down from pink to
- ivory and her respiration was no longer visible to the naked eye, but
- she was still beautiful. The deep freezing had not yet begun.
- The first technician began to whistle.
- "Mouse forty megadynes, one-third of a millisecond. Girl, output
- maximum, same time. Girl input, two minutes, what volume?"
- "Anything," said Tiga-be las
- "Anything. Whatever you use for deep personality engraving."
- "Set," said the technician.
- "Take the cube," said Tigabelas.
- The technician took it and fitted it into the coffin like box near the
- girl's head.
- "Good-bye, immortal mouse," said Tiga-be las
- "Think about the beautiful girl when I am dead and don't get too tired
- of Marc ia and the Moon Men when you've seen it for a million years . .
- ."
- "Record," said the second technician. He took it from Tigabelas and
- put it into a standard drama-shower, but one with output cables heavier
- than any home had ever installed.
- "Do you have a code word?" said the first technician.
- "It's a little poem," said Tiga-be las He reached in his pocket.
- "Don't read it aloud. If any of us mis spoke a word, there is a chance
- she might hear it and it would heterodyne the relationship between her
- and the laminated mouse."
- The two looked at a scrap of paper. In clear, archaic writing there
- appeared the lines: Lady if a man Tries to bother you, you can Think
- blue, Count two, And look for a red shoe.
- The technicians laughed warmly.
- "That'll do it," said the first technician.
- Tiga-be las gave them an embarrassed smile of thanks.
- "Turn them both on," he said.
- "Good-bye, girl," he murmured to himself.
- "Good-bye, mouse. Maybe I'll see you in seventy-four years."
- The room flashed with a kind of invisible light inside their heads.
- In moon orbit a navigator wondered about his mother's red shoes.
- Two million people on Earth started to count "one-two" and then
- wondered why they had done so.
- A bright young parakeet, in an orbital ship, began reciting the whole
- verse and baffled the crew as to what the meaning might be.
- Apart from this, there were no side-effects.
- The girl in the coffin arched her body with terrible strain. The
- electrodes had scorched the skin at her temples. The scars stood
- bright red against the chilled fresh skin of the girl.
- The cube showed no sign from the dead-live live-dead mouse.
- While the second technician put ointment on Veesey's scars, Tiga-be las
- put on a headset and touched the terminals of the cube very gently
- without moving it from the snap-in position it held in the
- coffin-shaped box.
- He nodded, satisfied. He stepped back.
- "You're sure the girl got it?"
- "We'll read it back before she goes to deep-freeze."
- "Marcia and the Moon Men, what?"
- "Can't miss it," said the first technician.
- "I'll let you know if there's anything missing. There won't be."
- Tiga-be las took one last look at the lovely, lovely girl.
- Seventy-three years, two months, three days, he thought to himself. And
- she, beyond Earth rules, may be awarded a thousand years. And the
- mouse-brain has got a million years.
- Veesey never knew any of them neither the first technician, nor the
- second technician, nor Tiga-be las the psychological guard.
- To the day of her death, she knew that Marcia and the Moon Men had
- included the most wonderful blue lights, the hypnotic count of
- "one-two, one-two" and the prettiest red shoes that any girl had seen
- on or off Earth.
- Three hundred and twenty-six years later she had to wake up.
- Her box had opened.
- Her body ached in every muscle and nerve.
- The ship was screaming emergency and she had to get up.
- She wanted to sleep, to sleep, or to die.
- The ship kept screaming.
- She had to get up.
- She lifted an arm to the edge of her coffin-bed. She had practiced
- getting in and out of the bed in the long training period before they
- sent her underground to be hypnotized and frozen. She knew just what
- to reach for, just what to expect. She pulled herself over on her
- side. She opened her eyes.
- The lights were yellow and strong. She closed her eyes again.
- This time a voice sounded from somewhere near her. It seemed to be
- saying,
- "Take the straw in your mouth."
- Veesey groaned.
- The voice kept on saying things.
- Something scratchy pressed against her mouth.
- She opened her eyes.
- The outline of a human head had come between her and the light.
- She squinted, trying to see if it might be one more of the doctors. No,
- this was the ship.
- The face came into focus.
- It was the face of a very handsome and very young man. His eyes looked
- into hers. She had never seen anyone who was both handsome and
- sympathetic, quite the way that he was. She tried to see him clearly,
- and found herself beginning to smile.
- The drinking-tube thrust past her lips and teeth.
- Automatically she sucked at it. The fluid was something like soup, but
- it had a medicinal taste too.
- The face had a voice.
- "Wake up," he said, "wake up. It doesn't do any good to hold back now.
- You need some exercise as soon as you can manage it."
- She let the tube slip from her mouth and gasped,
- "Who are you?"
- "Trece," he said, "and that's Talatashar over there. We've been up for
- two months, rescuing the robots. We need your help."
- "Help," she murmured, "my help?"
- Trece's face wrinkled and crinkled in a delightful grin.
- "Well, we sort of needed you. We really do need a third mind to watch
- the robots when we think we've fixed them. And besides, we're lonely.
- Talatashar and I aren't much company to each other. We looked over the
- list of reserve crew and we decided to wake you."
- He reached out a friendly hand to her.
- When she sat up she saw the other man, Talatashar. She immediately
- recoiled: she had never seen anyone so ugly. His hair was gray and
- cropped. Piggy little eyes peered out of eye-sockets which looked
- flooded with fat. His cheeks hung down in monstrous jowls on either
- side. On top of all that, his face was lopsided. One side seemed wide
- awake but the other was twisted in an endless spasm which looked like
- agony. She could not help putting her hand to her mouth. And it was
- with the back of her hand against her lips that she spoke.
- "I thought I thought everybody on this ship was supposed to be
- handsome."
- One side of Talatashar's face smiled at her while the other half stayed
- with its expression of frozen hurt.
- "We were," his voice rumbled, and it was not of itself an unpleasant
- voice, "we all were. Some of us always get spoiled in the freezing. It
- will take you a while to get used to me." He laughed grimly.
- "It took me a while to get used to me. In two months, I've managed.
- Pleased to meet you. Maybe you'll be pleased to meet me, after a
- while. What do you think of that, eh, Trece?"
- "What?" said Trece, who had watched them both with friendly worry.
- "The girl. So tactful. The direct diplomacy of the very young.
- Was I handsome, she said. No, say I. What is she, anyhow?"
- Trece turned to her.
- "Let me help you sit," he said.
- She sat up on the edge of her box.
- Wordlessly he passed the skin of fluid to her with its drinking tube,
- and she went back to sucking her broth. Her eyes peered up at the two
- men like the eyes of a small child. They were as innocent and troubled
- as the eyes of a kitten which has met worry for the first time.
- "What are you?" said Trece.
- She took her lips away from the tube for a moment.
- "A girl,"
- she said.
- Half of Talatashar's face smiled a sophisticated smile. The other half
- moved a little with muscular drag, but expressed nothing.
- "We see that," said he, grimly.
- "He means," said Trece conciliatorily, "what have you been trained
- for?"
- She took her mouth away again.
- "Nothing," said she.
- The men laughed both of them. First, Trece laughed with all the evil
- in the world in his voice. Then Talatashar laughed, and he was too
- young to laugh his own way. His laughter, too, was cruel. There was
- something masculine, mysterious, threatening, and secret in it, as
- though he knew all about things which girls could find out only at the
- cost of pain and humiliation. He was as alien, for the moment, as men
- have always been from women: filled with secret motives and concealed
- desires, driven by bright sharp thoughts which women neither had nor
- wished to have.
- Perhaps more than his body had spoiled.
- There was nothing in Veesey's own life to make her fear that laugh, but
- the instinctive reaction of a million years of womanhood behind her was
- to disregard the evil, go on the alert for more trouble, and hope for
- the best at the moment. She knew, from books and tapes, all about sex.
- This laugh had nothing to do with babies or with love. There was
- contempt and power and cruelty in it the cruelty of men who are cruel
- merely because they are men. For an instant she hated both of them,
- but she was not alarmed enough to set off the trigger of the protective
- devices which the psychological guard had built into her mind itself.
- Instead, she looked down the cabin, ten meters long and four meters
- wide.
- This was home now, perhaps forever. There were sleepers somewhere,
- but she did not see their boxes. All she had was this small space and
- the two men Trece with his warm smile, his nice voice, his interesting
- gray-blue eyes; and Talatashar, with his ruined face. And their
- laughter. That wretchedly mysterious masculine laughter, hostile and
- laughing-at in its undertones.
- Life's life, she thought, and I must live it. Here. Talatashar, who
- had finished laughing, now spoke in a very different voice.
- "There will be time for the fun and games later. First, we have to get
- the work done. The photonic sails aren't picking up enough starlight
- to get us anywhere. The mainsail is ripped by a meteor. We can't
- repair it, not when it's twenty miles across. So we have to jury-rig
- the ship that's the right old word."
- "How does it work?" asked Veesey sadly, not much interested in her own
- question. The aches and pains of the long freeze were beginning to
- bedevil her.
- Talatashar said,
- "It's simple. The sails are coated. We were put into orbit by
- rockets. The pressure of light is bigger on one side than on the
- other. With some pressure on one side and virtually no pressure on the
- other, the ship has to go somewhere.
- Interstellar matter is very fine and does not give us enough drag to
- slow us down. The sails pull away from the brightest source of light
- at any time. For the first eighty years it was the sun. Then we began
- trying to get both the sun and some bright patches of light behind it.
- Now we have more light coming at us than we want, and we will be pulled
- away from our destination if we do not point the blind side of the
- sails at the goal and the pushing sides at the next best source. The
- sailor died, for some reason we can't figure out. The ship's automatic
- mechanism woke us up and the navigation board explained the situation
- to us. Here we are.
- We have to fix the robots."
- "But what's the matter with them? Why don't they do it themselves? Why
- did they have to wake up people? They're supposed to be so smart." She
- particularly wondered, Why did they have to wake up me, But she
- suspected the answer that the men had done it, not the robots and she
- did not want to make them say it. She still remembered how their
- masculine laughter had turned ugly.
- "The robots weren't programmed to tear up sails only to fix them. We've
- got to condition them to accept the damage that we want to leave, and
- to go ahead with the new work which we are adding." "Could I have
- something to eat?" asked Veesey.
- "Let me get it!" cried Trece.
- "Why not?" said Talatashar.
- of Man While she ate, they went over the proposed work in detail, the
- three of them talking it out calmly. Veesey felt more relaxed. She
- had the sensation that they were taking her in as a partner.
- By the time they completed their work schedules, they were sure it
- would take between thirty-five and forty-two normal days to get the
- sails stiffened and re-hung. The robots did the outside work, but the
- sails were seventy thousand miles long by twenty thousand miles wide.
- Forty-two days!
- The work was not forty-two days at all.
- It was one year and three days before they finished.
- The relationships in the cabin had not changed much.
- Talatashar left her alone except to make ugly remarks. Nothing he had
- found in the medicine cabinet had made him look any better, but some of
- the things drugged him so that he slept long and well.
- Trece had long since become her sweetheart, but it was such an innocent
- romance that it might have been conducted on grass, under elms, at the
- edge of an Earthside silky river.
- Once she had found them fighting and had exclaimed: "Stop it! Stop it!
- You can't!"
- When they did stop hitting each other, she said wonderingly: "I thought
- you couldn't. Those boxes. Those safeguards. Those things they put
- in with us."
- And Talatashar said, in a voice of infinite ugliness and finality,
- "That's what they thought. I threw those things out of the ship months
- ago. Don't want them around."
- The effect on Trece was dramatic, as bad as if he had walked into one
- of the Ancient Unselfing Grounds unaware. He stood utterly still, his
- eyes wide and his voice filled with fear when, at last, he did speak.
- "So that's why we fought!"
- "You mean the boxes? They're gone, all right."
- "But," gasped Trece, "each was protected by each one's box.
- We were all protected from ourselves. God help us all!"
- "What is God?" said Talatashar.
- "Never mind. It's an old word. I heard it from a robot. But what are
- we going to do? What are you going to do?" said he accusingly to
- Talatashar.
- "Me," said Talatashar,
- "I'm doing nothing. Nothing has happened." The working side of his
- face twisted in a hideous smile.
- Veesey watched both of them.
- She did not understand it, but she feared it, that unspecific danger.
- Talatashar gave them his ugly, masculine laugh, but this time Trece did
- not join him. He stared open-mouthed at the other man.
- Talatashar put on a show of courage and indifference.
- "Shift's up," he said, "and I'm turning in."
- Veesey nodded and tried to say good night but no words came. She was
- frightened and inquisitive. Of the two, feeling inquisitive was worse.
- There were thirty odd thousand people all around her, but only these
- two were alive and present. They knew something which she did not
- know.
- Talatashar made a brave show of it by bidding her, "Mix up something
- special for the big eating tomorrow.
- Mind you do it, girl." He climbed into the wall.
- When Veesey turned toward Trece, it was he who fell into her arms.
- "J'm frightened," he said.
- "We can face anything in space, but we can't face us. I'm beginning to
- think that the sailor killed himself. His psychoiogicalguardbroke down
- too. And now we 'real] alone with just us. " Veesey looked
- instinctively around the cabin.
- "It's all the same as before. Just the three of us, and this little
- room, and the Up-and-Out outside."
- "Don't you see it, darling?" He grabbed her by the shoulders.
- "The little boxes protected us from ourselves.
- And now there aren't any. We are helpless. There isn't anything here
- to protect us from us. What hurts man like man? What kills people
- like people? What danger to us could be more terrible than
- ourselves?"
- She tried to pull away.
- "It's not that bad."
- Without answering he pulled her to him. He began tearing at her
- clothes. The jacket and shorts, like his own, were omni-textile and
- fitted tight. She fought him off but she was not the least bit
- frightened. She was sorry for him, and at this moment the only thing
- that worried her was that Talatashar might wake up and try to help her.
- That would be too much. Trece was not hard to stop.
- She got him to sit down and they drifted into the big chair together.
- His face was as tear-stained as her own. That night, they did not make
- love.
- In whispers, in gasps, he told her the story of Old Twentytwo. He told
- her that people poured out among the stars and that the ancient things
- inside people woke up, so that the deeps of their minds were more
- terrible than the blackest depth of space. Space never committed
- crimes. It just killed. Nature could transmit death, but only man
- could carry crime from world to world. Without the boxes, they looked
- into the bottomless depths of their own unknown selves.
- She did not really understand, but she tried as well as she possibly
- could.
- He went to sleep it was long after his shift should have ended
- murmuring over and over again:
- "Veesey, Veesey, protect me from me! What can I do now, now, now, so
- that I won't do something terrible later on? What can I do? Now I'm
- afraid of me, Veesey, and afraid of Old Twentytwo. Veesey, Veesey,
- you've got to save me from me. What can I do now, now, now ... ?"
- She had no answer and after he slept, she slept. The yellow lights
- burned brightly on them both. The robot-board, reading that no human
- being was in the "on" position, assumed complete control of the ship
- and sails.
- Talatashar woke them in the morning.
- No one that day, nor any of the succeeding days, said anything about
- the boxes. There was nothing to say.
- But the two men watched each other like unrelated beasts and Veesey
- herself began watching them in turn. Something wrong and vital had
- come into the room, some exuberance of life which she had never known
- existed. It did not smell; she could not see it; she could not reach
- it with her fingers. It was something real, nevertheless. Perhaps it
- was what people once called danger.
- She tried to be particularly friendly to both the men. It made the
- feeling diminish within her. But Trece became surly and jealous and
- Talatashar smiled his untruthful lopsided smile.
- IV
- Danger came to them by surprise.
- Talatashar's hands were on her, pulling her out of her own
- sleeping-box.
- She tried to fight but he was as remorseless as an engine.
- He pulled her free, turned her around, and let her float in the air.
- She would not touch the floor for a minute or two, and he obviously
- counted on getting control of her again. As she twisted in the air,
- wondering what had happened, she saw Trece's eyes rolling as they
- followed her movement. Only a fraction of a second later did she
- realize that she saw Trece too. He was tied up with emergency wire,
- and the wire which bound him was tied to one of the stanchions in the
- wall. He was more helpless than she.
- A cold deep fear came upon her.
- "Is this a crime?" she whispered to the empty air.
- "Is this what crime is, what you are doing to me?"
- Talatashar did not answer her, but his hands took a firm terrible grip
- on her shoulders. He turned her around. She slapped at him. He
- slapped her back, hitting so hard that her jaw felt like a wound.
- She had hurt herself accidentally a few times; the doctor robots had
- always hurried to her aid. But no other human being had ever hurt
- her. Hurting people why, that wasn't done, except for the games of
- men! It wasn't done. It couldn't happen. It did.
- All in a rush she remembered what Trece had told her about Old
- Twenty-two, and about what happened to people when they lost their own
- out sides in space and began making up evil from the people-insides
- which, after a million and more years of becoming human, still followed
- them everywhere even into space itself.
- This was crime come back to man.
- She managed to say it to Talatashar.
- "You are going to commit crimes? On this ship? With me?"
- His expression was hard to read, with half of his face frozen in a
- perpetual rictus of unfulfilled laughter. They were facing each other
- now. Her face was feverish from the pain of his slap, but the good
- side of his face showed no corresponding imprint of pain from having
- been struck by her. It showed nothing but strength, alertness, and a
- kind of attunement which was utterly and unimaginably wrong.
- At last he answered her, and it was as if he wandered among the wonders
- of his own soul.
- "I'm going to do what I please. What I please. Do you understand?"
- "Why don't you just ask us?" she managed to say.
- "Trece and I will do anything you want. We're all alone in this little
- ship, millions of miles from nowhere. Why shouldn't we do what you
- want? Let him go. And talk to me. We'll do what you want.
- Anything. You have rights too."
- His laugh was close to a crazy scream.
- He put his face close to her and hissed at her so sharply that droplets
- of his spittle sprayed against her cheek and ear.
- "I don't want rights!" he shouted at her.
- "I don't want what's mine. I don't want to do right. Do you think I
- haven't heard the two of you, night after night, making soft loving
- sounds when the cabin has gone dark? Why do you think I threw the
- cubes out of the ship? Why do you think I needed power?"
- "I don't know," she said, sadly and meekly. She had not given up hope.
- As long as he was talking he might talk himself out and become
- reasonable again. She had heard of robots blowing their circuits, so
- that they had to be hunted down by other robots. But she had never
- thought that it might happen to people too.
- Talatashar groaned. The history of man was in his groan the anger at
- life, which promises so much and gives so little, and despair about
- time, which tricks man while it shapes him. He sat back on the air and
- let himself drift toward the floor of the cabin, where the magnetic
- carpeting drew the silky iron filaments in their clothing.
- "You're thinking he'll get over this, aren't you?" said he, speaking
- of himself.
- She nodded.
- "You're thinking he'll get reasonable and let both of us alone, aren't
- you?"
- She nodded again.
- "You're thinking Talatashar, he'll get well when we arrive at Wereld
- Schemering, and the doctors will fix his face, and then we'll all be
- happy again. That's what you're thinking, isn't it?"
- She still nodded. Behind her she heard Trece give a loud groan against
- his gag, but she did not dare take her eyes off Talatashar and his
- spoiled, horrible face.
- "Well, it won't be that way, Veesey," he said. The finality in his
- voice was almost calm.
- "Veesey, you're not going to get there. I'm going to do what I have to
- do. I'm going to do things to you that no one ever did in space
- before, and then I'm going to throw your body out the disposal door.
- But I'll let Trece watch it all before I kill him too.
- And then, do you know what I'll do?"
- Some strange emotion it was probably fear began tightening the muscles
- in her throat. Her mouth had become dry.
- She barely managed to croak,
- "No, I don't know what you'll do then ..."
- Talatashar looked as though he were staring inward.
- "I don't either," said he, "except that it's not something I want to
- do. I don't want to do it at all. It's cruel and messy and when I get
- through I won't have you and him to talk to. But this is something I
- have to do. It's justice, in a strange way. You've got to die because
- you're bad. And I'm bad too; but if you die, I won't be so bad."
- He looked up at her brightly, almost as though he were normal.
- "Do you know what I'm talking about? Do you understand any of it?"
- "No. No. No," Veesey stammered, but she could not help it.
- Talatashar stared not at her but at the invisible face of his
- crime-to-come and said, almost cheerfully: "You might as well
- understand. It's you who will die for it, and then him. Long ago you
- did me a wrong, a dirty, intolerable wrong. It wasn't the you who's
- sitting here. You're not big enough or smart enough to do anything as
- awful as the things that were done to me. It wasn't this you who did
- it, it was the real, true you instead. And now you are going to be cut
- and burned and choked and brought back with medicines and cut and
- choked and hurt again, as long as your body can stand it. And when
- your body stops, I'm going to put on an emergency suit and shove your
- dead body out into space with him. He can go out alive, for all I
- care.
- Without a suit, he'll last two gasps. And then part of my justice will
- be done. That's
- what people have called crime. It's just justice, private justice
- that comes out of the deep insides of man. Do you understand,
- Veesey?"
- She nodded. She shook her head. She nodded again. She didn't know
- how to respond.
- "And then there are more things which I'll have to do," he went on,
- with a sort of purr.
- "Do you know what there is outside this ship, waiting for my crime?"
- She shook her head, and so he answered himself.
- "There are thirty thousand people following in their pods behind this
- ship. I'll pull them in by two and two and I will get young girls. The
- others I'll throw loose in space. And with the girls I'll find out
- what it is what it is I've always had to do, and never knew. Never
- knew, Veesey, till I found myself out in space with you."
- His voice almost went dreamy as he lost himself in his own thoughts.
- The twisted side of his face showed its endless laugh, but the mobile
- side looked thoughtful and melancholy, so that she felt there was
- something inside him which might be understood, if only she had the
- quickness and the imagination to think of it.
- Her throat still dry, she managed to half-whisper at him: "Do you hate
- me? Why do you want to hurt me? Do you hate girls?"
- "I don't hate girls," he blazed,
- "I hate me. Out here in space I found it out. You're not a person.
- Girls aren't people. They are soft and pretty and cute and cuddly and
- warm, but they have no feelings. I was handsome before my face
- spoiled, but that didn't matter. I always knew that girls weren't
- people. They're something like robots. They have all the power in the
- world and none of the worry. Men have to obey, men have to beg, men
- have to suffer, because they are built to suffer and to be sorry and to
- obey. All a girl has to do is to smile her pretty smile or to cross
- her pretty legs, and the man gives up everything he has ever wanted and
- fought for, just to be her slave. And then the girl" and at this point
- he got to screaming again, in a high shrill shout "and then the girl
- gets to be a woman and she has children, more girls to pester men, more
- men to be the victims of girls, more cruelty and more slaves. You're
- so cruel to me, Veesey! You're so cruel that you don't even know
- you're cruel. If you'd known how I wanted you, you'd have suffered
- like a person. But you didn't suffer.
- You're a girl. Well, you're going to find out now. You will suffer
- and then you will die. But you won't die until you know how men feel
- about women."
- "Tala," she said, using the nickname they had so rarely used to him,
- "Tala, that's not so. I never meant you to suffer."
- "Of course you didn't," he snapped.
- "Girls don't know what they do. That's what makes them girls. They're
- worse than snakes, worse than machines." He was mad, crazy-mad, in the
- outer deep of space. He stood
- up so suddenly that he shot through the air and had to catch himself
- on the ceiling.
- A noise in the side of the cabin made them both turn for a moment.
- Trece was trying to break loose from his bonds. It did no good. Veesey
- flung herself toward Trece, but Talatashar caught her by the shoulder.
- He twisted her around. His eyes blazed at her out of his poor,
- misshapen face.
- Veesey had sometime wondered what death would be like.
- She thought: This is it.
- Her body still fought Talatashar, there in the space boat cabin.
- Trece groaned behind his shackles and his gag. She tried to scratch at
- Talatashar's eyes, but the thought of death made her seem far away. Far
- away, inside herself.
- Inside herself, where other people could not reach, ever no matter what
- happened.
- Out of that deep nearby remoteness, words came into her head: Lady if a
- man Tries to bother you, you can Think blue, Count two, And look for a
- red shoe . . .
- Thinking blue was not hard. She just imagined the yellow cabin lights
- turning blue. Counting "one-two" was the simplest thing in the world.
- And even with Talatashar straining to catch her free hand, she managed
- to remember the beautiful, beautiful red shoes which she had seen in
- Marcia and the Moon Men.
- The lights dimmed momentarily and a huge voice roared at them from the
- control board.
- "Emergency, top emergency! People! People out of repair!"
- Talatashar was so astonished that he let her go.
- The board whined at them like a siren. It sounded as though the
- computer had become flooded with weeping.
- In an utterly different voice from his impassioned talkative rage,
- Talatashar looked directly at her and asked, very soberly, "Your cube.
- Didn't I get your cube too?"
- There was a knocking on the wall. A knocking from the millions of
- miles of emptiness outside. A knocking out of nowhere.
- A person they had never seen before stepped into the ship, walking
- through the double wall as though it had been nothing more than a
- streamer of mist.
- It was a man. A middle-aged man, sharp of face, strong in torso and
- limbs, clad in very old-style clothes. In his belt he had a whole
- collection of weapons, and in his hand a whip.
- "You there," said the stranger to Talatashar, "untie that man."
- He gestured with the whip-butt toward Trece, still bound and gagged.
- Talatashar got over his surprise.
- "You're a cube-ghost. You're not real!"
- The whip hissed in the air and a long red welt appeared on Talatashar's
- wrist. The drops of blood began to float beside him in the air before
- he could speak again.
- Veesey could say nothing; her mind and body seemed to be blanking
- out.
- As she sank to the floor, she saw Talatashar shake himself, walk over
- to Trece, and begin untying the knots.
- When Talatashar got the gag out of Trece's mouth, Trece spoke not to
- him, but to the stranger: "Who are you?"
- "I do not exist," said the stranger, "but I can kill you, any of you,
- if I wish. You had better do as I say. Listen carefully. You too,"
- he added, turning halfway around and looking at Veesey.
- "You listen too, because it's you who called me."
- All three listened. The fight was gone out of them. Trece rubbed his
- wrists and shook his hands to get the circulation going in them
- again.
- The stranger turned, in courtly and elegant fashion, so that he spoke
- most directly to Talatashar.
- "I derive from the young lady's cube. Did you notice the lights dim?
- Tiga-be las left a false cube in her freeze-box but he hid me in the
- ship. When she thought the key notions at me, there was a fraction of
- a microvolt which called for more power at my terminals. I am made
- from the brain of some small animal, but I bear the personality and the
- strength of Tiga-be las I shall last a billion years. When the current
- came on full power, I became operative as a distortion in your minds.
- I do not exist," said he, specifically addressing himself to
- Talatashar, "but if I needed to take out my imaginary pistol and to
- shoot you in the head with it, my control is so strong that your bone
- would comply with my command. The hole would appear in your head and
- your blood and your brains would pour out, just as much as blood is
- pouring from your hand just now. Look at your hand and believe me, if
- you wish."
- Talatashar refused to look.
- The stranger went on in a very deliberate tone.
- "No bullet would come from my pistol, no ray, no blast, nothing.
- Nothing at all. But your flesh would believe me, even if your thoughts
- did not. Your bone structure would believe me, whether you thought so
- or not. I am communicating to
- every separate single cell in your body, to everything which I feel to
- be alive. If I think bullet at you, your bone will pull aside for the
- imaginary wound. Your skin will part, your blood will pour out, your
- brains will splash. They will not do it by physical force but by
- communication from me. Communication direct, you fool.
- That may not be real violence, but it serves my purpose just as well.
- Now do you understand me? Look at your wrist."
- Talatashar did not avert his eyes from the stranger. In an odd cold
- voice he said,
- "I believe you. I guess I am crazy. Are you going to kill me?"
- "I don't know," said the stranger.
- Trece said,
- "Please, are you a person or machine?"
- "I don't know," said the stranger to him too.
- "What's your name?" asked Veesey.
- "Did you get a name when they made you and sent you with us?"
- "My name," said the stranger, with a bow to her, "is Sh'san."
- "Glad to meet you, Sh'san," said Trece, holding out his own hand.
- They shook hands.
- "I felt your hand," said Trece. He looked at the other two in
- amazement.
- "I felt his hand, I really did. What were you doing out in space all
- this time?"
- The stranger smiled.
- "I have work to do, not talk to make."
- "What do you want us to do," said Talatashar, "now that you've taken
- over?"
- "I haven't taken over," said Sh'san, "and you will do what you have to
- do. Isn't that the nature of people?"
- "But, please " said Veesey.
- The stranger had vanished and the three of them were alone in the space
- boat cabin again. Trece's gag and bindings had finally drifted down to
- the carpet but Tala's blood hung gently in the air beside him.
- Very heavily, Talatashar spoke.
- "Well, we're through that.
- Would you say I was crazy?"
- "Crazy?" said Veesey.
- "I don't know the word."
- "Damaged in the thinking," explained Trece to her. Turning to
- Talatashar he began to speak seriously.
- "I think that " He was interrupted by the control board. Little bells
- rang and a sign lighted up. They all saw it. Visitors expected, said
- the glowing sign.
- The storage door opened and a beautiful woman came into the cabin with
- them. She looked at them as though she knew them all.
- Veesey and Trece were inquisitive and startled, but Talatashar turned
- white, dead white.
- Veesey saw that the woman wore a dress of the style which had vanished
- a generation ago a style now seen only in the story-boxes. There was
- no back to it. The lady had a bold cosmetic design fanning out from
- her spinal column. In front, the dress hung from the usual magnet tabs
- which had been inserted into the shallow fatty area of the chest, but
- in her case the tabs were above the clavicles, so that the dress rose
- high, with an air of old-fashioned prudishness. Magnet tabs were at
- the usual place just below the ribcage, holding the half-skirt, which
- was very full, in a wide sweep of unpressed pleats. The lady wore a
- necklace and matching bracelet of off-world coral.
- The lady did not even look at Veesey. She went straight to Talatashar
- and spoke to him with peremptory love.
- "Tal, be a good boy. You've been bad." "Mama," gasped Talatashar.
- "Mama, you're dead!" "Don't argue with me," she snapped.
- "Be a good boy. Take care of the little girl. Where is the little
- girl?"
- She looked around and saw Veesey.
- "That little girl," she added, "be a good boy to that little girl. If
- you don't, you will break your mother's heart, you will ruin your
- mother's life, you will break your mother's heart, just like your
- father did. Don't make me tell you twice."
- She leaned over and kissed him on the forehead, and it seemed to Veesey
- that both sides of the man's face were equally twisted, for that
- moment.
- She stood up, looked around, nodded politely at Trece and Veesey, and
- walked back into the storage room, closing the door after her.
- Talatashar plunged after her, opening the door with a bang and shutting
- it with a slam. Trece called after him: "Don't stay in there too long.
- You'll freeze."
- Trece added, speaking to Veesey,
- "This is something your cube is doing. That Sh'san, he's the most
- powerful warden I ever saw. Your psychological guard must have been a
- genius. And you know what's the matter with him]" He nodded at the
- closed door.
- "He told me once, just in general. His own mother raised him. He was
- born in the asteroid belt and she didn't turn him in."
- "You mean, his very own mother?" said Veesey.
- "Yes, his genealogical mother," said Trece.
- "How dirty" said Veesey.
- "I
- never heard of anything like it." Talatashar came back into the room
- and said nothing to either of them. The mother did not reappear.
- But Sh'san, the eidetic man imprinted in the cube, continued to assert
- his authority over all three of them.
- of Man * * * Three days later Marcia herself appeared, talked to
- Veesey for half an hour about her adventures with the Moon Men, and
- then disappeared again. Marcia never pretended that she was real. She
- was too pretty to be real. A thick cascade of yellow hair crowned a
- well-formed head; dark eyebrows arched over vivid brown eyes; and an
- enchantingly mischievous smile pleased Veesey, Trece, and Talatashar.
- Marcia admitted that she was the imaginary heroine of a dramatic series
- from the story-boxes. Talatashar had calmed down completely after the
- apparition of Sh'san followed by that of his mother. He seemed anxious
- to get to the bottom of the phenomena. He tried to do it by asking
- Marcia.
- She answered his questions willingly.
- "What are you?" he demanded. The friendly smile on the good side of
- his face was more frightening than a scowl would have been.
- "I'm a little girl, silly," said Marcia.
- "But you're not real," he insisted.
- "No," she admitted, "but are you?" She laughed a happy girlish laugh
- the teen-ager tying up the bewildered adult in his own paradox.
- "Look," he persisted, "you know what I mean. You're just something
- that Veesey saw in the story-boxes and you've come to give her
- imaginary red shoes."
- "You can feel the shoes after I've left," said Marcia.
- "That means the cube has made them out of something on this ship," said
- Talatashar, very triumphantly.
- "Why not?" said Marcia.
- "I don't know about ships. I guess he does."
- "But even if the shoes are real, you're not," said Talatashar.
- "Where do you go when you 'leave' us?"
- "I don't know," said Marcia.
- "I came here to visit Veesey.
- When I go away I suppose that I will be where I was before I came."
- "And where was that?"
- "Nowhere," said Marcia, looking solid and real.
- "Nowhere? So you admit you're nothing?"
- "I will if you want me to," said Marcia, "but this conversation doesn't
- make much sense to me. Where were you before you were here?"
- "Here? You mean in this boat? I was on Earth," said Talatashar.
- "Before you were in this universe, where were you?"
- "I wasn't born, so I didn't exist."
- "Well," said Marcia, "it's the same with me, only a little bit
- different. Before I existed I didn't exist. When I exist, I'm here.
- I'm an echo out of Veesey's personality and I'm helping her to remember
- that she is a pretty young girl. I feel as real as you feel.
- So there!"
- Marcia went back to talking about her adventures with the Moon Men
- and Veesey was fascinated to hear all the things they had had to leave
- out of the story-box version. When Marcia was through, she shook hands
- with the two men, gave Veesey a little peck of a kiss on her left
- cheek, and walked through the hull into the gnawing emptiness of space,
- marked only by the starless rhomboids of the sails which cut off part
- of the heavens from view.
- Talatashar pounded his fist in his other, open hand.
- "Science has gone too far. They will kill us with their
- precautions."
- Trece said, deadly calm,
- "And what might you have done?"
- Talatashar fell into a gloomy silence.
- And on the tenth day after the apparitions began, they ended.
- The power of the cube drew itself into a whole thunderbolt of decision.
- Apparently the cube and the ship's computers had somehow filled in each
- other's data.
- The person who came in this time was a space captain, gray, wrinkled,
- erect, tanned by the radiation of a thousand worlds.
- "You know who I am," he said.
- "Yes, sir, a captain," said Veesey.
- "I don't know you," said Talatashar, "and I'm not sure I believe in
- you."
- "Has your hand healed?" asked the captain, grimly.
- Talatashar fell silent.
- The captain called them to attention.
- "Listen. You are not going to live long enough to get to the stars on
- your present course. I want Trece to set the macro-chronography for
- intervals of ninety-five years, and then I want to watch while he gives
- two of you at a time five years on watch. That will do to set the
- sails, check the tangling of the pod lines, and send out report
- beacons.
- This ship should have a sailor, but there is not enough equipment to
- turn one of you into a sailor, so we'll have to take a chance on the
- robot controls while all three of you sleep in your freeze-beds.
- Your sailor died of a blood clot and the robots pushed him out of the
- cabin before they woke you " Trece winced.
- "I thought he had committed suicide."
- "Not a bit," said the captain.
- "Now listen. You'll get through in about three sleeps if you obey
- orders. If you don't, you'll never get there."
- "It doesn't matter about me," said Talatashar, "but this little girl
- has got to get to Wereld Schemering while she still has some life. One
- of your blasted apparitions told me to take care of her, but the idea
- is a good one, anyhow."
- "Me too," said Trece.
- "I didn't realize that she was just a kid until I saw her talking to
- that other kid Marcia. Maybe I'll have a daughter like her some
- day."
- of Man The captain said nothing to these comments but gave them the
- full, happy smile of an old, wise man.
- An hour later they were through with the checkup of the boat.
- The three were ready to go to their separate freeze-beds. The captain
- was getting ready to make his farewell.
- Talatashar spoke up.
- "Sir, I can't help asking it, but who are you?"
- "A captain," said the captain promptly.
- "You know what I mean," said Tala wearily.
- The captain seemed to be looking inside himself.
- "I am a temporary, artificial personality created out of your minds by
- the personality which you call Sh'san. Sh'san is on the ship, but
- hidden from you, so that you will do him no harm. Sh'san was imprinted
- with the personality of a man, a real man, by the name ofTiga-be las
- Sh'san was also imprinted with the personalities of five or six good
- space officers, just in case those skills might be needed. A small
- amount of static electricity keeps Sh'san on the alert, and when he is
- in the right position, he has a triggering mechanism which can call for
- more current from the ship's supply."
- "But what is he? What are you?" Talatashar kept on, almost
- pleading.
- "I was about to commit a terrible crime and you ghosts came in and
- saved me. Are you imaginary? Are you real?"
- "That's philosophy. I'm made by science. I wouldn't know,"
- said the captain.
- "Please," said Veesey, "could you tell us what it seems like to you?
- Not what it is. What it seems like."
- The captain sagged, as though the discipline had gone out of him as
- though he suddenly felt terribly old.
- "When I'm talking and doing things, I suppose that I feel about like
- any other space captain. If I stop to think about it, I find myself
- pretty upsetting.
- I know that I'm just an echo in your minds, combined with the
- experience and wisdom which has gone into the cube. So I guess that I
- do what real people do. I just don't think about it very much.
- I mind my business." He stiffened and straightened and was himself
- again.
- "My own business," he repeated.
- "And Sh'san," said Trece, "how do you feel about him?"
- A look of awe almost a look of terror came upon the captain's face.
- "He? Oh, him." The tone of wonder enriched his voice and made it echo
- in the small cabin of the space boat
- "Sh'san. He is the thinker of all thinking, the 'to be' of being, the
- doer of doings. He is powerful beyond your strongest imagination.
- He makes me come living out of your living minds. In fact," said the
- captain with a final snarl, "he is a dead mouse-brain laminated with
- plastic and I have no idea at all of who I am. Good night to you
- all!"
- The captain set his cap on his head and walked straight through the
- Think Blue, Count Two 153 hull. Veesey ran to a viewpoint but there
- was nothing outside the ship. Nothing. Certainly no captain.
- "What can we do," said Talatashar, "but obey?"
- They obeyed. They climbed into their freeze-beds. Talatashar attached
- the correct electrodes to Veesey and to Trece before he went to his bed
- and attached his own. They called to each other pleasantly as the lids
- came down.
- They slept.
- VI
- At destination, the people of Wereld Schemering did the in gathering of
- pods, sails, and ship themselves. They did not wake the sleepers till
- they had them all assured of safety on the ground.
- They woke the three cab inmates together. Veesey, Trece, and
- Talatashar were so busy answering questions about the dead sailor,
- about the repaired sails, and about their problems on the trip that
- they did not have time to talk to each other. Veesey saw that
- Talatashar seemed to be very handsome. The port doctors had done
- something to restore his face, so that he seemed a strangely dignified
- young-old man. At last Trece had a chance to talk to her.
- "Good-bye, kid," he said.
- "Go to school for a while here and then find yourself a good man. I'm
- sorry."
- "Sorry for what?" she said, a terrible fear rising within her.
- "For smooching around with you before that trouble came.
- You're just a kid. But you're a good kid." He ran his fingers through
- her hair, turned on his heel, and was gone.
- She stood, utterly forlorn, in the middle of the room. She wished that
- she could weep. What use had she been on the trip?
- Talatashar had come up to her unnoticed.
- He held out his hand. She took it.
- "Give it time, child," said he.
- Is it child again? she thought to herself. To him she said,
- politely,
- "Maybe we'll see each other again. This is a pretty small world."
- His face lit up in an oddly agreeable smile. It made such a wonderful
- difference for the paralysis to be gone from one side.
- He did not look old at all, not really old.
- His voice took on urgency.
- "Veesey, remember that I remember. I remember what almost happened. I
- remember what we thought we saw. Maybe we did see all those things. We
- won't see them on the ground. But I want you to remember this. You
- saved us all. Me too. And Trece, and the thirty thousand out
- behind."
- "Me?" she said.
- "What did I do?"
- "You tuned in help. You let Sh'san work. It all came through you. If
- you hadn't been honest and kind and friendly, if you hadn't been
- terribly intelligent, no cube could have worked. That wasn't any dead
- mouse working miracles on us. It was your mind and your own goodness
- that saved us. The cube just added the sound effects. I tell you, if
- you hadn't been along, two dead men would be sailing off into the Big
- Nothing with thirty thousand spoiling bodies trailing along behind. You
- saved us all. You may not know how you did it, but you did."
- An official tapped him on the arm; Tala said, firmly but politely, to
- him,
- "Just a moment."
- "That's it, I guess," he said to her.
- A contrary spirit seized her; she had to speak, though she risked
- un-happiness by talking.
- "And what you said about girls .
- . . then . . . that time?"
- "I remember it." His face twisted almost back to its old ugliness for
- a moment.
- "I remember it. But I was wrong. Wrong."
- She looked at him and she thought in her own mind about the blue sky,
- about the two doors behind them, and about the red shoes in her
- luggage. Nothing miraculous happened. No Sh'san, no voices, no magic
- cubes.
- Except that he turned around, came back to her, and said, "Look. Let's
- make sure that we see each other next week. These people at the desk
- can tell us where we are going to be, so that we'll find each other.
- Let's pester them."
- Together they went to the immigration desk.
- The Colonel Came Back from the Nothing-at All I. The Naked and Alone
- We looked through the peephole of the hospital door.
- Colonel Harkening had torn off his pajamas again and lay naked face
- down on the floor.
- His body was rigid.
- His face was turned sharply to the left so that the neck muscles
- showed. His right arm stuck out straight from the body.
- The elbow formed a right angle, with the forearm and hand pointing
- straight upward. The left arm also pointed straight out, but in this
- case the hand and forearm pointed downward in line with the body.
- The legs were in the grotesque parody of a running position.
- Except that Colonel Harkening wasn't running.
- He was lying flat on the floor.
- Flat, as though he were trying to squeeze himself out of the third
- dimension and to lie in two planes only. Grosbeck stood back and gave
- Timofeyev his turn at the peephole.
- "I still say he needs a naked woman," said Grosbeck.
- Grosbeck always went in for the elementals.
- We had atropine, surgital, a whole family of the digitalin ids assorted
- narcotics, electrotherapy, hydrotherapy, subsonic therapy temperature
- shock, audiovisual shock, mechanical hypnosis, and gas hypnosis.
- None of these had had the least effect on Colonel Harkening.
- When we picked the colonel up he tried to lie down.
- When we put clothes on him he tore them off.
- We had already brought his wife to see him. She had wept because the
- world had acclaimed her husband a hero, dead in the vast, frightening
- emptiness of space. His miraculous return had astonished seven
- continents on Earth and the settlements on Venus and Mars.
- Harkening had been test pilot for the new device which had been
- developed by a team at the Research Office of the Instrumentality.
- of Man They called it a chronoplast, though a minority held out for
- the term plano form
- The theory of it was completely beyond me, though the purpose was
- simple enough. Crudely stated, the theory sought to compress living,
- material bodies into a two-dimensional frame while skipping the living
- body and its material adjuncts through two dimensions only to some
- inconceivably remote point in space.
- As our technology now stood it would have taken us a century at the
- least to reach Alpha Centauri, the nearest star.
- Desmond, the Harkening, who held the titular rank of colonel under the
- Chiefs of the Instrumentality, was one of the best space navigators we
- had. His eyes were perfect, his mind cool, his body superb, his
- experience first-rate: What more could we ask?
- Humanity had sent him out in a minute spaceship not much larger than
- the elevator in an ordinary private home. Somewhere between Earth and
- the Moon with millions of televideo watchers following his course, he
- had disappeared.
- Presumably he had turned on the chronoplast and had been the first man
- to plano form
- We never saw his craft again.
- But we found the colonel, all right.
- He lay naked in the middle of Central Park in New York, which lay about
- a hundred miles west of the Ancient Ruins.
- He lay in the grotesque position in which we had just observed him in
- the hospital cell, forming a sort of human starfish.
- Four months had passed and we had made very little progress with the
- colonel.
- It was not much trouble keeping him alive since we fed him by massive
- rectal and intravenous administrations of the requisites of medical
- survival. He did not oppose us. He did not fight except when we put
- clothes on him or tried to keep him too long out of the horizontal
- plane.
- When kept upright too long he would awaken just enough to go into a
- mad, silent, gloating rage, fighting the attendants, the straitjacket,
- and anything else that got in his way.
- We had had one hellish time in which the poor man suffered for an
- entire week, bound firmly in canvas and struggling every minute of the
- week to get free and to resume his nightmarish position.
- The wife's visit last week had done no more good than I expected
- Grosbeck's suggestion to do this week.
- The colonel paid no more attention to her than he paid to us doctors.
- If he had come back from the stars, come back from the cold beyond the
- Moon, come back from all the terrors of the Up-and Out come back by
- means unknown to any man living, come back in a form not himself and
- nevertheless himself, how could we expect the crude stimuli of
- previous human knowledge to awaken him?
- When Timofeyev and Grosbeck turned back to me after looking at him for
- the some-thousandth time, I told them I did not think we could make any
- progress with the case by ordinary means.
- "Let's start all over again. This man is here. He can't be here
- because nobody can come back from the stars, mother-naked in his own
- skin, and land from outer space in Central Park so gently that he shows
- not the slightest abrasion from a fall. Therefore, he isn't in that
- room, you and I aren't talking about anything, and there isn't any
- problem. Is that right?"
- "No," they chorused simultaneously.
- I turned on Grosbeck as the more obdurate of the two.
- "Have it your way then. He is there, major premise. He can't be
- there, minor premise. We don't exist. Q.E.D. That suit you any
- better?"
- "No, sir and doctor. Chief and Leader," said Grosbeck, sticking to the
- courtesies even though he was angry.
- "You are trying to destroy the entire context of this case, and, by
- doing so, are trying to lead us even further into unorthodox methods of
- treatment. Lord and Heaven, sir! We can't go any further that way.
- This man is crazy. It doesn't matter how he got into Central Park.
- That's a problem for the engineers. It's not a medical problem. His
- craziness is a medical problem. We can try to cure it, or we can try
- not to cure it. But we won't get anywhere if we mix the medicine with
- the engineering " "It's not that bad," interjected Timofeyev gently.
- As the older of my associates he had the right to address me by my
- short title. He turned to me.
- "I agree with you, sir and doctor Anderson, that the engineering is
- mixed up with this man's mental and physical state. After all, he is
- the first person to go out in a chronoplast and neither we nor the
- engineers nor anybody else has the faintest idea of what happened to
- him. The engineers can't find the machine, and we can't find his
- consciousness. Let's leave the machine to the engineers, but let's
- persevere on the medical side of the case."
- I said nothing, waiting for them to let off steam until they were
- prepared to reason with me and not just shout at me in their
- desperation.
- They looked at me, keeping their silence grudgingly, and trying to make
- me take the initiative in the unpleasant case.
- "Open the cell door," I said.
- "He's not going to run away in that position. All he wants to do is be
- flat."
- "Flatter than a Scotch pancake in a Chinese hell," said Grosbeck, "and
- you're not going to get anywhere by leaving him in his flatness. He
- was a human being once and the only way to make a human being be a
- human being is to appeal to the human being side of him, not to some
- imaginary flat side that got thrown into him while he was out wherever
- he was."
- Grosbeck himself smiled a lopsided grin; he was capable of seeing the
- humor of his own vehemence at times.
- "Shall we say he was out underneath space, sir and doctor, Chief and
- Leader?"
- "That's a good way to put it," I said.
- "You can try your naked woman idea later on, but I frankly don't think
- it's going to do any good. That man isn't corticating at a level above
- that of the simplest invertebrates except when he's in that grotesque
- position.
- If he's not thinking, he's not seeing. If he's not seeing, he won't
- see a woman any more than anything else. There's nothing wrong with
- the body. The trouble lies in the brain. I still see it as a problem
- of getting into the brain."
- "Or the soul," breathed Timofeyev, whose full name was Herbert Hoover
- Timofeyev, and who came from the most religious part of Russia.
- "You can't leave the soul out sometimes, doctor..
- ."
- We had entered the cell and stood there looking helplessly at the naked
- man.
- The patient breathed very quietly. His eyes were open; we had not been
- able to make the eyes blink, even with a photoflash. The patient
- acquired a grotesque and elementary humanity when he was taken out of
- his flat position. His mind reached, intellectually speaking, a high
- point no higher than that of a terrorized, panicked, momentarily
- deranged squirrel. When clothed or out of position he fought madly,
- hitting indiscriminately at objects and persons.
- Poor Colonel Harkening! We three were supposed to be the best doctors
- on Earth, and we could do nothing for him.
- We had even tried to study his way of fighting to see whether the
- muscular and eye movements involved in the struggle revealed where he
- had been or what experiences he had undergone. Even that was
- fruitless. He fought something after the fashion of a nine-month-old
- infant, using his adult strength, but using it indiscriminately.
- We never got a sound out of him.
- He breathed hard as he fought. His sputum bubbled. Froth appeared on
- his lips. His hands made clumsy movements to tear away the shirts and
- robes and walkers which we put on him.
- Sometimes his fingernails or toenails tore his own skin as he got free
- of gloves or shoes.
- He always went back to the same position: On the floor.
- Face down.
- Arms and legs in swastika form.
- There he was back from outer space. He was the first man to return,
- and yet he had not really returned.
- As we stood there helpless, Timofeyev made the first serious suggestion
- we had gotten that day.
- "Do you dare to try a secondary tele path
- Grosbeck looked shocked.
- I dared to give the subject thought. Secondary tele paths were in bad
- repute because they were supposed to come into the hospitals and have
- their telepathic capacities removed once it had been proved that they
- were not true tele paths with a real capacity for complete
- interchange.
- Under the Ancient Law many of them could and did elude us.
- With their dangerous part-telepathic capacities they took up
- charlatan-ism and fakery of the worst kind, pretending to talk with the
- dead, precipitating neurotics into psychotics, healing a few sick
- people and bungling ten other cases for each case that they did heal,
- and, in general, disturbing the good order of society.
- And yet, if everything else had failed . . .
- II. The Secondary Telepath A day later we were back in Harkening's
- hospital cell, almost in the same position.
- The three of us stood around the naked body on the floor.
- There was a fourth person with us, a girl.
- Timofeyev had found her. She was a member of his own religious group,
- the Post-Soviet Orthodox Eastern Quakers. You could tell when they
- spoke Anglic because they used the word "thou" from the Ancient English
- Language instead of the word "thee."
- Timofeyev looked at me.
- I nodded at him very quietly.
- He turned to the girl.
- "Canst thou help him, sister?"
- The child was scarcely more than twelve. She was a little girl with a
- long, lean face, a soft, mobile mouth, quick gray-green eyes, a mop of
- tan hair that fell over her shoulders. She had expressive, tapering
- hands. She showed no shock at all at the sight of the naked man lost
- in the depths of his insanity.
- She knelt down on the floor and spoke gently directly into the ear of
- Colonel Harkening.
- "Canst thou hear me, brother? I have come to help thee. I am thy
- sister Liana. I am thy sister under the love of God. I am thy sister
- born of the flesh of man. I am thy sister under the sky. I am thy
- sister come to help thee. I am thy sister, brother. I am thy sister.
- Waken a little and I can help thee. Waken a little to the words of thy
- sister. Waken a little for the love and the hope.
- Waken to let the love come in. Waken to let the love awaken thee
- further. Waken to let mankind get thee. Waken to return again,
- return
- again to the realm of man. The realm of man is a friendly realm.
- The friendship of man is a friendly thing. Thy friend is thy sister,
- by the name of Liana. Thy friend is here. Waken a little to the words
- of thy friend ..."
- As she talked on I saw that she made a gentle movement with her left
- hand, motioning us out of the room.
- I nodded to my two colleagues, jerking my head to indicate that we
- should step out in the corridor. We stepped just beyond the door so
- that we could still look in.
- The child went on with her endless chant.
- Grosbeck stood rigid, glaring at her as though she were an intrusion
- into the field of regular medicine. Timofeyev tried to look sweet,
- benevolent, and spiritual; he forgot and, instead, just looked excited.
- I got very tired and began to wonder when I could interrupt the child.
- It did not seem to me that she was getting anywhere.
- She herself settled the matter.
- She burst into tears.
- She went on talking as she wept, her voice broken with sobs, the tears
- from her eyes pouring down her cheeks and dropping on the face of the
- colonel just below her face.
- The colonel might as well have been made of porcelainized concrete.
- I could see his breathing, but the pupils of his eyes did not move. He
- was no more alive than he had been all these weeks. No more alive, and
- no less alive.
- No change. At last the girl gave up her weeping and talking and came
- out to the corridor to us.
- She spoke to me directly.
- "Art thou a brave man, Anderson, sir and doctor. Chief and Leader."
- It was a silly question. How does anybody answer a question like that?
- All I could say was
- "I suppose so. What do you want to do?"
- "I want you three," said she as solemnly as a witch.
- "I want you three to wear the helmet of the pin lighters and ride with
- me into hell itself. That soul is lost. It is frozen by a force I do
- not know, frozen out beyond the stars, where the stars caught it and
- made it their own, so that the poor man and brother that thou se est is
- truly among us, but his soul weeps in the unholy pleasure between the
- stars where it is lost to the mercy of God and to the friendship of
- mankind. Wilt thou, o brave man, sir and doctor, Chief and Leader,
- ride with me to hell itself?"
- What could I say but yes?
- The Colonel Came Back from the Nothing-at-All 161 III. The Return
- Late that night we made the return from the Nothing-at-All.
- There were five pin lighters helmets, crude things, mechanical
- correctives to natural telepathy, devices to throw the synapses of one
- mind into another so that all five of us could think the same
- thoughts.
- It was the first time that I had been in contact with the minds of
- Grosbeck and Timofeyev. They surprised me.
- Timofeyev really was clean all the way through, as clean and simple as
- washed linen. He was really a very simple man. The urgencies and
- pressures of his everyday life did not go down to the insides.
- Grosbeck was very different. He was as alive, as cackling, and as
- violent as a whole barnyard full of fowl: His mind was dirty in spots,
- clean in others. It was bright, smelly, alive, vivid, moving.
- I caught an echo of my own mind from them. To Timofeyev I seemed cold,
- high, icy, and mysterious; to Grosbeck I looked like a solid lump of
- coal. He couldn't see into my mind very much and he didn't even want
- to.
- We all sensed out toward Liana, and in reaching for the sense
- of-the-mind of Liana we encountered the mind of the colonel . .
- .
- Never have I encountered something so terrible.
- It was raw pleasure.
- As a doctor I have seen pleasure the pleasure of morphine which
- destroys, the pleasure of fen nine which kills and ruins, even the
- pleasure of the electrode buried in the living brain.
- As a doctor I had been required to see the wicked est of men kill
- themselves under the law. It was a simple thing we did. We put a thin
- wire directly into the pleasure center of the brain. The bad man then
- put his head near an electric field of the right phase and voltage. It
- was simple enough. He died of pleasure in a few hours.
- This was worse.
- This pleasure was not in human form.
- Liana was somewhere near and I caught her thoughts as she said,
- "We must go there, sirs and doctors, Chiefs and Leaders.
- "We must go there together, the four of us, go to where no man was, go
- to the Nothing-at-All, go to the hope and the heart of the pain, go to
- the pain which return may this man, go to the power which is greater
- than space, go to the power which has sent him home, go to the place
- which is not a place, find the force which is not a force, force the
- force which is not a force to give this heart and spare it back to
- us.
- "Come with me if you come at all. Come with me to the end of things.
- Come with me " Suddenly there was a flash as of sheet lightning in our
- minds.
- of Man It was bright lightning, bright, delicate, multicolored,
- gentle.
- Suffusing everything, it was like a cascade of pure color, paste! in
- hue, but intense in its brightness. The light came.
- The light came, I say.
- Strange.
- And it was gone.
- That was all.
- The experience was so quick that it could hardly be called
- instantaneous. It seemed to happen less than instantaneously, if you
- can imagine that. We all five felt that we had been befriended, looked
- at. We felt that we had been made the toys or the pets of some
- gigantic form of life immensely beyond the limits of human imagination,
- and that that life in looking at the four of us the three doctors and
- Liana had seen us and the colonel and had realized that the colonel
- needed to go back to his own kind.
- Because it was five, not four, who stood up.
- The colonel was trembling, but he was sane. He was alive. He was
- human again. He said very weakly: "Where am I? Is this an Earth
- hospital?"
- And then he fell into Timofeyev's arms.
- Liana was already gliding out the door.
- I followed her out.
- She turned on me.
- "Sir and doctor, Chief and Leader, all I ask is no thanks, and no
- money, no notice and no word of what has happened. My powers come from
- the goodness of the Lord's grace and from the friendliness of mankind.
- I should not intrude into the field of medicine. I should not have
- come if thy friend Timofeyev had not asked me as a matter of common
- mercy. Claim the credit for thy hospital, sir and doctor. Chief and
- Leader, but thou and thy friends should forget me."
- I stammered at her,
- "But the reports? .. ."
- "Write the reports any way thou wishes, but mention me not."
- "But our patient. He is our patient, too. Liana."
- She smiled a smile of great sweetness, of girlish and childish
- friendliness.
- "If he need me, I shall come to him . . ."
- The world was better, but not much the wiser.
- The chronoplast spaceship was never found. The colonel's return was
- never explained. The colonel never left Earth again.
- All he knew was that he had pushed a button out somewhere near the Moon
- and that he had then awakened in a hospital after four months had been
- unaccountably lost.
- And all the world knew was that he and his wife had unaccountably
- adopted a strange but beautiful little girl, poor in family, but rich
- in the mild generosity of her own spirit.
- The Game of Rat and Dragon I. The Table Pinlighting is a hell of a
- way to earn a living. Underbill was furious as he closed the door
- behind himself. It didn't make much sense to wear a uniform and look
- like a soldier if people didn't appreciate what you did.
- He sat down in his chair, laid his head back in the headrest, and
- pulled the helmet down over his forehead.
- As he waited for the pin-set to warm up, he remembered the girl in the
- outer corridor. She had looked at it, then looked at him scornfully.
- "Meow." That was all she had said. Yet it had cut him like a knife.
- What did she think he was a fool, a loafer, a uniformed nonentity?
- Didn't she know that for every half-hour of pin lighting he got a
- minimum of two months' recuperation in the hospital?
- By now the set was warm. He felt the squares of space around him,
- sensed himself at the middle of an immense grid, a cubic grid, full of
- nothing. Out in that nothingness, he could sense the hollow aching
- horror of space itself and could feel the terrible anxiety which his
- mind encountered whenever it met the faintest trace of inert dust.
- As he relaxed, the comforting solidity of the Sun, the clockwork of the
- familiar planets and the Moon rang in on him.
- Our own solar system was as charming and as simple as an ancient cuckoo
- clock filled with familiar ticking and with reassuring noises. The odd
- little moons of Mars swung around their planet like frantic mice, yet
- their regularity was itself an assurance that all was well. Far above
- the plane of the ecliptic, he could feel half a ton of dust more or
- less drifting outside the lanes of human travel.
- Here there was nothing to fight, nothing to challenge the mind, to tear
- the living soul out of a body with its roots dripping in effluvium as
- tangible as blood.
- Nothing ever moved in on the solar system. He could wear the pin-set
- forever and be nothing more than a sort of telepathic astronomer, a
- man
- of Man who could feel the hot, warm protection of the Sun throbbing
- and burning against his living mind.
- Woodley came in.
- "Same old ticking world," said Underhill.
- "Nothing to report.
- No wonder they didn't develop the pin-set until they began to plano
- form Down here with the hot Sun around us, it feels so good and so
- quiet. You can feel everything spinning and turning.
- It's nice and sharp and compact. It's sort of like sitting around
- home."
- Woodley grunted. He was not much given to flights of fantasy.
- Undeterred, Underhill went on,
- "It must have been pretty good to have been an ancient man. I wonder
- why they burned up their world with war. They didn't have to plano
- form They didn't have to go out to earn their livings among the stars.
- They didn't have to dodge the Rats or play the Game. They couldn't
- have invented pin lighting because they didn't have any need of it, did
- they, Woodley?"
- Woodley grunted,
- "Uh-huh." Woodley was twenty-six years old and due to retire in one
- more year. He already had a farm picked out. He had gotten through
- ten years of hard work pin lighting with the best of them. He had kept
- his sanity by not thinking very much about his job, meeting the strains
- of the task whenever he had to meet them, and thinking nothing more
- about his duties until the next emergency arose.
- Woodley never made a point of getting popular among the Partners. None
- of the Partners liked him very much. Some of them even resented him.
- He was suspected of thinking ugly thoughts of the Partners on occasion,
- but since none of the Partners ever thought a complaint in articulate
- form, the other pin lighters and the Chiefs of the Instrumentality left
- him alone.
- Underhill was still full of the wonder of their job. Happily he
- babbled on,
- "What does happen to us when we plano form Do you think it's sort of
- like dying? Did you ever see anybody who had his soul pulled out?"
- "Pulling souls is just a way of talking about it," said Woodley.
- "After all these years, nobody knows whether we have souls or not."
- "But I saw one once. I saw what Dogwood looked like when he came
- apart. There was something funny. It looked wet and sort of sticky as
- if it were bleeding and it went out of him and you know what they did
- to Dogwood? They took him away, up in that part of the hospital where
- you and I never go way up at the top part where the others are, where
- the others always have to go if they are alive after the Rats of the
- Up-and-Out have gotten them."
- Woodley sat down and lit an ancient pipe. He was burning something
- called tobacco in it. It was a dirty sort of habit, but it made him
- look very dashing and adventurous.
- "Look here, youngster. You don't have to worry about that stuff.
- Pinlighting is getting better all the time. The Partners are getting
- better. I've seen them pin light two Rats forty-six million miles
- apart in one and a half milliseconds. As long as people had to try to
- work the pin-sets themselves, there was always the chance that with a
- minimum of four-hundred milliseconds for the human mind to set a pin
- light we wouldn't light the Rats up fast enough to protect our plano
- forming ships. The Partners have changed all that. Once they get
- going, they're faster than Rats. And they always will be. I know it's
- not easy, letting a Partner share your mind " "It's not easy for them,
- either," said Underhill.
- "Don't worry about them. They're not human. Let them take care of
- themselves. I've seen more pin lighters go crazy from monkeying around
- with Partners than I have ever seen caught by the Rats.
- How many of them do you actually know of that got grabbed by Rats?"
- Underhill looked down at his fingers, which shone green and purple in
- the vivid light thrown by the tuned-in pin-set, and counted ships. The
- thumb for the Andromeda, lost with crew and passengers, the index
- finger and the middle finger for Release Ships 43 and 56, found with
- their pin-sets burned out and every man, woman, and child on board dead
- or insane. The ring finger, the little finger, and the thumb of the
- other hand were the first three battleships to be lost to the Rats lost
- as people realized that there was something out there underneath space
- itself which was alive, capricious, and malevolent.
- Planoforming was sort of funny. It felt like Like nothing much.
- Like the twinge of a mild electric shock. Like the ache of a sore
- tooth bitten on for the first time. Like a slightly painful flash of
- light against the eyes. Yet in that time, a forty-thousand-ton ship
- lifting free above Earth disappeared somehow or other into two
- dimensions and appeared half a light-year or fifty light-years off.
- At one moment, he would be sitting in the Fighting Room, the pin-set
- ready and the familiar solar system ticking around inside his head. For
- a second or a year (he could never tell how long it really was,
- subjectively), the funny little flash went through him and then he was
- loose in the Up-and-Out, the terrible open spaces between the stars,
- where the stars themselves felt like pimples on his telepathic mind and
- the planets were too far away to be sensed or read.
- Somewhere in this outer space, a gruesome death awaited, death and
- horror of a kind which Man had never encountered until he reached out
- for interstellar space itself. Apparently the light of the suns kept
- the Dragons
- of Man Dragons. That was what people called them. To ordinary
- people, there was nothing, nothing except the shiver of plano forming
- and the hammer blow of sudden death or the dark spastic note of lunacy
- descending into their minds.
- But to the tele paths they were Dragons.
- In the fraction of a second between the tele paths awareness of a
- hostile something out in the black, hollow nothingness of space and the
- impact of a ferocious, ruinous psychic blow against all living things
- within the ship, the tele paths had sensed entities something like the
- Dragons of ancient human lore, beasts more clever than beasts, demons
- more tangible than demons, hungry vortices of aliveness and hate
- compounded by unknown means out of the thin, tenuous matter between the
- stars.
- It took a surviving ship to bring back the news a ship in which, by
- sheer chance, a tele path had a light-beam ready, turning it out at the
- innocent dust so that, within the panorama of his mind, the Dragon
- dissolved into nothing at all and the other passengers, themselves
- non-telepathic, went about their way not realizing that their own
- immediate deaths had been averted.
- From then on, it was easy almost.
- Planoforming ships always carried tele paths Telepaths had their
- sensitiveness enlarged to an immense range by the pin-sets, which were
- telepathic amplifiers adapted to the mammal mind.
- The pin-sets in turn were electronically geared into small dirigible
- light bombs. Light did it.
- Light broke up the Dragons, allowed the ships to reform
- three-dimensionally, skip, skip, skip, as they moved from star to
- star.
- The odds suddenly moved down from a hundred to one against mankind to
- sixty to forty in mankind's favor.
- This was not enough. The tele paths were trained to become ultra
- sensitive trained to become aware of the Dragons in less than a
- millisecond.
- But it was found that the Dragons could move a million miles in just
- under two milliseconds and that this was not enough for the human mind
- to activate the light beams.
- Attempts had been made to sheathe the ships in light at all times.
- This defense wore out.
- As mankind learned about the Dragons, so too, apparently, the Dragons
- learned about mankind. Somehow they flattened their own bulk and came
- in on extremely flat trajectories very quickly.
- Intense light was needed, light of sun like intensity. This could be
- provided only by light bombs. Pinlighting came into existence.
- Pinlighting consisted of the detonation of ultra-vivid miniature
- photo-nuclear bombs, which converted a few ounces of a magnesium
- isotope into pure visible radiance.
- The odds kept coming down in mankind's favor, yet ships were being
- lost.
- It became so bad that people didn't even want to find the ships because
- the rescuers knew what they would see. It was sad to bring back to
- Earth three hundred bodies ready for burial and two hundred or three
- hundred lunatics, damaged beyond repair, to be wakened, and fed, and
- cleaned, and put to sleep, wakened and fed again until their lives were
- ended.
- Telepaths tried to reach into the minds of the psychotics who had been
- damaged by the Dragons, but they found nothing there beyond vivid
- spouting columns of fiery terror bursting from the primordial id
- itself, the volcanic source of life.
- Then came the Partners Man and Partner could do together what man could
- not do alone. Men had the intellect. Partners had the speed.
- The Partners rode their tiny craft, no larger than footballs, outside
- the spaceships. They plano formed with the ships. They rode beside
- them in their six-pound craft ready to attack.
- The tiny ships of the Partners were swift. Each carried a dozen pin
- lights bombs no bigger than thimbles.
- The pin lighters threw the Partners quite literally threw by means of
- mind-to-firing relays directly at the Dragons.
- What seemed to be Dragons to the human mind appeared in the form of
- gigantic Rats in the minds of the Partners.
- Out in the pitiless nothingness of space, the Partners' minds responded
- to an instinct as old as life. The Partners attacked, striking with a
- speed faster than man's, going from attack to attack until the Rats or
- themselves were destroyed. Almost all the time it was the Partners who
- won.
- With the safety of the interstellar skip, skip, skip of the ships,
- commerce increased immensely, the population of all the colonies went
- up, and the demand for trained Partners increased.
- Underbill and Woodley were a part of the third generation of pin
- lighters and yet, to them, it seemed as though their craft had endured
- forever.
- Gearing space into minds by means of the pin-set, adding the Partners
- to those minds, keying up the minds for the tension of a fight on which
- all depended this was more than human synapses could stand for long.
- Underhill needed his two months' rest after half an hour of fighting.
- Woodley needed his retirement after ten years of service. They were
- young. They were good. But they had limitations.
- So much depended on the choice of Partners, so much on the sheer luck
- of who drew whom.
- II. The Shuffle Father Moontree and the little girl named West
- entered the room. They were the other two pin lighters The human
- complement of the Fighting Room was now complete.
- Father Moontree was a red-faced man of forty-five who had lived the
- peaceful life of a farmer until he reached his fortieth year. Only
- then, belatedly, did the authorities find he was telepathic and agree
- to let him late in life enter upon the career of pin lighter He did
- well at it, but he was fantastically old for this kind of business.
- Father Moontree looked at the glum Woodley and the musing Underhill.
- "How're the youngsters today? Ready for a good fight?"
- "Father always wants a fight," giggled the little girl named West. She
- was such a little little girl. Her giggle was high and childish. She
- looked like the last person in the world one would expect to find in
- the rough, sharp dueling of pin lighting
- Underhill had been amused one time when he found one of the most
- sluggish of the Partners coming away happy from contact with the mind
- of the girl named West.
- Usually the Partners didn't care much about the human minds with which
- they were paired for the journey. The Partners seemed to take the
- attitude that human minds were complex and fouled up beyond belief,
- anyhow. No Partner ever questioned the superiority of the human mind,
- though very few of the Partners were much impressed by that
- superiority.
- The Partners liked people. They were willing to fight with them. They
- were even willing to die for them. But when a Partner liked an
- individual the way, for example, that Captain Wow or the Lady May liked
- Underhill, the liking had nothing to do with intellect. It was a
- matter of temperment, of feel.
- Underhill knew perfectly well that Captain Wow regarded his,
- Underbill's, brains as silly. What Captain Wow liked was Underbill's
- friendly emotional structure, the cheerfulness and glint of wicked
- amusement that shot through Underbill's unconscious thought patterns,
- and the gaiety with which Underhill faced danger. The words, the
- history books, the ideas, the science Underhill could sense all that in
- his own mind, reflected back from Captain Wow's mind, as so much
- rubbish.
- Miss West looked at Underhill.
- "I bet you' ve put stickum on the stones."
- "I did not!"
- Underhill felt his ears grow red with embarrassment. During his
- novitiate, he had tried to cheat in the lottery because he got
- particularly fond of a special Partner, a lovely young mother named
- Murr. It was so much easier to operate with Murr and she was so
- affectionate toward him that he
- forgot pin lighting was hard work and that he was not instructed to
- have a good time with his Partner. They were both designed and
- prepared to go into deadly battle together.
- One cheating had been enough. They had found him out and he had been
- laughed at for years.
- Father Moontree picked up the imitation-leather cup and shook the stone
- dice which assigned them their Partners for the trip. By senior rights
- he took first draw.
- He grimaced. He had drawn a greedy old character, a tough old male
- whose mind was full of slobbering thoughts of food, veritable oceans
- full of half-spoiled fish. Father Moontree had once said that he
- burped cod liver oil for weeks after drawing that particular glutton,
- so strongly had the telepathic image of fish impressed itself upon his
- mind. Yet the glutton was a glutton for danger as well as for fish. He
- had killed sixty-three Dragons, more than any other Partner in the
- service, and was quite literally worth his weight in gold.
- The little girl West came next. She drew Captain Wow.
- When she saw who it was, she smiled.
- "I like him," she said.
- "He's such fun to fight with. He feels so nice and cuddly in my
- mind."
- "Cuddly, hell," said Woodley.
- "I've been in his mind, too. It's the most leering mind in this ship,
- bar none."
- "Nasty man," said the little girl. She said it declaratively, without
- reproach.
- Underhill, looking at her, shivered.
- He didn't see how she could take Captain Wow so calmly.
- Captain Wow's mind did leer. When Captain Wow got excited in the
- middle of a battle, confused images of Dragons, deadly Rats, luscious
- beds, the smell of fish, and the shock of space all scrambled together
- in his mind as he and Captain Wow, their consciousnesses linked
- together through the pin-set, became a fantastic composite of human
- being and Persian cat.
- That's the trouble with working with cats, thought Underhill.
- It's a pity that nothing else anywhere will serve as Partner. Cats
- were all right once you got in touch with them telepathically.
- They were smart enough to meet the needs of the flight, but their
- motives and desires were certainly different from those of humans.
- They were companionable enough as long as you thought tangible images
- at them, but their minds just closed up and went to sleep when you
- recited Shakespeare or Colegrove, or if you tried to tell them what
- space was.
- It was sort of funny realizing that the Partners who were so grim and
- mature out here in space were the same cute little animals that people
- had
- of Man used as pets for thousands of years back on Earth. He had
- embarrassed himself more than once while on the ground saluting
- perfectly ordinary non-telepathic cats because he had forgotten for the
- moment that they were not Partners.
- He picked up the cup and shook out his stone dice.
- He was lucky he drew the Lady May.
- The Lady May was the most thoughtful Partner he had ever met. In her,
- the finely bred pedigree mind of a Persian cat had reached one of its
- highest peaks of development. She was more complex than any human
- woman, but the complexity was all one of emotions, memory, hope, and
- discriminated experience experience sorted through without benefit of
- words.
- When he had first come into contact with her mind, he was astonished at
- its clarity. With her he remembered her kitten hood
- He remembered every mating experience she had ever had. He saw in a
- half-recognizable gallery all the other pin lighters with whom she had
- been paired for the fight. And he saw himself radiant, cheerful, and
- desirable.
- He even thought he caught the edge of a longing A very flattering and
- yearning thought: What a pity he is not a cat.
- Woodley picked up the last stone. He drew what he deserved a sullen,
- scarred old tomcat with none of the verve of Captain Wow. Woodley's
- Partner was the most animal of all the cats on the ship, a low, brutish
- type with a dull mind. Even telepathy had not refined his character.
- His ears were half chewed off from the first fights in which he had
- engaged. He was a serviceable fighter, nothing more.
- Woodley grunted.
- Underbill glanced at him oddly. Didn't Woodley ever do anything but
- grunt?
- Father Moontree looked at the other three.
- "You might as well get your Partners now. I'll let the Go-Captain know
- we're ready to go into the Up-and-Out."
- HI. The Deal Underbill spun the combination lock on the Lady May's
- cage.
- He woke her gently and took her into his arms. She humped her back
- luxuriously, stretched her claws, started to purr, thought better of
- it, and licked him on the wrist instead. He did not have the pin-set
- on, so their minds were closed to each other, but in the angle of her
- mustache and in the movement of her ears, he caught some sense of the
- gratification she experienced in finding him as her Partner.
- He talked to her in human speech, even though speech meant nothing to
- a cat when the pin-set was not on.
- "It's a damn shame, sending a sweet little thing like you whirling
- around in the coldness of nothing to hunt for Rats that are bigger and
- deadlier than all of us put together. You didn't ask for this kind of
- fight, did you?"
- For answer, she licked his hand, purred, tickled his cheek with her
- long fluffy tail, turned around and faced him, golden eyes shining.
- For a moment, they stared at each other, man squatting, cat standing
- erect on her hind legs, front claws digging into his knee.
- Human eyes and cat eyes looked across an immensity which no words could
- meet, but which affection spanned in a single glance.
- "Time to get in," he said.
- She walked docilely to her spheroid carrier. She climbed in.
- He saw to it that her miniature pin-set rested firmly and comfortably
- against the base of her brain. He made sure that her claws were padded
- so that she could not tear herself in the excitement of battle.
- Softly he said to her,
- "Ready?"
- For answer, she preened her back as much as her harness would permit
- and purred softly within the confines of the frame that held her.
- He slapped down the lid and watched the sealant ooze around the seam.
- For a few hours, she was welded into her projectile until a workman
- with a short cutting arc would remove her after she had done her
- duty.
- He picked up the entire projectile and slipped it into the ejection
- tube. He closed the door of the tube, spun the lock, seated himself in
- his chair, and put his own pin-set on.
- Once again he flung the switch.
- He sat in a small room, small, small, warm, warm, the bodies of the
- other three people moving close around him, the tangible lights in the
- ceiling bright and heavy against his closed eyelids.
- As the pin-set warmed, the room fell away. The other people ceased to
- be people and became small glowing heaps of fire, embers, dark red
- fire, with the consciousness of life burning like old red coals in a
- country fireplace.
- As the pin-set warmed a little more, he felt Earth just below him, felt
- the ship slipping away, felt the turning Moon as it swung on the far
- side of the world, felt the planets and the hot, clear goodness of the
- sun which kept the Dragons so far from mankind's native ground.
- Finally, he reached complete awareness.
- He was telepathically alive to a range of millions of miles. He felt
- the dust which he had noticed earlier high above the ecliptic.
- With a thrill of warmth and tenderness, he felt the consciousness of
- the Lady May pouring
- over into his own. Her consciousness was as gentle and clear and yet
- sharp to the taste of his mind as if it were scented oil. It felt
- relaxing and reassuring. He could sense her welcome of him. It was
- scarcely a thought, just a raw emotion of greeting.
- At last they were one again.
- In a tiny remote corner of his mind, as tiny as the smallest toy he had
- ever seen in his childhood, he was still aware of the room and the
- ship, and of Father Moontree picking up a telephone and speaking to a
- Go-Captain in charge of the ship.
- His telepathic mind caught the idea long before his ears could frame
- the words. The actual sound followed the idea the way that thunder on
- an ocean beach follows the lightning inward from far out over the
- seas.
- "The Fighting Room is ready. Clear to plano form sir."
- Underhill was always a little exasperated the way that Lady May
- experienced things before he did.
- He was braced for the quick vinegar thrill of plano forming but he
- caught her report of it before his own nerves could register what
- happened.
- Earth had fallen so far away that he groped for several milliseconds
- before he found the Sun in the upper rear right-hand corner of his
- telepathic mind.
- That was a good jump, he thought. This way we'll get there in four or
- five skips.
- A few hundred miles outside the ship, the Lady May thought back at him,
- "o warm, o generous, o gigantic man! o brave, o friendly, o tender and
- huge Partner! o wonderful with you, with you so good, good, good,
- warm, warm, now to fight, now to go, good with you . . ."
- He knew that she was not thinking words, that his mind took the clear
- amiable babble of her cat intellect and translated it into images which
- his own thinking could record and understand.
- Neither one of them was absorbed in the game of mutual greetings. He
- reached out far beyond her range of perception to see if there was
- anything near the ship. It was funny how it was possible to do two
- things at once. He could scan space with his pin-set mind and yet at
- the same time catch a vagrant thought of hers, a lovely, affectionate
- thought about a son who had had a golden face and a chest covered with
- soft, incredibly downy white fur.
- While he was still searching, he caught the warning from her.
- We jump again!
- And so they had. The ship had moved to a second plano form
- The stars were different. The sun was immeasurably far behind. Even
- the nearest stars were barely in contact. This was good Dragon
- country, this open, nasty, hollow kind of space.
- He reached farther, faster, sensing and looking for danger, ready to
- fling the Lady May at danger wherever he found it.
- Terror blazed up in his mind, so sharp, so clear, that it came through
- as a physical wrench.
- The little girl named West had found something something immense, long,
- black, sharp, greedy, horrific. She flung Captain Wow at it.
- Underbill tried to keep his own mind clear.
- "Watch out!" he shouted telepathically at the others, trying to move
- the Lady May around.
- At one corner of the battle, he felt the lustful rage of Captain Wow as
- the big Persian tomcat detonated lights while he approached the streak
- of dust which threatened the ship and the people within. The lights
- scored near misses.
- The dust flattened itself, changing from the shape of a sting ray into
- the shape of a spear.
- Not three milliseconds had elapsed.
- Father Moontree was talking human words and was saying in a voice that
- moved like cold molasses out of a heavy jar,
- "Ca-p-t-a-in." Underbill knew that the sentence was going to be
- "Captain, move fast!"
- The battle would be fought and finished before Father Moontree got
- through talking.
- Now, fractions of a millisecond later, the Lady May was directly in
- line.
- Here was where the skill and speed of the Partners came in. She could
- react faster than he. She could see the threat as an immense Rat
- coming directly at her.
- She could fire the light-bombs with a discrimination which he might
- miss.
- He was connected with her mind, but he could not follow it.
- His consciousness absorbed the tearing wound inflicted by the alien
- enemy. It was like no wound on Earth raw, crazy pain which started
- like a burn at his navel. He began to writhe in his chair.
- Actually he had not yet had time to move a muscle when the Lady May
- struck back at their enemy.
- Five evenly spaced photonuclear bombs blazed out across a
- hundred-thousand miles.
- The pain in his mind and body vanished.
- He felt a moment of fierce, terrible, feral elation running through the
- mind of the Lady May as she finished her kill. It was always
- disappointing
- to the cats to find out that their enemies disappeared at the moment
- of destruction.
- Then he felt her hurt, the pain and the fear that swept over both of
- them as the battle, quicker than the movement of an eyelid, had come
- and gone. In the same instant there came the sharp and acid twinge of
- plano form
- Once more the ship went skip.
- He could hear Woodley thinking at him.
- "You don't have to bother much. This old son-of-a-gun and I will take
- over for a while."
- Twice again the twinge, the skip.
- He had no idea where he was until the lights of the Caledonia space
- port shone below.
- With a weariness that lay almost beyond the limits of thought, he threw
- his mind back into rapport with the pin-set, fixing the Lady May's
- projectile gently and neatly in its launching tube.
- She was half dead with fatigue, but he could feel the beat of her
- heart, could listen to her panting, and he grasped the grateful edge of
- a
- "Thanks" reaching from her mind to his.
- V. The Score They put him in the hospital at Caledonia.
- The doctor was friendly but firm.
- "You actually got touched by that Dragon. That's as close a shave as
- I've ever seen. It's all so quick that it'll be a long time before we
- know what happened scientifically, but I suppose you'd be ready for the
- insane asylum now if the contact had lasted several tenths of a
- millisecond longer. What kind of cat did you have out in front of
- you?"
- Underhill felt the words coming out of him slowly. Words were such a
- lot of trouble compared with the speed and the joy of thinking, fast
- and sharp and clear, mind to mind! But words were all that could reach
- ordinary people like this doctor.
- His mouth moved heavily as he articulated words.
- "Don't call our Partners cats. The right thing to call them is
- Partners. They fight for us in a team. You ought to know we call them
- Partners, not cats. How is mine?"
- "I don't know," said the doctor contritely.
- "We'll find out for you. Meanwhile, old man, you take it easy. There's
- nothing but rest that can help you. Can you make yourself sleep, or
- would you like us to give you some kind of sedative?"
- "I can sleep," said Underhill.
- "I just want to know about the Lady May."
- 1 he Game of Rat and Dragon 17: The nurse joined in. She was a little
- antagonistic.
- "Don't you want to know about the other people?"
- "They're okay," said Underhill.
- "I knew that before I came in here." He stretched his arms and sighed
- and grinned at them. He could see they were relaxing and were
- beginning to treat him as a person instead of a patient.
- "I'm all right," he said.
- "Just let me know when I can go see my Partner."
- A new thought struck him. He looked wildly at the doctor.
- "They didn't send her off with the ship, did they?"
- "I'll find out right away," said the doctor. He gave Underhill a
- reassuring squeeze of the shoulder and left the room.
- The nurse took a napkin off a goblet of chilled fruit juice.
- Underhill tried to smile at her. There seemed to be something wrong
- with the girl. He wished she would go away. First she had started to
- be friendly and now she was distant again. It's a nuisance being
- telepathic, he thought. You keep trying to reach even when you are not
- making contact.
- Suddenly she swung around on him.
- "You pin lighters You and your damn cats!"
- Just as she stamped out, he burst into her mind. He saw himself a
- radiant hero, clad in his smooth suede uniform, the pin set crown
- shining like ancient royal jewels around his head. He saw his own
- face, handsome and masculine, shining out of her mind. He saw himself
- very far away and he saw himself as she hated him.
- She hated him in the secrecy of her own mind. She hated him because he
- was she thought proud and strange and rich, better and more beautiful
- than people like her.
- He cut off the sight of her mind and, as he buried his face in the
- pillow, he caught an image of the Lady May.
- "She is a cat," he thought.
- "That's all she is a cat!" But that was not how his mind saw her quick
- beyond all dreams of speed, sharp, clever, unbelievably graceful,
- beautiful, wordless, and undemanding.
- Where would he ever find a woman who could compare with her?
- The Burning of the Brain I. Dolores Oh I tell you, it is sad, it is
- more than sad, it is fearful for it is a dreadful thing to go into the
- Up-and-Out, to fly without flying, to move between the stars as a moth
- may drift among the leaves on a summer night.
- Of all the men who took the great ships into plano form none was
- braver, none stronger, than Captain Magno Taliano.
- Scanners had been gone for centuries and the jonasoidal effect had
- become so simple, so manageable, that the traversing of light years was
- no more difficult to most of the passengers of the great ships than to
- go from one room to the other.
- Passengers moved easily.
- Not the crew.
- Least of all the captain.
- The captain of a jonasoidal ship which had embarked on an interstellar
- journey was a man subject to rare and overwhelming strains. The art of
- getting past all the complications of space was far more like the
- piloting of turbulent waters in ancient days than like the smooth seas
- which legendary men once traversed with sails alone.
- Go-Captain on the Wu-Feinstein, finest ship of its class, was Magno
- Taliano.
- Of him it was said,
- "He could sail through hell with the muscles of his left eye alone. He
- could plow space with his living brain if the instruments failed . .
- ."
- Wife to the Go-Captain was Dolores Oh. The name was Japonical, from
- some nation of the ancient days. Dolores Oh had been once beautiful,
- so beautiful that she took men's breath away, made wise men into fools,
- made young men into nightmares of lust and yearning. Wherever she went
- men had quarreled and fought over her.
- But Dolores Oh was proud beyond all common limits of pride.
- She refused to go through the ordinary rejuvenescence. A terrible
- yearning a
- of Man hundred or so years back must have come over her. Perhaps she
- said to herself, before that hope and terror which a mirror in a quiet
- room becomes to anyone: "Surely I am me. There must be a me more than
- the beauty of my face, there must be a something other than the
- delicacy of skin and the accidental lines of my jaw and my cheekbone.
- "What have men loved if it wasn't me? Can I ever find out who I am or
- what I am if I don't let beauty perish and live on in whatever flesh
- age gives me?"
- She had met the Go-Captain and had married him in a romance that left
- forty planets talking and half the ship lines stunned.
- Magno Taliano was at the very beginning of his genius.
- Space, we can tell you, is rough rough like the wildest of storm driven
- waters, filled with perils which only the most sensitive, the quickest,
- the most daring of men can surmount.
- Best of them all, class for class, age for age, out of class, beating
- the best of his seniors, was Magno Taliano.
- For him to marry the most beautiful beauty of forty worlds was a
- wedding like Heloise and Abelard's or like the unforgettable romance of
- Helen America and Mr. Grey-no-more.
- The ships of the Go-Captain Magno Taliano became more beautiful year by
- year, century by century.
- As ships became better he always obtained the best. He maintained his
- lead over the other Go-Captains so overwhelmingly that it was
- unthinkable for the finest ship of mankind to sail out amid the
- roughnesses and uncertainties of two-dimensional space without himself
- at the helm.
- Stop-Captains were proud to sail space beside him. (Though the
- Stop-Captains had nothing more to do than to check the maintenance of
- the ship, its loading and unloading when it was in normal space, they
- were still more than ordinary men in their own kind of world, a world
- far below the more majestic and adventurous universe of the
- Go-Captains.) Magno Taliano had a niece who in the modern style used a
- place instead of a name: she was called
- "Dita from the Great South House."
- When Dita came aboard the Wu-Feinstein she had heard much of Dolores
- Oh, her aunt by marriage who had once captivated the men in many
- worlds. Dita was wholly unprepared for what she found.
- Dolores greeted her civilly enough, but the civility was a sucking pump
- of hideous anxiety, the friendliness was the driest of mockeries, the
- greeting itself an attack.
- What's the matter with the woman? thought Dita.
- As if to answer her thought, Dolores said aloud and in words: "It's
- nice to meet a woman who's not trying to take Taliano from me. I love
- him. Can you believe that? Can you?"
- The Burning of the Brain "Of course," said Dita. She looked at the
- ruined face of Dolores Oh, at the dreaming terror in Dolores's eyes,
- and she realized that Dolores had passed all limits of nightmare and
- had become a veritable demon of regret, a possessive ghost who sucked
- the vitality from her husband, who dreaded companionship, hated
- friendship, rejected even the most casual of acquaintances, because she
- feared forever and without limit that there was really nothing to
- herself, and feared that without Magno Taliano she would be more lost
- than the blackest of whirlpools in the nothing between the stars.
- Magno Taliano came in.
- He saw his wife and niece together.
- He must have been used to Dolores Oh. In Dita's eyes Dolores was more
- frightening than a mud-caked reptile raising its wounded and venomous
- head with blind hunger and blind rage.
- To Magno Taliano the ghastly woman who stood like a witch beside him
- was somehow the beautiful girl he had wooed and had married
- one-hundred-sixty-four years before.
- He kissed the withered cheek, he stroked the dried and stringy hair, he
- looked into the greedy, terror-haunted eyes as though they were the
- eyes of a child he loved. He said, lightly and gently, "Be good to
- Dita, my dear."
- He went on through the lobby of the ship to the inner sanctum of the
- plano forming room.
- The Stop-Captain waited for him. Outside on the world of Sherman the
- scented breezes of that pleasant planet blew in through the open
- windows of the ship.
- Wu-Feinstein, finest ship of its class, had no need for metal walls. It
- was built to resemble an ancient, prehistoric estate named Mount
- Vernon, and when it sailed between the stars it was encased in its own
- rigid and self-renewing field of force.
- The passengers went through a few pleasant hours of strolling on the
- grass, enjoying the spacious rooms, chatting beneath a marvelous
- simulacrum of an atmosphere-filled sky.
- Only in the plano forming room did the Go-Captain know what happened.
- The Go-Captain, his pin lighters sitting beside him, took the ship from
- one compression to another, leaping hotly and frantically through
- space, sometimes one light-year, sometimes a hundred light-years, jump,
- jump, jump, jump until the ship, the light touches of the captain's
- mind guiding it, passed the perils of millions upon millions of worlds,
- came out at its appointed destination, and settled as lightly as one
- feather resting upon others, settled into an embroidered and decorated
- countryside where the passengers could move as easily away from their
- journey as if they had
- done nothing more than to pass an afternoon in a pleasant old house by
- the side of a river.
- II. The Lost Locksheet Magno Taliano nodded to his pin lighters The
- Stop-Captain bowed obsequiously from the doorway of the plano forming
- room.
- Taliano looked at him sternly, but with robust friendliness. With
- formal and austere courtesy he asked, "Sir and Colleague, is everything
- ready for the jonasoidal effect?"
- The Stop-Captain bowed even more formally.
- "Truly ready.
- Sir and Master."
- "The lock sheets in place?"
- "Truly in place, Sir and Master."
- "The passengers secure?"
- "The passengers are secure, numbered, happy and ready, Sir and
- Master."
- Then came the last and the most serious of questions.
- "Are my pin lighters warmed with their pin-sets and ready for
- combat?"
- "Ready for combat, Sir and Master." With these words the Stop-Captain
- withdrew. Magno Taliano smiled to his pin lighters
- Through the minds of all of them there passed the same thought.
- How could a man that pleasant stay married all those years to a hag
- like Dolores Oh? How could that witch, that horror, have ever been a
- beauty? How could that beast have ever been a woman, particularly the
- divine and glamorous Dolores Oh whose image we still see in four-di
- every now and then?
- Yet pleasant he was, though long he may have been married to Dolores
- Oh. Her loneliness and greed might suck at him like a nightmare, but
- his strength was more than enough strength for two.
- Was he not the captain of the greatest ship to sail between the
- stars?
- Even as the pin lighters smiled their greetings back to him, his right
- hand depressed the golden ceremonial lever of the ship. This
- instrument alone was mechanical. All other controls in the ship had
- long since been formed telepathically or electronically.
- Within the plano forming room the black skies became visible and the
- tissue of space shot up around them like boiling water at the base of a
- waterfall. Outside that one room the passengers still walked sedately
- on scented lawns.
- From the wall facing him, as he sat rigid in his Go-Captain's chair,
- Magno Taliano sensed the forming of a pattern which in three or four
- hundred milliseconds would tell him where he was and would give him
- the next clue as to how to move.
- He moved the ship with the impulses of his own brain, to which the wall
- was a superlative complement.
- The wall was a living brickwork of lock sheets laminated charts,
- one-hundred-thousand charts to the inch, the wall preselected and
- preassembled for all imaginable contingencies of the journey which,
- each time afresh, took the ship across half unknown immensities of time
- and space. The ship leapt, as it had before.
- The new star focused.
- Magno Taliano waited for the wall to show him where he was, expecting
- (in partnership with the wall) to flick the ship back into the pattern
- of stellar space, moving it by immense skips from source to
- destination.
- This time nothing happened.
- Nothing?
- For the first time in a hundred years his mind knew panic.
- It couldn't be nothing. Not nothing. Something had to focus.
- The lock sheets always focused.
- His mind reached into the lock sheets and he realized with a
- devastation beyond all limits of ordinary human grief that they were
- lost as no ship had ever been lost before. By some error never before
- committed in the history of mankind, the entire wall was made of
- duplicates of the same lock sheet
- Worst of all, the Emergency Return sheet was lost. They were amid
- stars none of them had ever seen before, perhaps as near as
- five-hundred-million miles, perhaps as far as forty parsecs.
- And the lock sheet was lost.
- And they would die.
- As the ship's power failed coldness and blackness and death would crush
- in on them in a few hours at the most. That then would be all, all of
- the Wu-Feinstein, all of Dolores Oh.
- III. The Secret of the Old Dark Brain Outside of the plano forming
- room of the Wu-Feinstein the passengers had no reason to understand
- that they were marooned in the nothing-at-all.
- Dolores Oh rocked back and forth in an ancient rocking chair.
- Her haggard face looked without pleasure at the imaginary river that
- ran past the edge of the lawn. Dita from the Great South House sat on
- a hassock by her aunt's knees.
- Dolores was talking about a trip she had made when she was young
- of Man and vibrant with beauty, a beauty which brought trouble and
- hate wherever it went.
- "... so the guardsman killed the captain and then came to my cabin and
- said to me,
- "You've got to marry me now. I've given up everything for your sake,"
- and I said to him,
- "I never said that I loved you. It was sweet of you to get into a
- fight, and in a way I suppose it is a compliment to my beauty, but it
- doesn't mean that I belong to you the rest of my life. What do you
- think I am, anyhow?" " Dolores Oh sighed a dry, ugly sigh, like the
- crackling of subzero winds through frozen twigs.
- "So you see, Dita, being beautiful the way you are is no answer to
- anything. A woman has got to be herself before she finds out what she
- is. I know that my lord and husband, the Go-Captain, loves me because
- my beauty is gone, and with my beauty gone there is nothing but me to
- love, is there?"
- An odd figure came out on the verandah. It was a pin lighter in full
- fighting costume. Pinlighters were never supposed to leave the plano
- forming room, and it was most extraordinary for one of them to appear
- among the passengers.
- He bowed to the two ladies and said with the utmost courtesy, "Ladies,
- will you please come into the plano forming room?
- We have need that you should see the Go-Captain now."
- Dolores's hand leapt to her mouth. Her gesture of grief was as
- automatic as the striking of a snake. Dita sensed that her aunt had
- been waiting a hundred years and more for disaster, that her aunt had
- craved ruin for her husband the way that some people crave love and
- others crave death.
- Dita said nothing. Neither did Dolores, apparently at second thought,
- utter a word.
- They followed the pin lighter silently into the plano forming room.
- The heavy door closed behind them.
- Magno Taliano was still rigid in his Captain's chair.
- He spoke very slowly, his voice sounding like a record played too
- slowly on an ancient parlophone.
- "We are lost in space, my dear," said the frigid, ghostly voice of the
- Captain, still in his Go-Captain's trance.
- "We are lost in space and I thought that perhaps if your mind aided
- mine we might think of a way back."
- Dita started to speak.
- A pin lighter told her: "Go ahead and speak, my dear. Do you have any
- suggestion?"
- "Why don't we just go back? It would be humiliating, wouldn't it?
- Still it would be better than dying. Let's use the Emergency Return
- Locksheet and go on right back. The world will forgive Magno Taliano
- for a single failure after thousands of brilliant and successful
- trips."
- The pin lighter a pleasant enough young man, was as friendly and calm
- as a doctor informing someone of a death or of a mutilation.
- "The impossible has happened, Dita from the Great South House. All the
- lock sheets are wrong. They are all the same one. And not one of them
- is good for emergency return."
- With that the two women knew where they were. They knew that space
- would tear into them like threads being pulled out of a fiber so that
- they would either die bit by bit as the hours passed and as the
- material of their bodies faded away a few molecules here and a few
- there. Or, alternatively, they could die all at once in a flash if the
- Go-Captain chose to kill himself and the ship rather than to wait for a
- slow death. Or, if they believed in religion, they could pray.
- The pin lighter said to the rigid Go-Captain,
- "We think we see a familiar pattern at the edge of your own brain. May
- we look in?"
- Taliano nodded very slowly, very gravely.
- The pin lighter stood still.
- The two women watched. Nothing visible happened, but they knew that
- beyond the limits of vision and yet before their eyes a great drama was
- being played out. The minds of the pin lighters probed deep into the
- mind of the frozen Go-Captain, searching amid the synapses for the
- secret of the faintest clue to their possible rescue.
- Minutes passed. They seemed like hours.
- At last the pin lighter spoke.
- "We can see into your midbrain, Captain. At the edge of your
- paleocortex there is a star pattern which resembles the upper left rear
- of our present location."
- The pin lighter laughed nervously.
- "We want to know, can you fly the ship home on your brain?"
- Magno Taliano looked with deep tragic eyes at the inquirer.
- His slow voice came out at them once again since he dared not leave the
- half-trance which held the entire ship in stasis.
- "Do you mean can I fly the ship on a brain alone? It would burn out my
- brain and the ship would be lost anyhow ..."
- "But we're lost, lost, lost," screamed Dolores Oh. Her face was alive
- with hideous hope, with a hunger for ruin, with a greedy welcome of
- disaster. She screamed at her husband,
- "Wake up, my darling, and let us die together. At least we can belong
- to each other that much, that long, forever!"
- "Why die?" said the pin lighter softly.
- "You tell him, Dita."
- Said Dita,
- "Why not try, Sir and Uncle?"
- Slowly Magno Taliano turned his face toward his niece. Again his
- hollow voice sounded.
- "If I do this I shall be a fool or a child or a dead man, but I will do
- it for you."
- Dita had studied the work of the Go-Captains and she knew well enough
- that if the paleocortex was lost the personality became intellectually
- sane, but emotionally crazed. With the most ancient part of the brain
- gone the fundamental controls of hostility, hunger, and sex
- disappeared. The most ferocious of animals and the most brilliant of
- men were reduced to a common level a level of infantile friendliness in
- which lust and playfulness and gentle, unappeasable hunger became the
- eternity of their days.
- Magno Taliano did not wait.
- He reached out a slow hand and squeezed the hand of Dolores Oh.
- "As I die you shall at last be sure I love you."
- Once again the women saw nothing. They realized they had been called
- in simply to give Magno Taliano a last glimpse of his own life.
- A quiet pin lighter thrust a beam-electrode so that it reached square
- into the paleocortex of Captain Magno Taliano.
- The plano forming room came to life. Strange heavens swirled about
- them like milk being churned in a bowl.
- Dita realized that her partial capacity of telepathy was functioning
- even without the aid of a machine. With her mind she could feel the
- dead wall of the lock sheets She was aware of the rocking of the
- Wu-Feinstein as it leapt from space to space, as uncertain as a man
- crossing a river by leaping from one ice covered rock to the other.
- In a strange way she even knew that the paleocortical part of her
- uncle's brain was burning out at last and forever, that the star
- patterns which had been frozen in the lock sheets lived on in the
- infinitely complex pattern of his own memories, and that with the help
- of his own telepathic pin lighters he was burning out his brain cell by
- cell in order for them to find a way to the ship's destination. This
- indeed was his last trip.
- Dolores Oh watched her husband with a hungry greed surpassing all
- expression.
- Little by little his face became relaxed and stupid.
- Dita could see the midbrain being burned blank, as the ship's controls
- with the help of the pin lighters searched through the most magnificent
- intellect of its time for a last course into harbor.
- Suddenly Dolores Oh was on her knees, sobbing by the hand of her
- husband.
- A pin lighter took Dita by the arm.
- "We have reached destination," he said.
- "And my uncle?"
- The pin lighter looked at her strangely.
- She realized he was speaking to her without moving his lips speaking
- mind-to-mind with pure telepathy.
- "Can't you see it?"
- She shook her head dazedly.
- The pin lighter thought his emphatic statement at her once again.
- "As your uncle burned out his brain, you picked up his skills.
- Can't you sense it? You are a Go-Captain yourself and one of the
- greatest of us."
- "And he?"
- The pin lighter thought a merciful comment at her.
- Magno Taliano had risen from the chair and was being led from the room
- by his wife and consort, Dolores Oh. He had the amiable smile of an
- idiot, and his face for the first time in more than a hundred years
- trembled with shy and silly love.
- From Gustible's Planet Shortly after the celebration of the four
- thousandth anniversary of the opening of space, Angary J. Gustible
- discovered Gustible's planet. The discovery turned out to be a tragic
- mistake.
- Gustible's planet was inhabited by highly intelligent life forms. They
- had moderate telepathic powers. They immediately mind-read Angary J.
- Gustible's entire mind and life history, and embarrassed him very
- deeply by making up an opera concerning his recent divorce.
- The climax of the opera portrayed his wife throwing a teacup at him.
- This created an unfavorable impression concerning Earth culture, and
- Angary J. Gustible, who held a reserve commission as a Subchief of the
- Instrumentality, was profoundly embarrassed to find that it was not the
- higher realities of Earth which he had conveyed to these people, but
- the unpleasant intimate facts.
- As negotiations proceeded, other embarrassments developed.
- In physical appearance the inhabitants of Gustible's planet, who called
- themselves Apicians, resembled nothing more than oversize ducks, ducks
- four feet to four feet six in height. At their wing tips, they had
- developed juxtaposed thumbs. They were paddle-shaped and sufficed to
- feed the Apicians.
- Gustible's planet matched Earth in several respects: in the dishonesty
- of the inhabitants, in their enthusiasm for good food, in their instant
- capacity to understand the human mind. Before Gustible began to get
- ready to go back to Earth, he discovered that the Apicians had copied
- his ship. There was no use hiding this fact. They had copied it in
- such detail that the discovery of Gustible's planet meant the
- simultaneous discovery of Earth . . .
- By the Apicians.
- The implications of this tragic development did not show up until the
- Apicians followed him home. They had a plano forming ship capable of
- traveling in non-space just as readily as his.
- The most important feature of Gustible's planet was its singularly
- close match to the biochemistry of Earth. The Apicians were the first
- intelligent life forms ever met by human beings who were at once
- capable of smelling and enjoying everything which human beings smelled
- and enjoyed, capable of following any human music with forthright
- pleasure, and capable of eating and drinking everything in sight.
- The very first Apicians on Earth were greeted by somewhat alarmed
- ambassadors who discovered that an appetite for Munich beer, Camembert
- cheese, tortillas, and enchiladas, as well as the better grades of chow
- mein, far transcended any serious cultural, political, or strategic
- interests which the new visitors might have.
- Arthur Djohn, a Lord of the Instrumentality who was acting for this
- particular matter, delegated an Instrumentality agent named Calvin
- Dredd as the chief diplomatic officer of Earth to handle the matter.
- Dredd approached one Schmeckst, who seemed to be the Apician leader.
- The interview was an unfortunate one.
- Dredd began by saying,
- "Your Exalted Highness, we are delighted to welcome you to Earth "
- Schmeckst said,
- "Are those edible?" and proceeded to eat the plastic buttons from
- Calvin Dredd's formal coat, even before Dredd could say though not
- edible they were attractive.
- Schmeckst said,
- "Don't try to eat those, they are really not very good."
- Dredd, looking at his coat sagging wide open, said,
- "May I offer you some food?"
- Schmeckst said,
- "Indeed, yes."
- And while Schmeckst ate an Italian dinner, a Peking dinner, a red-hot
- peppery Szechuanese dinner, a Japanese sukiyaki dinner, two British
- breakfasts, a smorgasbord, and four complete servings of
- diplomatic-level Russian zakouska, he listened to the propositions of
- the Instrumentality of Earth.
- These did not impress him. Schmeckst was intelligent despite his gross
- and offensive eating habits. He pointed out: "We two worlds are equal
- in weapons. We can't fight. Look," said he to Calvin Dredd in a
- threatening tone.
- Calvin Dredd braced himself, as he had learned to do.
- Schmeckst also braced him.
- For an instant Dredd did not know what had happened. Then he realized
- that in putting his body into a rigid and controlled posture he had
- played along with the low-grade but manipulable telepathic powers of
- the visitors. He was frozen rigid till Schmeckst laughed and released
- him.
- Schmeckst said,
- "You see, we are well matched. I can freeze you. Nothing short of
- utter desperation could get you out of it. If you try to fight us,
- we'll lick you. We are going to move in here and live with you. We
- have enough room on our planet. You can come and live with us too. We
- would like to hire a lot of those cooks of yours. You'll simply have
- to divide space with us, and that's all there is to it."
- That really was all there was to it. Arthur Djohn reported back to the
- Lords of the Instrumentality that, for the time being, nothing could be
- done about the disgusting people from Gustible's planet.
- They kept their greed within bounds by their standards. A mere
- seventy-two thousand of them swept the Earth, hitting every wine shop,
- dining hall, snack bar, soda bar, and pleasure center in the world.
- They ate popcorn, alfalfa, raw fruit, live fish, birds on the wing,
- prepared foods, cooked and canned foods, food concentrates, and
- assorted medicines.
- Outside of an enormous capacity to hold many times what the human body
- could tolerate in the way of food, they showed very much the same
- effects as persons. Thousands of them got various local diseases,
- sometimes called by such undignified names as the Yangtze rapids, Delhi
- belly, the Roman groanin', or the like.
- Other thousands became ill and had to relieve themselves in the fashion
- of ancient emperors. Still they came.
- Nobody liked them. Nobody disliked them enough to wish a disastrous
- war.
- Actual trade was minimal. They bought large quantities of foodstuffs,
- paying in rare metals. But their economy on their own planet produced
- very little which the world itself wanted. The cities of mankind had
- long since developed to a point of comfort and corruption where a
- relatively inonocultural being, such as the citizens of Gustible's
- planet, could not make much impression.
- The word
- "Apician" came to have unpleasant connotations of bad manners,
- greediness, and prompt payment. Prompt payment was considered rude in
- a credit society, but after all it was better than not being paid at
- all.
- The tragedy of the relationship of the two groups came from the
- unfortunate picnic of the lady Ch'ao, who prided herself on having
- ancient Chinesian blood. She decided that it would be possible to
- satiate Schmeckst and the other Apicians to a point at which they would
- be able to listen to reason. She arranged a feast which, for quality
- and quantity, had not been seen since previous historic times, long
- before the many interruptions of war, collapse, and rebuilding of
- culture. She searched the museums of the world for recipes.
- The dinner was set forth on the tele screens of the entire world. It
- was held in a pavilion built in the old Chinesian style.
- A soaring dream of dry bamboo and paper walls, the festival building
- had a thatched roof in the true ancient fashion. Paper lanterns with
- real candles illuminated the scene. The fifty selected Apician guests
- gleamed like ancient idols. Their
- of Man feathers shone in the light and they clicked their paddle like
- thumbs readily as they spoke, telepathically and fluently, in any Earth
- language which they happened to pick out of the heads of their
- hearers.
- The tragedy was fire. Fire struck the pavilion, wrecked the dinner.
- The lady Ch'ao was rescued by Calvin Dredd. The Apicians fled. All of
- them escaped, all but one. Schmeckst himself. Schmeckst suffocated.
- He let out a telepathic scream which was echoed in the living voices of
- all the human beings, other Apicians, and animals within reach, so that
- the television viewers of the world caught a sudden cacophony of birds
- shrilling, dogs barking, cats yowling, otters screeching, and one lone
- panda letting out a singularly high grunt. Then Schmeckst perished.
- The pity of it... The Earth leaders stood about, wondering how to solve
- the tragedy. On the other side of the world, the Lords of the
- Instrumentality watched the scene. What they saw was amazing and
- horrible. Calvin Dredd, cold, disciplined agent that he was,
- approached the ruins of the pavilion. His face was twisted in an
- expression which they had difficulty in understanding. It was only
- after he licked his lips for the fourth time and they saw a ribbon of
- drool running down his chin that they realized he had gone mad with
- appetite. The lady Ch'ao followed close behind, drawn by some
- remorseless force.
- She was out of her mind. Her eyes gleamed. She stalked like a cat. In
- her left hand she held a bowl and chopsticks.
- The viewers all over the world watching the screen could not understand
- the scene. Two alarmed and dazed Apicians followed the humans,
- wondering what was going to happen.
- Calvin Dredd made a sudden reach. He pulled out the body of
- Schmeckst.
- The fire had finished Schmeckst. Not a feather remained on him. And
- then the flash fire, because of the peculiar dryness of the bamboo and
- the paper and the thousands upon thousands of candles, had baked him.
- The television operator had an inspiration. He turned on the
- smell-control.
- Throughout the planet Earth, where people had gathered to watch this
- unexpected and singularly interesting tragedy, there swept a smell
- which mankind had forgotten. It was an essence of roast duck.
- Beyond all imagining, it was the most delicious smell that any human
- being had ever smelled. Millions upon millions of human mouths
- watered. Throughout the world people looked away from their sets to
- see if there were any Apicians in the neighborhood.
- Just as the Lords of the Instrumentality ordered the disgusting scene
- cut off, Calvin Dredd and the lady Ch'ao began eating the roast
- Apician, Schmeckst.
- Within twenty-four hours most of the Apicians on Earth had been
- served, some with cranberry sauce, others baked, some fried Southern
- style. The serious leaders of Earth dreaded the consequences of such
- uncivilized conduct. Even as they wiped their lips and asked for one
- more duck sandwich, they felt that this behavior was difficult beyond
- all imagination.
- The blocks that the Apicians had been able to put on human action did
- not operate when they were applied to human beings who, looking at an
- Apician, went deep into the recesses of their personality and were
- animated by a mad hunger which transcended all civilization.
- The Lords of the Instrumentality managed to round up Schmeckst's deputy
- and a few other Apicians and to send them back to their ship.
- The soldiers watching them licked their lips. The captain tried to see
- if he could contrive an accident as he escorted his state visitors.
- Unfortunately, tripping Apicians did not break their necks, and the
- Apicians kept throwing violent mind-blocks at human beings in an
- attempt to save themselves.
- One of the Apicians was so undiplomatic as to ask for a chicken salad
- sandwich and almost lost a wing, raw and alive, to a soldier whose
- appetite had been restimulated by reference to food.
- The Apicians went back, the few survivors. They liked Earth well
- enough and Earth food was delicious, but it was a horrible place when
- they considered the cannibalistic human beings who lived there so
- cannibalistic that they ate ducks!
- The Lords of the Instrumentality were relieved to note that when the
- Apicians left they closed the space lane behind them.
- No one quite knows how they closed it, or what defenses they had.
- Mankind, salivating and ashamed, did not push the pursuit hotly.
- Instead, people tried to make up chicken, duck, goose, Cornish hen,
- pigeon, sea-gull, and other sandwiches to duplicate the incomparable
- taste of a genuine inhabitant of Gustible's planet. None were quite
- authentic and people, in their right minds, were not uncivilized enough
- to invade another world solely for getting the inhabitants as
- tidbits.
- The Lords of the Instrumentality were happy to report to one another
- and to the rest of the world at their next meeting that the Apicians
- had managed to close Gustible's planet altogether, had had no further
- interest in dealing with Earth, and appeared to possess just enough of
- a technological edge on human beings to stay concealed from the eyes
- and the appetites of men.
- Save for that, the Apicians were almost forgotten. A confidential
- secretary of the Office of Interstellar Trade was astonished when the
- frozen intelligences of a methane planet ordered forty thousand cases
- of Munich beer He suspected them of being jobbers, not consumers. But
- on the instructions of his superiors he kept the matter confidential
- and allowed the beer to be shipped.
- It undoubtedly went to Gustible's planet, but they did not offer any of
- their own citizens in exchange.
- The matter was closed. The napkins were folded. Trade and diplomacy
- were at an end.
- Himself in Anachron And Time there is And Time there was And Time goes
- on, before But what is the Knot That binds the time That holds it here,
- and more Oh, the Knot in Time Is a secret place They sought in times of
- yore Somewhere in Space They seek it still But Tasco hunts no more ...
- HE FOUND IT from "Mad Dita 's Song " First they threw out every bit of
- machinery which was not vital to their lives or the function of the
- ship. Then went Dita's treasured honeymoon items (foolishly and
- typically she had valued these over the instruments). Next they
- ejected every bit of nutrient except the minimum for survival for two
- persons. Tasco knew then. It was not enough. The ship still had to
- be lightened.
- He remembered that the Subchiefhad said, bitterly enough: "So you got
- leave to time-travel together! You fool! I don't know whether it was
- your idea or hers to have a 'honeymoon in time,"
- but with everyone watching your marriage you've got the sentimental mob
- behind you.
- "Honeymoon in time," indeed. Why?
- Is it that your woman is jealous of your time trips? Don't be an
- idiot, Tasco. You know that ship's not built for two. You don't even
- have to go at all; we can send Vomact. He's single. " Tasco
- remembered, too, the quick warmth of his jealousy at the mention of
- Vomact. If anything had been needed to steel his determination, that
- name had done it. How could he possibly have backed out after
- the publicity over his proposed flight to
- find the Knot. The Subchief must have realized from the expression on
- his face something of his feelings; he had said with a knowledgeable
- grin: "Well, if anybody can find the Knot, it'll be you. But listen,
- leave her here. Take her later if you like but go first alone." But
- Tasco could remember, too, Dita 's kitten-soft body as she nestled up
- to him holding his eyes with her own and murmuring,
- "But, darling, you promised..."
- Yes, he had been warned, but that didn't make the tragedy any easier.
- Yes, he could have left her behind, but what kind of marriage would
- they have had with the blot of her bitterness on the first days of
- their married life? And how could he have lived with himself if he had
- let Vomact go in his place? How, even, would Dita have regarded him?
- He could not deceive himself; he knew that Dita loved him, loved him
- dearly, but he had been a hero ever since she had known him and how
- much would she have loved him without the hero image? He loved her
- enough not to want to find out.
- And now, one of them must go, be lost in space and time forever. Tasco
- looked at her, his beloved. He thought, I have loved you forever, but
- in our case forever was only three earth days.
- Shall I love you there in space and timelessness? To postpone, if only
- for minutes, the eternal parting, he pretended to find some other
- instrument which could be disposed of, and sent through the hatch one
- person' s share of the remaining nutrient. Now the decision was made.
- Dita came over to stand beside him.
- "Does that do it, Tasco? Is the ship light enough now for us to get
- out of the Knot? Instead of answering he held her tightly against him.
- I've done what I had to, he thought. . . Dita, Dita, not to hold you
- ever again . . .
- Softly, not to disturb the moon-pale curve of her hair, he passed his
- hand over her head. Then he released her.
- "Get ready to take over, Dita. I could not murder you, oh my darling,
- and unless the ship is lightened by the weight of one of us we will
- both die here in the Knot. You must take it back, you have to take
- back the ship and all the instrument-gathered data.
- It's not you or me or us now. We're the servants of the
- Instrumentality. You must understand . . ."
- Still within his arms, she backed away enough to look at his face. She
- was dewy-eyed, loving, frightened, her lips trembling with affection.
- She was adorable, and Cranch! how incompetent.
- But she'd make it; she had to. She said nothing at first, trying to
- hold her lips steady, and then she said the thing that would annoy him
- most.
- "Don't, darling, don't. I couldn't stand it. ... Please don't leave
- me."
- His reaction was completely spontaneous: His open hand caught her
- across the cheek, hard. A reciprocal anger flashed across her eyes and
- mouth, but she gained control of herself. She returned to pleading.
- "Tasco, Tasco, don't be bad to me. If we have to die together, I can
- face it. Don't leave me, please don't leave me. I don't blame you
- .
- . ." I don't blame you! he thought. By the Forgotten One, that's
- really rather good!
- He said, as quietly as he could,
- "I' ve told you. Somebody has got to take this ship back to our own
- time and place. We've found the Knot. This is the Knot in Time.
- Look."
- He pointed. The Merochron swung slightly back and forth, from
- +1,000,000:1 to500,000:1.
- "Look hard twenty-years-a minute-plus to ten-years-a-minute-minus. The
- ship has a chance of getting out if the load is lightened. We've
- thrown everything else we could out. Now I'm going. I love you; you
- love me. It will be as hard for me to leave you as for you to see me
- go. A lifetime with you would not have been enough. But, Dita, you
- owe me this ... to take the ship back safely. Don't make it harder for
- me.
- If you can hold it on Left Subformal Probability, do it. If not, keep
- on trying to slow down in back time
- "But, darling . . ."
- He wanted to be tender. Words caught in his throat. But their time
- had run out. Their honeymoon had been a gamble, their own gamble, and
- now it and their life together were over. Three earth days! The
- Instrumentality remained; the Chiefs and Lords waited; a million lives
- would be a cheap price for a fix on the Knot in Time. Dita could do
- it. Even she could do it if the ship were lighter by a man.
- His farewell kiss was not one she would remember. He was in a hurry
- now to finish it; the sooner he left, the better her chances were of
- getting back. And still she looked at him as if she expected him to
- stay and talk. Something in her eyes made him suspicious that she
- would try to hinder him. He cut in his helmet speaker and said:
- "Goodbye. I love you. I have to go now, quickly. Please do as I ask
- and don't get in my way."
- She was weeping now.
- "Tasco, you're going to die . . ."
- "Maybe," he said.
- She reached for him, tried to hold him.
- "Darling, don't. Don't go. Don't hurry so."
- Roughly he pushed her back into the control seat. He tried to hold his
- anger that she would not let him do even this right, to die for her.
- She would make it a scene.
- "Sweetheart," he said, "don't make me say it all over again. Anyhow, I
- may not die. I'll aim for a planet full of nymphs and I'll live a
- thousand years."
- He had half expected to stir her to jealousy or anger... at least some
- other emotion, but she disregarded his poor joke and went on quietly
- weeping. A wisp of smoke rising in the hot moving air of the cabin
- made them look to the control panel. The Probability Selector was
- glowing. Tasco kept his face
- of Man immobile, glad that she did not realize the significance of the
- reading. Now no one will ever find me, even if I live, he thought.
- But go, go, go!
- He smiled at her through his shimmering suit. He touched her arm with
- his metal claw. Then, before she could stop him he backed into the
- escape hatch, slammed the door on himself, fumbled for the ejector gun,
- pressed the button. Pressed it hard.
- Thunder, and a wash like water. There went his world, his wife, his
- time, himself... He floated free in ana chron Others had gone astray
- between the Probabilities; none had come back. They had borne it, he
- supposed. If they could, he could too. And then it caught him. The
- others, had they left wives and sweethearts?
- Was it for them too a personal tragedy? Himself and Dita, they had not
- had to come. Vanity, pride, jealousy, stubbornness. They had come.
- And now: himself in ana chron
- He felt himself leaping from Probability to Probability like a pebble
- bouncing down a corrugated plastic roof. He couldn't even tell whether
- he was going toward Formal or Resolved. Perhaps he was still somewhere
- in Left Subformal.
- The clatter ceased. He waited for more blows.
- One more came. Only one, and sharp.
- He felt tension go out of him. He felt the Probabilities firming
- around him, listened to the selector working in his helmet as it coded
- him into atime-space combination fit for human life. The thing had a
- murmur in it which he had never heard in a practice jump, but then,
- this wasn't practice. He had never before gotten out between the
- Probabilities, never floated free in ana chron
- A feeling of weight and direction made him realize that he was coming
- back to common space. His feet were touching ground. He stood still,
- attempting to relax while a world took shape around him. There was
- something very strange about the whole business.
- The grey color of the space around him resembled the grey of fast back
- timing the blind blur which he had so often seen from the cabin window
- when, having chosen a Probability, he had coursed it down until the
- Selectors had given him an opening he could land in. But how could he
- be back timing with no ship, no power?
- Unless Unless the Knot in Time in flinging him out had imparted to him
- a time-momentum in his own body. But even if that were so he should
- decelerate. Was he coming down in ratio? This still felt like high
- timing 10,000:1 or higher.
- He tried briefly to think of Dita but his personal situation outweighed
- everything else. A new worry hit him. What was his own personal
- consumption of time? With time so high outside his unit was it also
- rising inside? How
- Himself in Anachron long would his nutrients last? He tried to be
- aware of his own body, to feel hunger, to catch a glimpse of himself.
- Was the automatic nutrition keeping up with the changing time? On
- inspiration, he rubbed his face against the mask to see if his whiskers
- had grown since he left the ship.
- He had a beard. Plenty.
- Before he could figure that one out, there was one last Snap!
- and he fainted.
- When he recovered, he was still erect. Some kind of frame supported
- him. Who had put it there, and how? By the continued grey ness he
- could tell that his physiological time and external time had not yet
- met. He felt a violent impatience. There should be some way to slow
- down. His helmet felt heavy. Disregarding the risks, he clawed at the
- mask until it came off.
- The air was sweet but thick, thick. He had to fight to breathe it in.
- It was hardly worth the struggle.
- He was still high timing more so than he had thought anybody could with
- an exposed body. He looked down and saw his beard tremble as it grew.
- He felt the stab of fingernails growing against his palms; there should
- have been an automatic cut-off but time was going too fast. Clenching
- his hand, he broke off the nails roughly. His boots had apparently
- broken off his toenails, and although his feet were uncomfortable the
- pressure was bearable.
- Anyway there was nothing he could do about it.
- His immense tiredness warned him that the automatic nutrient system was
- not keeping up with his bodily time. With effort he fitted his claw to
- his belt and twisted until the supplementary food vial was released. He
- felt the needle pierce the skin of his belly; he twisted again until
- the hot surge of nourishment told him that the food-injector had
- reached a vein. Almost immediately his strength began to rise.
- He watched the blur of buildings flashing into instantaneous shape
- around him, standing a moment, and then melting slowly away. Now he
- could see a little more of his surroundings. He seemed to be standing
- in the mouth of a cave or in a great doorway. It was curious, that,
- about the buildings. All the other buildings he had seen in time had
- worked the other way. First the slow up-thrust as they were built,
- then the greying evenness of age, then the flash of removal. But, he
- reminded himself tiredly, he was back timing and he thought it probable
- that no other human being had ever back timed so hard and fast or for
- so long a time.
- He seemed now to be rapidly decelerating. A building appeared around
- him, then he was outside of it, then back in again. Suddenly a great
- light shone in front of him.
- Now he was inside a large palace. He seemed to be placed on a
- pedestal, high up at the center of things. Shimmering masses began to
- take form
- of Man around him at rhythmic intervals: people? There was something
- wrong about the way they moved; why did they move with that strange
- awkwardness?
- As the light persisted and this building seemed solid, he made an
- effort to squint to try to see more. His eyeballs were the only part
- of his anatomy that seemed to move freely. His breaking growing
- breaking fingernails and toenails and the growing beard reminded him to
- break off another food needle in his vein. His skin itched
- intolerably. As he realized the increasing immobility of his arms he
- felt panic and while there was still time pushed the continuous-flow
- button on the supplementary nutrients. Despite the food, enough to
- keep him alive in the cold of space, he could no longer move his hands
- and fingers. And still, it seemed only minutes since he had left the
- ship. (Dita, Dita, are you out of the Knot ? Did you manage it in
- time ? If only I calculated the weight load right. . .) The building
- continued stable around him. He rolled his eyes to try to see where he
- was, when he was.
- I'm still alive, he thought. Nobody else ever got out of'anachron.
- That's something. Nobody else ever stepped out of time to be seen
- again.
- Deceleration continued. The bright light before him remained even and
- he found he could see better. In front of him was a sort of picture,
- high and large. What was it? Panels, a series of panels, paintings
- from some remote past.
- He peered harder and recognized that the panel at the top left was
- himself, Tasco Magnon. There he was: shimmering space suit, marble
- armrests, pedestal below him. But they had given him wings like the
- wings of angels of the Old Strong Religion.
- Great white wings. And they had put a halo around his head. The next
- panel showed him as he felt: suit shimmering but his face old and
- tired.
- The panels on the lower level were equally curious. The first showed a
- bed of grass or moss with luminescence glowing above it. The second
- showed a skeleton standing in a frame.
- His tired mind sought to make sense of the panels.
- People became plainer in the blur around him. Sometimes he could
- almost see individuals. The colors of the paintings brightened,
- brightened, until they flashed gay and bold, then disappeared.
- Disappeared completely, flatly.
- His brain, so old and tired now, struggled with immense effort to reach
- the truth. Physiological time was utterly deranged. Each minute
- seemed years. His thoughts became old memories while he thought them.
- But the truth came through to him: He was still back timing
- He had passed the time of his arrival and resurrection in this world.
- The
- Himself in Anachron 199 resurrection was wisely prophesied by the
- beings who built the palace, painted the wings and halo around him.
- He would die soon, in the remote past of this civilization.
- Long afterwards, centuries before his own death, his alien remains
- would fade into the system of this time-space locus; and in fading,
- they would seem to glow and to assemble. They must have been
- untouchable and beyond manipulation. The people who had built the
- palace and their forefathers had watched dust turn to skeleton,
- skeleton heave upright, skeleton become mummy, mummy become corpse,
- corpse become old man, old man become young himself as he had left the
- spaceship. He had landed in his own tomb, his own temple.
- He had yet to fulfill the things which these people had seen him do,
- and had recorded in the panels of his temple.
- Across his fatigue he felt a thrill of weary remote pride: he knew that
- he was sure to fulfill the godhood which these people had so faithfully
- recorded. He knew he would become young and glorious, only to
- disappear. He'd done it, a few minutes or millennia ago.
- The clash of time within his body tore at him with peculiar pain. The
- food needle seemed to have no further effect. His vitals felt dry.
- The building glowed as it seemed to come nearer.
- The ages thrust against him. He thought,
- "I am Tasco Magnon and have been a god. I will become one again."
- But his last conscious thought was nothing grandiose. A glimpse of
- moon-pale hair, a half-turned cheek. In the aching lost silence of his
- own mind he called, Dita! Dita!
- The twisted time ship took form at the Uateport of the Instrumentality.
- Officials and engineers rushed up, opened the door. The young woman
- who sat at the controls staring blindly was white-faced beyond all
- weeping. They tried to rouse her from her trance-like state but she
- clung desperately to the controls, repeating like a chant: "He jumped
- out. Tasco jumped out. He jumped out. Alone, alone in ana chron . .
- ."
- Gravely and gently the officials lifted her from the controls so that
- they could remove the now-priceless instruments.
- The Crime and the Glory of Commander Suzdal Do not read this story;
- turn the page quickly. The story may upset you. Anyhow, you probably
- know it already. It is a very disturbing story. Everyone knows it.
- The glory and the crime of Commander Suzdal have been told in a
- thousand different ways.
- Don't let yourself realize that the story is the truth.
- It isn 't. Not at all. There's not a bit of truth to it. There is no
- such planet as Arachosia, no such people as klopts, no such world as
- Catland. These are all just imaginary, they didn't happen, forget
- about it, go away and read something else.
- The Beginning Commander Suzdal was sent forth in a shell-ship to
- explore the outermost reaches of our galaxy. His ship was called a
- cruiser, but he was the only man in it. He was equipped with hypnotics
- and cubes to provide him the semblance of company, a large crowd of
- friendly people who could be convoked out of his own hallucinations.
- The Instrumentality even offered him some choice in his imaginary
- companions, each of whom was embodied in a small ceramic cube
- containing the brain of a small animal but imprinted with the
- personality of an actual human being.
- Suzdal, a short, stocky man with ajolly smile, was blunt about his
- needs: "Give me two good security officers. I can manage the ship, but
- if I'm going into the unknown, I'll need help in meeting the strange
- problems which might show up."
- The loading official smiled at him,
- "I never heard of a cruiser commander who asked for security officers.
- Most people regard them as an utter nuisance."
- "That's all right," said Suzdal.
- "I don't."
- "Don't you want some chess players?"
- "I can play chess," said Suzdal, "all I want to, using the spare
- computers. All I have to do is set the power down and they start
- losing. On full power, they always beat me."
- The official then gave Suzdal an odd look. He did not exactly leer,
- but his expression became both intimate and a little unpleasant.
- "What about other companions?" he asked, with a funny little edge to
- his voice.
- "I've got books," said Suzdal, "a couple of thousand. I'm going to be
- gone only a couple of years Earth time."
- "Local-subjective, it might be several thousand years," said the
- official, "though the time will wind back up again as you reapproach
- Earth. And I wasn't talking about books," he repeated, with the same
- funny, prying lilt to his voice.
- Suzdal shook his head with momentary worry, ran his hand through his
- sandy hair. His blue eyes were forthright and he looked
- straightforwardly into the official's eyes.
- "What do you mean, then, if not books? Navigators? I' ve got them,
- not to mention the turtle-men. They' re good company, if you just talk
- to them slowly enough and then give them plenty of time to answer.
- Don't forget, I've been out before .. ."
- The official spat out his offer: "Dancing girls. WOMEN.
- Concubines. Don't you want any of those? We could even cube your own
- wife for you and print her mind on a cube for you. That way she could
- be with you every week that you were awake."
- Suzdal looked as though he would spit on the floor in sheer disgust.
- "Alice? You mean, you want me to travel around with a ghost of her?
- How would the real Alice feel when I came back?
- Don't tell me that you're going to put my wife on a mousebrain.
- You're just offering me delirium. I've got to keep my wits out there
- with space and time rolling in big waves around me. I'm going to be
- crazy enough, just as it is. Don't forget, I've been out there before.
- Getting back to a real Alice is going to be one of my biggest reality
- factors. It will help me to get home." At this point, Suzdal's own
- voice took on the note of intimate inquiry, as he added,
- "Don't tell me that a lot of cruiser commanders ask to go flying around
- with imaginary wives. That would be pretty nasty, in my opinion. Do
- many of them do it?"
- "We're here to get you loaded on board ship, not to discuss what other
- officers do or do not do. Sometimes we think it good to have a female
- companion on the ship with the commander, even if she is imaginary. If
- you ever found anything among the stars which took on female form,
- you'd be mighty vulnerable to it."
- "Females, among the stars? Bosh!" said Suzdal.
- "Strange things have happened," said the official.
- "Not that," said Suzdal.
- "Pain, craziness, distortion, panic without end, a craze for food yes,
- those I can look for and face.
- They will be there. But
- females, no. There aren't any. I love my wife. I won't make females
- up out of my own mind. After all, I'll have the turtle people aboard,
- and they will be bringing up their young. I'll have plenty of family
- to watch and to take part in. I can even give Christmas parties for
- the young ones."
- "What kind of parties are those?" asked the official.
- "Just a funny little ancient ritual that I heard about from an outer
- pilot. You give all the young things presents, once every
- local-subjective year."
- "It sounds nice," said the official, his voice growing tired and
- final.
- "You still refuse to have a cube-woman on board. You wouldn't have to
- activate her unless you really needed her."
- "You haven't flown, yourself, have you?" asked Suzdal.
- It was the official's turn to flush.
- "No," he said, flatly.
- "Anything that's in that ship, I'm going to think about. I'm acheerful
- sort of man, and very friendly. Let me just get along with my
- turtle-people. They're not lively, but they are considerate and
- restful. Two thousand or more years, local-subjective, is a lot of
- time. Don't give me additional decisions to make. It's work enough,
- running the ship. Just leave me alone with my turtle people I've
- gotten along with them before."
- "You, Suzdal, are the commander," said the loading official.
- "We'll do as you say."
- "Fine,"smiled Suzdal.
- "You may get a lot of queer types on this run, but I'm not one of
- them."
- The two men smiled agreement at one another and the loading of the ship
- was completed.
- The ship itself was managed by turtle-men, who aged very slowly, so
- that while Suzdal coursed the outer rim of the galaxy and let the
- thousands of years local count go past while he slept in his frozen
- bed, the turtle-men rose generation by generation, trained their young
- to work the ship, taught the stories of the Earth that they would never
- see again, and read the computers correctly, to awaken Suzdal only when
- there was a need for human intervention and for human intelligence.
- Suzdal awakened from time to time, did his work and then went back.
- He felt that he had been gone from Earth only a few months.
- Months indeed! He had been gone more than a subjective ten thousand
- years, when he met the siren capsule.
- It looked like an ordinary distress capsule. The kind of thing that
- was often shot through space to indicate some complication of the
- destiny of man among the stars. This capsule had apparently been flung
- across an immense distance, and from the capsule Suzdal got the story
- of Arachosia.
- The story was false. The brains of a whole planet the wild genius of a
- malevolent, unhappy race had been dedicated to the problem of ensnaring
- and attracting a normal pilot from Old Earth. The story which the
- capsule
- sang conveyed the rich personality of a wonderful woman with a
- contralto voice. The story was true, in part. The appeals were real,
- in part. Suzdal listened to the story and it sank, like a wonderfully
- orchestrated piece of grand opera, right into the fibers of his brain.
- It would have been different if he had known the real story.
- Everybody now knows the real story of Arachosia, the bitter terrible
- story of the planet which was a paradise, which turned into a hell. The
- story of how people got to be something different from people. The
- story of what happened way out there in the most dreadful place among
- the stars.
- He would have fled if he knew the real story. He couldn't understand
- what we now know: Mankind could not meet the terrible people of
- Arachosia without the people of Arachosia following them home and
- bringing to mankind a grief greater than grief, a craziness worse than
- mere insanity, a plague surpassing all imaginable plagues.
- The Arachosians had become unpeople, and yet, in their innermost
- imprinting of their personalities, they remained people.
- They sang songs which exalted their own deformity and which praised
- themselves for what they had so horribly become, and yet, in their own
- songs, in their own ballads, the organ tones of the refrain rang out:
- And I mourn Man!
- They knew what they were and they hated themselves. Hating themselves,
- they pursued mankind.
- Perhaps they are still pursuing mankind.
- The Instrumentality has by now taken good pains that the Arachosians
- will never find us again, has flung networks of deception out along the
- edge of the galaxy to make sure that those lost ruined people cannot
- find us. The Instrumentality knows and guards our world and all the
- other worlds of mankind against the deformity which has become
- Arachosia. We want nothing to do with Arachosia. Let them hunt for
- us. They won't find us.
- How could Suzdal know that?
- This was the first time someone had met the Arachosians, and he met
- them only with a message in which an elfin voice sang the elfin song of
- ruin, using perfectly clear words in the old common tongue to tell a
- story so sad, so abominable, that mankind has not forgotten it yet. In
- its essence the story was very simple. This is what Suzdal heard, and
- what people have learned ever since then.
- The Arachosians were settlers. Settlers could go out by sail ship
- trailing behind them the pods. That was the first way.
- Or they could go out by plano form ship, ships piloted by skillful men,
- who went into Space2 and came out again and found man.
- Or for very long distances indeed, they could go out in the new
- combination. Individual pods packed into an enormous shell-ship, a
- gigantic version of Suzdal's own ship. The sleepers frozen, the
- machines waking, the ship fired to and beyond the speed of light, flung
- below space, coming out at random and homing on a suitable target. It
- was a gamble, but brave men took it. If no target was found, their
- machines might course space forever, while the bodies, protected by
- freezing as they were, spoiled bit by bit, and while the dim light of
- life went out in the individual frozen brains.
- The shell-ships were the answers of mankind to an overpopulation which
- neither the old planet Earth nor its daughter planets could quite
- respond to. The shell-ships took the bold, the reckless, the romantic,
- the willful, sometimes the criminals out among the stars. Mankind lost
- track of these ships, over and over again. The advance explorers, the
- organized Instrumentality, would stumble upon human beings, cities and
- cultures, high or low, tribes or families, where the shell-ships had
- gone on, far, far beyond the outermost limits of mankind, where the
- instruments of search had found an Earthlike planet, and the
- shell-ship, like some great dying insect, had dropped to the planet,
- awakened its people, broken open, and destroyed itself with its
- delivery of newly reborn men and women, to settle a world.
- Arachosia looked like a good world to the men and women who came to it.
- Beautiful beaches, with cliffs like endless rivieras rising above. Two
- bright big moons in the sky, a sun not too far away. The machines had
- pretested the atmosphere and sampled the water, had already scattered
- the forms of Old Earth life into the atmosphere and in the seas so that
- as the people awakened they heard the singing of Earth birds and they
- knew that Earth fish had already been adapted to the oceans and flung
- in, there to multiply. It seemed a good life, a rich life. Things
- went well.
- Things went very, very well for the Arachosians.
- This is the truth.
- This was, thus far, the story told by the capsule.
- But here they diverged.
- The capsule did not tell the dreadful, pitiable truth about Arachosia.
- It invented a set of plausible lies. The voice which came
- telepathically out of the capsule was that of a mature, warm happy
- female some woman of early middle age with a superb speaking
- contralto.
- Suzdal almost fancied that he talked to it, so real was the
- personality. How could he know that he was being beguiled, trapped?
- It sounded right, really right.
- "And then," said the voice, "the Arachosian sickness has been hitting
- us. Do not land. Stand off. Talk to us. Tell us about medicine. Our
- young die, without reason. Our farms are rich, and the wheat here is
- more golden than
- of Man it was on Earth, the plums more purple, the flowers whiter.
- Everything does well except people.
- "Our young die ..." said the womanly voice, ending in a sob.
- "Are there any symptoms?" thought Suzdal, and almost as though it had
- heard his question, the capsule went on.
- "They die of nothing. Nothing which our medicine can test, nothing
- which our science can show. They die. Our population is dropping.
- People, do not forget us! Man, whoever you are, come quickly, come
- now, bring help! But for your own sake, do not land. Stand off-planet
- and view us through screens so that you can take word back to the home
- of man about the lost children of mankind among the strange and
- outermost stars!"
- Strange, indeed!
- The truth was far stranger, and very ugly indeed.
- Suzdal was convinced of the truth of the message. He had been selected
- for the trip because he was good-natured, intelligent, and brave; this
- appeal touched all three of his qualities.
- Later, much later, when he was arrested, Suzdal was asked, "Suzdal, you
- fool, why didn't you test the message? You've risked the safety of all
- the man kinds for a foolish appeal!"
- "It wasn't foolish!" snapped Suzdal.
- "That distress capsule had a sad, wonderful womanly voice and the story
- checked out true."
- "With whom?" said the investigator, flatly and dully.
- Suzdal sounded weary and sad when he replied to the point.
- "It checked out with my books. With my knowledge." Reluctantly he
- added,
- "And with my own judgment. . ."
- "Was your judgment good?" said the investigator.
- "No," said Suzdal, and let the single word hang on the air as though it
- might be the last word he would ever speak.
- But it was Suzdal himself who broke the silence when he added,
- "Before I set course and went to sleep, I activated my security
- officers in cubes and had them check the story. They got the real
- story of Arachosia, all right. They cross-ciphered it out of patterns
- in the distress capsule and they told me the whole real story very
- quickly, just as I was waking up."
- "And what did you do?"
- "I did what I did. I did that for which I expect to be punished.
- The Arachosians were already walking around the outside of my hull by
- then. They had caught my ship. They had caught me. How was I to know
- that the wonderful, sad story was true only for the first twenty full
- years that the woman told about. And she wasn' t even a woman. Just a
- klopt. Only the first twenty years.. ."
- Things had gone well for the Arachosians for the first twenty years.
- Then came disaster, but it was not the tale told in the distress
- capsule.
- They couldn't understand it. They didn't know why it had to happen to
- them. They didn't know why it waited twenty years, three months, and
- four days. But their time came.
- We think it must have been something in the radiation of their sun. Or
- perhaps a combination of that particular sun's radiation and the
- chemistry, which even the wise machines in the shell-ship had not fully
- analyzed, which reached out and was spread from within. The disaster
- hit. It was a simple one and utterly unstoppable.
- They had doctors. They had hospitals. They even had a limited
- capacity for research.
- But they could not research fast enough. Not enough to meet this
- disaster. It was simple, monstrous, enormous.
- Femininity became carcinogenic.
- Every woman on the planet began developing cancer at the same time, on
- her lips, in her breasts, in her groin, sometimes along the edge of her
- jaw, the edge of her lip, the tender portions of her body. The cancer
- had many forms, and yet it was always the same. There was something
- about the radiation which reached through, which reached into the human
- body, and which made a particular form of desoxycorticosterone turn
- into a sub form unknown on earth ofpregnandiol, which infallibly caused
- cancer. The advance was rapid.
- The little baby girls began to die first. The women clung weeping to
- their fathers, their husbands. The mothers tried to say goodbye to
- their sons.
- One of the doctors, herself, was a woman, a strong woman.
- Remorselessly, she cut live tissue from her living body, put it under
- the microscope, took samples of her own urine, her blood, her spit, and
- she came up with the answer: There is no answer.
- And yet there was something better and worse than an answer.
- If the sun of Arachosia killed everything which was female, if the
- female fish floated upside down on the surface of the sea, if the
- female birds sang a shriller, wilder song as they died above the eggs
- which would never hatch, if the female animals grunted and growled in
- the lairs where they hid away with pain, female human beings did not
- have to accept death so tamely. The doctor's name was Astarte Kraus.
- The Magic of the Klopts The human female could do what the animal
- female could not.
- She could turn male. With the help of equipment from the ship,
- tremendous quantities of testosterone were manufactured, and every
- single girl and woman still surviving was turned into a man.
- Massive injections were administered to
- of Man all of them. Their faces grew heavy, they all returned to
- growing a little bit, their chests flattened out, their muscles grew
- stronger, and in less than three months they were indeed men.
- Some lower forms of life had survived because they were not polarized
- clearly enough to the forms of male and female, which depended on that
- particular organic chemistry for survival. With the fish gone, plants
- clotted the oceans, the birds were gone but the insects survived;
- dragonflies, butterflies, mutated versions of grasshoppers, beetles,
- and other insects swarmed over the planet.
- The men who had lost women worked side by side with the men who had
- been made out of the bodies of women.
- When they knew each other, it was unutterably sad for them to meet.
- Husband and wife, both bearded, strong, quarrelsome, desperate, and
- busy. The little boys somehow realizing that they would never grow up
- to have sweethearts, to have wives, to get married, to have
- daughters.
- But what was a mere world to stop the driving brain and the burning
- intellect of Dr. Astarte Kraus? She became the leader of her people,
- the men and the men-women. She drove them forward, she made them
- survive, she used cold brains on all of them.
- (Perhaps, if she had been a sympathetic person, she would have let them
- die. But it was the nature of Dr. Kraus not to be sympathetic just
- brilliant, remorseless, implacable against the universe which had tried
- to destroy her.) Before she died. Dr. Kraus had worked out a
- carefully programmed genetic system. Little bits of the men's tissues
- could be implanted by a surgical routine in the abdomens, just inside
- the peritoneal wall, crowding a little bit against the intestines, an
- artificial womb and artificial chemistry and artificial insemination by
- radiation, by heat made it possible for men to bear boy children.
- What was the use of having girl children if they all died? The people
- of Arachosia went on. The first generation lived through the tragedy,
- half insane with the grief and disappointment. They sent out message
- capsules and they knew that their messages would reach Earth in six
- million years.
- As new explorers, they had gambled on going further than other ships
- went. They had found a good world, but they were not quite sure where
- they were. Were they still within the familiar galaxy, or had they
- jumped beyond to one of the nearby galaxies?
- They couldn't quite tell. It was a part of the policy of Old Earth not
- to over-equip the exploring parties for fear that some of them, taking
- violent cultural change or becoming aggressive empires, might turn back
- on Earth and destroy it. Earth always made sure that it had the
- advantages.
- The third and fourth and fifth generations of Arachosians were still
- people. All of them were male. They had the human memory, they had
- human books, they knew the words mama, sister, sweetheart, but they no
- longer really understood what these terms referred to.
- The human body, which had taken four million years on Earth to grow,
- has immense resources within it, resources greater than the brain, or
- the personality, or the hopes of the individual. And the bodies of the
- Arachosians decided things for them. Since the chemistry of femininity
- meant instant death, and since an occasional girl baby was born dead
- and buried casually, the bodies made the adjustment. The men of
- Arachosia became both men and women. They gave themselves the ugly
- nickname "klopt." Since they did not have the rewards of family life,
- they became strutting cockerels, who mixed their love with murder, who
- blended their songs with duels, who sharpened their weapons, and who
- earned the right to reproduce within a strange family system which no
- decent Earth-man would find comprehensible.
- But they did survive.
- And the method of their survival was so sharp, so fierce, that it was
- indeed a difficult thing to understand.
- In less than four hundred years the Arachosians had civilized into
- groups of fighting clans. They still had just one planet, around just
- one sun. They lived in just one place. They had a few spacecraft they
- had built themselves. Their science, their art, and their music moved
- forward with strange lurches of inspired neurotic genius, because they
- lacked the fundamentals in the human personality itself, the balance of
- male and female, the family, the operations of love, of hope, of
- reproduction. They survived, but they themselves had become monsters
- and did not know it.
- Out of their memory of old mankind they created a legend of Old Earth.
- Women in that memory were deformities, who should be killed. Misshapen
- beings, who should be erased. The family, as they recalled it, was
- filth and abomination which they were resolved to wipe out if they
- should ever meet it.
- They, themselves, were bearded homosexuals, with rouged lips, ornate
- earrings, fine heads of hair, and very few old men among them. They
- killed off their men before they became old; the things they could not
- get from love or relaxation or comfort, they purchased with battle and
- death. They made up songs proclaiming themselves to be the last of the
- old men and the first of the new, and they sang their hate to mankind
- when they should meet, and they sang,
- "Woe is Earth that we should find it," and yet something inside them
- made them add to almost every song a refrain which troubled even
- them:
- The Trap Suzdal had been deceived by the message capsule. He put
- himself back in the sleeping compartment and he directed the turtle-men
- to take the cruiser to Arachosia, wherever it might be.
- He did not do this crazily or wantonly. He did it as amatter of
- deliberate judgment. A judgment for which he was later heard, tried,
- judged fairly, and then put to something worse than death.
- He deserved it.
- He sought for Arachosia without stopping to think of the most
- fundamental rule: How could he keep the Arachosians, singing monsters
- that they were, from following him home to the eventual ruin of Earth?
- Might not their condition be a disease which could be contagious, or
- might not their fierce society destroy the other societies of men and
- leave Earth and all of men's other worlds in ruin? He did not think of
- this, so he was heard, and tried and punished much later. We will come
- to that.
- The Arrival Suzdal awakened in orbit off Arachosia. And he awakened
- knowing he had made a mistake. Strange ships clung to his shell ship
- like evil barnacles from an unknown ocean, attached to a familiar water
- craft. He called to his turtle-men to press the controls and the
- controls did not work.
- The outsiders, whoever they were, man or woman or beast or god, had
- enough technology to immobilize his ship. Suzdal immediately realized
- his mistake. Naturally, he thought of destroying himself and the ship,
- but he was afraid that if he destroyed himself and missed destroying
- the ship completely there was a chance that his cruiser, a late model
- with recent weapons, would fall into the hands of whoever it was
- walking on the outer dome of his own cruiser. He could not afford the
- risk of mere individual suicide. He had to take a more drastic step.
- This was not time for obeying Earth rules.
- His security officer a cube ghost wakened to human form whispered the
- whole story to him in quick intelligent gasps: "They are people, sir.
- "More people than I am.
- "I'm a ghost, an echo working out of a dead brain.
- "These are real people. Commander Suzdal, but they are the worst
- people ever to get loose among the stars. You must destroy them,
- sir!"
- "I can't," said Suzdal, still trying to come fully awake.
- "They're people. " "Then you've got to beat them off. By any means,
- sir. By any means whatever. Save Earth. Stop them. Warn Earth."
- "And I?" asked Suzdal, and was immediately sorry that he had asked
- the selfish, personal question.
- "You will die or you will be punished," said the security officer
- sympathetically, "and I do not know which one will be worse."
- "Now?"
- "Right now. There is no time left for you. No time at all."
- "But the rules . . . ?"
- "You have already strayed far outside of rules."
- There were rules, but Suzdal left them all behind.
- Rules, rules for ordinary times, for ordinary places, for
- understandable dangers.
- This was a nightmare cooked up by the flesh of man, motivated by the
- brains of man. Already his monitors were bringing him news of who
- these people were, these seeming maniacs, these men who had never known
- women, these boys who had grown to lust and battle, who had a family
- structure which the normal human brain could not accept, could not
- believe, could not tolerate. The things on the outside were people,
- and they weren't. The things on the outside had the human brain, the
- human imagination, and the human capacity for revenge, and yet Suzdal,
- a brave officer, was so frightened by the mere nature of them that he
- did not respond to their efforts to communicate.
- He could feel the turtle-women among his crew aching with fright
- itself, as they realized who was pounding on their ship and who it was
- that sang through loud announcing machines that they wanted in, in,
- in.
- Suzdal committed a crime. It is the pride of the Instrumentality that
- the Instrumentality allows its officers to commit crimes or mistakes or
- suicide. The Instrumentality does the things for mankind that a
- computer can not do. The Instrumentality leaves the human brain, the
- human choice in action.
- The Instrumentality passes dark knowledge to its staff, things not
- usually understood in the inhabited world, things prohibited to
- ordinary men and women because the officers of the Instrumentality, the
- captains and the subchiefs and the chiefs, must know their jobs. If
- they do not, all mankind might perish.
- Suzdal reached into his arsenal. He knew what he was doing.
- The larger moon of Arachosia was habitable. He could see that there
- were earth plants already on it, and earth insects. His monitors
- showed him that the Arachosian men-women had not bothered to settle on
- the planet. He threw an agonized inquiry at his computers and cried
- out: "Read me the age it's in!"
- The machine sang back,
- "More than thirty million years."
- Suzdal had strange resources. He had twins or quadruplets of almost
- every Earth animal. The earth animals were carried in tiny capsules no
- larger than a medicine capsule and they consisted of the sperm and the
- ovum of the
- of Man higher animals, ready to be matched for sowing, ready to be
- imprinted; he also had small life-bombs which could surround any form
- of life with at least a chance of survival.
- He went to the bank and he got cats, eight pairs, sixteen earth cats,
- Fells domesticus, the kind of cat that you and I know, the kind of cat
- which is bred, sometimes for telepathic uses, sometimes to go along on
- the ships and serve as auxiliary weapons when the minds of the pin
- lighters direct the cats to fight off dangers.
- He coded these cats. He coded them with messages just as monstrous as
- the messages which had made the men-women of Arachosia into monsters.
- This is what he coded: Do not breed true.
- Invent new chemistry.
- You will serve man.
- Become civilised.
- Learn speech.
- You will serve man.
- When man calls you will serve man.
- Go back, and come forth.
- Serve man.
- These instructions were no mere verbal instructions. They were
- imprints on the actual molecular structure of the animals.
- They were changes in the genetic and biological coding which went with
- these cats. And then Suzdal committed his offense against the laws of
- mankind. He had a chronopathic device on board the ship. A time
- distorter, usually to be used for a moment or a second or two to bring
- the ship away from utter destruction.
- The men-women of Arachosia were already cutting through the hull.
- He could hear their high, hooting voices screaming delirious pleasure
- at one another as they regarded him as the first of their promised
- enemies that they had ever met, the first of the monsters from Old
- Earth who had finally overtaken them. The true, evil people on whom
- they, the men-women of Arachosia, would be revenged.
- Suzdal remained calm. He coded the genetic cats. He loaded them into
- life-bombs. He adjusted the controls of his chronopathic machine
- illegally, so that instead of reaching one second for a ship of eighty
- thousand tons, they reached two million years for a load of less than
- four kilos. He flung the cats into the nameless moon of Arachosia.
- And he flung them back in time, And he knew he did not have to wait.
- He didn't.
- The Crime and the Glory of Commander Suzdal The Gotland Suzdal Made
- The cats came. Their ships glittered in the naked sky above Arachosia.
- Their little combat craft attacked. The cats who had not existed a
- moment before, but who had then had two million years in which to
- follow a destiny printed into their brains, printed down their spinal
- cords, etched into the chemistry of their bodies and personalities. The
- cats had turned into people of a kind, with speech, intelligence, hope,
- and a mission. Their mission was to reach Suzdal, to rescue him, to
- obey him, and to damage Arachosia.
- The cat ships screamed their battle warnings.
- "This is the day of the year of the promised age. And now come
- cats!"
- The Arachosians had waited for battle for four thousand years and now
- they got it. The cats attacked them. Two of the cat craft recognized
- Suzdal, and the cats reported, "Oh Lord, oh God, oh Maker of all
- things, oh Commander of Time, oh Beginner of Life, we have waited since
- Everything began to serve You, to serve Your Name, to obey Your
- Glory!
- May we live for You, may we die for You. We are Your people."
- Suzdal cried and threw his message to all the cats.
- "Harry the klopts but don't kill them all!"
- He repeated,
- "Harry them and stop them until I escape." He flung his cruiser into
- non space and escaped.
- Neither cat nor Arachosian followed him.
- And that's the story, but the tragedy is that Suzdal got back.
- And the Arachosians are still there and the cats are still there.
- Perhaps the Instrumentality knows where they are, perhaps the
- Instrumentality does not. Mankind does not really want to find out. It
- is against all law to bring up a form of life superior to man.
- Perhaps the cats are. Perhaps somebody knows whether the Arachosians
- won and killed the cats and added the cat science to their own and are
- now looking for us somewhere, probing like blind men through the stars
- for us true human beings to meet, to hate, to kill. Or perhaps the
- cats won.
- Perhaps the cats are imprinted by a strange mission, by weird hopes of
- serving men they don't recognize. Perhaps they think we are all
- Arachosians and should be saved only for some particular cruiser
- commander, whom they will never see again. They won't see Suzdal,
- because we know what happened to him.
- The Trial of Suzdal Suzdal was brought to trial on a great stage in the
- open world.
- His trial was recorded. He had gone in when he should not have gone
- in. He had searched for the Arachosians without waiting and asking for
- advice and
- of Man reinforcements. What business was it of his to relieve a
- distress ages old? What business indeed?
- And then the cats. We had the records of the ship to show that
- something came out of that moon. Spacecraft, things with voices,
- things that could communicate with the human brain. We're not even
- sure, since they transmitted directly into the receiver computers, that
- they spoke an Earth language. Perhaps they did it with some sort of
- direct telepathy. But the crime was, Suzdal had succeeded.
- By throwing the cats back two million years, by coding them to survive,
- coding them to develop civilization, coding them to come to his rescue,
- he had created a whole new world in less than one second of objective
- time.
- His chronopathic device had flung the little life-bombs back to the wet
- earth of the big moon over Arachosia and in less time than it takes to
- record this, the bombs came back in the form of a fleet built by a
- race, an Earth race, though of cat origin, two million years old.
- The court stripped Suzdal of his name and said,
- "You will not be named Suzdal any longer."
- The court stripped Suzdal of his rank.
- "You will not be a commander of this or any other navy, neither
- imperial nor of the Instrumentality."
- The court stripped Suzdal of his life.
- "You will not live longer, former commander, and former Suzdal."
- And then the court stripped Suzdal of death.
- "You will go to the planet Shayol, the place of uttermost shame from
- which no one ever returns. You will go there with the contempt and
- hatred of mankind. We will not punish you. We do not wish to know
- about you any more. You will live on, but for us you will have ceased
- to exist."
- That's the story. It's a sad, wonderful story. The Instrumentality
- tries to cheer up all the different kinds of mankind by telling them it
- isn't true, it's just a ballad.
- Perhaps the records do exist. Perhaps somewhere the crazy klopts of
- Arachosia breed their boyish young, deliver their babies, always by
- Caesarean, feed them always by bottle, generations of men who have
- known fathers and who have no idea of what the word mother might be.
- And perhaps the Arachosians spend their crazy lives in endless battle
- with intelligent cats who are serving a mankind that may never come
- back.
- That's the story.
- Furthermore, it isn't true.
- Golden the Ship Was-Oh! Oh! Oh!
- Aggression started very far away.
- War with Raumsog came about twenty years after the great cat scandal
- which, for a while, threatened to cut the entire planet Earth from the
- desperately essential santa clara drug. It was a short war and a
- bitter one.
- Corrupt, wise, weary old Earth fought with masked weapons, since only
- hidden weapons could maintain so ancient a sovereignty sovereignty
- which had long since lapsed into a titular paramountcy among the
- communities of mankind. Earth won and the others lost, because the
- leaders of Earth never put other considerations ahead of survival. And
- this time, they thought, they were finally and really threatened.
- The Raumsog war was never known to the general public except for the
- revival of wild old legends about golden ships.
- On Earth the Lords of the Instrumentality met. The presiding chairman
- looked about and said,
- "Well, gentlemen, all of us have been bribed by Raumsog. We have all
- been paid off individually.
- I myself received six ounces ofstroon in pure form. Will the rest of
- you show better bargains?"
- Around the room, the councilors announced the amounts of their
- bribes.
- The chairman turned to the secretary.
- "Enter the bribes in the record and then mark the record
- off-the-record."
- The others nodded gravely.
- "Now we must fight. Bribery is not enough. Raumsog has been
- threatening to attack Earth. It's been cheap enough to let him
- threaten, but obviously we don't mean to let him do it."
- "How are you going to stop him. Lord Chairman?" growled a gloomy old
- member.
- "Get out the golden ships?"
- "Exactly that." The chairman looked deadly serious.
- There was a murmurous sigh around the room. The golden ships had
- been used against an inhuman life-form many centuries before.
- They were hidden somewhere in non space and only a few officials of
- Earth knew how much reality there was to them. Even at the level of
- the Lords of the Instrumentality the council did not know precisely
- what they were.
- "One ship," said the chairman of the Lords of the Instrumentality,
- "will be enough."
- It was.
- The dictator Lord Raumsog on his planet knew the difference some weeks
- later.
- "You can't mean that," he said.
- "You can't mean it. There is no such ship that size. The golden ships
- are just a story. No one ever saw a picture of one."
- "Here is a picture, my Lord," said the subordinate.
- Raumsog looked at it.
- "It's a trick. Some piece of trick photography. They distorted the
- size. The dimensions are wrong.
- Nobody has a ship that size. You could not build it, or if you did
- build it, you could not operate it. There just is not any such thing "
- He babbled on for a few more sentences before he realized that his men
- were looking at the picture and not at him.
- He calmed down.
- The boldest of the officers resumed speaking.
- "That one ship is ninety million miles long. Your Highness. It
- shimmers like fire, but moves so fast that we cannot approach it. But
- it came into the center of our fleet almost touching our ships, stayed
- there twenty or thirty thousandths of a second. There it was, we
- thought. We saw the evidence of life on board: light beams waved; they
- examined us and then, of course, it lapsed back into non space
- Ninety million miles, Your Highness. Old Earth has some stings yet and
- we do not know what the ship is doing."
- The officers stared with anxious confidence at their overlord.
- Raumsog sighed.
- "If we must fight, we'll fight. We can destroy that too. After all,
- what is size in the spaces between the stars?
- What difference does it make whether it is nine miles or nine million
- or ninety million?" He sighed again.
- "Yet I must say ninety million miles is an awful big size for a ship. I
- don't know what they are going to do with it."
- He did not.
- Golden the Ship Was-Oh! Oh! Oh!
- It is strange strange and even fearful what the love of Earth can do to
- men. Tedesco, for example.
- Tedesco's reputation was far-flung. Even among the Go-Captains, whose
- thoughts were rarely on such matters, Tedesco was known for his
- raiment, the foppish arrangement of his mantle of office, and his
- bejeweled badges of authority. Tedesco was known too for his languid
- manner and his luxurious sybaritic living. When the message came, it
- found Tedesco in his usual character.
- He was lying on the air-draft with his brain pleasure centers plugged
- into the triggering current. So deeply lost in pleasure was he that
- the food, the women, the clothing, the books of his apartments were
- completely neglected and forgotten. All pleasure save the pleasure of
- electricity acting on the brain was forgotten.
- So great was the pleasure that Tedesco had been plugged into the
- current for twenty hours without interruption a manifest disobedience
- of the rule which set six hours as maximum pleasure.
- And yet, when the message came relayed to Tedesco's brain by the
- infinitesimal crystal set there for the transmittal of messages so
- secret that even thought was too vulnerable to interception when the
- message came Tedesco struggled through layer after layer of bliss and
- unconsciousness. The ships of gold the golden ships for Earth is in
- danger. Tedesco struggled. Earth is in danger. With a sigh of bliss
- he made the effort to press the button which turned off the current.
- And with a sigh of cold reality he took a look at the world about him
- and turned to the job at hand. Quickly he prepared to wait upon the
- Lords of the Instrumentality.
- The chairman of the Lords of the Instrumentality sent out the Lord
- Admiral Tedesco to command the golden ship. The ship itself, larger
- than most stars, was an incredible monstrosity.
- Centuries before it had frightened away nonhuman aggressors from a
- forgotten corner of the galaxies.
- The Lord Admiral walked back and forth on his bridge.
- The cabin was small, twenty feet by thirty. The control area of the
- ship measured nothing over a hundred feet. All the rest was a golden
- bubble of the feinting ship, nothing more than thin and incredibly
- rigid foam with tiny wires cast across it so as to give the illusion of
- a hard metal and strong defenses.
- The ninety million miles of length were right. Nothing else was. The
- ship was a gigantic dummy, the largest scarecrow ever conceived by the
- human mind.
- Century after century it had rested in non space between the stars,
- waiting for use. Now it proceeded helpless and defenseless against a
- militant and crazy dictator Raumsog and his horde of hard-fighting and
- very real ships.
- of Man Raumsog had broken the disciplines of space. He had killed the
- pin lighters He had emprisoned the Go-captains. He had used renegades
- and apprentices to pillage the immense interstellar ships and had armed
- the captive vessels to the teeth. In a system which had not known real
- war, and least of all war against Earth, he had planned well.
- He had bribed, he had swindled, he had propagandized. He expected
- Earth to fall before the threat itself. Then he launched his attack.
- With the launching of the attack. Earth itself changed. Corrupt
- rascals became what they were in title: the leaders and the defenders
- of mankind.
- Tedesco himself had been an elegant fop. War changed him into an
- aggressive captain, swinging the largest vessel of all time as though
- it were a tennis bat.
- He cut in on the Raumsog fleet hard and fast.
- Tedesco shifted his ship right, north, up, over.
- He appeared before the enemy and eluded them down, forward, right,
- over.
- He appeared before the enemy again. One successful shot from them
- could destroy an illusion on which the safety of mankind itself
- depended. It was his business not to allow them that shot.
- Tedesco was not a fool. He was fighting his own strange kind of war,
- but he could not help wondering where the real war was proceeding.
- Prince Lovaduck had obtained his odd name because he had had a
- Chinesian ancestor who did love ducks, ducks in their Peking form
- succulent duck skins brought forth to him ancestral dreams of culinary
- ecstasy.
- His ancestress, an English lady, had said,
- "Lord Lovaduck, that fits you!" and the name had been proudly taken as
- a family name. Lord Lovaduck had a small ship. The ship was tiny and
- had a very simple and threatening name: Anybody.
- The ship was not listed in the space register and he himself was not in
- the Ministry of Space Defense. The craft was attached only to the
- Office of Statistics and Investigation under the listing, vehicle" %for
- the Earth treasury. He had very elementary defenses. With him on the
- ship went one chronopathic idiot essential to his final and vital
- maneuvers.
- With him also went a monitor. The monitor, as always, sat rigid,
- catatonic, unthinking, unaware except for the tape recorder of his
- living mind which unconsciously noted every imminent mechanical
- movement of the ship and was prepared to destroy Lovaduck, the
- chronopathic idiot,
- and the ship itself should they attempt to escape the authority of
- Earth or should they turn against Earth. The life of a monitor was a
- difficult one but was far better than execution for crime, its usual
- alternative. The monitor made no trouble. Lovaduck also had a very
- small collection of weapons, weapons selected with exquisite care for
- the atmosphere, the climate, and the precise conditions ofRaumsog's
- planet.
- He also had a ps ionic talent, a poor crazy little girl who wept, and
- whom the Lords of the Instrumentality had cruelly refused to heal,
- because her talents were better in unshielded form than they would have
- been had she been brought into the full community of mankind. She was
- a class-three etiological interference.
- Lovaduck brought his tiny ship near the atmosphere of Raumsog's planet.
- He had paid good money for his captaincy to this ship and he meant to
- recover it. Recover it he would, and handsomely, if he succeeded in
- his adventurous mission.
- The Lords of the Instrumentality were the corrupt rulers of a corrupt
- world, but they had learned to make corruption serve their civil and
- military ends, and they were in no mind to put up with failures. If
- Lovaduck failed he might as well not come back at all.
- No bribery could save him from this condition. No monitor could let
- him escape. If he succeeded, he might be almost as rich as an Old
- North Australian or a stroon merchant.
- Lovaduck materialized his ship just long enough to hit the planet by
- radio. He walked across the cabin and slapped the girl.
- The girl became frantically excited. At the height of her excitement
- he slapped a helmet on her head, plugged in the ship's communication
- system, and flung her own peculiar emotional ps ionic radiations over
- the entire planet.
- She was a luck-changer. She succeeded: for a few moments, at every
- place on that planet, under the water and on it, in the sky and in the
- air, luck went wrong just a little. Quarrels did occur, accidents did
- happen, mischances moved just within the limits of sheer probability.
- They all occurred within the same minute. The uproar was reported just
- as Lovaduck moved his ship to another position. This was the most
- critical time of all. He dropped down into the atmosphere. He was
- immediately detected. Ravening weapons reached for him, weapons sharp
- enough to scorch the very air and to bring every living being on the
- planet into a condition of screaming alert.
- No weapons possessed by Earth could defend against such an attack.
- Lovaduck did not defend. He seized the shoulders of his chronopathic
- idiot. He pinched the poor defective; the idiot fled, taking the ship
- with him. The ship moved back three, four seconds in time to a period
- slightly earlier than the first detection. All the instruments on
- Raumsog's planet went off. There was nothing on which they could
- act.
- Lovaduck was ready. He discharged the weapons. The weapons were not
- noble.
- The Lords of the Instrumentality played at being chivalrous and did
- love money, but when life and death were at stake, they no longer cared
- much about money, or credit, or even about honor.
- They fought like the animals of Earth's ancient past they fought to
- kill. Lovaduck had discharged a combination of organic and inorganic
- poisons with a high dispersion rate. Seventeen million people, nine
- hundred and fifty thousandths of the entire population, were to die
- within that night.
- He slapped the chronopathic idiot again. The poor freak whimpered. The
- ship moved back two more seconds in time.
- As he unloaded more poison, he could feel the mechanical relays reach
- for him.
- He moved to the other side of the planet, moving backward one last
- time, dropped a final discharge of virulent carcinogens, and snapped
- his ship into non space into the outer reaches of nothing. Here he was
- far beyond the reach of Raumsog.
- VI
- Tedesco's golden ship moved serenely toward the dying planet, Raumsog's
- fighters closing on it. They fired it evaded, surprisingly agile for
- so immense a craft, a ship larger than any sun seen in the heavens of
- that part of space. But while the ships closed in their radios
- reported: "The capital has blanked out."
- "Raumsog himself is dead."
- "There is no response from the north."
- "People are dying in the relay stations."
- The fleet moved, inter communicated and began to surrender.
- The golden ship appeared once more and then it disappeared, apparently
- forever.
- VII
- The Lord Tedesco returned to his apartments and to the current for
- plugging into the centers of pleasure in his brain. But as he arranged
- himself on the air-jet his hand stopped on its mission to press the
- button
- which would start the current. He realized, suddenly, that he had
- pleasure. The contemplation of the golden ship and of what he had
- accomplished alone, deceptive, without the praise of all the worlds for
- his solitary daring gave even greater pleasure than that of the
- electric current. And he sank back on the jet of air and thought of
- the golden ship, and his pleasure was greater than any he had ever
- experienced before.
- On Earth, the Lords of the Instrumentality gracefully acknowledged that
- the golden ship had destroyed all life on Raumsog's planet. Homage was
- paid to them by the many worlds of mankind. Lovaduck, his idiot, his
- little girl, and the monitor were taken to hospitals. Their minds were
- erased of all recollection of their accomplishments.
- Lovaduck himself appeared before the Lords of the Instrumentality. He
- felt that he had served on the golden ship and he did not remember what
- he had done. He knew nothing of a chronopathic idiot. And he
- remembered nothing of his little "vehicle." Tears poured down his face
- when the Lords of the Instrumentality gave him their highest
- decorations and paid him an immense sum of money. They said: "You have
- served well and you are discharged. The blessings and the thanks of
- mankind will forever rest upon you . . ."
- Lovaduck went back to his estates wondering that his service should
- have been so great. He wondered, too, in the centuries of the rest of
- his life, how any man such as himself could be so tremendous a hero and
- never quite remember how it was accomplished.
- On a very remote planet, the survivors of a Raumsog cruiser were
- released from internment. By special orders, direct from Earth, their
- memories had been discoordinated so that they would not reveal the
- pattern of defeat. An obstinate reporter kept after one spaceman.
- After many hours of hard drinking the survivor's answer was still the
- same: "Golden the ship was oh! oh! oh! Golden the ship was oh!
- oh! oh!"
- The Dead Lady Of Clown Town You already know the end the immense
- drama of the Lord Jestocost, seventh of his line, and how the cat-girl
- C" mell initiated the vast conspiracy. But you do not know the
- beginning, how the first Lord Jestocost got his name, because of the
- terror and inspiration which his mother, Lady Goroke, obtained from the
- famous real-life drama of the dog-girl D'joan. It is even less likely
- that you know the other story the one behind D'joan. This story is
- sometimes mentioned as the matter of the "nameless witch,"
- which is absurd, because she really had a name. The name was "Elaine,"
- an ancient and forbidden one.
- Elaine was a mistake. Her birth, her life, her career were all
- mistakes. The ruby was wrong. How could that have happened?
- Go back to An-fang, the Peace Square at An-fang, the Beginning Place at
- An-fang, where all things start. Bright it was.
- Red Square, dead square, clear square, under a yellow sun.
- This was Earth Original, Manhome itself, where Earthport thrusts its
- way up through hurricane clouds that are higher than the mountains.
- An-fang was near a city, the only living city with a pre-atomic name.
- The lovely meaningless name was Meeya Meefia, where the lines of
- ancient roadways, untouched by a wheel for thousands of years, forever
- paralleled the warm, bright, clear beaches of the Old South East.
- The headquarters of the People Programmer was at An-fang, and there the
- mistake happened: A ruby trembled. Two tourmaline nets failed to
- rectify the laser beam. A diamond noted the error. Both the error and
- the correction went into the general computer.
- The error assigned, on the general account of births for Fomalhaut III,
- the profession of "lay therapist, female, intuitive capacity for
- correction of human physiology with local resources."
- On some of the early ships they used to call these people witch women
- because they worked unaccountable cures. For pioneer parties, these
- lay therapists were invaluable; in
- settled post-Riesmannian societies, they became an awful nuisance.
- Sickness disappeared with good conditions, accidents dwindled down to
- nothing, medical work became institutional.
- Who wants a witch, even a good witch, when a thousand-bed hospital is
- waiting with its staff eager for clinical experience... and only seven
- out of its thousand beds filled with real people?
- (The remaining beds were filled with lifelike robots on which the staff
- could practice, lest they lose their morale. They could, of course,
- have worked on under people animals in the shape of human beings, who
- did the heavy and the weary work which remained as the caput mortuum of
- a really perfected economy but it was against the law for animals, even
- when they were under people to go to a human hospital. When under
- people got sick, the Instrumentality took care of them in
- slaughterhouses. It was easier to breed new under people for the jobs
- than it was to repair sick ones. Furthermore, the tender, loving care
- of a hospital might give them ideas. Such as the idea that they were
- people. This would have been bad, from the prevailing point of view.
- Therefore the human hospitals remained almost empty while an under
- person who sneezed four times or who vomited once was taken away, never
- to be ill again. The empty beds kept on with the robot patients, who
- went through endless repetitions of the human patterns of injury or
- disease.) This left no work for witches, bred and trained.
- Yet the ruby had trembled; the program had indeed made a mistake; the
- birth-number for a "lay therapist, general, female, immediate use" had
- been ordered for Fomalhaut III.
- Much later, when the story was all done down to its last historic
- detail, there was an investigation into the origins of Elaine. When
- the laser had trembled, both the original order and the correction were
- fed simultaneously into the machine. The machine recognized the
- contradiction and promptly referred both papers to the human
- supervisor, an actual man who had been working on the job for seven
- years.
- He was studying music, and he was bored. He was so close to the end of
- his term that he was already counting the days to his own release.
- Meanwhile he was rearranging two popular songs.
- One was The Big Bamboo, a primitive piece which tried to evoke the
- original magic of man. The other was about a girl, Elaine, Elaine,
- whom the song asked to refrain from giving pain to her loving swam.
- Neither of the songs was important; but between them they influenced
- history, first a little bit and then very much.
- The musician had plenty of time to practice. He had not had to meet a
- real emergency in all his seven years. From time to time the machine
- made reports to him, but the musician just told the machine to correct
- its own errors, and it infallibly did so.
- On the day that the accident of Elaine happened, he was trying to
- perfect his finger work on the guitar, a very old instrument believed
- to date from the
- The Dead Lady of Clown Town pre-space period. He was playing The Big
- Bamboo for the hundredth time.
- The machine announced its mistake with an initial musical chime. The
- supervisor had long since forgotten all the instructions which he had
- so worrisomely memorized seven long years ago. The alert did not
- really and truly matter, because the machine invariably corrected its
- own mistakes whether the supervisor was on duty or not.
- The machine, not having its chime answered, moved into a second-stage
- alarm. From a loudspeaker set in the wall of the room, it shrieked in
- a high, clear human voice, the voice of some employee who had died
- thousands of years earlier: "Alert, alert! Emergency. Correction
- needed. Correction needed!"
- The answer was one which the machine had never heard before, old though
- it was. The musician's fingers ran madly, gladly over the guitar
- strings and he sang clearly, wildly back to the machine a message
- strange beyond any machine's belief: Beat, beat the Big Bamboo! Beat,
- beat, beat the Big Bamboo for me ... Hastily the machine set its memory
- banks and computers to work, looking for the code reference to
- "bamboo," trying to make that word fit the present context. There was
- no reference at all.
- The machine pestered the man some more.
- "Instructions unclear. Instructions unclear. Please correct."
- "Shut up," said the man.
- "Cannot comply," stated the machine.
- "Please state and repeat, please state and repeat, please state and
- repeat."
- "Do shut up," said the man, but he knew the machine would not obey
- this. Without thinking, he turned to his other tune and sang the first
- two lines twice over: Elaine, Elaine, go cure the pain!
- Elaine, Elaine, go cure the pain!
- Repetition had been inserted as a safeguard into the machine, on the
- assumption that no real man would repeat an error. The name
- "Elaine" was not correct number code, but the fourfold emphasis seemed
- to confirm the need for a "lay therapist, female." The machine itself
- noted that a genuine man had corrected the situation card presented as
- a matter of emergency.
- "Accepted," said the machine.
- This word, too late, jolted the supervisor away from his music.
- "Accepted what?" he asked.
- There was no answering voice. There was no sound at all except for the
- whisper of slightly-moistened warm air through the ventilators.
- The supervisor looked out the window. He could see a little of the
- blood-black red color of the Peace Square of An-fang; beyond lay the
- ocean, endlessly beautiful and endlessly tedious.
- The supervisor sighed hopefully. He was young.
- "Guess it doesn't matter," he thought, picking up his guitar.
- (Thirty-seven years later, he found out that it did matter.
- The Lady Goroke herself, one of the Chiefs of the Instrumentality, sent
- a Subchief of the Instrumentality to find out who had caused D'joan.
- When the man found that the witch Elaine was the source of the trouble,
- she sent him on to find out how Elaine had gotten into a well-ordered
- universe. The supervisor was found. He was still a musician. He
- remembered nothing of the story. He was hypnotized. He still
- remembered nothing. The subchief invoked an emergency and Police Drug
- Four ("clear memory") was administered to the musician. He immediately
- remembered the whole silly scene, but insisted that it did not matter.
- The case was referred to Lady Goroke, who instructed the authorities
- that the musician be told the whole horrible, beautiful story of D'joan
- at Fomalhaut the very story which you are now being told and he wept.
- He was not punished otherwise, but the Lady Goroke commanded that those
- memories be left in his mind for so long as he might live.) The man
- picked up his guitar, but the machine went on about its work.
- It selected a fertilized human embryo, tagged it with the freakish
- name
- "Elaine," irradiated the genetic code with strong aptitudes for
- witchcraft, and then marked the person's card for training in medicine,
- transportation by sail-ship to Fomalhaut III, and release for service
- on the planet.
- Elaine was born without being needed, without being wanted, without
- having a skill which could help or hurt any existing human being. She
- went into life doomed and useless.
- It is not remarkable that she was misbegotten. Errors do happen.
- Remarkable was the fact that she managed to survive without being
- altered, corrected, or killed by the safety devices which mankind has
- installed in society for its own protection.
- Unwanted, unused, she wandered through the tedious months and useless
- years of her own existence. She was well fed, richly clothed,
- variously housed. She had machines and robots to serve her, under
- people to obey her, people to protect her against others or against
- herself, should the need arise. But she could never find work; without
- work, she had no time for love; without work or love, she had no hope
- at all.
- If she had only stumbled into the right experts or the right
- authorities, they would have altered or re-trained her. This would
- have made her into an
- The Dead Lady of Clown Town acceptable woman; but she did not find the
- police, nor did they find her. She was helpless to correct her own
- programming, utterly helpless. It had been imposed on her at An-fang,
- way back at An-fang, where all things begin.
- The ruby had trembled, the tourmaline failed, the diamond passed
- unsupported. Thus, a woman was born doomed.
- II
- Much later, when people made songs about the strange case of the
- dog-girl D'joan, the minstrels and singers had tried to imagine what
- Elaine felt like, and they had made up The Song of Elaine for her. It
- is not authentic, but it shows how Elaine looked at her own life before
- the strange case of D'joan began to flow from Elaine's own actions:
- Other women hate me.
- Men never touch me.
- I am too much me.
- I'll be a witch!
- Mama never towelled me.
- Daddy never growled me.
- Little kiddies grate me. I'll be a bitch!
- People never named me.
- Dogs never shamed me.
- Oh, I am a such me! I'll be a witch.
- I'll make them shun me. They 'll never run me. Could they even stun
- me? I'll be a witch.
- Let them all attack me. They can only rack me.
- Me I can hack me.
- I'll be a witch.
- Other women hate me.
- Men never touch me.
- I am too much me.
- I'll be a witch.
- The song overstates the case. Women did not hate Elaine; they did not
- look at her. Men did not shun Elaine; they did not notice her either.
- There were no places on Fomalhaut III where she could have met human
- children, for the nurseries were far underground because of chancy
- radiation and fierce weather. The song pretends that Elaine began with
- the thought that she was not human, but under people and had herself
- been born a dog. This did not happen at the beginning of the case, but
- only at the very end, when the story of D'joan was already being
- carried between the stars and developing with all the new twists of
- folklore and legend. She never went mad.
- ("Madness" is a rare condition, consisting of a human mind which does
- not engage its environment correctly. Elaine approached it before she
- met D'joan. Elaine was not the only case, but she was a rare and
- genuine one. Her life, thrust back from all attempts at growth, had
- turned back on itself and her mind had spiraled inward to the only
- safety she could really know, psychosis. Madness is always better than
- X, and X to each patient is individual, personal, secret, and
- overwhelmingly important.
- Elaine had gone normally mad; her imprinted and destined career was the
- wrong one.
- "Lay therapists, female" were coded to work decisively, autonomously,
- on their own authority, and with great rapidity. These working
- conditions were needed on new planets.
- They were not coded to consult other people; most places, there would
- be no one to consult. Elaine did what was set for her at An-fang, all
- the way down to the individual chemical conditions of her spinal fluid.
- She was herself the wrong and she never knew it. Madness was much
- kinder than the realization that she was not herself, should not have
- lived, and amounted at the most to a mistake committed between a
- trembling ruby and a young, careless man with a guitar.) She found
- D'joan and the worlds reeled.
- Their meeting occurred at a place nicknamed "the edge of the world,"
- where the under city met daylight. This was itself unusual; but
- Fomalhaut III was an unusual and uncomfortable planet, where wild
- weather and men's caprice drove architects to furious design and
- grotesque execution.
- Elaine walked through the city, secretly mad, looking for sick people
- whom she could help. She had been stamped, imprinted, designed, born,
- bred, and trained for this task. There was no task.
- She was an intelligent woman. Bright brains serve madness as well as
- they serve sanity namely, very well indeed. It never occurred to her
- to give up her mission.
- The people of Fomalhaut III, like the people of Manhome Earth itself,
- are almost uniformly handsome; it is only in the far out
- half-unreachable worlds that the human stock, strained by the sheer
- effort to survive, becomes ugly, weary, or varied. She did not look
- much different from the other intelligent, handsome people who flocked
- the streets. Her hair was black,
- and she was tall. Her arms and legs were long, the trunk of her body
- short. She wore her hair brushed straight back from a high, narrow,
- square forehead. Her eyes were an odd, deep blue. Her mouth might
- have been pretty, but it never smiled, so that no one could really tell
- whether it was beautiful or not. She stood erect and proud: but so did
- everyone else. Her mouth was strange in its very lack of communicative
- ness and her eyes swept back and forth, back and forth like ancient
- radar, looking for the sick, the needy, and stricken, whom she had a
- passion to serve.
- How could she be unhappy? She had never had time to be happy. It was
- easy for her to think that happiness was something which disappeared at
- the end of childhood. Now and then, here and there, perhaps when a
- fountain murmured in sunlight or when leaves exploded in the startling
- Fomalhautian spring, she wondered that other people people as
- responsible as herself by the doom of age, grade, sex, training, and
- career number should be happy when she alone seemed to have no time for
- happiness.
- But she always dismissed the thought and walked the ramps and streets
- until her arches ached, looking for work which did not yet exist.
- Human flesh, older than history, more dogged than culture, has its own
- wisdom. The bodies of people are marked with the archaic ruses of
- survival, so that on Fomalhaut III, Elaine herself preserved the skills
- of ancestors she never even thought about those ancestors who, in the
- incredible and remote past, had mastered terrible Earth itself. Elaine
- was mad. But there was a part of her which suspected that she was
- mad.
- Perhaps this wisdom seized her as she walked from Waterrocky Road
- toward the bright esplanades of the Shopping Bar. She saw a forgotten
- door. The robots could clean near it but, because of the old, odd
- architectural shape, they could not sweep and polish right at the
- bottom line of the door. A thin hard line of old dust and caked polish
- lay like a sealant at the base of the door line It was obvious that no
- one had gone through for a long, long time.
- The civilized rule was that prohibited areas were marked both
- telepathically and with symbols. The most dangerous of all had robot
- or under people guards. But everything which was not prohibited, was
- permitted. Thus Elaine had no right to open the door, but she had no
- obligation not to do so. She opened it By sheer caprice.
- Or so she thought.
- This was a far cry from the
- "I'll be a witch" motif attributed to her in the later ballad. She was
- not yet frantic, not yet desperate, she was not yet even noble.
- That opening of a door changed her own world and changed life on
- thousands of planets for generations to come, but the opening was not
- of Man itself strange. It was the tired caprice of a thoroughly
- frustrated and mildly unhappy woman. Nothing more. All the other
- descriptions of it have been improvements, embellishments,
- falsifications.
- She did get a shock when she opened the door, but not for the reasons
- attributed backwards to her by balladists and historians.
- She was shocked because the door opened on steps and the steps led down
- to landscape and sunlight truly an unexpected sight on any world. She
- was looking from the New City to the Old City. The New City rose on
- its shell out over the Old City, and when she looked "indoors" she saw
- the sunset in the city below. She gasped at the beauty and the
- unexpectedness of it.
- There, the open door with another world beyond it. Here, the old
- familiar street, clean, handsome, quiet, useless, where her own useless
- self had worked a thousand times.
- There something. Here, the world she knew. She did not know the words
- "fairyland" or "magic place," but if she had known them, she would have
- used them.
- She glanced to the right, to the left.
- The passersby noticed neither her nor the door. The sunset was just
- beginning to show in the upper city. In the lower city it was already
- blood-red with streamers of gold like enormous frozen flame. Elaine
- did not know that she sniffed the air; she did not know that she
- trembled on the edge of tears; she did not know that a tender smile,
- the first smile in years, relaxed her mouth and turned her tired tense
- face into a passing loveliness.
- She was too intent on looking around.
- People walked about their business. Down the road, an under people
- type female, possibly cat detoured far around a true human who was
- walking at a slower pace. Far away, a police ornithopter flapped
- slowly around one of the towers; unless the robots used a telescope on
- her or unless they had one of the rare hawk-under men who were
- sometimes used as police, they could not see her.
- She stepped through the doorway and pulled the door itself back into
- the closed position.
- She did not know it, but therewith unborn futures reeled out of
- existence, rebellion flamed into coming centuries, people and under
- people died in strange causes, mothers changed the names of unborn
- lords, and starships whispered back from places which men had not even
- imagined before. Space3, which had always been there, waiting for
- men's notice, would come the sooner because of her, because of the
- door, because of her next few steps, what she would say, and the child
- she would meet.
- (The ballad-writers told the whole story later on, but they told it
- backwards, from their own knowledge of D'joan and what Elaine had done
- to set the
- worlds afire. The simple truth is the fact that a lonely woman went
- through a mysterious door. That is all. Everything else happened
- later.) At the top of the steps she stood, door closed behind her, the
- sunset gold of the unknown city streaming out in front of her. She
- could see where the great shell of the New City of Kalma arched out
- toward the sky; she could see that the buildings here were older, less
- harmonious than the ones she had left. She did not know the concept
- "picturesque," or she would have called it that.
- She knew no concept to describe the scene which lay peacefully at her
- feet.
- There was not a person in sight.
- Far in the distance, a fire-detector throbbed back and forth on top of
- an old tower. Outside of that there was nothing but the yellow-gold
- city beneath her, and a bird was it a bird, or a large storm-swept
- leaf? in the middle distance.
- Filled with fear, hope, expectation, and the surmisal of strange
- appetites, she walked downward with quiet, unknown purpose.
- III
- At the foot of the stairs, nine flights of them there had been, a child
- waited a girl, about five. The child had a bright blue smock, wavy
- red-brown hair, and the daintiest hands which Elaine had ever seen.
- Elaine's heart went out to her. The child looked up at her and shrank
- away. Elaine knew the meaning of those handsome brown eyes, of that
- muscular supplication of trust, that recoil from people. It was not a
- child at all just some animal in the shape of a person, a dog perhaps,
- which would later be taught to speak, to work, to perform useful
- services.
- The little girl rose, standing as though she were about to run.
- Elaine had the feeling that the little dog-girl had not decided whether
- to run toward her or from her. She did not wish to get involved with
- an under person what woman would? but neither did she wish to frighten
- the little thing. After all, it was small, very young.
- The two confronted each other for a moment, the little thing uncertain,
- Elaine relaxed. Then the little animal-girl spoke.
- "Ask her," she said, and it was a command.
- Elaine was suprised. Since when did animals command?
- "Ask her!" repeated the little thing. She pointed at a window which
- had the words traveler's aid above it. Then the girl ran.
- A flash of blue from her dress, a twinkle of white from her running
- sandals, and she was gone.
- Elaine stood quiet and puzzled in the forlorn and empty city.
- The window spoke to her,
- "You might as well come on over.
- You will, you know."
- It was the wise mature voice of an experienced woman a voice with a
- bubble of laughter underneath its phonic edge, with a hint of sympathy
- and enthusiasm in its tone. The command was not merely a command. It
- was, even at its beginning, a happy private joke between two wise
- women.
- Elaine was not surprised when a machine spoke to her.
- Recordings had been telling her things all her life. She was not sure
- of this situation, however.
- "Is there somebody there?" she said.
- "Yes and no," said the voice.
- "I'm Travelers' Aid' and I help everybody who comes through this way.
- You're lost or you wouldn't be here. Put your hand in my window."
- "What I mean is," said Elaine, "are you a person or are you a
- machine?"
- "Depends," said the voice.
- "I'm a machine, but I used to be a person, long, long ago. A lady, in
- fact, and one of the Instrumentality. But my time came and they said
- to me,
- "Would you mind if we made a machine print of your whole personality?
- It would be very helpful for the information booths." So of course I
- said yes, and they made this copy, and I died, and they shot my body
- into space with all the usual honors, but here I was. It felt pretty
- odd inside this contraption, me looking at things and talking to people
- and giving good advice and staying busy, until they built the new city.
- So what do you say? Am I me or aren't I?"
- "I don't know, ma'am." Elaine stood back.
- The warm voice lost its humor and became commanding.
- "Give me your hand, then, so I can identify you and tell you what to
- do."
- "I think," said Elaine, "that I'll go back upstairs and go through the
- door into the upper city."
- "And cheat me," said the voice in the window, "out of my first
- conversation with a real person in four years?" There was demand in
- the voice, but there was still the warmth and the humor; there was
- loneliness too. The loneliness decided Elaine. She stepped up to the
- window and put her hand flat on the ledge.
- "You're Elaine," cried the window.
- "You're Elaine! The worlds wait for you. You're from An-fang, where
- all things begin, the Peace Square at An-fang, on Old Earth itself!"
- "Yes," said Elaine.
- The voice bubbled over with enthusiasm.
- "He is waiting for you. Oh, he has waited for you a long, long time.
- And the little girl you met. That was D'joan herself. The story has
- begun.
- "The world's great age begins anew." And I can die when it is over. So
- sorry, my dear. I don't mean to confuse you. I am the Lady Pane
- Ashash. You're Elaine. Your number originally ended 783 and you
- shouldn't even be on this planet. All the important people here end
- with the number 5 and 6. You're a lay therapist and you're in the wrong
- place, but your lover is already on his way, and you've never been in
- love yet, and it's all too exciting."
- Elaine looked quickly around her. The old lower town was turning more
- red and less gold as the sunset progressed. The steps behind her
- seemed terribly high as she looked back, the door at the top very
- small. Perhaps it had locked on her when she closed it. Maybe she
- wouldn't ever be able to leave the old lower city.
- The window must have been watching her in some way, because the voice
- of the Lady Pane Ashash became tender, "Sit down, my dear," said the
- voice from the window.
- "When I was me, I used to be much more polite. I haven't been me for a
- long, long time. I'm a machine, and still I feel like myself. Do sit
- down, and do forgive me."
- Elaine looked around. There was the roadside marble bench behind her.
- She sat on it obediently. The happiness which had been in her at the
- top of the stairs bubbled forth anew. If this wise old machine knew so
- much about her, perhaps it could tell her what to do. What did the
- voice mean by "wrong planet"? By "lover"? By "he is coming for you
- now," or was that what the voice had actually said?
- "Take a breath, my dear," said the voice of the Lady Pane Ashash. She
- might have been dead for hundreds or thousands of years, but still
- spoke with the authority and kindness of a great lady.
- Elaine breathed deep. She saw a huge red cloud, like a pregnant whale,
- getting ready to butt the rim of the upper city, far above her and far
- out over the sea. She wondered if clouds could possibly have
- feelings.
- The voice was speaking again. What had it said?
- Apparently the question was repeated.
- "Did you know you were coming?" said the voice from the window.
- "Of course not." Elaine shrugged.
- "There was just this door, and I didn't have anything special to do, so
- I opened it. And here was a whole new world inside a house. It looked
- strange and rather pretty, so I came down. Wouldn't you have done the
- same thing?"
- "I don't know," said the voice candidly.
- "I'm really a machine.
- I haven't been me for a long, long time. Perhaps I would have, when I
- was alive. I don't know that, but I know about things.
- Maybe I can see the future, or perhaps the machine part of me computes
- such good probabilities that it just seems like it. I know who you are
- and what is going to happen to you. You had better brush your hair."
- "Whatever for?" said Elaine.
- "He is coming," said the happy old voice of the Lady Pane Ashash.
- "Who is coming?" said Elaine, almost irritably.
- "Do you have a mirror? I wish you would look at your hair. It could
- be prettier, not that it isn't pretty right now. You want to look your
- best. Your lover, that's who is coming, of course."
- "I haven't got a lover," said Elaine.
- "I haven't been authorized one, not till
- I' ve done some of my lifework, and I haven't even found my
- lifeworkyet.I'm not the kind of girl who would go ask a subchief for
- the dreamies, not when I'm not entitled to the real thing. I may not
- be much of a person, but I have some self-respect." Elaine got so mad
- that she shifted her position on the bench and sat with her face turned
- away from the all-watching window.
- The next words gave her gooseflesh down her arms, they were uttered
- with such real earnestness, such driving sincerity.
- "Elaine, Elaine, do you really have no idea of who you are?"
- Elaine pivoted on the bench so that she looked toward the window. Her
- face was caught redly by the rays of the setting sun.
- She could only gasp.
- "I don't know what you mean. . . ."
- The inexorable voice went on.
- "Think, Elaine, think. Does the name
- "D'joan' mean nothing to you?"
- "I suppose it's an under person a dog. That's what the D is for, isn't
- it?"
- "That was the little girl you met," said the Lady Pane Ashash, as
- though the statement were something tremendous.
- "Yes," said Elaine dutifully. She was a courteous woman, and never
- quarreled with strangers.
- "Wait a minute," said the Lady Pane Ashash.
- "I'm going to get my body out. God knows when I wore it last, but
- it'll make you feel more at easy terms with me. Forgive the clothes.
- They'reold stuff, but I think the body will work all right. This is
- the beginning of the story of D'joan, and I want that hair of yours
- brushed even if I have to brush it myself. Just wait right there,
- girl, wait right there. I'll just take a minute."
- The clouds were turning from dark red to liver-black. What could
- Elaine do? She stayed on the bench. She kicked her shoe against the
- walk. She jumped a little when the old-fashioned street lights of the
- lower city went on with sharp geometrical suddenness; they did not have
- the subtle shading of the newer lights in the other city upstairs,
- where day phased into the bright clear night with no sudden shift in
- color.
- The door beside the little window creaked open. Ancient plastic
- crumbled to the walk.
- Elaine was astonished.
- Elaine knew she must have been unconsciously expecting a monster, but
- this was a charming woman of about her own height, wearing weird,
- old-fashioned clothes. The strange woman had glossy black hair, no
- evidence of recent or current illness, no signs of severe lesions in
- the past, no impairment evident of sight, gait, reach, or eyesight.
- (There was no way she could check on smell or taste right off, but this
- was the medical check-up she had had built into her from birth on the
- checklist which she had run through with every adult person she had
- ever met. She had been designed as a "lay therapist, female" and she
- was a good one, even when there was no one at all to treat.)
- Truly, the body was a rich one. It must have cost the landing charges
- of forty or fifty planet falls The human shape was perfectly rendered.
- The mouth moved over genuine teeth; the words were formed by throat,
- palate, tongue, teeth, and lips, and not just by a microphone mounted
- in the head. The body was really a museum piece. It was probably a
- copy of the Lady Pane Ashash herself in time of life. When the face
- smiled, the effect was indescribably winning. The lady wore the
- costume of a bygone age a stately frontal dress of heavy blue material,
- embroidered with a square pattern of gold at hem, waist, and bodice.
- She had a matching cloak of dark, faded gold, embroidered in blue with
- the same pattern of squares. Her hair was up swept and set with
- jeweled combs. It seemed perfectly natural, but there was dust on one
- side of it.
- The robot smiled,
- "I'm out of date. It's been a long time since I was me. But I
- thought, my dear, that you would find this old body easier to talk to
- than the window over there . . ."
- Elaine nodded mutely.
- "You know this is not me?" said the body, sharply.
- Elaine shook her head. She didn't know; she felt that she didn't know
- anything at all.
- The Lady Pane Ashash looked at her earnestly.
- "This is not me. It's a robot body. You looked at it as though it
- were a real person. And I'm not me, either. It hurts sometimes. Did
- you know a machine could hurt? I can. But I'm not me."
- "Who are you?" said Elaine to the pretty old woman.
- "Before I died, I was the Lady Pane Ashash. Just as I told you.
- Now I am a machine, and a part of your destiny. We will help each
- other to change the destiny of worlds, perhaps even to bring mankind
- back to humanity."
- Elaine stared at her in bewilderment. This was no common robot. It
- seemed like a real person and spoke with such warm authority. And this
- thing, whatever it was, this thing seemed to know so much about her.
- Nobody else had ever cared. The nurse mothers at the Childhouse on
- earth had said,
- "Another witch child and pretty too, they're not much trouble," and had
- let her life go by.
- At last Elaine could face the face which was not really a face.
- The charm, the humor, the expressiveness were still there.
- "What what," stammered Elaine, "do I do now?"
- "Nothing," said the long-dead Lady Pane Ashash, "except to meet your
- destiny."
- "You mean my lover?"
- "So impatient!" laughed the dead woman's record in a very human way.
- "Such a hurry. Lover first and destiny later. I was like that myself
- when I was a girl."
- "But what do I do?" persisted Elaine.
- The night was now complete above them. The street lights glared on the
- empty and un swept streets. A few doorways, not one of them less than
- a full street-crossing away, were illuminated with rectangles of light
- or shadow light if they were far from the street lights, so that their
- own interior lights shone brightly, shadow if they were so close under
- the big lights that they cut off the glare from overhead.
- "Go through this door," said the old nice woman.
- But she pointed at the undistinguished white of an uninterrupted wall.
- There was no door at all in that place.
- "But there's no door there," said Elaine.
- "If there were a door," said the Lady Pane Ashash, "you wouldn't need
- me to tell you to go through it. And you do need me."
- "Why?" said Elaine.
- "Because I've waited for you hundreds of years, that's why."
- "That's no answer!" snapped Elaine.
- "It is so an answer," smiled the woman, and her lack of hostility was
- not robot like at all. It was the kindliness and composure of a mature
- human being. She looked up into Elaine's eyes and spoke emphatically
- and softly.
- "I know because I do know. Not because I'm a dead person that doesn't
- matter any more but because I am now a very old machine. You will go
- into the Brown and Yellow Corridor and you will think of your lover,
- and you will do your work, and men will hunt you. But you will come
- out happily in the end.
- Do you understand this?"
- "No," said Elaine, "no, I don't." But she reached out her hand to the
- sweet old woman. The lady took her hand. The touch was warm and very
- human.
- "You don't have to understand it. Just do it. And I know you will. So
- since you are going, go."
- Elaine tried to smile at her, but she was troubled, more consciously
- worried than ever before in her life. Something real was happening to
- her, to her own individual self, at a very long last.
- "How will I get through the door?"
- "I'll open it," smiled the lady, releasing Elaine's hand, "and you' ll
- know your lover when he sings you the poem."
- "Which poem?" said Elaine, stalling for time and frightened by a door
- which did not even exist.
- "It starts,
- "I knew you and loved you, and won you, in Kalma . . ." You'll know
- it. Go on in. It'll be bothersome at first, but when you meet the
- Hunter, it will all seem different."
- "Have you ever been in there, yourself?"
- "Of course not," said the dear old lady.
- "I'm a machine.
- That whole place is thought proof Nobody can see, hear, think, or talk
- in or out of it.
- It's a shelter left over from the ancient wars, when the slightest
- sign of a thought would have brought destruction on the whole place.
- That's why the Lord Englok built it, long before my time.
- But you can go in. And you will. Here's the door."
- The old robot lady waited no longer. She gave Elaine a strange
- friendly crooked smile, half proud and half apologetic. She took
- Elaine with firm fingertips holding Elaine's left elbow. They walked a
- few steps down toward the wall.
- "Here, now," said the Lady Pane Ashash, and pushed. Elaine flinched as
- she was thrust toward the wall. Before she knew it, she was through.
- Smells hit her like a roar of battle. The air was hot. The light was
- dim. It looked like a picture of the Pain Planet, hidden somewhere in
- space. Poets later tried to describe Elaine at the door with a verse
- which begins, There were brown ones and blue ones And white ones and
- whiter, In the hidden and forbidden Downtown of Clown Town. There were
- horrid ones and horrider In the brown and yellow corridor.
- The truth was much simpler.
- Trained witch, born witch that she was, she perceived the truth
- immediately. All these people, all she could see, at least, were sick.
- They needed help. They needed herself.
- But the joke was on her, for she could not help a single one of them.
- Not one of them was a real person. They were just animals, things in
- the shape of man. Underpeople. Dirt.
- And she was conditioned to the bone never to help them.
- She did not know why the muscles of her legs made her walk forward, but
- they did.
- There are many pictures of that scene.
- The Lady Pane Ashash, only a few moments in her past, seemed very
- remote. And the city of Kalma itself, the New City, ten stories above
- her, almost seemed as though it had never existed at all. This, this
- was real.
- She stared at the under people
- And this time, for the first time in her life, they stared right back
- at her. She had never seen anything like this before.
- They did not frighten her; they surprised her. The fright, Elaine
- felt, was to come later. Soon, perhaps, but not here, not now.
- IV
- Something which looked like a middle-aged woman walked right up to her
- and snapped at her.
- "Are you death?"
- Elaine stared.
- "Death? What do you mean? I'm Elaine."
- "Be damned to that!" said the woman-thing.
- "Are you death?"
- Elaine did not know the word "damned" but she was pretty sure that
- "death," even to these things, meant simply "termination of life."
- "Of course not," said Elaine.
- "I'm just a person. A witch woman, ordinary people would call me. We
- don't have anything to do with you under people Nothing at all." Elaine
- could see that the woman-thing had an enormous coiffure of soft brown
- sloppy hair, a sweat-reddened face, and crooked teeth which showed when
- she grinned.
- "They all say that. They never know that they're death. How do you
- think we die, if you people don't send contaminated robots in with
- diseases? We all die off when you do that, and then some more under
- people find this place again later on and make a shelter of it and live
- in it for a few generations until the death machines, things like you,
- come sweeping through the city and kill us off again. This is Clown
- Town, the under people place.
- Haven't you heard of it?"
- Elaine tried to walk past the woman-thing, but she found her arm
- grabbed. This couldn't have happened before, not in the history of the
- world an under person seizing a real person!
- "Let go!" she yelled.
- The woman-thing let her arm go and faced toward the others.
- Her voice had changed. It was no longer shrill and excited, but low
- and puzzled instead.
- "I can't tell. Maybe it is a real person.
- Isn't that a joke? Lost, in here with us. Or maybe she is death. I
- can't tell. What do you think, Charley-is-my-darling?"
- The man she spoke to stepped forward. Elaine thought, in another time,
- in some other place, that under person might pass for an attractive
- human being. His face was illuminated by intelligence and alertness.
- He looked directly at Elaine as though he had never seen her before,
- which indeed he had not, but he continued looking with so sharp, so
- strange a stare that she became uneasy. His voice, when he spoke, was
- brisk, high, clear, friendly; set in this tragic place, it was the
- caricature of a voice, as though the animal had been programmed for
- speech from the habits of a human, persuader by profession, whom one
- saw in the story boxes telling people messages which were neither good
- nor important, but merely clever. The handsomeness was itself
- deformity. Elaine wondered if he had come from goat stock.
- "Welcome, young lady," said Charley-is-my-darling.
- "Now that you are here, how are you going to get out? If we turned her
- head around, Mabel," said he to the under woman who had first greeted
- Elaine, "turned it around eight or ten times, it would come off. Then
- we could live a few weeks or months longer before our lords and
- creators found us and put us all to death.
- What do you say, young lady? Should we kill you?"
- "Kill? You mean, terminate life? You cannot. It is against the law.
- Even the Instrumentality does not have the right to do that without
- trial. You can't. You're just under people
- "But we will die," said Charley-is-my-darling, flashing his quick
- intelligent smile, "if you go back out of that door. The police will
- read about the Brown and Yellow Corridor in your mind and they will
- flush us out with poison or they will spray disease in here so that we
- and our children will die."
- Elaine stared at him.
- The passionate anger did not disturb his smile or his persuasive tones,
- but the muscles of his eye-sockets and forehead showed the terrible
- strain. The result was an expression which Elaine had never seen
- before, a sort of self-control reaching out beyond the limits of
- insanity.
- He stared back at her.
- She was not really afraid of him. Underpeople could not twist the
- heads of real persons; it was contrary to all regulations.
- A thought struck her. Perhaps regulations did not apply in a place
- like this, where illegal animals waited perpetually for sudden death.
- The being which faced her was strong enough to turn her head around ten
- times clockwise or counterclockwise.
- From her anatomy lessons, she was pretty sure that the head would come
- off somewhere during that process. She looked at him with interest.
- Animal-type fear had been conditioned out of her, but she had, she
- found, an extreme distaste for the termination of life under random
- circumstances. Perhaps her "witch" training would help. She tried to
- pretend that he was in fact a man. The diagnosis "hypertension:
- chronic aggression, now frustrated, leading to over stimulation and
- neurosis: poor nutritional record: hormone disorder probable" leapt
- into her mind.
- She tried to speak in a new voice.
- "I am smaller than you," she said, "and you can 'kill' me just as well
- later as now. We might as well get acquainted. I'm Elaine, assigned
- here from Manhome Earth."
- The effect was spectacular.
- Charley-is-my-darling stepped back. Mabel's mouth dropped open. The
- others gaped at her. One or two, more quick-witted than the rest,
- began whispering to their neighbors.
- At last Charley-is-my-darling spoke to her.
- "Welcome, my lady. Can I
- call you my lady? I guess not. Welcome, Elaine. We are your people.
- We will do whatever you say. Of course you got in. The Lady Pane
- Ashash sent you. She has been telling us for a hundred years that
- somebody would come from Earth, a real person with an animal name, not
- a number, and that we should have a child named D'joan ready to take up
- the threads of destiny. Please, please sit down. Will you have a
- drink of water? We have no clean vessel here. We are all under people
- here and we have used everything in the place, so that it is
- contaminated for a real person." A thought struck him.
- "Baby-baby, do you have a new cup in the kiln?" Apparently he saw
- someone nod, because he went right on talking.
- "Get it out then, for our guest, with tongs.
- New tongs. Do not touch it. Fill it with water from the top of the
- little waterfall. That way our guest can have an uncontaminated drink.
- A clean drink." He beamed with a hospitality which was as ridiculous
- as it was genuine.
- Elaine did not have the heart to say she did not want a drink of
- water.
- She waited. They waited.
- By now, her eyes had become accustomed to the darkness.
- She could see that the main corridor was painted a yellow, faded and
- stained, and a contrasting light brown. She wondered what possible
- human mind could have selected so ugly a combination.
- Cross-corridors seemed to open into it; at any rate, she saw
- illuminated archways further down and people walking out of them
- briskly. No one can walk briskly and naturally out of a shallow
- alcove, so she was pretty sure that the archways led to something.
- The under people too, she could see. They looked very much like
- people. Here and there, individuals reverted to the animal type a
- horse-man whose muzzle had regrown to its ancestral size, a rat-woman
- with normal human features except for nylon like white whiskers, twelve
- or fourteen on each side of her face, reaching twenty centimeters to
- either side. One looked very much like a person indeed a beautiful
- young woman seated on a bench some eight or ten meters down the
- corridor, and paying no attention to the crowd, to Mabel, to
- Charley-is-my-darling, or to herself.
- "Who is that?" said Elaine, pointing with a nod at the beautiful young
- woman.
- Mabel, relieved from the tension which had seized her when she had
- asked if Elaine were "death," babbled with a sociability which was
- outre in this environment,
- "That's Crawlie."
- "What does she do?" asked Elaine.
- "She has her pride," said Mabel, her grotesque red face now jolly and
- eager, her slack mouth spraying spittle as she spoke.
- "But doesn't she do anything?" said Elaine.
- Charley-is-my-darling intervened.
- "Nobody has to do anything here, Lady Elaine "
- "It's illegal to call me
- "Lady," " said Elaine.
- "I'm sorry, human being Elaine. Nobody has to do anything at all here.
- The whole bunch of us are completely illegal. This corridor is a
- thought-shelter, so that no thoughts can escape or enter it. Wait a
- bit! Watch the ceiling ... Now!"
- A red glow moved across the ceiling and was gone.
- "The ceiling glows," said Charley-is-my-darling, "whenever anything
- thinks against it. The whole tunnel registers 'sewage tank: organic
- waste' to the outside, so that dim perceptions of life which may escape
- here are not considered too unaccountable.
- People built it for their own use, a million years ago."
- "They weren't here on Fomalhaut III a million years ago,"
- snapped Elaine. Why, she wondered, did she snap at him? He wasn't a
- person, just a talking animal who had missed being dropped down the
- nearest incinerator.
- "I'm sorry, Elaine," said Charley-is-my-darling.
- "I should have said, a long time ago. We under people don't get much
- chance to study real history. But we use this corridor. Somebody with
- a morbid sense of humor named this place Clown Town. We live along for
- ten or twenty or a hundred years, and then people or robots find us and
- kill us all. That's why Mabel was upset. She thought you were death
- for this time. But you're not. You're Elaine. That's wonderful,
- wonderful." His sly, too-clever face beamed with transparent
- sincerity. It must have been quite a shock to him to be honest.
- "You were going to tell me what the under girl is for," said Elaine.
- "That's Crawlie," said he.
- "She doesn't do anything. None of us really have to. We're all doomed
- anyhow. She's a little more honest than the rest of us. She has her
- pride. She scorns the rest of us. She puts us in our place. She
- makes everybody feel inferior. We think she is a valuable member of
- the group. We all have our pride, which is hopeless anyway, but
- Crawlie has her pride all by herself, without doing anything whatever
- about it.
- She sort of reminds us. If we leave her alone, she leaves us alone."
- Elaine thought, You're funny things, so much like people, but so
- inexpert about it, as though you all had to "die" before you really
- learned what it is to be alive. Aloud, she could only say,
- "I
- never met anybody like that."
- Crawlie must have sensed that they were talking about her, because she
- looked at Elaine with a short quick stare of blazing hatred. Crawlie's
- pretty face locked itself into a glare of concentrated hostility and
- scorn; then her eyes wandered and Elaine felt that she, Elaine, no
- longer existed in the thing's mind, except as arebuke which had been
- administered and forgotten.
- She had never seen privacy as impenetrable as Crawlie's. And yet the
- being, whatever she might have been made from, was very lovely in human
- terms.
- of Man A fierce old hag, covered with mouse-gray fur, rushed up to
- Elaine. The mouse-woman was the Baby-baby who had been sent on the
- errand. She held a ceramic cup in a pair of long tongs.
- Water was in it.
- Elaine took the cup.
- Sixty to seventy under people including the little girl in the blue
- dress whom she had seen outside, watched her as she sipped. The water
- was good. She drank it all. There was a universal exhalation, as
- though everyone in the corridor had waited for this moment. Elaine
- started to put the cup down but the old mouse-woman was too quick for
- her. She took the cup from Elaine. stopping her in mid-gesture and
- using the tongs, so that the cup would not be contaminated by the touch
- of an under person
- "That's right, Baby-baby," said Charley-is-my-darling, "we can talk. It
- is our custom not to talk with a newcomer until we have offered our
- hospitality. Let me be frank. We may have to kill you, if this whole
- business turns out to be a mistake, but let me assure you that if I do
- kill you, I will do it nicely and without the least bit of malice.
- Right?"
- Elaine did not know what was so right about it, and said so.
- She visualized her head being twisted off. Apart from the pain and the
- degradation, it seemed so terribly messy to terminate life in a sewer
- with things which did not even have a right to exist.
- He gave her no chance to argue, but just went on explaining, "Suppose
- things turn out just right. Suppose that you are the
- Esther-Elaine-or-Eleanor that we have all been waiting for the person
- who will do something to D'joan and bring us all help and deliverance
- give us life, in short, real life then what do we do?"
- "I don't know where you get all these ideas about me. Why am I
- Esther-Elaine-or-Eleanor? What do I do to D'joan? Why me?"
- Charley-is-my-darling stared at her as though he could not believe her
- question. Mabel frowned as though she could not think of the right
- words to put forth her opinions. Baby-baby, who had glided back to the
- group with swift mouse like suddenness, looked around as though she
- expected someone from the rear to speak. She was right. Crawlie
- turned her face toward Elaine and said, with infinite condescension: "I
- did not know that real people were ill-informed or stupid.
- You seem to be both. We have all our information from the Lady Pane
- Ashash. Since she is dead, she has no prejudices against us under
- people Since she has not had much of anything to do, she has run
- through billions and billions of probabilities for us. All of us know
- what most probabilities come to sudden death by disease or gas, or
- maybe being hauled off to the slaughterhouses in big police
- ornithopters. But Lady Pane Ashash found that perhaps a person with a
- name like yours would come, a human being with an old name and not a
- number name, that that person would meet the Hunter, that
- she and the Hunter would teach the under child D'joan a message, and
- that the message would change the worlds. We have kept one child after
- another named D'joan, waiting for a hundred years.
- Now you show up. Maybe you are the one. You don't look very competent
- to me. What are you good for?"
- "I'm a witch," said Elaine.
- Crawlie could not keep the surprise from showing in her face.
- "A witch? Really?"
- "Yes," said Elaine, rather humbly.
- "I wouldn't be one," said Crawlie.
- "I have my pride." She turned her face away and locked her features in
- their expression of perennial hurt and disdain.
- Charley-is-my-darling whispered to the group nearby, not caring whether
- Elaine heard his words or not,
- "That's wonderful, wonderful. She is a witch. A human witch. Perhaps
- the great day is here! Elaine," said he humbly, "will you please look
- at us?"
- Elaine looked. When she stopped to think about where she was, it was
- incredible that the empty old lower city of Kalma should be just
- outside, just beyond the wall, and the busy new city a mere thirty-five
- meters higher. This corridor was a world to itself. It felt like a
- world, with the ugly yellows and browns, the dim old lights, the
- stenches of man and animal mixed under intolerably bad ventilation.
- Baby-baby, Crawlie, Mabel, and Charley-is-my-darling were part of this
- world. They were real; but they were outside, outside, so far as
- Elaine herself was concerned.
- "Let me go," she said.
- "I'll come back some day."
- Charley-is-my-darling, who was so plainly the leader, spoke as if in a
- trance: "You don't understand, Elaine. The only 'going' you are going
- to go is death. There is no other direction. We can't let the old you
- go out of this door, not when the Lady Pane Ashash has thrust you in to
- us. Either you go forward to your destiny, to our destiny too, either
- you do that, and all works out all right, so that you love us, and we
- love you," he added dreamily, "or else I kill you with my own hands.
- Right here. Right now. I could give you another clean drink of water
- first. But that is all. There isn't much choice for you, human being
- Elaine. What do you think would happen if you went outside?"
- "Nothing, I hope," said Elaine.
- "Nothing!" snorted Mabel, her face regaining its original
- indignation.
- "The police would come flapping by in their ornithopter " "And they'd
- pick your brains," said Baby-baby.
- "And they'd know about us," said a tall pale man who had not spoken
- before.
- "And we," said Crawlie from her chair, "would all of us die within an
- hour or two at the longest. Would that matter to you, Ma'am and
- Elaine?"
- of Man "And," added Charley-is-my-darling, "they would disconnect the
- Lady Pane Ashash, so that even the recording of that dear dead lady
- would be gone at last, and there would be no mercy at all left upon
- this world."
- "What is 'mercy'?" asked Elaine.
- "It's obvious you never heard of it," said Crawlie.
- The old mouse-hag Baby-baby came close to Elaine. She looked up at her
- and whispered through yellow teeth,
- "Don't let them frighten you, girl. Death doesn't matter all that
- much, not even to you true humans with your four hundred years or to us
- animals with the slaughterhouse around the corner. Death is a when,
- not a what. It's the same for all of us. Don't be scared. Go
- straight ahead and you may find mercy and love. They're much richer
- than death, if you can only find them. Once you do find them, death
- won't be very important."
- "I still don't know mercy" said Elaine, "but I thought I knew what love
- was, and I don't expect to find my lover in a dirty old corridor full
- of under people
- "I don't mean that kind of love," laughed Baby-baby, brushing aside
- Mabel's attempted interruption with a wave of her hand paw The old
- mouse face was on fire with sheer expressiveness.
- Elaine could suddenly imagine what Baby-baby had looked like to a
- mouse-under man when she was young and sleek and gray.
- Enthusiasm flushed the old features with youth as Baby-baby went on,
- "I don't mean love for a lover, girl. I mean love for yourself. Love
- for life. Love for all things living. Love even for me. Your love
- for me. Can you imagine that?"
- Elaine swam through fatigue but she tried to answer the question. She
- looked in the dim light at the wrinkled old mouse hag with her filthy
- clothes and her little red eyes. The fleeting image of the beautiful
- young mouse-woman had faded away; there was only this cheap, useless
- old thing, with her inhuman demands and her senseless pleading. People
- never loved under people They used them, like chairs or door handles
- Since when did a doorhandle demand the Charter of Ancient Rights?
- "No," said Elaine calmly and evenly,
- "I can't imagine ever loving you."
- "I knew it," said Crawlie from her chair. There was triumph in the
- voice.
- Charley-is-my-darling shook his head as if to clear his sight.
- "Don't you even know who controls Fomalhaut III?"
- "The Instrumentality," said Elaine.
- "Butdo we have to go on talking? Let me go or kill me or something.
- This doesn't make sense. I was tired when I got here, and I'm a
- million years tireder now."
- Mabel said,
- "Take her along."
- "All right," said Charley-is-my-darling.
- "Is the Hunter there?"
- The child D'joan spoke. She had stood at the back of the group.
- "He came in the other way when she came in the front."
- Elaine said to Charley-is-my-darling,
- "You lied to me. You said there was only one way."
- "I did not lie," said he.
- "There is only one way for you or me or for the friends of the Lady
- Pane Ashash. The way you came. The other way is death."
- "What do you mean?"
- "I mean," he said, "that it leads straight into the slaughterhouses of
- the men you do not know. The Lords of the Instrumentality who are here
- on Fomalhaut III. There is the Lord Femtiosex, who is just and without
- pity. There is the Lord Limaono, who thinks that under people are a
- potential danger and should not have been started in the first place.
- There is the Lady Goroke, who does not know how to pray, but who tries
- to ponder the mystery of life and who has shown kindnesses to under
- people as long as the kindnesses were lawful ones. And there is the
- Lady Arabella Underwood, whose justice no man can understand. Nor
- under people either," he added with a chuckle.
- "Who is she? I mean, where did she get the funny name? It doesn't
- have a number in it. It's as bad as your names. Or my own," said
- Elaine.
- "She's from Old North Australia, the stroon world, on loan to the
- Instrumentality, and she follows the laws she was born to. The Hunter
- can go through the rooms and the slaughterhouses of the
- Instrumentality, but could you? Could
- I?"
- "No," said Elaine.
- "Then forward," said Charley-is-my-darling, "to your death or to great
- wonders. May I lead the way, Elaine?"
- Elaine nodded wordlessly.
- The mouse-hag Baby-baby patted Elaine's sleeve, her eyes alive with
- strange hope. As Elaine passed Crawlie's chair, the proud, beautiful
- girl looked straight at her, expressionless, deadly, and severe. The
- dog-girl D'joan followed the little procession as if she had been
- invited.
- They walked down and down and down. Actually, it could not have been a
- full half-kilometer. But with the endless browns and yellows, the
- strange shapes of the lawless and untended under people the stenches
- and the thick heavy air, Elaine felt as if she were leaving all known
- worlds behind.
- In fact, she was doing precisely that, but it did not occur to her that
- her own suspicion might be true.
- V
- At the end of the corridor there was a round gate with a door of gold
- or brass.
- Charley-is-my-darling stopped.
- "I can't go further," he said.
- "You and D'joan will have to go on. This
- is the forgotten antechamber between the tunnel and the upper palace.
- The Hunter is there. Go on. You're a person. It is safe.
- Underpeople usually die in there. Go on." He nudged her elbow and
- pulled the sliding door apart.
- "But the little girl," said Elaine.
- "She's not a girl," said Charley-is-my-darling.
- "She's just a dog as I'm not a man, just a goat brightened and cut and
- trimmed to look like a man. If you come back, Elaine, I will love you
- like God or I will kill you. It depends."
- "Depends on what?" asked Elaine.
- "And what is
- "God'?"
- Charley-is-my-darling smiled the quick tricky smile which was wholly
- insincere and completely friendly, both at the same time. It was
- probably the trademark of his personality in ordinary times.
- "You'll find out about God somewhere else, if you do. Not from us. And
- the depending is something you'll know for yourself. You won't have to
- wait for me to tell you. Go along now. The whole thing will be over
- in the next few minutes."
- "But D'joan?" persisted Elaine.
- "If it doesn't work," said Charley-is-my-darling, "we can always raise
- another D'joan and wait for another you. The Lady Pane Ashash had
- promised us that. Go on in!"
- He pushed her roughly, so that she stumbled through. Bright light
- dazzled her and the clean air tasted as good as fresh water on her
- first day out of the space-ship pod.
- The little dog-girl had trotted in beside her.
- The door, gold or brass, clanged to behind them.
- Elaine and D'joan stood still, side by side, looking forward and
- upward.
- There are many famous paintings of that scene. Most of the paintings
- show Elaine in rags with the distorted, suffering face of a witch. This
- is strictly un historical She was wearing her everyday culottes,
- blouse, and twin over-the-shoulder purses when she went in the other
- end of Clown Town. This was the usual dress on Fomalhaut III at that
- time. She had done nothing at all to spoil her clothes, so she must
- have looked the same when she came out. And D'joan well, everyone
- knows what D'joan looked like.
- The Hunter met them.
- The Hunter met them, and new worlds began.
- He was a shortish man, with black curly hair, black eyes that danced
- with laughter, broad shoulders, and long legs. He walked with a quick
- sure step. He kept his hands quiet at his side, but the hands did not
- look tough and calloused, as though they had been terminating lives,
- even the lives of animals.
- "Come up and sit down," he greeted them.
- "I've been waiting for you both."
- Elaine stumbled upward and forward.
- "Waiting?" she gasped.
- "Nothing mysterious," he said.
- "I had the view screen on. The one into the tunnel. Its connections
- are shielded, so the police could not have peeped it."
- Elaine stopped dead still. The little dog-girl, one step behind her,
- stopped too. She tried to draw herself up to her full height.
- She was about the same tallness that he was. It was difficult, since
- he stood four or five steps above them. She managed to keep her voice
- even when she said: "You know, then?"
- "What?"
- "All those things they said."
- "Sure I know them," he smiled.
- "Why not?"
- "But," stammered Elaine, "about you and me being lovers?
- That too?"
- "That too.
- "He smiled again.
- "I've been hearing it half my life.
- Come on up, sit down, and have something to eat. We have a lot of
- things to do tonight, if history is to be fulfilled through us.
- What do you eat, little girl?" said he kindly to D'joan.
- "Raw meat or people food?"
- "I'm a finished girl," said D'joan, "so I prefer chocolate cake with
- vanilla ice cream."
- "That you shall have," said the Hunter.
- "Come, both of you, and sit down."
- They had topped the steps. A luxurious table, already set, was waiting
- for them. There were three couches around it. Elaine looked for the
- third person who would join them. Only as she sat down did she realize
- that he meant to invite the dog-child.
- He saw her surprise, but did not comment on it directly.
- Instead, he spoke to D'joan.
- "You know me, girl, don't you?"
- The child smiled and relaxed for the first time since Elaine had seen
- her. The dog-girl was really strikingly beautiful when the tension
- went out of her. The wariness, the quietness, the potential disquiet
- these were dog qualities. Now the child seemed wholly human and mature
- far beyond her years. Her white face had dark, dark brown eyes.
- "I've seen you lots of times, Hunter. And you've told me what would
- happen if I turned out to be the D'joan. How I would spread the word
- and meet great trials. How I might die and might not, but people and
- under people would remember my name for thousands of years. You've
- told me almost everything I know except the things that I can't talk to
- you about. You know them too, but you won't talk, will you?" said the
- little girl imploringly.
- "I know you've been to Earth," said the Hunter.
- "Don't say it! Please don't say it!" pleaded the girl.
- "Earth! Manhome itself?" cried Elaine.
- "How, by the stars, did you get there?"
- The Hunter intervened.
- "Don't press her, Elaine. It's a big secret, and she
- wants to keep it. You'll find out more tonight than mortal woman was
- ever told before."
- "What does 'mortal' mean?" asked Elaine, who disliked antique words.
- "It just means having a termination of life."
- "That's foolish," said Elaine.
- "Everything terminates. Look at those poor messy people who went on
- beyond the legal four hundred years." She looked around. Rich
- black-and-red curtains hung from ceiling to floor. On one side of the
- room there was a piece of furniture she had never seen before. It was
- like a table, but it had little broad flat doors on the front, reaching
- from side to side; it was richly ornamented with unfamiliar woods and
- metals. Nevertheless, she had more important things to talk about than
- furniture.
- She looked directly at the Hunter (no organic disease; wounded in left
- arm at an earlier period; somewhat excessive exposure to sunlight;
- might need correction for near vision) and demanded of him: "Am I
- captured by you, too?"
- "Captured?"
- "You're a Hunter. You hunt things. To kill them, I suppose.
- That under man back there, the goat who calls himself
- Charley-ismy-darling " "He never does!" cried the dog-girl, D'joan,
- interrupting.
- "Never does what?" said Elaine, cross at being interrupted.
- "He never calls himself that. Other people, under people I mean, call
- him that. His name is Balthasar, but nobody uses it."
- "What does it matter, little girl?" said Elaine.
- "I'm talking about my life. Your friend said he would take my life
- from me if something did not happen."
- Neither D'joan nor the Hunter said anything.
- Elaine heard a frantic edge go into her voice.
- "You heard it!"
- She turned to the Hunter.
- "You saw it on the view screen
- The Hunter's voice was serenity and assurance: "We three have things to
- do before this night is out. We won't get them done if you are
- frightened or worried. I know the under people but I know the Lords of
- the Instrumentality as well all four of them, right here. The Lords
- Limaono and Femtiosex and the Lady Goroke. And the Norstrilian, too.
- They will protect you. Charleyis-my-darling might want to take your
- life from you because he is worried, afraid that the tunnel of Englok,
- where you just were, will be discovered. I have ways of protecting him
- and yourself as well. Have confidence in me for a while. That's not
- so hard, is it?"
- "But," protested Elaine, "the man or the goat or whatever he was,
- Charley-is-my-darling, he said it would all happen right away, as soon
- as I came up here with you."
- "How can anything happen," said little D'joan, "if you keep talking all
- the time?"
- The Hunter smiled.
- "That's right," he said.
- "We've talked enough. Now we must become lovers."
- Elaine jumped to her feet.
- "Not with me, you don't. Not with her here. Not when I haven't found
- my work to do. I'm a witch.
- I'm supposed to do something, but I've never really found out what it
- was."
- "Look at this," said the Hunter calmly, walking over to the wall, and
- pointing with his finger at an intricate circular design.
- Elaine and D'joan both looked at it.
- The Hunter spoke again, his voice urgent.
- "Do you see it, D'joan? Do you really see it? The ages turn, waiting
- for this moment, little child. Do you see it? Do you see yourself in
- it?"
- Elaine looked at the little dog-girl. D'joan had almost stopped
- breathing. She stared at the curious symmetrical pattern as though it
- were a window into enchanting worlds.
- The Hunter roared, at the top of his voice,
- "D'joan! Joan!
- Joanie!"
- The child made no response.
- The Hunter stepped over to the child, slapped her gently on the cheek,
- shouted again. D'joan continued to stare at the intricate design.
- "Now," said the Hunter, "you and I make love. The child is absent in a
- world of happy dreams. That design is a mandala, something left over
- from the unimaginable past. It locks the human consciousness in place.
- D'joan will not see us or hear us.
- We cannot help her go toward her destiny unless you and I make love
- first."
- Elaine, her hand to her mouth, tried to inventory symptoms as a means
- of keeping her familiar thoughts in balance. It did not work. A
- relaxation spread over her, a happiness and quiet that she had not once
- felt since her childhood.
- "Did you think," said the Hunter, "that I hunted with my body and
- killed with my hands? Didn't anyone ever tell you that the game comes
- to me rejoicing, that the animals die while they scream with pleasure?
- I'm a tele path and I work under license.
- And I have my license now from the dead Lady Pane Ashash."
- Elaine knew that they had come to the end of the talking.
- Trembling, happy, frightened, she fell into his arms and let him lead
- her over to the couch at the side of the black-and-gold room.
- A thousand years later, she was kissing his ear and murmuring loving
- words at him, words that she did not even realize she knew. She must,
- she thought, have picked up more from the story boxes than she ever
- realized.
- "You're my love," she said, "my only one, my darling. Never, never
- leave me; never throw me away. Oh, Hunter, I love you so!"
- of Man "We part," he said, "before tomorrow is gone, but shall meet
- again. Do you realize that all this has only been a little more than
- an hour?"
- Elaine blushed.
- "And I," she stammered,
- "I I'm hungry."
- "Natural enough," said the Hunter.
- "Pretty soon we can waken the little girl and eat together. And then
- history will happen, unless somebody walks in and stops us."
- "But, darling," said Elaine, "can't we go on at least for a while? A
- year? A month? A day? Put the little girl back in the tunnel for a
- while."
- "Not really," said the Hunter, "but I'll sing you the song that came
- into my mind about you and me. I've been thinking bits of it for a
- long time, but now it has really happened. Listen."
- He held her two hands in his two hands, looked easily and frankly into
- her eyes. There was no hint in him of telepathic power.
- He sang to her the song which we know as I Loved You and Lost You.
- I knew you, and loved you, and won you, in Kalma. I loved you, and won
- you, and lost you, my darling! The dark skies of Waterrock swept down
- against us. Lightning-lit only by our own love, my lovely!
- Our time was a short time, a sharp hour of glory We tasted delight and
- we suffer denial.
- The tale of us two is a bittersweet story, Short as a shot but as long
- as death.
- We met and we loved, and vainly we plotted To rescue beauty from a
- smothering war. Time had no time for us, the minutes, no mercy. We
- have loved and lost, and the world goes on.
- We have lost and have kissed, and have parted, my darling! All that
- we have, we must save in our hearts, love. The memory of beauty and
- the beauty of memory . . . I've loved you, and won you, and lost you,
- in Kalma.
- His fingers, moving in the air, produced a soft organ-like music in the
- room. She had noticed music-beams before, but she had never had one
- played for herself.
- By the time he was through singing, she was sobbing. It was all so
- true, so wonderful, so heartbreaking.
- He had kept her right hand in his left hand. Now he released her
- suddenly. He stood up.
- "Let's work first. Eat later. Someone is near us."
- He walked briskly over to the little dog-girl, who was still seated on
- the chair looking at the mandala with open, sleeping eyes. He took her
- head firmly and gently between his two hands and turned her eyes away
- from the design. She struggled momentarily against his hands and then
- seemed to wake up fully.
- She smiled.
- "That was nice. I rested. How long was it five minutes?"
- "More than that," said the Hunter gently.
- "I want you to take Elaine's hand."
- A few hours ago, and Elaine would have protested at the grotesquerie of
- holding hands with an under person This time, she said nothing, but
- obeyed: she looked with much love toward the Hunter.
- "You two don't have to know much," said the Hunter.
- "You, D'joan, are going to get everything that is in our minds and in
- our memories. You will become us, both of us. Forevermore. You will
- meet your glorious fate."
- The little girl shivered.
- "Is this really the day?"
- "It is," said the Hunter.
- "Future ages will remember this night."
- "And you, Elaine," said he to her, "have nothing to do but to love me
- and to stand very still. Do you understand? You will see tremendous
- things, some of them frightening. But they won't be real. Just stand
- still."
- Elaine nodded wordlessly.
- "In the name," said the Hunter, "of The First Forgotten One, in the
- name of the Second Forgotten One, in the name of the Third Forgotten
- One. For the love of people, that will give them life. For the love
- that will give them a clean death and true . . ."
- His words were clear but Elaine could not understand them.
- The day of days was here.
- She knew it.
- She did not know how she knew it, but she did.
- The Lady Pane Ashash crawled up through the solid floor, wearing her
- friendly robot body. She came near to Elaine and murmured: "Have no
- fear, no fear."
- Fear? thought Elaine. This is no time for fear. It is much too
- interesting.
- As if to answer Elaine, a clear, strong, masculine voice spoke out of
- nowhere: This is the time for the daring sharing.
- When these words were spoken, it was as if a bubble had been pricked.
- Elaine felt her personality and D'joan's mingling.
- With ordinary telepathy, it would have been frightening. But this was
- not communication. It was being.
- She had become Joan. She felt the clean little body in its tidy
- clothes. She became aware of the girl-shape again. It was oddly
- pleasant and familiar, in terribly faraway kinds of feeling, to
- remember that she had had that shape once the smooth, innocent flat
- chest; the uncomplicated groin; the fingers which still felt as though
- they were separate and alive in extending from the palm of the hand.
- But the mind that child's mind! It was like an enormous museum
- illuminated by rich stained-glass windows, cluttered with variegated
- heaps of beauty and treasure, scented by strange incense which moved
- slowly in un propelled air. D'joan had a mind which reached all the
- way back to the color and glory of man's antiquity. D'joan had been a
- Lord of the Instrumentality, a monkey-man riding the ships of space, a
- friend of the dear dead Lady Pane Ashash, and Pane Ashash herself.
- No wonder the child was rich and strange: she had been made the heir of
- all the ages.
- This is the time for the glaring top of the truth at the wearing
- sharing, said the nameless, clear, loud voice in her mind. This is the
- time for you and him.
- Elaine realized that she was responding to hypnotic suggestions which
- the Lady Pane Ashash had put into the mind of the little dog-girl
- suggestions which were triggered into full potency the moment that the
- three of them came into telepathic contact.
- For a fraction of a second, she perceived nothing but astonishment
- within herself. She saw nothing but herself every detail, every
- secrecy, every thought and feeling and contour of flesh. She was
- curiously aware of how her breasts hung from her chest, the tension of
- her belly-muscles holding her female backbone straight and erect Female
- backbone?
- Why had she thought that she had a female backbone?
- And then she knew.
- She was following the Hunter's mind as his awareness rushed through her
- body, drank it up, enjoyed it, loved it all over again, this time from
- the inside out.
- She knew somehow that the little dog-girl watched everything quietly,
- wordlessly, drinking in from them both the full nuance of being truly
- human.
- Even with the delirium, she sensed embarrassment. It might be a dream,
- but it was still too much. She began to close her mind and the thought
- had come to her that she should take her hands away from the hands of
- Hunter and the dog-child.
- But then fire came . . .
- VI
- Fire came up from the floor, burning about them intangibly.
- Elaine felt nothing ... but she could sense the touch of the little
- girl's hand.
- Flames around the dames, games, said an idiot voice from nowhere.
- Fire around the pyre, sire, said another.
- Hot is what we got, tot, said a third.
- Suddenly Elaine remembered Earth, but it was not the Earth she knew.
- She was herself D'joan, and notD'joan. She was a tall, strong
- monkey-man, indistinguishable from at rue human being.
- She/he had tremendous alertness in her/ his heart as she/ he walked
- across the Peace Square at An-fang, the Old Square at An-fang, where
- all things begin. She/he noticed a discrepancy.
- Some of the buildings were not there.
- The real Elaine thought to herself,
- "So that's what they did with the child printed her with the memories
- of other under people Other ones, who dared things and went places."
- The fire stopped.
- Elaine saw the black-and-gold room clean and untroubled for a moment
- before the green white-topped ocean rushed in. The water poured over
- the three of them without getting them wet in the least. The greenness
- washed around them without pressure, without suffocation.
- Elaine was the Hunter. Enormous dragons floated in the sky above
- Fomalhaut III. She felt herself wandering across a hill, singing with
- love and yearning. She had the Hunter's own mind, his own memory. The
- dragon sensed him, and flew down. The enormous reptilian wings were
- more beautiful than a sunset, more delicate than orchids. Their beat
- in the air was as gentle as the breath of a baby. She was not only
- Hunter but dragon too; she felt the minds meeting and the dragon dying
- in bliss, in Joy.
- Somehow the water was gone. So too were D'joan and the Hunter. She
- was not in the room. She was taut, tired, worried Elaine, looking down
- a nameless street for hopeless destinations.
- She had to do things which could never be done. The wrong me, the
- wrong time, the wrong place and I'm alone, I'm alone, I'm alone, her
- mind screamed. The room was back again; so too were the hands of the
- Hunter and the little girl.
- Mist began rising Another dream? thought Elaine. Aren't we done?
- But there was another voice somewhere, a voice which grated like the
- rasp of a saw cutting through bone, like the grind of a broken machine
- still working at ruinous top speed. It was an evil voice, a
- terror-filling voice.
- Perhaps this really was the "death" which the tunnel under people had
- mistaken her for.
- The Hunter's hand released hers. She let go of D'joan.
- There was a strange woman in the room. She wore the baldric of
- authority and the leotards of a traveler.
- Elaine stared at her.
- "You' ll be punished," said the terrible voice, which now was coming
- out of the woman.
- "Wh wh what?" stammered Elaine.
- "You're conditioning an under person without authority. I don't know
- who you are, but the Hunter should know better. The animal will have
- to die, of course," said the woman, looking at little D'joan.
- Hunter muttered, half in greeting to the stranger, half in explanation
- to Elaine, as though he did not know what else to say: "Lady Arabella
- Underwood."
- Elaine could not bow to her, though she wanted to.
- The surprise came from the little dog girl.
- I am your sister Joan, she said, and no animal to you.
- The Lady Arabella seemed to have trouble hearing. (Elaine herself
- could not tell whether she was hearing spoken words or taking the
- message with her mind.) I am Joan and I love you.
- The Lady Arabella shook herself as though water had splashed on her.
- "Of course you're Joan. You love me. And I love you."
- People and under people meet on the terms of love.
- "Love. Love, of course. You're a good little girl. And so right."
- You will forget me, said Joan, until we meet and love again.
- "Yes, darling. Good-by for now."
- At last D'joan did use words. She spoke to the Hunter and Elaine,
- saying,
- "It is finished. I know who I am and what I must do. Elaine had
- better come with me. We will see you soon, Hunter if we live."
- Elaine looked at the Lady Arabella, who stood stock still, staring
- like a blind woman. The Hunter nodded at Elaine with his wise, kind,
- rueful smile.
- The little girl led Elaine down, down, down to the door which led back
- to the tunnel of Englok. Just as they went through the brass door,
- Elaine heard the voice of the Lady Arabella say to the Hunter: "What
- are you doing here all by yourself? The room smells funny. Have you
- had animals here? Have you killed something?"
- "Yes, Ma' am," said the Hunter as D'joan and Elaine stepped through the
- door.
- "What?" cried the Lady Arabella.
- Hunter must have raised his voice to a point of penetrating emphasis
- because he wanted the other two to hear him, too: "I have killed,
- Ma'am," he said, "as always with love. This time it was a system."
- They slipped through the door while the Lady Arabella's protesting
- voice, heavy with authority and inquiry, was still sweeping against the
- Hunter.
- Joan led. Her body was the body of a pretty child, but her personality
- was the full awakening of all the under people who had been imprinted
- on her. Elaine could not understand it, because Joan was still the
- little dog-girl, but Joan was now also Elaine, also Hunter. There was
- no doubt about their movement; the child, no longer an under girl led
- the way and Elaine, human or not, followed.
- The door closed behind them. They were back in the Brown and Yellow
- Corridor. Most of the under people were awaiting them. Dozens stared
- at them. The heavy animal-human smells of the old tunnel rolled
- against them like thick, slow waves. Elaine felt the beginning of a
- headache at her temples, but she was much too alert to care.
- For a moment, D'joan and Elaine confronted the under people
- Most of you have seen paintings or theatricals based upon this scene.
- The most famous of all is, beyond doubt, the fantastic "one-line
- drawing" of San Shigonanda the board of the background almost uniformly
- gray, with a hint of brown and yellow on the left, a hint of black and
- red on the right, and in the center the strange white line, almost a
- smear of paint, which somehow suggests the bewildered girl Elaine and
- the doom blessed child Joan.
- Charley-is-my-darling was, of course, the first to find his voice.
- (Elaine did not notice him as a goat-man any more. He seemed an
- earnest, friendly man of middle age, fighting poor health and an
- uncertain life with great courage. She now found his smile persuasive
- and charming. Why, thought Elaine, didn't I see him that way before?
- Have I changed?) Charley-is-my-darling had spoken before Elaine found
- her wits.
- "He did it. Are you D'joan?"
- "Am I D'joan?" said the child, asking the crowd of deformed, weird
- people in the tunnel.
- "Do you think I am D'joan?"
- "No! No! You are the lady who was promised you are the bridge-woman,"
- cried a tall yellow-haired old woman, whom Elaine could not remember
- seeing before. The woman flung herself to her knees in front of the
- child, and tried to get D'joan's hand. The child held her hands away,
- quietly, but firmly, so the woman buried her face in the child's skirt
- and wept.
- "I am Joan," said the child, "and I am dog no more. You are people
- now, people, and if you die with me, you will die men.
- Isn't that better than it has ever been before? And you. Ruthie,"
- said she to the woman at her feet, "stand up and stop crying. Be glad.
- These are the days that I shall be with you. I know your children were
- all taken away and killed, Ruthie, and I am sorry.
- I cannot bring them back. But I give you womanhood. I have even made
- a person out of Elaine."
- "Who are you?" said Charley-is-my-darling.
- "Who are you?"
- "I'm the little girl you put out to live or die an hour ago. But now I
- am Joan, not D'joan, and I bring you a weapon. You are women. You are
- men. You are people. You can use the weapon."
- "What weapon?" The voice was Crawlie's, from about the third row of
- spectators.
- "Life and life-with," said the child Joan.
- "Don't be a fool," said Crawlie.
- "What's the weapon? Don't give us words. We've had words and death
- ever since the world of under people began. That's what people give us
- good words, fine principles, and cold murder, year after year,
- generation after generation. Don't tell me I'm a person I'm not. I'm
- a bison and I know it. An animal fixed up to look like a person. Give
- me a something to kill with. Let me die fighting."
- Little Joan looked incongruous in her young body and short stature,
- still wearing the little blue smock in which Elaine had first seen her.
- She commanded the room. She lifted her hand and the buzz of low
- voices, which had started while Crawlie was yelling, dropped off to
- silence again.
- "Crawlie," she said, in a voice that carried all the way down the hall,
- "peace be with you in the everlasting now."
- Crawlie scowled. She did have the grace to look puzzled at Joan's
- message to her, but she did not speak.
- "Don't talk to me, dear people," said little Joan.
- "Get used to me first. I bring you life-with. It's more than love.
- Love's a hard, sad, dirty word, a cold word, an old word. It says too
- much and it promises too little. I bring you something much bigger
- than love. If you're alive, you're alive. If you're alive with then
- you know the other life is there too both of you, any of you, all of
- you. Don't do anything. Don't grab, don't clench, don't possess.
- Just be. That's the weapon. There's not a flame or a gun or a poison
- that can stop it."
- "I want to believe you," said Mabel, "but I don't know how to."
- "Don't believe me," said little Joan.
- "Just wait and let things happen. Let me through, good people. I have
- to sleep for a while.
- Elaine will watch me while I sleep and when I get up, I will tell you
- why you are under people no longer."
- Joan started to move forward A wild ululating screech split the
- corridor.
- Everyone looked around to see where it came from.
- It was almost like the shriek of a fighting bird, but the sound came
- from among them.
- Elaine saw it first.
- Crawlie had a knife and just as the cry ended, she flung herself on
- Joan.
- Child and woman fell on the floor, their dresses a tangle. The large
- hand rose up twice with the knife, and the second time it came up
- red.
- From the hot shocking burn in her side, Elaine knew that she must
- herself have taken one of the stabs. She could not tell whether Joan
- was still living.
- The under men pulled Crawlie off the child.
- Crawlie was white with rage.
- "Words, words, words. She'll kill us all with her words."
- A large, fat man, with the muzzle of a bear on the front of an
- otherwise human-looking head and body, stepped around the man who held
- Crawlie. He gave her one tremendous slap. She dropped to the floor
- unconscious. The knife, stained with blood, fell on the old worn
- carpet. (Elaine thought automatically: restorative for her later;
- check neck vertebrae; no problem of bleeding.) For the first time in
- her life, Elaine functioned as a wholly efficient witch. She helped
- the people pull the clothing from little Joan. The tiny body, with the
- heavy purple-dark blood pumping out from just below the rib-cage,
- looked hurt and fragile. Elaine reached in her left handbag. She had
- a surgical radar pen. She held it to her eye and looked through the
- flesh, up and down the wound. The peritoneum was punctured, the liver
- cut, the upper folds of the large intestine were perforated in two
- places. When she saw this, she knew what to do. She brushed the
- bystanders aside and got to work.
- First she glued the cuts from the inside out, starting with the damage
- to the liver. Each touch of the organic adhesive was preceded by a
- tiny spray of re-coding powder, designed to reinforce the capacity of
- the injured organ to restore itself. The probing, pressing, squeezing
- took eleven minutes. Before it was finished, Joan had awakened, and
- was murmuring: "Am I dying?"
- "Not at all," said Elaine, "unless these human medicines poison your
- dog blood."
- "Who did it?"
- "Crawlie?"
- "Why?" said the child.
- "Why? Is she hurt too? Where is she?"
- "Not as hurt as she is going to be," said the goat-man,
- Charley-is-my-darling.
- "If she lives, we'll fix her up and try her and put her to death."
- "No, you won't," said Joan.
- "You're going to love her. You must."
- The goat-man looked bewildered.
- He turned in his perplexity to Elaine.
- "Better have a look at Crawlie," said he.
- "Maybe Orson killed her with that slap. He's a bear, you know."
- "So I saw," said Elaine, drily. What did the man think that thing
- looked like, a hummingbird?
- She walked over to the body of Crawlie. As soon as she touched the
- shoulders, she knew that she was in for trouble.
- The outer appearances were human, but the musculature beneath was not.
- She suspected that the laboratories had left Crawlie terribly strong,
- keeping the buffalo strength and obstinacy for some remote industrial
- reason of their own. She took out a brain link a close-range
- telepathic hookup which worked only briefly and slightly, to see if the
- mind still functioned. As she reached for Crawlie's head to attach it,
- the unconscious girl sprang suddenly to life, jumped to her feet, and
- said: "No, you don't! You don't peep me, you dirty human!"
- "Crawlie, stand still."
- "Don't boss me, you monster!"
- "Crawlie, that's a bad thing to say." It was eerie to hear such a
- commanding voice coming from the throat and mouth of a small child.
- Small she might have been, but Joan commanded the scene.
- "I don't care what I say. You all hate me."
- "That's not true, Crawlie."
- "You' re a dog and now you' re a person. You' re born a traitor. Dogs
- have always sided with people. You hated me even before you went into
- that room and changed into something else. Now you are going to kill
- us all."
- "We may die, Crawlie, but I won't do it."
- "Well, you hate me, anyhow. You've always hated me."
- "You may not believe it," said Joan, "but I've always loved you. You
- were the prettiest woman in our whole corridor."
- Crawlie laughed. The sound gave Elaine gooseflesh.
- "Suppose I believed it. How could I live if I thought that people
- loved me? If I believed you, I would have to tear myself to pieces, to
- break my brains on the wall, to do " The laughter changed to sobs, but
- Crawlie managed to resume talking: "You things are so stupid that you
- don't even know that you're monsters. You're not people. You never
- will be people. I'm one of you myself. I'm honest enough to admit
- what I am. We're dirt, we're nothing,
- we're things that are less than machines. We hide in the earth like
- dirt and when people kill us they do not weep. At least we were
- hiding. Now you come along, you and your tame human woman" Crawlie
- glared briefly at Elaine "and you try to change even that. I'll kill
- you again if I can, you dirt, you slut, you dog! What are you doing
- with that child's body ? We don't even know who you are now. Can you
- tell us?"
- The bear-man had moved up close to Crawlie, unnoticed by her, and was
- ready to slap her down again if she moved against little Joan.
- Joan looked straight at him and with a mere movement of her eyes she
- commanded him not to strike.
- "I'm tired," she said,
- "I'm tired, Crawlie. I'm a thousand years old when I am not even five.
- And I am Elaine now, and I am Hunter too, and I am the Lady Pane
- Ashash, and I know a great many more things than I thought I would ever
- know. I have work to do, Crawlie, because I love you, and I think I
- will die soon. But please, good people, first let me rest."
- The bear-man was on Crawlie's right. On her left, there had moved up a
- snake-woman. The face was pretty and human, except for the thin forked
- tongue which ran in and out of the mouth like a dying flame. She had
- good shoulders and hips but no breasts at all. She wore empty golden
- brassiere cups which swung against her chest. Her hands looked as
- though they might be stronger than steel. Crawlie started to move
- toward Joan, and the snake-woman hissed.
- It was the snake hiss of Old Earth.
- For a second, every animal-person in the corridor stopped breathing.
- They all stared at the snake-woman. She hissed again, looking straight
- at Crawlie. The sound was an abomination in that narrow space. Elaine
- saw that Joan tightened up like a little dog, Charley-is-my-darling
- looked as though he was ready to leap twenty meters in one jump, and
- Elaine herself felt an impulse to strike, to kill, to destroy. The
- hiss was a challenge to them all.
- The snake-woman looked around calmly, fully aware of the attention she
- had obtained.
- "Don't worry, dear people. See, I'm using Joan's name for all of us.
- I'm not going to hurt Crawlie, not unless she hurts Joan. But if she
- hurts Joan, if anybody hurts Joan, they will have me to deal with. You
- have a good idea who I am. We S-people have great strength, high
- intelligence, and no fear at all. You know we cannot breed. People
- have to make us one by one, out of ordinary snakes. Do not cross me,
- dear people. I want to learn about this new love which Joan is
- bringing, and nobody is going to hurt Joan while I am here. Do you
- hear me, people? Nobody. Try it, and you die. I think I could kill
- almost all of you before I died, even if you all attacked me at once.
- Do you hear me, people? Leave Joan alone. That
- of Man goes for you, too, you soft human woman. I am not afraid of
- you either. You there," said she to the bear-man, "pick little Joan up
- and carry her to a quiet bed. She must rest. She must be quiet for a
- while. You be quiet too, all you people, or you will meet me.
- Me." Her black eyes roved across their faces. The snake-woman moved
- forward and they parted in front of her, as though she were the only
- solid being in a throng of ghosts.
- Her eyes rested a moment on Elaine. Elaine met the gaze, but it was an
- uncomfortable thing to do. The black eyes with neither eyebrows nor
- lashes seemed full of intelligence and devoid of emotion. Orson, the
- bear-man, followed obediently behind. He carried little Joan.
- As the child passed Elaine she tried to stay awake. She murmured,
- "Make me bigger. Please make me bigger. Right away."
- "I don't know how .. ." said Elaine.
- The child struggled to full awakening.
- "I'll have work to do.
- Work . . . and maybe my death to die. It will all be wasted if I am
- this little. Make me bigger."
- "But " protested Elaine again.
- "If you don't know, ask the lady."
- "What lady?"
- The S-woman had paused, listening to the conversation. She cut in.
- "The Lady Pane Ashash, of course. The dead one. Do you think that a
- living Lady of the Instrumentality would do anything but kill us
- all?"
- As the snake-woman and Orson carried Joan away, Charley-ismy-darling
- came up to Elaine and said,
- "Do you want to go?"
- "Where?"
- "To the Lady Pane Ashash, of course."
- "Me?" said Elaine.
- "Now?" said Elaine, even more emphatically.
- "Of course not," said Elaine, pronouncing each word as though it were a
- law.
- "What do you think I am? A few hours ago I did not even know that you
- existed. I wasn't sure about the word' death I just assumed that
- everything terminated at four hundred years, the way it should. It's
- been hours of danger, and everybody has been threatening everybody else
- for all that time. I'm tired and I'm sleepy and I'm dirty, and I've
- got to take care of myself, and besides " She stopped suddenly and bit
- her lip. She had started to say, and besides, my body is all worn out
- with that dreamlike lovemaking which the Hunter and I had together.
- That was not the business of Charley-is-my-darling: he was goat enough
- as he was.
- His mind was goa tish and would not see the dignity of it all.
- The goat-man said, very gently,
- "You are making history, Elaine, and when you make history you cannot
- always take care of all the little things too. Are you happier and
- more important than you ever were before? Yes?
- Aren't you a different you from the person who met Balthasarjust a few
- hours ago?"
- Elaine was taken aback by the seriousness. She nodded.
- "Stay hungry and tired. Stay dirty. Just a little longer. Time must
- not be wasted. You can talk to the Lady Pane Ashash. Find out what we
- must do about little Joan. When you come back with further
- instructions, I will take care of you myself. This tunnel is not as
- bad a town as it looks. We will have everything you could need, in the
- Room of Englok. Englok himself built it, long ago.
- Work just a little longer, and then you can eat and rest. We have
- everything here.
- "I am the citizen of no mean city." But first you must help Joan. You
- love Joan, don't you?"
- "Oh, yes, I do," she said.
- "Then help us just a little bit more."
- With death? she thought. With murder? With violation of law?
- But but it was all for Joan.
- It was thus that Elaine went to the camouflaged door, went out under
- the open sky again, saw the great saucer of Upper Kalma reaching out
- over the Old Lower City. She talked to the voice of the Lady Pane
- Ashash, and obtained certain instructions, together with other
- messages. Later, she was able to repeat them, but she was too tired to
- make out their real sense.
- She staggered back to the place in the wall where she thought the door
- to be, leaned against it, and nothing happened.
- "Further down, Elaine, further down. Hurry! When I used to be me, I
- too got tired," came the strong whisper of the Lady Pane Ashash, "but
- do hurry!"
- Elaine stepped away from the wall, looking at it.
- A beam of light struck her.
- The Instrumentality had found her.
- She rushed wildly at the wall.
- The door gaped briefly. The strong welcome hand of
- Charleyis-my-darling helped her in.
- "The light! The light!" cried Elaine.
- "I've killed us all. They saw me."
- "Not yet," smiled the goat-man, with his quick crooked intelligent
- smile.
- "I may not be educated, but I am pretty smart."
- He reached toward the inner gate, glanced back at Elaine appraisingly,
- and then shoved a man-sized robot through the door.
- "There it goes, a sweeper about your size. No memory bank.
- A worn-out brain. Just simple motivations. If they come down to see
- what they thought they saw, they will see this instead. We keep a
- bunch of these at the door. We don't go out much, but when we do, it's
- handy to have these to cover up with."
- He took her by the arm.
- "While you eat, you can tell me. Can we make her bigger. . . ?"
- of Man "Who?"
- "Joan, of course. Our Joan. That's what you went to find out for
- us."
- Elaine had to inventory her own mind to see what the Lady Pane Ashash
- had said on that subject. In a moment she remembered.
- "You need a pod. And a jelly bath. And narcotics, because it will
- hurt. Four hours."
- "Wonderful," said Charley-is-my-darling, leading her deeper and deeper
- into the tunnel.
- "But what's the use of it," said Elaine, "if I've ruined us all?
- The Instrumentality saw me coming in. They will follow. They will
- kill all of you, even Joan. Where is the Hunter? Shouldn't I sleep
- first?" She felt her lips go thick with fatigue; she had not rested or
- eaten since she took that chance on the strange little door between
- Waterrocky Road and the Shopping Bar.
- "You're safe, Elaine, you're safe," said Charley-is-my-darling, his sly
- smile very warm and his smooth voice carrying the ring of sincere
- conviction. For himself, he did not believe a word of it.
- He thought they were all in danger, but there was no point in
- terrifying Elaine. Elaine was the only real person on their side,
- except for the Hunter, who was a strange one, almost like an animal
- himself, and for the Lady Pane Ashash, who was very benign, but who
- was, after all, a dead person. He was frightened himself, but he was
- afraid of fear. Perhaps they were all doomed.
- In a way, he was right.
- VII
- The Lady Arabella Underwood had called the Lady Goroke.
- "Something has tampered with my mind."
- The Lady Goroke felt very shocked. She threw back the inquiry. Put a
- probe on it.
- "I did. Nothing."
- Nothing?
- More shock for the Lady Goroke. Sound the alert, then.
- "Oh, no. Oh, no, no. It was a friendly, nice tampering." The Lady
- Arabella Underwood, being an Old North Australian, was rather formal:
- she always thought full words at her friends, even in telepathic
- contact. She never sent mere raw ideas.
- But that's utterly unlawful. You're part of the Instrumentality.
- It's a crime! thought the Lady Goroke.
- She got a giggle for reply.
- You laugh. . . ? she inquired.
- "I just thought a new Lord might be here. From the Instrumentality.
- Having a look at me."
- The Lady Goroke was very proper and easily shocked. We wouldn't do
- that!
- The Lady Arabella thought to herself but did not transmit, "Not to you,
- my dear. You're a blooming prude." To the other she transmitted,
- "Forget it then."
- Puzzled and worried, the Lady Goroke thought: Well, all right.
- Break?
- "Right-ho. Break."
- The Lady Goroke frowned to herself. She slapped her wall.
- Planet Central, she thought at it.
- A mere man sat at a desk.
- "I am the Lady Goroke," she said.
- "Of course, my Lady," he replied.
- "Police fever, one degree. One degree only. Till rescinded.
- Clear?"
- "Clear, my Lady. The entire planet?"
- "Yes," she said.
- "Do you wish to give a reason?" His voice was respectful and
- routine.
- "Must I?"
- "Of course not, my Lady."
- "None given, then. Close."
- He saluted and his image faded from the wall.
- She raised her mind to the level of a light clear call.
- Instrumentality Only Instrumentality Only. I have raised the police
- fever level one degree by command. Reason, personal disquiet. You
- know my voice. You know me. Goroke.
- Far across the city a police ornithopter flapped slowly down the
- street.
- The police robot was photographing a sweeper, the most elaborately
- malfunctioning sweeper he had ever seen.
- The sweeper raced down the road at unlawful speeds, approaching three
- hundred kilometers an hour, stopped with a sizzle of plastic on stone,
- and began picking dust-motes off the pavement.
- When the ornithopter reached it, the sweeper took off again, rounded
- two or three corners at tremendous speed, and then settled down to its
- idiot job.
- The third time this happened, the robot in the ornithopter put a
- disabling slug through it, flew down, and picked it up with the claws
- of his machine.
- He saw it in close view.
- "Birdbrain. Old model. Birdbrain. Good they don't use those any
- more. The thing could have hurt a Man. Now, I'm printed from a mouse,
- a real mouse with lots and lots of brains."
- He flew toward the central junkyard with the worn out sweeper. The
- sweeper, crippled but still conscious, was trying to pick dust off the
- iron claws which held it.
- Below them, the Old City twisted out of sight with its odd geometrical
- lights. The New City, bathed in its soft perpetual glow, shone out
- against the night of Fomalhaut III. Beyond them, the everlasting ocean
- boiled in its private storms.
- On the actual stage the actors cannot do much with the scene of the
- interlude, where Joan was cooked in a single night from the size of a
- child five years old to the tallness of a miss fifteen or sixteen. The
- biological machine did work well, though at the risk of her life. It
- made her into a vital, robust young person, without changing her mind
- at all. This is hard for any actress to portray. The story boxes have
- the advantage. They can show the machine with all sorts of
- improvements flashing lights, bits of lightning, mysterious rays.
- Actually, it looked like a bathtub full of boiling brown jelly,
- completely covering Joan.
- Elaine, meanwhile, ate hungrily in the palatial room of Englok himself.
- The food was very, very old, and she had doubts, as a witch, about its
- nutritional value, but it stilled her hunger. The denizens of Clown
- Town had declared this room "off limits" to themselves, for reasons
- which Charley-is-my darling could not make plain. He stood in the
- doorway and told her what to do to find food, to activate the bed out
- of the floor, to open the bathroom. Everything was very old-fashioned
- and nothing responded to a simple thought or to a mere slap. A curious
- thing happened.
- Elaine had washed her hands, had eaten, and was preparing for her bath.
- She had taken most of her clothes off, thinking only that
- Charley-is-my-darling was an animal, not a man, so that it did not
- matter. Suddenly she knew it did matter.
- He might be an under person but he was a man to her.
- Blushing deeply all the way down to her neck, she ran into the bathroom
- and called back to him: "Go away. I will bathe and then sleep. Wake
- me when you have to, not before."
- "Yes , Elai the."
- "An d a nd " "Yes ?"
- "Thank you," she said.
- "Thank you very much. Do you know, I never said 'thank you' to an
- under person before."
- "That's all right," said Charley-is-my-darling with a smile.
- "Most real people don't. Sleep well, my dear Elaine. When you awaken,
- be ready for great things. We shall take a star out of the skies and
- shall set thousands of worlds on fire . . ."
- "What's that?" she said, putting her head around the corner of the
- bathroom.
- "Just a figure of speech," he smiled.
- "Just meaning that you won't have much time. Rest well. Don't forget
- to put your clothes in the ladysmaid machine. The ones in Clown Town
- are all worn out. But since we haven't used this room, yours ought to
- work."
- "Which is it?" she said.
- "The red lid with the gold handle. Just lift it." On that domestic
- note he left her to rest, while he went off and plotted the destiny of
- a hundred billion lives.
- They told her it was mid-morning when she came out of the room of
- Englok. How could she have known it? The brown-and yellow corridor,
- with its gloomy old yellow lights, was just as dim and stench-ridden as
- ever.
- The people all seemed to have changed.
- Baby-baby was no longer a mouse-hag, but a woman of considerable force
- and much tenderness. Crawlie was as dangerous as a human enemy,
- staring at Elaine, her beautiful face gone bland with hidden hate.
- Charley-is-my-darling was gay, friendly, and persuasive. She thought
- she could read expressions on the faces of Orson and the S-woman, odd
- though their features were.
- After she had gotten through some singularly polite greetings, she
- demanded,
- "What's happening now?"
- A new voice spoke up a voice she knew and did not know.
- Elaine glanced over at a niche in the wall.
- The Lady Pane Ashash! And who was that with her?
- Even as she asked herself the question, Elaine knew the answer. It was
- Joan, grown, only half a head less tall than the Lady Pane Ashash or
- herself. It was a new Joan, powerful, happy, and quiet; but it was all
- the dear little old D'joan too.
- "Welcome," said the Lady Pane Ashash, "to our revolution."
- "What's a revolution?" asked Elaine.
- "And I thought you couldn't come in here with all the thought
- shielding?"
- The Lady Pane Ashash lifted a wire which trailed back from her robot
- body.
- "I rigged this up so that I could use the body.
- Precautions are no use any more. It's the other side which will need
- the precautions now. A revolution is a way of changing systems and
- people. This is one. You go first, Elaine. This way."
- "To die? Is that what you mean?"
- The Lady Pane Ashash laughed warmly.
- "You know me by now. You know my friends here. You know what your own
- life has been down to now, a useless witch in a world which did not
- want you. We may die, but it's what we do before we die that counts.
- This is Joan going to meet her destiny. You lead as far as the Upper
- City. Then Joan will lead. And then we shall see."
- "You mean, all these people are going too?" Elaine looked at the
- ranks
- of Man of the under people who were beginning to form into two queues
- down the corridor. The queues bulged wherever mothers led their
- children by the hand or carried small ones in their arms. Here and
- there the line was punctuated by a giant under person
- They have been nothing, thought Elaine, and I was nothing too. Now we
- are all going to do something, even though we may be terminated for
- it.
- "May be," thought she: "shall be" is the word. But it is worth it if
- Joan can change the worlds, even a little bit, even for other people.
- Joan spoke up. Her voice had grown with her body, but it was the same
- dear voice which the little dog-girl had had sixteen hours (they seem
- sixteen years, thought Elaine) ago, when Elaine first met her at the
- door to the tunnel of Englok.
- Joan said,
- "Love is not something special, reserved for men alone.
- "Love is not proud. Love has no real name. Love is for life itself,
- and we have life.
- "We cannot win by fighting. People outnumber us, outgun us, outrun us,
- outfight us. But people did not create us. Whatever made people, made
- us too. You all know that, but will we say the name?"
- There was a murmur of no and never from the crowd.
- "You have waited for me. I have waited too. It is time to die,
- perhaps, but we will die the way people did in the beginning, before
- things became easy and cruel for them. They live in a stupor and they
- die in a dream. It is not a good dream and if they awaken, they will
- know that we are people too. Are you with me?" They murmured yes.
- "Do you love me?" Again they murmured agreement.
- "Shall we go out and meet the day?" They shouted their acclaim.
- Joan turned to the Lady Pane Ashash.
- "Is everything as you wished and ordered?"
- "Yes," said the dear dead woman in the robot body.
- "Joan first, to lead you. Elaine preceding her, to drive away robots
- or ordinary under people When you meet real people, you will love them.
- That is all. You will love them. If they kill you, you will love
- them. Joan will show you how. Pay no further attention to me.
- Ready?"
- Joan lifted her right hand and said words to herself. The people bowed
- their heads before her, faces and muzzles and snouts of all sizes and
- colors. A baby of some kind mewed in a tiny falsetto to the rear.
- Just before she turned to lead the procession, Joan turned back to the
- people and said,
- "Crawlie, where are you?"
- "Here, in the middle," said a clear, calm voice far back.
- "Do you love me now, Crawlie?"
- "No, D'joan. I like you less than when you were a little dog.
- But these are my people too, as well as yours. I am brave. I can
- walk. I won't make trouble."
- "Crawlie," said Joan, "will you love people if we meet them?"
- All faces turned toward the beautiful bison-girl. Elaine could just
- see her, way down the murky corridor. Elaine could see that the girl'
- s face had turned utter, dead white with emotion.
- Whether rage or fear, she could not tell.
- At last Crawlie spoke,
- "No, I won't love people. And I won't love you. I have my pride."
- Softly, softly, like death itself at a quiet bedside, Joan spoke.
- "You can stay behind, Crawlie. You can stay here. It isn't much of a
- chance, but it's a chance."
- Crawlie looked at her.
- "Bad luck to you, dog-woman, and bad luck to the rotten human being up
- there beside you."
- Elaine stood on tiptoe to see what would happen. Crawlie's face
- suddenly disappeared, dropping downward.
- The snake woman elbowed her way to the front, stood close to Joan where
- the others could see her, and sang out in a voice as clear as metal
- itself: "Sing 'poor, poor, Crawlie," dear people. Sing
- "I love Crawlie,"
- dear people. She is dead. I just killed her so that we would all be
- full of love. I love you too," said the S-woman, on whose reptilian
- features no sign of love or hate could be seen.
- Joan spoke up, apparently prompted by the Lady Pane Ashash.
- "We do love Crawlie, dear people. Think of her and then let us move
- forward."
- Charley-is-my-darling gave Elaine a little shove.
- "Here, you lead."
- In a dream, in a bewilderment, Elaine led.
- She felt warm, happy, brave when she passed close to the strange Joan,
- so tall and yet so familiar. Joan gave her a full smile and
- whispered,
- "Tell me I'm doing well, human woman. I'm a dog and dogs have lived a
- million years for the praise of man."
- "You're right, Joan, you're completely right! I'm with you.
- Shall I go now?" responded Elaine.
- Joan nodded, her eyes brimming with tears.
- Elaine led.
- Joan and the Lady Pane Ashash followed, dog and dead woman championing
- the procession.
- The rest of the under people followed them in turn, in a double line.
- When they made the secret door open, daylight flooded the corridor.
- Elaine could almost feel the stale odor-ridden air pouring out with
- them. When she glanced back into the tunnel for the last time, she saw
- the body of Crawlie lying all alone on the floor.
- Elaine herself turned to the steps and began going up them.
- No one had yet noticed the procession.
- Elaine could hear the wire of the Lady Pane Ashash dragging on the
- stone and metal of the steps as they climbed.
- When she reached the top door, Elaine had a moment of indecision and
- of Man panic.
- "This is my life, my life," she thought.
- "I have no other.
- What have I done? Oh, Hunter, Hunter, where are you? Have you
- betrayed me?"
- Said Joan softly behind her,
- "Go on! Go on. This is a war of love. Keep going."
- Elaine opened the door to the upper street. The roadway was full of
- people. Three police ornithopters flapped slowly overhead.
- This was an unusual number. Elaine stopped again.
- "Keep walking," said Joan, "and warn the robots off."
- Elaine advanced and the revolution began.
- VIII
- The revolution lasted six minutes and covered one hundred and twelve
- meters.
- The police flew over as soon as the under people began pouring out of
- the doorway.
- The first one glided in like a big bird, his voice asking, "Identify!
- Who are you?"
- Elaine said,
- "Go away. That is a command."
- "Identify yourself," said the bird-like machine, banking steeply with
- the lens-eyed robot peering at Elaine out of its middle.
- "Go away," said Elaine.
- "I am a true human and I command."
- The first police ornithopter apparently called to the others by radio.
- Together they flapped their way down the corridor between the big
- buildings.
- A lot of people had stopped. Most of their faces were blank, a few
- showing animation or amusement or horror at the sight of so many under
- people all crowded in one place.
- Joan's voice sang out, in the clearest possible enunciation of the Old
- Common Tongue: "Dear people, we are people. We love you. We love
- you."
- The under people began to chant love, love, love in a weird plainsong
- full of sharps and halftones. The true humans shrank back. Joan
- herself set the example by embracing a young woman of about her own
- height. Charley-is-my-darling took a human man by the shoulders and
- shouted at him: "I love you, my dear fellow! Believe me, I do love
- you. It's wonderful meeting you." The human man was startled by the
- contact and even more startled by the glowing warmth of the goat-man's
- voice. He stood mouth slack and body relaxed with sheer, utter, and
- accepted surprise.
- Somewhere to the rear a person screamed.
- A police ornithopter came flapping back. Elaine could not tell if it
- was one of the three she had sent away, or a new one altogether. She
- waited for
- it to get close enough to hail, so that she could tell it to go
- away.
- For the first time, she wondered about the actual physical character of
- danger. Could the police machine put a slug through her? Or shoot
- flame at her? Or lift her screaming, carrying her away with its iron
- claws to some place where she would be pretty and clean and never
- herself again?
- "Oh, Hunter, Hunter, where are you now? Have you forgotten me? Have
- you betrayed me?"
- The under people were still surging forward and mingling with the real
- people, clutching them by their hands or their garments, and repeating
- in the queer medley of voices: "I love you. Oh, please, I love you! We
- are people. We are your sisters and brothers . . ."
- The snake-woman wasn't making much progress. She had seized a human
- man with her more-than-iron hand. Elaine hadn't seen her saying
- anything, but the man had fainted dead away. The snake-woman had him
- draped over her arm like an empty overcoat and was looking for somebody
- else to love.
- Behind Elaine a low voice said,
- "He's coming soon."
- "Who?" said Elaine to the Lady Pane Ashash, knowing perfectly well
- whom she meant, but not wanting to admit it, and busy with watching the
- circling ornithopter at the same time.
- "The Hunter, of course," said the robot with the dear dead lady's
- voice.
- "He'll come for you. You'll be all right. I'm at the end of my wire.
- Look away, my dear. They are about to kill me again and I am afraid
- that the sight would distress you."
- Fourteen robots, foot models, marched with military decision into the
- crowd. The true humans took heart from this and some of them began to
- slip away into doorways. Most of the real people were still so
- surprised that they stood around with the under people pawing at them,
- babbling the accents of love over and over again, the animal origin of
- their voices showing plainly.
- The robot sergeant took no note of this. He approached the Lady Pane
- Ashash only to find Elaine standing in his way.
- "I command you," she said, with all the passion of a working witch,
- "I command you to leave this place."
- His eye-lenses were like dark-blue marbles floating in milk.
- They seemed swim my and poorly focused as he looked her over.
- He did not reply but stepped around her, faster than her own body could
- intercept him. He made for the dear, dead Lady Pane Ashash.
- Elaine, bewildered, realized that the Lady's robot body seemed more
- human than ever. The robot-sergeant confronted her.
- This is the scene which we all remember, the first authentic picture
- tape of the entire incident: The gold and black sergeant, his milky
- eyes staring at the Lady Pane Ashash.
- The Lady herself, in the pleasant old robot body, lifting a commanding
- hand.
- Elaine, distraught, half-turning as though she would grab the robot by
- his right arm. Her head is moving so rapidly that her black hair
- swings as she turns.
- Charley-is-my-darling shouting,
- "I love, love, love!" at a small handsome man with mouse-colored hair.
- The man is gulping and saying nothing.
- All this we know.
- Then comes the unbelievable, which we now believe, the event for which
- the stars and worlds were unprepared.
- Mutiny.
- Robot mutiny.
- Disobedience in open daylight.
- The words are hard to hear on the tape, but we can still make them out.
- The recording device on the police ornithopter had gotten a square fix
- on the face of the Lady Pane Ashash. Lipreaders can see the words
- plainly; non-lip-readers can hear the words the third or fourth time
- the tape is run through the eye box
- Said the Lady,
- "Overridden."
- Said the sergeant,
- "No, you're a robot."
- "See for yourself. Read my brain. I am a robot. I am also a woman.
- You cannot disobey people. I am people. I love you.
- Furthermore, you are people. You think. We love each other. Try.
- Try to attack."
- "I I cannot," said the robot sergeant, his milky eyes seeming to spin
- with excitement.
- "You love me? You mean I'm alive? I exist?"
- "With love, you do," said the Lady Pane Ashash.
- "Look at her," said the Lady, pointing to Joan, "because she has
- brought you love."
- The robot looked and disobeyed the law. His squad looked with him.
- He turned back to the Lady and bowed to her: "Then you know what we
- must do, if we cannot obey you and cannot disobey the others."
- "Do it," she said sadly, "but know what you are doing. You are not
- really escaping two human commands. You are making achoice. You. That
- makes you men."
- The sergeant turned to his squad of man-sized robots: "You hear that?
- She says we are men. I believe her. Do you believe her?"
- "We do," they cried almost unanimously.
- This is where the picture-tape ends, but we can imagine how the scene
- was concluded. Elaine had stopped short, just behind the
- sergeant-robot. The other robots had come up behind her.
- Charley-is-my-darling had stopped talking. Joan was in the act of
- lifting her hands in blessing, her warm brown dog eyes gone wide with
- pity and understanding.
- People wrote down the things that we cannot see.
- Apparently the robot-sergeant said,
- "Our love, dear people, and good-
- bye. We disobey and die." He waved his hand to Joan. It is not
- certain whether he did or did not say,
- "Good-bye, our lady and our liberator." Maybe some poet made up the
- second saying; the first one, we are sure about. And we are sure about
- the next word, the one which historians and poets all agree on. He
- turned to his men and said, "Destruct."
- Fourteen robots, the black-and-gold sergeant and his thirteen
- silver-blue foot soldiers, suddenly spurted white fire in the street of
- Kalma. They detonated their suicide buttons, thermite caps in their
- own heads. They had done something with no human command at all, on an
- order from another robot, the body of the Lady Pane Ashash, and she in
- turn had no human authority, but merely the word of the little dog-girl
- Joan, who had been made an adult in a single night.
- Fourteen white flames made people and under people turn their eyes
- aside. Into the light there dropped a special police ornithopter. Out
- of it came the two Ladies, Arabella Underwood and Goroke. They lifted
- their forearms to shield their eyes from the blazing dying robots. They
- did not see the Hunter, who had moved mysteriously into an open window
- above the street and who watched the scene by putting his hands over
- his eyes and peeking through the slits between his fingers. While the
- people still stood blinded, they felt the fierce telepathic shock of
- the mind of the Lady Goroke taking command of the situation. That was
- her right, as a Chief of the Instrumentality. Some of the people, but
- not all of them, felt the outre counter shock of Joan's mind reaching
- out to meet the Lady Goroke.
- "I command," thought the Lady Goroke, her mind kept open to all
- beings.
- "Indeed you do, but I love, I love you," thought Joan.
- The first-order forces met.
- They engaged.
- The revolution was over. Nothing had really happened, but Joan had
- forced people to meet her. This was nothing like the poem about people
- and under people getting all mixed up. The mixup came much later, even
- after the time of C'mell. The poem is pretty, but it is dead wrong, as
- you can see for yourself: You should ask me, Me, me, me Because I know
- I used to live On the Eastern Shore.
- Men aren't men, And women aren't women, And people aren't people any
- more.
- of Man There is no Eastern Shore on Fomalhaut III anyhow; the people
- under people crisis came much later than this. The revolution had
- failed, but history had reached its new turning point the quarrel of
- the two Ladies. They left their minds open out of sheer surprise.
- Suicidal robots and world-loving dogs were unheard-of. It was bad
- enough to have illegal under people on the prowl, but these new things
- ah!
- Destroy them all, said the Lady Goroke.
- "Why?" thought the Lady Arabella Underwood.
- Malfunction, replied Goroke.
- "But they're not machines!"
- Then they're animals under people Destroy! Destroy!
- Then came the answer which has created our own time. It came from the
- Lady Arabella Underwood, and all Kalma heard it: Perhaps they are
- people. They must have a trial.
- The dog-girl Joan dropped to her knees.
- "I have succeeded. I have succeeded, I have succeeded! You can kill
- me, dear people, but I love, love you!"
- The Lady Pane Ashash said quietly to Elaine,
- "I thought I would be dead by now. Really dead, at last. But I am
- not. I have seen the worlds turn, Elaine, and you have seen them turn
- with me."
- The under people had fallen quiet as they heard the high volume
- telepathic exchange between the two great Ladies.
- The real soldiers dropped out of the sky, their ornithopters whistling
- as they hawked down to the ground. They ran up to the under people and
- began binding them with cord.
- One soldier took a single look at the robot body of the Lady Pane
- Ashash. He touched it with his staff, and the staff turned cherry-red
- with heat. The robot-body, its heat suddenly drained, fell to the
- ground in a heap of icy crystals.
- Elaine walked between the frigid rubbish and the red-hot staff. She
- had seen Hunter.
- She missed seeing the soldier who came up to Joan, started to bind her,
- and then fell back weeping, babbling,
- "She loves me!
- She loves me!"
- The Lord Femtiosex, who commanded the in flying soldiers, bound Joan
- with cord despite her talking.
- Grimly he answered her: "Of course you love me. You're a good dog.
- You'll die soon, doggy, but till then, you'll obey."
- "I'm obeying," said Joan, "but I'm a dog and a person. Open your mind,
- man, and you'll feel it."
- Apparently he did open his mind and felt the ocean of love rip tiding
- into him. It shocked him. His arm swung up and back, the edge of the
- hand striking at Joan's neck for the ancient kill.
- "No, you don't," thought the Lady Arabella Underwood.
- "That child is going to get a proper trial."
- He looked at her and glared. Chief doesn't strike Chief, my Lady. Let
- go my arm.
- Thought the Lady Arabella at him, openly and in public: A trial,
- then.
- In his anger he nodded at her. He would not think or speak to her in
- the presence of all the other people.
- A soldier brought Elaine and Hunter before him.
- "Sir and master, these are people, not under people But they have
- dog-thoughts, cat-thoughts, goat-thoughts, and robot-ideas in their
- heads. Do you wish to look?"
- "Why look?" said the Lord Femtiosex, who was as blond as the ancient
- pictures of Baldur, and oftentimes that arrogant as well.
- "The Lord Limaono is arriving. That's all of us. We can have the
- trial here and now."
- Elaine felt cords bite into her wrists; she heard the Hunter murmur
- comforting words to her, words which she did not quite understand.
- "They will not kill us," he murmured, "though we will wish they had,
- before this day is out. Everything is happening as she said it would,
- and " "Who is that she?" interrupted Elaine.
- "She? The lady, of course. The dear dead Lady Pane Ashash, who has
- worked wonders after her own death, merely with the print of her
- personality on the machine. Who do you think told me what to do? Why
- did we wait for you to condition Joan to greatness? Why did the people
- way down in Clown Town keep on raising one D'joan after another, hoping
- that hope and a great wonder would occur?"
- "You knew?" said Elaine.
- "You knew ... before it happened?"
- "Of course," said the Hunter, "not exactly, but more or less.
- She had had hundreds of years after death inside that computer.
- She had time for billions of thoughts. She saw how it would be if it
- had to be, and I " "Shut up, you people!" roared the Lord Femtiosex.
- "You are making the animals restless with your babble. Shut up, or I
- will stun you!"
- Elaine fell silent.
- The Lord Femtiosex glanced around at her, ashamed at having made his
- anger naked before another person. He added quietly: "The trial is
- about to begin. The one that the tall Lady ordered."
- IX
- You all know about the trial, so there is no need to linger over it.
- There is another picture of San Shigonanda, the one from his
- conventional period, which shows it very plainly.
- of Man The street had filled full of real people, crowding together to
- see something which would ease the boredom of perfection and time. They
- all had numbers or number-codes instead of names.
- They were handsome, well, dully happy. They even looked a great deal
- alike, similar in their handsomeness, their health, and their
- underlying boredom. Each of them had a total of four hundred years to
- live. None of them knew real war, even though the extreme readiness of
- the soldiers showed vain practice of hundreds of years. The people
- were beautiful, but they felt themselves useless, and they were quietly
- desperate without knowing it themselves. This is all clear from the
- painting, and from the wonderful way that San Shigonanda has of forming
- them in informal ranks and letting the calm blue light of day shine
- down on their handsome, hopeless features.
- With the under people the artist performs real wonders.
- Joan herself is bathed in light. Her light brown hair and her doggy
- brown eyes express softness and tenderness. He even conveys the idea
- that her new body is terribly new and strong, that she is virginal and
- ready to die, that she is a mere girl and yet completely fearless. The
- posture of love shows in her legs: she stands lightly. Love shows in
- her hands: they are turned outward toward the judges. Love shows in
- her smile: it is confident.
- And the judges!
- The artist has them, too. The Lord Femtiosex, calm again, his narrow
- sharp lips expressing perpetual rage against a universe which has grown
- too small for him. The Lord Limaono, wise, twice-reborn, sluggardly,
- but alert as a snake behind the sleepy eyes and the slow smile. The
- Lady Arabella Underwood, the tallest true-human present, with her
- Norstrilian pride and the arrogance of great wealth, along with the
- capricious tenderness of great wealth, showing in the way that she sat,
- judging her fellow-judges instead of the prisoners. The Lady Goroke,
- bewildered at last, frowning at a play of fortune which she does not
- understand. The artist has it all.
- And you have the real view-tapes, too, if you want to go to a museum.
- The reality is not as dramatic as the famous painting, but it has value
- of its own. The voice of Joan, dead these many centuries, is still
- strangely moving. It is the voice of a dog carved-into-man, but it is
- also the voice of a great lady. The image of the Lady Pane Ashash must
- have taught her that, along with what she had learned from Elaine and
- Hunter in the antechamber above the Brown and Yellow Corridor of
- Englok.
- The words of the trial, they too have survived. Many of them have
- become famous, all across the worlds.
- Joan said, during inquiry,
- "But it is the duty of life to find more than life, and to exchange
- itself for that higher goodness."
- Joan commented, upon sentence,
- "My body is your property, but my love is not. My love is my own, and
- I shall love you fiercely while you kill me."
- When the soldiers had killed Charley-is-my-darling and were trying to
- hack off the head of the S-woman until one of them thought to freeze
- her into crystals, Joan said: "Should we be strange to you, we animals
- of Earth that you have brought to the stars? We shared the same sun,
- the same oceans, the same sky. We are all from Manhome. How do you
- know that we would not have caught up with you if we had all stayed at
- home together? My people were dogs. They loved you before you made a
- woman-shaped thing out of my mother. Should I not love you still? The
- miracle is not that you have made people out of us. The miracle is
- that it took us so long to understand it.
- We are people now, and so are you. You will be sorry for what you are
- going to do to me, but remember that I shall love your sorrow, too,
- because great and good things will come out of it."
- The Lord Limaono slyly asked,
- "What is a 'miracle'?" And her words were,
- "There is knowledge from Earth which you have not yet found again.
- There is the name of the nameless one. There are secrets hidden in
- time from you. Only the dead and the unborn can know them right now: I
- am both."
- The scene is familiar, and yet we will never understand it. We know
- what the Lords Femtiosex and Limaono thought they were doing. They
- were maintaining established order and they were putting it on tape.
- The minds of men can live together only if the basic ideas are
- communicated. Nobody has, even now, found out a way of recording
- telepathy directly into an instrument. We get pieces and snatches and
- wild jumbles, but we never get a satisfactory record of what one of the
- great ones was transmitting to another. The two male chiefs were
- trying to put on record all those things about the episode which would
- teach careless people not to play with the lives of the under people
- They were even trying to make under people understand the rules and
- designs by virtue of which they had been transformed from animals into
- the highest servants of man. This would have been hard to do, given
- the bewildering events of the last few hours, even from one Chief of
- the Instrumentality to another; for the general public, it was almost
- impossible. The outpouring from the Brown and Yellow Corridor was
- wholly unexpected, even though the Lady Goroke had surprised D'joan;
- the mutiny of the robot police posed problems which would have to be
- discussed halfway across the galaxy. Furthermore, the dog-girl was
- making points which had some verbal validity. If they were left in the
- form of mere words without proper context, they might affect heedless
- or impressionable minds. A bad idea can spread like a mutated germ. If
- it is at all interesting, it can leap from one mind to another halfway
- across the universe before it has a stop put to it.
- Look at the ruinous fads and foolish fashions which have nuisanced
- mankind even in the ages of the highest
- of Man orderliness. We today know that variety, flexibility, danger,
- and the seasoning of a little hate can make love and life bloom as they
- never bloomed before; we know it is better to live with the
- complications of thirteen thousand old languages resurrected from the
- dead ancient past than it is to live with the cold blind-alley
- perfection of the Old Common Tongue. We know a lot of things which the
- Lords Femtiosex and Limaono did not, and before we consider them stupid
- or cruel, we must remember that centuries passed before mankind finally
- came to grips with the problem of the under people and decided what
- "life" was within the limits of the human community.
- Finally, we have the testimony of the two Lords themselves.
- They both lived to very advanced ages, and toward the end of their
- lives they were worried and annoyed to find that the episode of D'joan
- overshadowed all the bad things which had not happened during their
- long careers bad things which they had labored to forestall for the
- protection of the planet Fomalhaut III and they were distressed to see
- themselves portrayed as casual, cruel men when in fact they were
- nothing of the sort. If they had seen that the story of Joan on
- Fomalhaut III would get to be what it is today one of the great
- romances of mankind, along with the story of C'mell or the romance of
- the lady who sailed The Soul they would not only have been
- disappointed, but they would have been justifiably angry at the
- fickleness of mankind as well. Their roles are clear, because they
- made them clear. The Lord Femtiosex accepts the responsibility for the
- notion of fire; the Lord Limaono agrees that he concurred in the
- decision. Both of them, many years later, reviewed the tapes of the
- scene and agreed that something which the Lady Arabella Underwood had
- said or thought Something had made them do it.
- But even with the tapes to refresh and clarify their memories, they
- could not say what.
- We have even put computers on the job of cataloguing every word and
- every inflection of the whole trial, but they have not pinpointed the
- critical point either.
- And the Lady Arabella nobody ever questioned her. They didn't dare.
- She went back to her own planet of Old North Australia, surrounded by
- the immense treasure of the santa clara drug, and no planet is going to
- pay at the rate of two thousand million credits a day for the privilege
- of sending an investigator to talk to a lot of obstinate, simple,
- wealthy Norstril ian peasants who will not talk to off worlders anyhow.
- The Norstrilians charge that sum for the admission of any guest not
- selected by their own invitation; so we will never know what the Lady
- Arabella Underwood said or did after she went home. The Norstrilians
- said they did not wish to discuss the matter, and if
- we do not wish to go back to living a mere seventy years we had better
- not anger the only planet which produces stroon.
- And the Lady Goroke she, poor thing, went mad.
- Mad, for a period of years.
- People did not know it till later, but there was no word to be gotten
- out of her. She performed the odd actions which we now know to be a
- part of the dynasty of Lords Jestocost, who forced themselves by
- diligence and merit upon the Instrumentality for two hundred and more
- years. But on the case of Joan she had nothing to say.
- The trial is therefore a scene about which we know everything and
- nothing.
- We think that we know the physical facts of the life of D'joan who
- became Joan. We know about the Lady Pane Ashash who whispered
- endlessly to the under people about a justice yet to come. We know the
- whole life of the unfortunate Elaine and of her involvement with the
- case. We know that there were in those centuries, when under people
- first developed, many warrens in which illegal under people used their
- near-human wits, their animal cunning, and their gift of speech to
- survive even when mankind had declared them surplus. The Brown and
- Yellow Corridor was not by any means the only one of its kind. We even
- know what happened to the Hunter.
- For the other under people Charley-is-my-darling, Babybaby, Mabel, the
- S-woman, Orson, and all the others we have the tapes of the trial
- itself. They were not tried by anybody. They were put to death by the
- soldiers on the spot, as soon as it was plain that their testimony
- would not be needed. As witnesses, they could live a few minutes or an
- hour; as animals, they were already outside the regulations.
- Ah, we know all about that now, and yet know nothing. Dying is simple,
- though we tend to hide it away. The how of dying is a minor scientific
- matter; the when of dying is a problem to each of us, whether he lives
- on the old-fashioned 400-year-life planets or on the radical new ones
- where the freedoms of disease and accident have been reintroduced; the
- why of it is still as shocking to us as it was to pre-atomic man, who
- used to cover farmland with the boxed bodies of his dead. These under
- people died as no animals had ever died before. Joyfully.
- One mother held her children up for the soldier to kill them all.
- She must have been of rat origin, because she had septuplets in closely
- matching form.
- The tape shows us the picture of the soldier getting ready.
- The rat-woman greets him with a smile and holds up her seven babies.
- Little blondes they are, wearing pink or blue bonnets, all of them with
- glowing cheeks and bright little eyes.
- "Put them on the ground," said the soldier.
- "I'm going to kill you and
- them too." On the tape, we can hear the nervous peremptory edge of
- his voice. He added one word, as though he had already begun to think
- that he had to justify himself to these under people
- "Orders," he added.
- "It doesn't matter if I hold them, soldier. I'm their mother.
- They'll feel better if they die easily with their mother near. I love
- you, soldier. I love all people. You are my brother, even though my
- blood is rat blood and yours is human. Go ahead and kill them,
- soldier. I can't even hurt you. Can't you understand it?
- I love you, soldier. We share a common speech, common hopes, common
- fears, and a common death. That is what Joan has taught us all. Death
- is not bad, soldier. It just comes badly, sometimes, but you will
- remember me after you have killed me and my babies. You will remember
- that I love you now " The soldier, we see on the tape, can stand it no
- longer. He clubs his weapon, knocks the woman down; the babies scatter
- on the ground. We see his booted heel rise up and crush down against
- their heads. We hear the wet popping sound of the little heads
- breaking, the sharp cut-off of the baby wails as they die.
- We get one last view of the rat-woman herself. She has stood up again
- by the time the seventh baby is killed. She offers her hand to the
- soldier to shake. Her face is dirty and bruised, a trickle of blood
- running down her left cheek. Even now, we know she is a rat, an under
- person a modified animal, a nothing. And yet we, even we across the
- centuries, feel that she has somehow become more of a person than we
- are that she dies human and fulfilled. We know that she has triumphed
- over death: we have not.
- We see the soldier looking straight at her with eerie horror, as though
- her simple love were some unfathomable device from an alien source.
- We hear her next words on the tape: "Soldier, I love all of you " His
- weapon could have killed her in a fraction of a second, if he had used
- it properly. But he didn't. He clubbed it and hit her, as though his
- heat-remover had been a wooden club and himself a wild man instead of
- part of the elite guard of Kalma.
- We know what happens then.
- She falls under his blows. She points. Points straight at Joan,
- wrapped in fire and smoke.
- The rat-woman screams one last time, screams into the lens of the robot
- camera as though she were talking not to the soldier but to all
- mankind: "You can't kill her. You can't kill love. I love you,
- soldier, love you. You can't kill that. Remember " His last blow
- catches her in the face.
- She falls back on the pavement. He thrusts his foot, as we can see by
- the tape, directly on her throat. He leaps forward in an odd little
- jig, bringing his
- full weight down on her fragile neck. He swings while stamping
- downward, and we then see his face, full on in the camera.
- It is the face of a weeping child, bewildered by hurt and shocked by
- the prospect of more hurt to come.
- He had started to do his duty, and duty had gone wrong, all wrong.
- Poor man. He must have been one of the first men in the new world who
- tried to use weapons against love. Love is a sour and powerful
- ingredient to meet in the excitement of battle.
- All the under people died that way. Most of them died smiling, saying
- the word "love" or the name
- "Joan."
- The bear-man Orson had been kept to the very end.
- He died very oddly. He died laughing.
- The soldier lifted his pellet-thrower and aimed it straight at Orson's
- forehead. The pellets were 22 millimeters in diameter and had a muzzle
- velocity of only 125 meters per second. In that manner, they could
- stop recalcitrant robots or evil under people without any risk of
- penetrating buildings and hurting the true people who might be inside,
- out of sight.
- Orson looks, on the tape the robots made, as though he knows perfectly
- well what the weapon is. (He probably did.
- Underpeople used to live with the danger of a violent death hanging
- over them from birth until removal.) He shows no fear of it, in the
- pictures we have; he begins to laugh. His laughter is warm, generous,
- relaxed like the friendly laughter of a happy foster-father who has
- found a guilty and embarrassed child, knowing full well that the child
- expects punishment but will not get it.
- "Shoot, man. You can't kill me, man. I'm in your mind. I love you.
- Joan taught us. Listen, man. There is no death. Not for love.
- Ho, ho, ho, poor fellow, don't be afraid of me. Shoot! You're the
- unlucky one. You're going to live. And remember. And remember. And
- remember. I've made you human, fellow."
- The soldier croaks,
- "What did you say?"
- "I'm saving you, man. I'm turning you into a real human being. With
- the power of Joan. The power of love. Poor guy! Go ahead and shoot
- me if it makes you uncomfortable to wait. You'll do it anyhow."
- This time we do not see the soldier's face but the tightness of his
- back and neck betray his own internal stress.
- We see the big broad bear face blossom forth in an immense splash of
- red as the soft heavy pellets plow into it.
- Then the camera turns to something else.
- A little boy, probably a fox, but very finished in his human shape.
- He was bigger than a baby, but not big enough, like the larger under
- children to have understood the deathless importance of Joan's
- teaching.
- He was the only one of the group who behaved like an ordinary under
- person He broke and ran.
- He was clever: He ran among the spectators, so that the soldier could
- not use pellets or heat-reducers on him without hurting an actual human
- being. He ran and jumped and dodged, fighting passively but
- desperately for his life.
- At last one of the spectators a tall man with a silver hat tripped him
- up. The fox-boy fell to the pavement, skinning his palms and knees.
- Just as he looked up to see who might be coming at him, a bullet caught
- him neatly in the head. He fell a little way forward, dead.
- People die. We know how they die. We have seen them die shy and quiet
- in the Dying Houses. We have seen others go into the 400-year-rooms,
- which have no door knobs and no cameras on the inside. We have seen
- pictures of many dying in natural disasters, where the robot crews took
- picture-tapes for the record and the investigation later on. Death is
- not uncommon, and it is very unpleasant.
- But this time, death itself was different. All the fear of death
- except for the one little fox-boy, too young to understand and too old
- to wait for death in his mother's arms had gone out of the under people
- They met death willingly, with love and calmness in their bodies, their
- voices, their demeanor. It did not matter whether they lived long
- enough to know what happened to Joan herself: they had perfect
- confidence in her, anyway.
- This indeed was the new weapon, love and the good death.
- Crawlie, with her pride, had missed it all.
- The investigators later found the body of Crawlie in the corridor. It
- was possible to reconstruct who she had been and what had happened to
- her. The computer in which the bodiless image of the Lady Pane Ashash
- survived for a few days after the trial was, of course, found and
- disassembled. Nobody thought at the time to get her opinions and last
- words. A lot of historians have gnashed their teeth over that.
- The details are therefore clear. The archives even preserve the long
- interrogation and responses concerning Elaine, when she was processed
- and made clear after the trial. But we do not know how the idea of
- "fire" came in.
- Somewhere, beyond sight of the tape-scanner, the word must have been
- passed between the four chiefs of the Instrumentality who were
- conducting the trial. There is the protest of the Chief of Birds
- (Robot), or police chief of Kalma, a Subchief named Fisi.
- The records show his appearance. He comes in at the right side of the
- scene, bows respectfully to the four Chiefs, and lifts his right hand
- in the traditional sign for "beg to interrupt," an odd twist of the
- elevated hand which the actors had found it very difficult to copy when
- they tried to put the whole story of Joan and Elaine into a single
- drama. (In fact, he had no more idea that future ages would be
- studying his casual appearance than did the others. The whole episode
- was characterized by haste and precipitateness, in the light of what we
- now know.) The Lord Limaono says:
- "Interruption refused. We are making a decision."
- The Chief of Birds spoke up anyhow.
- "My words are for your decision, my Lords and my Ladies."
- "Say it, then," commanded the Lady Goroke, "but be brief."
- "Shut down the viewers. Destroy that animal. Brainwash the
- spectators. Get amnesia yourselves, for this one hour. This whole
- scene is dangerous. I am nothing but a supervisor of ornithopters,
- keeping perfect order, but I " "We have heard enough." said the Lord
- Femtiosex.
- "You manage your birds and we' ll run the worlds. How do you dare to
- think 'like a Chief ? We have responsibilities which you can't even
- guess at. Stand back."
- Fisi, in the pictures, stands back, his face sullen. In that
- particular frame of scenes, one can see some of the spectators going
- away. It was time for lunch and they had become hungry; they had no
- idea that they were going to miss the greatest atrocity in history,
- about which a thousand and more grand operas would be written.
- Femtiosex then moved to the climax.
- "More knowledge, not less, is the answer to this problem. I have heard
- about something which is not as bad as the Planet Shayol, but which can
- do just as well for an exhibit on a civilized world. You there," said
- he to Fisi, the Chief of Birds, "bring oil and a spray. Immediately."
- Joan looked at him with compassion and longing, but she said nothing.
- She suspected what he was going to do. As a girl, as a dog, she hated
- it; as a revolutionary, she welcomed it as the consummation of her
- mission.
- The Lord Femtiosex lifted his right hand. He curled the ring finger
- and the little finger, putting his thumb over them. That left the
- first two fingers extended straight out. At that time, the sign from
- one Chief to another, meaning, "private channels, telepathic,
- immediate." It has since been adopted by under people as their emblem
- for political unity.
- The four Chiefs went into a trancelike state and shared the judgment.
- Joan began to sing in a soft, protesting, doglike wail, using the
- off-key plainsong which the under people had sung just before their
- hour of decision when they left the Brown and Yellow Corridor. Her
- words were nothing special, repetitions of the "people, dear people, I
- love you" which she had been communicating ever since she came to the
- surface of Kalma. But the way she did it has defied imitation across
- the centuries. There are thousands of lyrics and melodies which call
- themselves, one way and another. The Song of Joan, but none of them
- come near to the heart-wrenching pathos of the original tapes. The
- singing, like her own personality, was unique.
- The appeal was deep. Even the real people tried to listen, shifting
- their eyes from the four immobile Chiefs of the Instrumentality to the
- brown-eyed singing girl. Some of them just could not stand it. In
- true human fashion, they forgot why they were there and went
- absent-mindedly home to lunch.
- Suddenly Joan stopped. Her voice ringing clearly across the crowd,
- she cried out: "The end is near, dear people. The end is near." Eyes
- all shifted to the two Lords and the two Ladies of the Instrumentality.
- The Lady Arabella Underwood looked grim after the telepathic
- conference. The Lady Goroke was haggard with wordless grief.
- The two Lords looked severe and resolved.
- It was the Lord Femtiosex who spoke.
- "We have tried you, animal. Youroffense is great. You have lived
- illegally. For that the penalty is death. You have interfered with
- robots in some manner which we do not understand. For that brand-new
- crime, the penalty should be more than death; and I have recommended a
- punishment which was applied on a planet of the Violet Star. You have
- also said many unlawful and improper things, detracting from the
- happiness and security of mankind. For that the penalty is
- reeducation, but since you have two death sentences already, this does
- not matter. Do you have anything to say before I pronounce
- sentence?"
- "If you light a fire today, my Lord, it will never be put out in the
- hearts of men. You can destroy me. You can reject my love.
- You cannot destroy the goodness in yourselves, no matter how much
- goodness may anger you " "Shut up!" he roared.
- "I asked for a plea, not a speech. You will die by fire, here and now.
- What do you say to that?" "I love you, dear people."
- Femtiosex nodded to the men of the Chief of Birds, who had dragged a
- barrel and a spray into the street in front of Joan.
- "Tie her to that post," he commanded.
- "Spray her. Light her.
- Are the tape-makers in focus? We want this to be recorded and known.
- If the under people try this again, they will see that mankind controls
- the worlds." He looked at Joan and his eyes seemed to go out of focus.
- In an unaccustomed voice he said,
- "I
- am not a bad man, little dog-girl, but you are a bad animal and we must
- make an example of you. Do you understand that?"
- "Femtiosex," she cried, leaving out his title,
- "I am very sorry for you. I love you too."
- With these words of hers, his face became clouded and angry again. He
- brought his right hand down in a chopping gesture.
- Fisi copied the gesture and the men operating the barrel and spray
- began to squirt a hissing stream of oil on Joan. Two guards had
- already chained her to the lamp post, using an improvised chain of
- handcuffs to make sure that she stood upright and remained in plain
- sight of the crowd.
- "Fire," said Femtiosex.
- Elaine felt the Hunter's body, beside her, cramp sharply. He seemed to
- strain intensely. For herself, she felt the way she had felt when she
- was de frozen and taken out of the adiabatic pod in which she had made
- the trip
- from Earth sick to her stomach, confused in her mind, emotions rocking
- back and forth inside her.
- Hunter whispered to her,
- "I tried to reach her mind so that she would die easy. Somebody else
- got there first. I... don't know who it is."
- Elaine stared.
- The fire was being brought. Suddenly it touched the oil and Joan
- flamed up like a human torch.
- X
- The burning of D'joan at Fomalhaut took very little time, but the ages
- will not forget it.
- Femtiosex had taken the crudest step of all.
- By telepathic invasion he had suppressed her human mind, so that only
- the primitive canine remained.
- Joan did not stand still like a martyred queen.
- She struggled against the flames which licked her and climbed her. She
- howled and shrieked like a dog in pain, like an animal whose brain good
- though it is cannot comprehend the senselessness of human cruelty.
- The result was directly contrary to what the Lord Femtiosex had
- planned.
- The crowd of people stirred forward, not with curiosity but because of
- compassion. They had avoided the broad areas of the street on which
- the dead under people lay as they had been killed, some pooled in their
- own blood, some broken by the hands of robots, some reduced to piles of
- frozen crystal. They walked over the dead to watch the dying, but
- their watching was not the witless boredom of people who never see a
- spectacle; it was the movement of living things, instinctive and deep,
- toward the sight of another living thing in a position of danger and
- ruin.
- Even the guard who had held Elaine and Hunter by gripping Hunter's arm
- even he moved forward a few unthinking steps.
- Elaine found herself in the first row of the spectators, the acrid,
- unfamiliar smell of burning oil making her nose twitch, the howls of
- the dying dog-girl tearing through her eardrums into her brain.
- Joan was turning and twisting in the fire now, trying to avoid the
- flames which wrapped her tighter than clothing. The odor of something
- sickening and strange reached the crowd. Few of them had ever smelled
- the stink of burning meat before.
- Joan gasped.
- In the ensuing seconds of silence, Elaine heard something she had never
- expected to hear before the weeping of grown human beings. Men and
- women stood there sobbing and not knowing why they sobbed.
- Femtiosex loomed over the crowd, obsessed by the failure of his
- of Man demonstration. He did not know that the Hunter, with a
- thousand kills behind him, was committing the legal outrage of peeping
- the mind of a Chief of the Instrumentality.
- The Hunter whispered to Elaine,
- "In a minute I'll try it. She deserves something better than that. .
- ."
- Elaine did not ask what. She too was weeping.
- The whole crowd became aware that a soldier was calling. It took them
- several seconds to look away from the burning, dying Joan.
- The soldier was an ordinary one. Perhaps he was the one who had been
- unable to tie Joan with bonds a few minutes ago, when the Lords decreed
- that she be taken into custody.
- He was shouting now, shouting frantically and wildly, shaking his fist
- at the Lord Femtiosex.
- "You're a liar, you're a coward, you're a fool, and I challenge you "
- The Lord Femtiosex became aware of the man and of what he was yelling.
- He came out of his deep concentration and said, mildly for so wild a
- time: "What do you mean?"
- "This is a crazy show. There is no girl here. No fire. Nothing.
- You are hallucinating the whole lot of us for some horrible reason of
- your own, and I'm challenging you for it, you animal, you fool, you
- coward."
- In normal times even a Lord had to accept a challenge or adj just the
- matter with clear talk.
- This was no normal time.
- The Lord Femtiosex said,
- "All this is real. I deceive no one."
- "If it's real, Joan, I'm with you!" shrieked the young soldier.
- He jumped in front of the jet of oil before the other soldiers could
- turn it off and then he leapt into the fire beside Joan.
- Her hair had burned away but her features were still clear.
- She had stopped the doglike whining shriek. Femtiosex had been
- interrupted. She gave the soldier, who had begun to burn as he stood
- voluntarily beside her, the gentlest and most feminine of smiles. Then
- she frowned, as though there were something which she should remember
- to do, despite the pain and terror which surrounded her.
- "Now!" whispered the Hunter. He began to hunt the Lord Femtiosex as
- sharply as he had ever sought the alien, native minds of Fomalhaut
- III.
- The crowd could not tell what had happened to the Lord Femtiosex. Had
- he turned coward? Had he gone mad? (Actually, the Hunter, by using
- every gram of the power of his mind, had momentarily taken Femtiosex
- courting in the skies; he and Femtiosex were both male birdlike beasts,
- singing wildly for the beautiful female who lay hidden in the landscape
- far, far below.) Joan was free, and she knew she was free.
- She sent out her message. It knocked both Hunter and Femtiosex out
- of
- thinking; it flooded Elaine; it made even Fisi, the Chief of Birds,
- breathe quietly. She called so loudly that within the hour messages
- were pouring in from the other cities to Kalma, asking what had
- happened. She thought a single message, not words. But in words it
- came to this: "Loved ones, you kill me. This is my fate. I bring
- love, and love must die to live on. Love asks nothing, does nothing.
- Love thinks nothing. Love is knowing yourself and knowing all other
- people and things. Know and rejoice. I die for all of you now, dear
- ones " She opened her eyes for a last time, opened her mouth, sucked in
- the raw flame, and slumped forward. The soldier, who had kept his
- nerve while his clothing and body burned, ran out of the fire, afire
- himself, toward his squad. A shot stopped him and he pitched flat
- forward.
- The weeping of the people was audible throughout the streets.
- Underpeople, tame and licensed ones, stood shamelessly among them and
- wept too.
- The Lord Femtiosex turned wearily back to his colleagues. The face of
- Lady Goroke was a sculptured, frozen caricature of sorrow. He turned
- to the Lady Arabella Underwood.
- "I seem to have done something wrong, my Lady. Take over, please."
- The Lady Arabella stood up. She called to Fisi,
- "Put out that fire." She looked out over the crowd. Her hard, honest
- Norstrilian features were unreadable. Elaine, watching her, shivered
- at the thought of a whole planet full of people as tough, obstinate,
- and clever as these.
- "It's over," said the Lady Arabella.
- "People, go away.
- Robots, clean up. Underpeople, to your jobs."
- She looked at Elaine and the Hunter.
- "I know who you are and I suspect what you have been doing. Soldiers,
- take them away."
- The body of Joan was fire-blackened. The face did not look
- particularly human anymore; the last burst of fire had caught her in
- the nose and eyes. Her young, girlish breasts showed with
- heart-wrenching immodesty that she had been young and female once. Now
- she was dead, just dead.
- The soldiers would have shoveled her into a box if she had been an
- under person Instead, they paid her the honors of war that they would
- have given to one of their own comrades or to an important civilian in
- time of disaster. They unslung a litter, put the little blackened body
- on it, and covered the body with their own flag. No one had told them
- to do so.
- As their own soldier led them up the road toward the Waterrock, where
- the houses and offices of the military were located, Elaine saw that he
- too had been crying.
- She started to ask him what he thought of it, but Hunter stopped her
- with a shake of the head. He later told her that the soldier might be
- punished for talking with them.
- When they got to the office, they found the Lady Goroke already
- there.
- The Lady Goroke already there ... It became a nightmare in the weeks
- that followed. She had gotten over her grief and was conducting an
- inquiry into the case of Elaine and D'joan.
- The Lady Goroke already there . . . She was waiting when they slept.
- Her image, or perhaps herself, sat in on all the endless
- interrogations. She was particularly interested in the chance meeting
- of the dead Lady Pane Ashash, the misplaced witch Elaine, and the
- non-adjusted man, the Hunter.
- The Lady Goroke already there ... She asked them everything, but she
- told them nothing.
- Except for once.
- Once she burst out, violently personal after endless hours of formal,
- official work,
- "Your minds will be cleansed when we get through, so it wouldn't matter
- how much else you know. Do you know that this has hurt me me! all the
- way to the depths of everything I believe in?"
- They shook their heads.
- "I'm going to have a child, and I'm going back to Manhome to have it.
- And I'm going to do the genetic coding myself. I'm going to call him
- Jestocost. That's one of the Ancient Tongues, the Paroskii one, for
- 'cruelty," to remind him where he comes from, and why. And he, or his
- son, or his son will bring justice back into the world and solve the
- puzzle of the under people What do you think of that? On second
- thought, don't think. It's none of your business, and I am going to do
- it anyway."
- They stared at her sympathetically, but they were too wound up in the
- problems of their own survival to extend her much sympathy or advice.
- The body of Joan had been pulverized and blown into the air, because
- the Lady Goroke was afraid that the under people would make a good
- place out of it; she felt that way herself, and she knew that if she
- herself were tempted, the under people would be even more tempted.
- Elaine never knew what happened to the bodies of all the other people
- who had turned themselves, under Joan's leadership, from animals into
- mankind, and who had followed the wild, foolish march out of the Tunnel
- of Englok into the Upper City of Kalma. Was it really wild? Was it
- really foolish? If they had stayed where they were, they might have
- had a few days or months or years of life, but sooner or later the
- robots would have found them and they would have been exterminated like
- the vermin which they were. Perhaps the death they had chosen was
- better. Joan did say,
- "It's the mission of life always to look for something better than
- itself, and then to try to trade life itself for meaning."
- At last, the Lady Goroke called them in and said,
- "Goodbye, you two. It's foolish, saying goodbye, when an hour from now
- you will remember neither me nor Joan. You've finished your work here.
- I've set up a lovely
- job for you. You won't have to live in a city. You will be weather
- watchers roaming the hills and watching for all the little changes
- which the machines can't interpret fast enough. You will have whole
- lifetimes of marching and picnicking and camping together.
- I've told the technicians to be very careful, because you two are very
- much in love with each other. When they re-route your synapses, I want
- that love to be there with you."
- They each knelt and kissed her hand. They never wittingly saw her
- again. In later years they sometimes saw a fashionable ornithopter
- soaring gently over their camp, with an elegant woman peering out of
- the side of it; they had no memories to know that it was the Lady
- Goroke, recovered from madness, watching over them.
- Their new life was their final life.
- Of Joan and the Brown and Yellow Corridor, nothing remained.
- They were both very sympathetic toward animals, but they might have
- been this way even if they had never shared in the wild political
- gamble of the dear dead Lady Pane Ashash.
- One time a strange thing happened. An under man from an elephant was
- working in a small valley, creating an exquisite rock garden for some
- important official of the Instrumentality who might later glimpse the
- garden once or twice a year. Elaine was busy watching the weather, and
- the Hunter had forgotten that he had ever hunted, so that neither of
- them tried to peep the under man mind. He was a huge fellow, right at
- the maximum permissible size five times the gross stature of a man. He
- had smiled at them friendlily in the past.
- One evening he brought them fruit. Such fruit! Rare off-world items
- which a year of requests would not have obtained for ordinary people
- like them. He smiled his big, shy elephant smile, put the fruit down,
- and prepared to lumber off.
- "Wait a minute," cried Elaine.
- "Why are you giving us this?
- Why us?"
- "For the sake of Joan," said the elephant-man.
- "Who's Joan?" said the Hunter.
- The elephant-man looked sympathetically at them.
- "That's all right. You don't remember her, but I do."
- "But what did Joan do?" said Elaine.
- "She loved you. She loved us all," said the elephant-man. He turned
- quickly, so as to say no more. With incredible deftness for so heavy a
- person, he climbed speedily into the fierce lovely rocks above them and
- was gone.
- "I wish we had known her," said Elaine.
- "She sounds very nice."
- In that year there was born the man who was to be the first Lord
- Jestocost.
- Under Old Earth I need a temporary dog For a temporary job On a
- temporary place Like Earth!
- Song from The Merchant of Menace There were the Douglas-Ouyang planets,
- which circled their sun in a single cluster, riding around and around
- the same orbit unlike any other planets known. There were the
- gentlemen suicides back on Earth, who gambled their lives even more
- horribly, gambled sometimes for things worse than their lives against
- different kinds of geophysics which real men had never experienced.
- There were girls who fell in love with such men, however stark and
- dreadful their personal fates might be.
- There was the Instrumentality, with its unceasing labor to keep man
- man. And there were the citizens who walked in the boulevards before
- the Rediscovery of Man. The citizens were happy. They had to be
- happy. If they were found sad, they were calmed and drugged and
- changed until they were happy again.
- This story concerns three of them: the gambler who took the name
- Sun-boy, who dared to go down to the Gebiet, who confronted himself
- before he died; the girl Santuna, who was fulfilled in a thousand ways
- before she died; and the Lord Sto Odin, a most ancient of days, who
- knew it all and never dreamed of preventing any of it.
- Music runs through this story. The soft sweet music of the Earth
- Government and the Instrumentality, bland as honey and sickening in the
- end. The wild illegal pulsations of the Gebiet, where most men were
- forbidden to enter. Worst of all, the crazy fugues and improper
- melodies of the
- Bezirk, closed to men for fifty-seven centuries opened by accident,
- found, trespassed in! And with it our story begins.
- II
- The Lady Ru had said, a few centuries before: "Scraps of knowledge have
- been found. In the ultimate beginning of man, even before there were
- aircraft, the wise man Laodz declared, "Water does nothing but it
- penetrates everything. Inaction finds the road." Later an ancient
- Lord said this: There is a music which underlies all things. We dance
- to the tunes all our lives, though our living ears never hear the music
- which guides us and moves us. Happiness can kill people as softly as
- shadows seen in dreams." We must be people first and happy later, lest
- we live and die in vain."
- The Lord Sto Odin was more direct. He declared the truth to a few
- private friends: "Our population is dropping on most worlds, including
- the Earth. People have children, but they don't want them very much. I
- myself have been a three-father to twelve children, a two-father to
- four, and a one-father, I suppose, to many others. I have had zeal for
- work and I have mistaken it for zeal in living. They are not the
- same.
- "Most people want happiness. Good: we have given them happiness.
- "Dreary useless centuries of happiness, in which all the unhappy were
- corrected or adjusted or killed. Unbearable desolate happiness without
- the sting of grief, the wine of rage, the hot fumes of fear. How many
- of us have ever tasted the acid, icy taste of old resentment? That's
- what people really lived for in the Ancient Days, when they pretended
- to be happy and were actually alive with grief, rage, fury, hate,
- malice, and hope! Those people bred like mad. They populated the
- stars while they dreamed of killing each other, secretly or openly.
- Their plays concerned murder or betrayal or illegal love. Now we have
- no murder. We cannot imagine any kind of love which is illegal. Can
- you imagine the Murkins with their highway net? Who can fly anywhere
- today without seeing that net of enormous highways? Those roads are
- ruined, but they're still here. You can see the abominable things
- quite clearly from the moon. Don't think about the roads. Think of
- the millions of vehicles that ran on those roads, the people filled
- with greed and rage and hate, rushing past each other with their
- engines on fire. They say that fifty thousand a year were killed on
- the roads alone. We would call that a war. What people they must have
- been, to rush day and night and to build things which would help other
- people to rush even more! They were different from us.
- They must have been wild, dirty, free. Lusting for life, perhaps, in a
- way that we do not. We can easily go a thousand times faster than they
- ever went, but who, nowadays, bothers to
- Under Old Earth go? Why go? It's the same there as here, except for
- a few fighters or technicians." He smiled at his friends and added, ".
- . . and Lords of the Instrumentality, like ourselves. We go for the
- reasons of the Instrumentality. Not ordinary people reasons. Ordinary
- people don't have much reason to do anything. They work at the jobs
- which we think up for them, to keep them happy while the robots and the
- under people do the real work. They walk. They make love. But they
- are never unhappy.
- "They can't be!"
- The Lady Mmona disagreed.
- "Life can't be as bad as you say.
- We don't just think they are happy. We know they are happy. We look
- right into their brains with telepathy. We monitor their emotional
- patterns with robots and scanners. It's not as though we didn't have
- samples. People are always turning unhappy. We're correcting them all
- the time. And now and then there are bad accidents, which even we
- cannot correct. When people are very unhappy, they scream and weep.
- Sometimes they even stop talking and just die, despite everything we
- can do for them. You can't say that isn't real!"
- "But I do," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "You do what?" cried Mmona.
- "I do say this happiness is not real," he insisted.
- "How can you," she shouted at him, "in the face of the evidence? Our
- evidence, which we of the Instrumentality decided on a long time ago.
- We collect it ourselves. Can we, the Instrumentality, be wrong?"
- "Yes," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- This time it was the entire circle who went silent.
- Sto Odin pleaded with them.
- "Look at my evidence. People don't care whether they are one-fathers
- or one-mothers or not.
- They don't know which children are theirs, anyhow. Nobody dares to
- commit suicide. We keep them too happy. But do we spend any time
- keeping the talking animals, the under people as happy as men? And do
- under people commit suicide?"
- "Certainly," said Mmona.
- "They are preconditioned to commit suicide if they are hurt too badly
- for easy repair or if they fail in their appointed work."
- "I don't mean that. Do they ever commit suicide for their reasons, not
- ours?"
- "No," said the Lord Nuru-or, a wise young Lord of the
- Instrumentality.
- "They are too desperately busy doing their jobs and staying alive."
- "How long does an under person live?" said Sto Odin, with deceptive
- mildness.
- "Who knows?" said Nuru-or.
- "Half a year, a hundred years, maybe several hundred years."
- "What happens if he does not work?" said the Lord Sto Odin, with a
- friendly-crafty smile.
- "We kill him," said Mmona, "or our robot-police do."
- "And does the animal know it?"
- "Know he will be killed if he does not work?" said Mmona.
- "Of course. We tell all of them the same thing. Work or die.
- What's that got to do with people?"
- The Lord Nuru-or had fallen silent and a wise, sad smile had begun to
- show on his face. He had begun to suspect the shrewd, dreadful
- conclusion toward which the Lord Sto Odin was driving.
- But Mmona did not see it and she pressed the point.
- "My Lord," said she, "you are insisting that people are happy. You
- admit they do not like to be unhappy. You seem to want to bring up a
- problem which has no solution. Why complain of happiness? Isn't it
- the best which the Instrumentality can do for mankind? That's our
- mission. Are you saying that we are failing in it?"
- "Yes. We are failing." The Lord Sto Odin looked blindly at the room
- as though alone.
- He was the oldest and wisest, so they waited for him to talk.
- He breathed lightly and smiled at them again.
- "You know when I am going to die?"
- "Of course," said Mmona, thinking for half a second.
- "Seventy-seven days from now. But you posted the time yourself. And
- it is not our custom, my Lord, as you well know, to bring intimate
- things into meetings of the Instrumentality."
- "Sorry," said Sto Odin, "but I'm not violating a law. I'm making a
- point. We are sworn to uphold the dignity of man.
- Yet we are killing mankind with a bland hopeless happiness which has
- prohibited news, which has suppressed religion, which has made all
- history an official secret. I say that the evidence is that we are
- failing and that mankind, whom we've sworn to cherish, is failing too.
- Failing in vitality, strength, numbers, energy. I have a little while
- to live. I am going to try to find out."
- The Lord Nuru-or asked with sorrowful wisdom, as though he guessed the
- answer: "And where will you go to find out?"
- "I shall go," said the Lord Sto Odin, "down into the Gebiet."
- "The Gebiet oh, no!" cried several. And one voice added, "You're
- immune."
- "I shall waive immunity and I shall go," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "Who can do anything to a man who is already almost a thousand years
- old and who has chosen only seventy-seven more days to live?"
- "But you can't!" said Mmona.
- "Some criminal might capture you and duplicate you, and then we would
- all of us be in peril."
- "When did you last hear of a criminal among mankind?" said Sto
- Odin.
- "There are plenty of them, here and there in the off worlds
- "But on Old Earth itself?" asked Sto Odin.
- She stammered.
- "I don't know. There must have been a criminal once." She looked
- around the room.
- "Don't any of the rest of you know?"
- There was silence.
- The Lord Sto Odin stared at them all. In his eyes was the brightness
- and fierceness which had made whole generations of lords plead with him
- to live just a few more years, so that he could help them with their
- work. He had agreed, but within the last quarter-year he had
- overridden them all and had picked his day of death. He had lost none
- of his powers in doing this. They shrank from his stare while they
- waited with respect for his decision.
- The Lord Sto Odin looked at the Lord Nuru-or and said,
- "I
- think you have guessed what I am going to do in the Gebiet and why I
- have to go there."
- "The Gebiet is a preserve where no rules apply and no punishments are
- inflicted. Ordinary people can do what they want down there, not what
- we think they should want. From all I hear, it is pretty nasty and
- pointless, the things that they find out. But you, perhaps, may sense
- the inwardness of these things. You may find a cure for the weary
- happiness of mankind."
- "That is right," said Sto Odin.
- "And that is why I am going, after I make the appropriate official
- preparations."
- III
- Go he did. He used one of the most peculiar conveyances ever seen on
- Earth, since his own legs were too weak to carry him far.
- With only two-ninths of a year to live, he did not want to waste time
- getting his legs re grafted
- He rode in an open sedan-chair carried by two Roman legionaries.
- The legionaries were actually robots, without a trace of blood or
- living tissue in them. They were the most compact and difficult kind
- to create, since their brains had to be located in their chests several
- million sheets of incredibly fine laminations, imprinted with the whole
- life experience of an important, useful, and long-dead person. They
- were clothed as legionaries, down to cuirasses, swords, kilts, greaves,
- sandals, and shields, merely because it was the whim of the Lord Sto
- Odin to go behind the rim of history for his companions. Their bodies,
- all metal, were very strong. They could batter walls, jump chasms,
- crush any man or under person with their
- mere fingers, or throw their swords with the accuracy of guided
- projectiles.
- The forward legionary, Flavius, had been head of FourteenB in the
- Instrumentality an espionage division so secret that even among Lords,
- few knew exactly of its location or its function. He was (or had been,
- till he was imprinted on a robot-mind as he lay dying) the director of
- historical research for the whole human race. Now he was a dull,
- pleasant machine carrying two poles until his master chose to bring his
- powerful mind into bright, furious alert by speaking the simple Latin
- phrase, understood by no other person living, Summa nulla est.
- The rear legionary, Livius, had been a psychiatrist who turned into a
- general. He had won many battles until he chose to die, somewhat
- before his time, because he perceived that battle itself was a struggle
- for the defeat of himself.
- Together, and added to the immense brainpower of the Lord Sto Odin
- himself, they represented an unsurpassable team.
- "The Gebiet," commanded the Lord Sto Odin.
- "The Gebiet," said both of them heavily, picking up the chair with its
- supporting poles.
- "And then the Bezirk," he added.
- "The Bezirk," they chimed in toneless voices.
- Sto Odin felt his chair tilt back as Livius put his two ends of the
- poles carefully on the ground, came up beside Sto Odin, and saluted
- with open palm.
- "May I awaken?" said Livius in an even, mechanical voice.
- "Summa nulla est, " said the Lord Sto Odin.
- Livius's face sprang into full animation.
- "You must not go there, my Lord! You would have to waive immunity and
- meet all dangers. There is nothing there yet. Not yet. Some day they
- will come pouring out of that underground Hades and give you men a real
- fight. Now, no. They are just miserable beings, cooking away in their
- weird unhappiness, making love in manners which you never thought of "
- "Never mind what you think I've thought. What's your objection in real
- terms?"
- "It's pointless, my Lord! You have only bits of a year to live.
- Do something noble and great for man before you die. They may turn us
- off. We would like to share your work before you go away."
- "Is that all?" said Sto Odin.
- "My Lord," said Flavius, "you have awakened me too. I say, go forward.
- History is being re spun down there. Things are loose which you great
- ones of the Instrumentality have never even suspected. Go now and
- look, before you die. You may do nothing, but I disagree with my
- companion. It is as dangerous as Space3 might be, if we ever were to
- find it, but it is interesting. And in this world where all things
- have been done, where all thoughts have been thought, it is hard to
- find things which still prompt the human mind with raw curiosity. I'm
- dead, as you perfectly well know, but even I, inside this machine
- brain, feel the tug of adventure, the pull of danger, the magnetism of
- the unknown. For one thing, they are committing crimes down there. And
- you Lords are overlooking them."
- "We chose to overlook them. We are not stupid. We wanted to see what
- might happen," said the Lord Sto Odin, "and we have to give those
- people time before we find out just how far they might go if they are
- cut off from controls."
- "They are having babies!" said Flavius excitedly.
- "I know that."
- "They have hooked in two illegal instant-message machines,"
- shouted Flavius.
- Sto Odin was calm.
- "So that's why the Earth's credit structure has appeared to be leaking
- in its balance of trade."
- "They have a piece of the congo helium shouted Flavius.
- "The congo helium shouted the Lord Sto Odin.
- "Impossible!
- It's unstable. They could kill themselves. They could hurt Earth!
- What are they doing with it?"
- "Making music," said Flavius, more quietly.
- "Making what?"
- "Music. Songs. Nice noise to dance to."
- The Lord Sto Odin sputtered.
- "Take me there right now. This is ridiculous. Having a piece of the
- congo helium down there is as bad as wiping out inhabited planets to
- play checkers."
- "My Lord," said Livius.
- "Yes?" said Sto Odin.
- "I withdraw my objections," said Livius.
- Sto Odin said, very dryly,
- "Thank you."
- "They have something else down there. When I did not want you to go, I
- did not mention it. It might have aroused your curiosity. They have a
- god."
- The Lord Sto Odin said,
- "If this is going to be a historical lecture, save it for another time.
- Go back to sleep and carry me down."
- Livius did not move.
- "I mean what I said."
- "A god? What do you call a god?"
- "A person or an idea capable of starting wholly new cultural patterns
- in motion."
- The Lord Sto Odin leaned forward.
- "You know this?"
- "We both do," said Flavius and Livius.
- "We saw him," said Livius.
- "You told us, a tenth-year ago, to walk around freely for thirty hours,
- so we put on ordinary robot bodies and happened to get into the Gebiet.
- When we sensed the congo helium operating, we had to go on down to find
- out what it was doing. Usually, it is employed to keep the stars in
- their place " "Don't tell me that. I know it. Was it a man?"
- "A man," said Flavius, "who is re-living the life of Akhnaton."
- "Who's that?" said the Lord Sto Odin, who knew history, but wanted to
- see how much his robots knew.
- "A king, tall, long-faced, thick-lipped, who ruled the human world of
- Egypt long, long before atomic power. Akhnaton invented the best of
- the early gods. This man is re-enacting Akhnaton's life step by step.
- He has already made a religion out of the sun. He mocks at happiness.
- People listen to him. They joke about the Instrumentality."
- Livius added,
- "We saw the girl who loves him. She herself was young, but beautiful.
- And I think she has powers which will make the Instrumentality promote
- her or destroy her some day in the future."
- "They both made music," said Flavius, "with that piece of the congo
- helium And this man or god this new kind of Akhnaton, whatever you may
- want to call him, my Lord he was dancing a strange kind of dance. It
- was like a corpse being tied with rope and dancing like a marionette.
- The effect on the people around him was as good as the best hypnotism
- you ever saw. I'm a robot now, but it bothered even me."
- "Did the dance have a name?" said Sto Odin.
- "I don't know the name," said Flavius, "but I memorized the song, since
- I have total recall. Do you wish to hear it?"
- "Certainly," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- Flavius stood on one leg, threw his arms out at weird, improbable
- angles, and began to sing in a high, insulting tenor voice which was
- both fascinating and repugnant: Jump, dear people, and I'll howl for
- you. Jump and howl and I'll weep for you. I weep because I'm a
- weeping man. I'm a weeping man because I weep. I weep because the day
- is done, Sun is gone, Home is lost, Time killed dad.
- I killed time.
- World is round.
- Day is run,
- Clouds are shot, Stars are out, Mountain's fire, Rain is hot, Hot is
- blue.
- I am done.
- So are you. Jump, dear people, for the howling man. Leap, dear
- people, for the weeping man.
- I'm a weeping man because I weep for you!
- "Enough," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- Flavius saluted. His face went back to amiable stolidity. Just before
- he took the front ends of the shaft he glanced back and brought forth
- one last comment: "The verse is skeltonic."
- "Tell me nothing more of your history. Take me there."
- The robots obeyed. Soon the chair was jogging comfortably down the
- ramps of the ancient left-over city which sprawled beneath Earthport,
- that miraculous tower which seemed to touch the stratocumulus clouds in
- the blue, clear nothingness above mankind. Sto Odin went to sleep in
- his strange vehicle and did not notice that the human passers-by often
- stared at him.
- The Lord Sto Odin woke fitfully in strange places as the legionaries
- carried him further and further into the depths below the city, where
- sweet pressures and warm, sick smells made the air itself feel dirty to
- his nose.
- "Stop!" whispered the Lord Sto Odin, and the robots stopped.
- "Who am I?" he said to them.
- "You have announced your will to die, my Lord," said Flavius,
- "seventy-seven days from now, but so far your name is still the Lord
- Sto Odin,"
- "I am alive?" the Lord asked.
- "Yes," said both the robots.
- "You are dead?"
- "We are not dead. We are machines, printed with the minds of men who
- once lived. Do you wish to turn back, my Lord?"
- "No. No. Now I remember. You are the robots. Livius, the
- psychiatrist and general Flavius, the secret historian. You have the
- minds of men, and are not men?"
- "That is right, my Lord," said Flavius.
- "Then how can I be alive I, Sto Odin?"
- "You should feel it yourself, sir," said Livius, "though the mind of
- the old is sometimes very strange."
- "How can I be alive?" asked Sto Odin, staring around the city.
- "How can I be alive when the people who knew me are dead?
- They have whipped through the corridors like wraiths of smoke, like
- traces of cloud; they were here, and they loved me, and they knew me,
- and now they are dead. Take my wife, Eileen. She was a pretty thing,
- a brown-eyed child who came out of her learning chamber all perfect and
- all young. Time touched her and she danced to the cadence of time. Her
- body grew full, grew old. We repaired it. But at last she cramped in
- death and she went to that place to which I am going. If you are dead,
- you ought to be able to tell me what death is like, where the bodies
- and minds and voices and music of men and women whip past these
- enormous corridors, these hardy pavements, and are then gone. How can
- passing ghosts like me and my kind, each with just a few dozen or a few
- hundred years to go before the great blind winds of time whip us away
- how can phantoms like me have built this solid city, these wonderful
- engines, these brilliant lights which never go dim? How did we do it,
- when we pass so swiftly, each of us, all of us? Do you know?"
- The robots did not answer. Pity had not been programmed into their
- systems. The Lord Sto Odin harangued them nonetheless: "You are taking
- me to a wild place, a free place, an evil place, perhaps. They are
- dying there too, as all men die, as I shall die, so soon, so brightly
- and simply. I should have died a long time ago. I was the people who
- knew me, I was the brothers and comrades who trusted me, I was the
- women who comforted me, I was the children whom I loved so bitterly and
- so sweetly many ages ago. Now they are gone. Time touched them, and
- they were not. I can see everyone that I ever knew racing through
- these corridors, see them young as toddlers, see them proud and wise
- and full with business and maturity, see them old and contorted as time
- reached out for them and they passed hastily away. Why did they do it?
- How can I live on? When I am dead, will I know that I once lived? I
- know that some of my friends have cheated and lie in the icy sleep,
- hoping for something which they do not know. I've had life, and I know
- it. What is life? A bit of play, a bit of learning, some words
- well-chosen, some love, a trace of pain, more work, memories, and then
- dirt rushing up to meet sunlight.
- That's all we've made of it we, who have conquered the stars!
- Where are my friends? Where is my me that I once was so sure of, when
- the people who knew me were time-swept like storm-driven rags toward
- darkness and oblivion? You tell me. You ought to know! You are
- machines and you were given the minds of men.
- You ought to know what we amount to, from the outside in."
- "We were built," said Livius, "by men and we have whatever men put into
- us, nothing more. How can we answer talk like yours? It is rejected
- by our minds, good though our minds may be.
- We have no grief, no fear, no
- fury. We know the names of these feelings but not the feelings
- themselves. We hear your words but we do not know what you are talking
- about. Are you trying to tell us what life feels like? If so, we
- already know. Not much. Nothing special. Birds have life too, and so
- do fishes. It is you people who can talk and who can knot life into
- spasms and puzzles. You muss things up. Screaming never made the
- truth truthful, at least, not to us."
- "Take me down," said Sto Odin.
- "Take me down to the Gebiet, where no well-mannered man has gone in
- many years. I am going to judge that place before I die."
- They lifted the sedan-chair and resumed their gentle dog-trot down the
- immense ramps down toward the warm steaming secrets of the Earth
- itself. The human pedestrians became more scarce, but under men most
- often of gorilla or ape origin passed them, toiling their way upward
- while dragging shrouded treasures which they had filched from the
- uncatalogued storehouses of man's most ancient past. At other times
- there was a wild whirl of metal wheels on stone roadway; the under men
- having offloaded their treasures at some intermediate point high above,
- sat on their wagons and rolled back downhill, like grotesque
- enlargements of the ancient human children who were once reported to
- have played with wagons in this way.
- A command, scarcely a whisper, stopped the two legionaries again.
- Flavius turned. Sto Odin was indeed calling both of them.
- They stepped out of the shafts and came around to him, one on each
- side.
- "I may be dying right now," he whispered, "and that would be most
- inconvenient at this time. Get out my manikin meee!"
- "My Lord," said Flavius, "it is strictly forbidden for us robots to
- touch any human manikin, and if we do touch one, we are commanded to
- destroy ourselves immediately thereafter! Do you wish us to try,
- nevertheless? If so, which one of us? You have the command, my
- Lord."
- IV
- He waited so long that even the robots began to wonder if he died amid
- the thick wet air and the nearby stench of steam and oil.
- The Lord Sto Odin finally roused himself and said: "I need no help.
- Just put the bag with my manikin meee on my lap."
- "This one?" asked Flavius, lifting a small brown suitcase and handling
- it with a very gingerly touch indeed.
- The Lord Sto Odin gave a barely perceptible nod and whispered
- "Open it carefully for me. But do not touch the manikin, if those are
- your orders."
- of Man Flavius twisted at the catch of the bag. It was hard to
- manage.
- Robots did not feel fear, but they were intellectually attuned to the
- avoidance of danger; Flavius found his mind racing with wild choices as
- he tried to get the bag open. Sto Odin tried to help him, but the
- ancient hand, palsied and weak, could not even reach the top of the
- case. Flavius labored on, thinking that the Gebiet and Bezirk had
- their dangers, but that this meddling with manikins was the riskiest
- thing which he had ever encountered while in robot form, though in his
- human life he had handled many of them, including his own. They were
- "manikin, electroencephalographic and endocrine" in model form, and
- they showed in miniaturized replica the entire diagnostic position of
- the patient for whom they were fashioned.
- Sto Odin whispered to them.
- "There's no helping it. Turn me up. If I die, take my body back and
- tell the people that I misjudged my time."
- Just as he spoke, the case sprang open. Inside it there lay a little
- naked human man, a direct copy of Sto Odin himself.
- "We have it, my Lord," cried Livius, from the other side.
- "Let me guide your hand to it, so that you can see what to do."
- Though it was forbidden for robots to touch manikins meee, it was legal
- for them to touch a human person with the person's consent. Livius's
- strong cupro-plastic fingers, with a reserve of many tons of gripping
- power in their human-like design, pulled the hands of the Lord Sto Odin
- forward until they rested on the manikin meee. Flavius, quick, smooth,
- agile, held the Lord's head upright on his weary old neck, so that the
- ancient Lord could see what the hands were doing.
- "Is any part dead?" said the old Lord to the manikin, his voice
- clearer for the moment.
- The manikin shimmered and two spots of solid black showed along the
- outside upper right thigh and the right buttock.
- "Organic reserve?" said the Lord to his own manikin meee, and again
- the machine responded to his command. The whole miniature body
- shimmered to a violent purple and then subsided to an even pink.
- "I still have some all-around strength left in this body, prosthetics
- and all," said Sto Odin to the two robots.
- "Set me up, I tell you! Set me up."
- "Are you sure, my Lord," said Livius, "that we should do a thing like
- that here where the three of us are alone in a deep tunnel? In less
- than half an hour we could take you to a real hospital, where actual
- doctors could examine you."
- "I said," repeated the Lord Sto Odin, "set me up. I'll watch the
- manikin while you do it."
- "Your control is in the usual place, my Lord?" asked Livius.
- "How much of a turn?" asked Flavius.
- "Nape of my neck, of course. The skin over it is artificial and
- self-sealing. One twelfth of a turn will be enough. Do you have a
- knife with you?"
- Flavius nodded. He took a small sharp knife from his belt, probed
- gently around the old Lord's neck, and then brought the knife down with
- a quick, sure turn.
- "That did it!" said Sto Odin, in a voice so hearty that both of them
- stepped back a little. Flavius put the knife back in his belt.
- Sto Odin, who had almost been comatose a moment before, now held the
- manikin meee in his unaided hands.
- "See, gentlemen!"
- he cried.
- "You may be robots, but you can still see the truth and report it."
- They both looked at the manikin meee, which Sto Odin now held in front
- of himself, his thumb and fingertip in the armpits of the medical
- doll.
- "Watch what it reads," he said to them with a clear, ringing voice.
- "Prosthetics!" he shouted at the manikin.
- The tiny body changed from its pink color to a mixture. Both legs
- turned the color of a deep bruised blue. The legs, the left arm, one
- eye, one ear, and the skullcap stayed blue, showing the prostheses in
- place.
- "Felt pain!" shouted Sto Odin at the manikin. The little doll
- returned to its light pink color. All the details were there, even to
- genitals, toenails, and eyelashes. There was no trace of the black
- color of pain in any part of the little body.
- "Potential pain!" shouted Sto Odin. The doll shimmered. Most of it
- settled to the color of dark walnut wood, with some areas of intense
- brown showing more clearly then the rest.
- "Potential breakdown one day!" shouted Sto Odin. The little body went
- back to its normal color of pink. Small lightnings showed at the base
- of the brain, but nowhere else.
- "I'm all right," said Sto Odin.
- "I can continue as I have done for the last several hundred years.
- Leave me set up on this high life-output. I can stand it for a few
- hours, and if I cannot, there's little lost." He put the manikin back
- in its bag, hung the bag on the doorhandle of the sedan-chair, and
- commanded the legionaries,
- "Proceed!"
- The legionaries stared at him as if they could not see him.
- He followed the lines of glance and saw that they were gazing rigidly
- at his manikin meee. It had turned black.
- "Are you dead?" asked Livius, speaking as hoarsely as a robot could.
- "Not dead at all!" cried Sto Odin.
- "I have been death in fractions of a moment, but for the time I am
- still life. That was just the pain-sum of my living body which showed
- on the manikin meee. The fire of life still burns within me. Watch as
- I put the manikin away . . ." The doll flared into a swirl of pastel
- orange as the Lord Sto Odin pulled the cover down.
- of Man They looked away as though they had seen an evil or an
- explosion.
- "Down, men, down," he cried, calling them wrong names as they stepped
- back between their carrying shafts to take him deeper under the vitals
- of the earth.
- V
- He dreamed brown dreams while they trotted down endless ramps. He woke
- a little to see the yellow walls passing. He looked at his dry old
- hand and it seemed to him that in this atmosphere, he had himself
- become more reptilian than human.
- "I am caught by the dry, drab enturtlement of old, old age," he
- murmured, but the voice was weak and the robots did not hear him. They
- were running downward on a long meaningless concrete ramp which had
- become filmed by a leak of ancient oil, and they were taking care that
- they did not stumble and drop their precious master.
- At a deep, hidden point the downward ramp divided, the left into a
- broad arena of steps which could have seated thousands of spectators
- for some never-to-occur event, and the right into a narrow ramp which
- bore upward and then curved, yellow lights and all.
- "Stop!" called Sto Odin.
- "Do you see her? Do you hear it?"
- "Hear what?" said Flavius.
- "The beat and the cadence of the congo helium rising out of the Gebiet.
- The whirl and the skirl of impossible music coming at us through miles
- of solid rock? That girl whom I can already see, waiting at a door
- which should never have been opened? The sound of the star-borne
- music, not designed for the proper human ear?" He shouted,
- "Can't you hear it? That cadence. The unlawful metal of congo helium
- so terrible far underground? Dah, dah. Dah, dah. Dah. Music which
- nobody has ever understood before?"
- Said Flavius,
- "I hear nothing, saving the pulse of air in this corridor, and your own
- heartbeat, my Lord. And something else, a little like machinery, very
- far away."
- "There, that!" cried Sto Odin, "which you call 'a little like
- machinery," does it come in a beat of five separate sounds, each one
- distinct?"
- "No. No, sir. Not five."
- "And you, Livius, when you were a man, you were very telepathic? Is
- there any of that left in the robot which is you?"
- "No, my Lord, nothing. I have good senses, and I am also cut into the
- subsurface radio of the Instrumentality. Nothing unusual."
- "No five-beat? Each note separate, short of prolonged, given meaning
- and shape by the terrible music of the congo helium imprisoned with us
- inside this much-too-solid rock? You hear nothing?"
- The two robots, shaped like Roman legionaries, shook their heads.
- "But I can see her, through this stone. She has breasts like ripe
- pears and dark brown eyes that are like the stones of fresh cut
- peaches. And I can hear what they are singing, their weird silly words
- of a penta paul made into something majestic by the awful music of the
- congo helium Listen to the words. When I repeat them, they sound just
- silly, because the dread-inspiring music does not come with them. Her
- name is Santuna and she stares at him. No wonder she stares. He is
- much more tall than most men, yet he makes this foolish song into
- something frightening and strange.
- Slim Jim.
- Dim him.
- Grim.
- And his name is Yebayee, but now he is Sun-boy. He has the long face
- and the thick lips of the first man to talk about one god and one only:
- Akhnaton."
- "Akhnaton the pharaoh," said Flavius.
- "That name was known in my office when I was a man. It was a secret.
- One of the first and greatest of the more-than-ancient kings. You see
- him, my Lord?"
- "Through this rock I see him. Through this rock I hear the delirium
- engendered by the congo helium I go to him." The Lord Sto Odin stepped
- out of the sedan chair and beat softly and weakly against the solid
- stone wall of the corridor. The yellow lamps gleamed. The legionaries
- were helpless. Here was something which their sharp swords could not
- pierce. Their once human personalities, engraved on their
- micro-miniaturized brains, could not make sense out of the
- all-too-human situation of an old, old man dreaming wild dreams in a
- remote tunnel.
- Sto Odin leaned against the wall, breathing heavily, and said to them
- with a sibilant rasp: "These are no whispers which can be missed. Can't
- you hear the five-beat of the congo helium making its crazy music
- again?
- Listen to the words of this one. It's another penta paul Silly, bony
- words given flesh and blood and entrails by the music which carries
- them. Here, listen.
- T
- r y ' .
- V
- i e .
- C
- r y .
- D
- i e .
- B
- y e .
- This one you did not hear either?"
- "May I use my radio to ask the surface of Earth for advice?"
- said one of the robots.
- "Advice! Advice! What advice do we need? This is the Gebiet and one
- more hour of running and you will be in the heart of the Bezirk."
- He climbed back into the sedan chair and commanded, "Run, men, run! It
- can't be more than three or four kilometers somewhere in this warren of
- stone. I will guide you. If I stop guiding you, you may take my body
- back to the surface, so that I can be given a wonderful funeral and be
- shot with a rocketcoffin into space with an orbit of no return. You
- have nothing to worry about. You are machines, nothing more, are you
- not? Are you not?" His voice shrilled at the end.
- Said Flavius,
- "Nothing more."
- Said Livius,
- "Nothing more. And yet " "And yet what?" demanded the Lord Sto
- Odin.
- "And yet," said Livius,
- "I know I am a machine, and I know that I have known feelings only when
- I was once a living man. I sometimes wonder if you people might go too
- far. Too far, with us robots. Too far, perhaps, with the under people
- too. Things were once simple, when everything that talked was a human
- being and everything which did not talk was not. You may be coming to
- an ending of the ways."
- "If you had said that on the surface," said the Lord Sto Odin grimly,
- "your head might have been burned off by its automatic magnesium flare.
- You know that there you are monitored against having illegal
- thoughts."
- "Too well do I know it," said Livius, "and I know that I must have died
- once as a man, if I exist here in robot form.
- Dying didn't seem to hurt me then and it probably won't hurt next time.
- But nothing really matters much when we get down this far into the
- Earth. When we get this far down, everything changes. I never really
- understood that the inside of the world was this big and this sick."
- "It's not how far down we are," said the Lord crossly, "it's where we
- are. This is the Gebiet, where all laws have been lifted, and down
- below and over yonder is the Bezirk, where laws have never been. Carry
- me rapidly now. I want to look on this strange musician with the face
- of Akhnaton and I want to talk to the girl who worships him, Santuna.
- Run carefully now.
- Up a little, to the left a little. If I sleep, do not worry. Keep
- going. I will waken myself when we come anywhere near the music of the
- congo helium If I can hear it now, so far away, think of what it will
- be like when you yourselves approach it!"
- He leaned back in his seat. They picked up the shafts of the
- sedan-chair and ran in the direction which they had been told.
- VI
- They had run for more than an hour, with occasional delays when they
- had tricky footwork over leaking pipes or damaged walkways, when the
- light became so bright that they had to reach in their pouches and put
- on sun-glasses, which looked very odd indeed underneath the Roman
- helmets of two fully armed legionaries. (It was even more odd, of
- course, that the eyes were not eyes at all; robot eyes were like white
- marbles swimming in little bowls of glittering ink, producing a grimly
- milky stare.) They looked at their master and he had not yet stirred,
- so they took a corner of his robe and twisted it firmly into a bandage
- to protect his eyes against the bright light.
- The new light made the yellow bulbs of the corridor fade out of notice.
- The light was like a whole aurora borealis compressed and projected
- through the basement corridor of a hotel left over from long ago.
- Neither of the robots knew the nature of the light, but it pulsed in
- beats of five.
- The music and the lights became obtrusive even to the two robots as
- they walked or trotted downward toward the center of the world. The
- air-forcing system must have been very strong, because the inner heat
- of the Earth had not reached them, even at this great depth. Flavius
- had no idea of how many kilometers below the surface they had come. He
- knew that it was not much in planetary distance, but it was very far
- indeed for an ordinary walk.
- The Lord Sto Odin sat up in the litter quite suddenly. When the two
- robots slowed, he said crossly at them: "Keep going.
- Keep going. I am going to set myself up. I'm strong enough to do
- it."
- He took out the manikin meee and studied it in the light of the minor
- aurora borealis which repeated itself in the corridor.
- The manikin ran through its changes of diagnoses and colors. The Lord
- was satisfied. With firm old fingers he put the knife tip to the back
- of his neck and set his output of vital energies at an even higher
- level.
- The robots did what they had been told.
- The lights had been bewildering. Sometimes they made walking itself
- difficult. It was hard to believe that dozens or hundreds, perhaps
- thousands, of human beings had found their way through these uncharted
- corridors in order to discover the inmost precincts of the Bezirk,
- where all things were allowed.
- Yet the robots had to believe it. They themselves had been here before
- and they scarcely remembered how they had found their way the other
- time.
- And the music! It beat at them harder than ever before. It came in
- beats of five, ringing out the tones of the penta paul the five-word
- verse which
- the mad cat-minstrel C'paul had developed while playing his c'lute
- some centuries before. The form itself confirmed and reinforced the
- poignancy of cats combined with the heartbreaking intelligence of the
- human being. No wonder people had found their way down here.
- In all the history of man, there was no act which could not be produced
- by any one of the three bitterest forces in the human spirit religious
- faith, vengeful vainglory, or sheer vice. Here, for the sake of vice,
- men had found the un discoverable deep and had put it to wild, filthy
- uses. The music called them on.
- This was very special music. It came at Sto Odin and his legionaries
- in two utterly different ways by now, reverberating at them through
- solid rock and echoing, re-echoing through the maze of corridors,
- carried by the dark heavy air. The corridor lights were still yellow,
- but the electromagnetic illuminations, which kept time to the music,
- made the ordinary lighting seem wan. The music controlled all things,
- paced all time, called all life to itself. It was song of a kind which
- the two robots had not noticed with such intensity on their previous
- visit.
- Even the Lord Sto Odin, for all his travels and experiences, had never
- heard it before.
- It was all of this: The beat and the heat and the neat repeat of the
- notes which poured from the congo helium metal never made for music,
- matter and anti-matter locked in a fine magnetic grid to ward off the
- outermost perils of space. Now a piece of it was deep in the body of
- Old Earth, counting out strange cadences.
- The churn and the burn and the hot return of music riding the living
- rock, accompanying itself in an air-carried echo. The surge and the
- urge of an erotic dirge which moaned, groaned through the heavy
- stone.
- Sto Odin woke and stared sharply forward, seeing nothing but
- experiencing everything.
- "Soon we shall see the gate and the girl," said he.
- "You know this, man? You who have never been here before?" Livius had
- spoken.
- "I know it," said the Lord Sto Odin, "because I know it."
- "You wear the feathers of immunity."
- "I wear the feathers of immunity."
- "Does that mean that we, your robots, are free too, down in this
- Bezirk?"
- "Free as you like," said the Lord Sto Odin, "provided that you do my
- wishes. Otherwise I shall kill you."
- "If we keep going," said Flavius, "may we sing the under people song?
- It might keep some of that terrible music out of our brains. The music
- has all feelings and we have none.
- Nevertheless it disturbs us. I do not know why."
- "My radio contact with the surface has lapsed," said Livius
- irrelevantly.
- "I need to sing too."
- "Go ahead, both of you," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "But keep on going, or you die."
- The robots lifted their voice in song: I eat my rage. I swallow my
- grief.
- There's no relief From pain or age.
- Our time comes.
- I work my life.
- I
- breathe my breath.
- I face my death Without a wife.
- Our time comes.
- We under men Shove, crush, and crash.
- There'll be a clash And thunder when Our time comes.
- Though the song had the barbarous, ancient thrill of bagpipes in it,
- the melody could not counter or cancel the sane, wild rhythm of the
- congo helium beating at them, now, from all directions at once.
- "Nice piece of sedition, that," said the Lord Sto Odin dryly, "but I
- like it better as music than I do this noise which is tearing its way
- through the depths of the world. Keep going. Keep going.
- I must meet this mystery before I die."
- "We find it hard to endure that music coming at us through the rock,"
- said Livius.
- "It seems to us that it is much stronger than it was when we came here
- some months ago. Could it have changed?" asked Flavius.
- "That is the mystery. We let them have the Gebiet, beyond our own
- jurisdiction. We gave them the Bezirk, to do with as they please. But
- these ordinary people have created or encountered some extraordinary
- power. They have brought new things into the Earth. It may be
- necessary for all three of us to die before we settle the matter."
- "We can't die the way you do," said Livius.
- "We're already robots, and the people from whom we were imprinted have
- been dead a long time. Do you mean you would turn us off?"
- "I would, perhaps, or else some other force. Would you mind?"
- "Mind? You mean, have emotions about it? I don't know,"
- said Flavius.
- "I used to think that I had real, full experience when you used the
- phrase Summa nulla est and brought us up to full capacity, but that
- music which we have been hearing has the effect of a thousand passwords
- all said at once. I am beginning to care about my life and I think
- that I am becoming what your reference explained by the word 'afraid."
- " "I too feel it," said Livius.
- "This is not a power which we knew to exist on Earth before. When I
- was a strategist someone told me about the really indescribable dangers
- connected with the Douglas-Ouyang planets, and it seems to me now that
- a danger of that kind is already with us, here inside the tunnel.
- Something which Earth never made. Something which man never developed.
- Something which no robot could out-compute.
- Something wild and very strong brought into being by the use of the
- congo helium Look around us."
- He did not need to say that. The corridor itself had become a living,
- pulsing rainbow.
- They turned one last loop in the corridor and they were there The very
- last limit of the realm of distress.
- The source of evil music.
- The end of the Bezirk.
- They knew it because the music blinded them, the lights deafened them,
- their senses ran into one another and became confused. This was the
- immediate presence of the congo helium
- There was a door, immensely large, carved with elaborate Gothic
- ornament. It was much too big for any human man to have had need of
- it. In the door a single figure stood, her breasts accented into vivid
- brights and darks by the brilliant light which poured from one side of
- the door only, the right.
- They could see through the door, into an immense hall wherein the floor
- was covered by hundreds of limp bundles of ragged clothing. These were
- the people, unconscious. Above them and between them there danced the
- high figure of a male, holding a glittering something in his hands. He
- prowled and leaped and twisted and turned to the pulsation of the music
- which he himself produced.
- "Summa nulla est, " said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "I want you two robots to be keyed to maximum. Are you now to top
- alert?"
- "We are, sir," chorused Livius and Flavius.
- "You have your weapons?"
- "We cannot use them," said Livius, "since it is contrary to our
- programming, but you can use them, sir."
- "I'm not sure," said Flavius.
- "I'm not at all sure. We are equipped with
- surface weapons. This music, these hypnotics, these lights who knows
- what they may have done to us and to our weapons, which were never
- designed to operate this far underground?"
- "No fear," said Sto Odin.
- "I'll take care of all of it."
- He took out a small knife.
- When the knife gleamed under the dancing lights, the girl in the
- doorway finally took notice of the Lord Sto Odin and his strange
- companions.
- She spoke to him, and her voice rode through the heavy air with the
- accents of clarity and death.
- VII
- "Who are you," she said, "that you should bring weapons to the last
- uttermost limits of the Bezirk?"
- "This is just a small knife, lady," said the Lord Sto Odin, "and with
- this I can do no harm to anyone. I am an old man and I am setting my
- own vitality button higher."
- She watched in curiously as he brought the point of the knife to the
- nape of his own neck and then gave it three full, deliberate turns.
- Then she stared and said,
- "You are strange, my Lord. Perhaps you are dangerous to my friends and
- me."
- "I am dangerous to no one." The robots looked at him, surprised,
- because of the fullness and the richness of his voice.
- He had set his vitality very high indeed, giving himself, at that rate,
- perhaps no more than an hour or two of life, but he had regained the
- physical power and the emotional force of his own prime years. They
- looked at the girl. She had taken Sto Odin's statement at full face
- value, almost as though it were an incontrovertible canon of faith.
- "I wear," Sto Odin went on, "these feathers. Do you know what they
- signify?"
- "I can see," she said. "that you are a Lord of the Instrumentality,
- but I do not know what the feathers mean . . ."
- "Waiver of immunity. Anyone who can manage it is allowed to kill me or
- to hurt me without danger of punishment." He smiled, a little
- grimly.
- "Of course, I have the right to fight back, and I do-know how to fight.
- My name is the Lord Sto Odin. Why are you here, girl?"
- "I love that man in there if he is a man any more."
- She stopped and pursed her lips in bewilderment. It was strange to see
- those girlish lips compressed in a momentary stammer of the soul. She
- stood there, more nude than a newborn infant, her face covered with
- provocative, off-beat cosmetics. She lived for a mission of love in
- the
- depths of the nothing and nowhere: yet she remained a girl, a person,
- a human being capable, as she was now, of an immediate relationship to
- another human being.
- "He was a man, my Lord, even when he came back from the surface with
- that piece of congo helium Only a few weeks ago, those people were
- dancing too. Now they just lie on the ground.
- They do not even die. I myself held the congo helium too, and I made
- music with it. Now the power of the music is eating him up and he
- dances without resting. He won't come out to me and I do not dare go
- into that place with him. Perhaps I too would end up as one more heap
- on the floor."
- A crescendo of the intolerable music made speech intolerable for her.
- She waited for it to pass while the room beyond blazed a pulsing violet
- at them.
- When the music of the congo helium subsided a little, Sto Odin spoke:
- "How long has it been that he has danced alone with this strange power
- coursing through him?"
- "One year. Two years. Who can tell? I came down here and lost time
- when I arrived. You Lords don't even let us have clocks and calendars
- up on the surface."
- "We ourselves saw you dancing just a tenth-year ago," said Livius,
- interrupting.
- She glanced at them, quickly, in curiously
- "Are you the same two robots who were here a while back? You look very
- different now. You look like ancient soldiers. I can't imagine why
- ... All right, maybe it was a week, maybe it was a year."
- "What were you doing down here?" asked Sto Odin, gently.
- "What do you think?" she said.
- "Why do all the other people come down here? I was running away from
- the timeless time, the lifeless life, the hopeless hope that you Lords
- apply to all mankind on the surface. You let the robots and the under
- people work, but you freeze the real people in a happiness which has no
- hope and no escape."
- "I'm right," cried Sto Odin.
- "I'm right, though I die for it!"
- "I don't understand you," said the girl.
- "Do you mean that you too, a Lord, have come down here to escape from
- the useless hope that wraps up all of us?"
- "No, no, no," he said, as the shifting lights of the congo helium music
- made improbable traceries across his features.
- "I just meant that I told the other Lords that something like this was
- happening to you ordinary people on the surface. Now you are telling
- me exactly what I told them. Who were you, anyhow?"
- The girl glanced down at her unclothed body as though she were aware,
- for the first time, of her nakedness. Sto Odin could see the blush
- pour from her face down across her neck and chest. She said, very
- quietly: "Don't you know? We never answer that question down here."
- "You have rules?" he said.
- "You people have rules, even here in the Bezirk?"
- She brightened up when she realized that he had not meant the indecent
- question as an impropriety. Eagerly she explained.
- "There aren't any rules. They are just understandings. Somebody told
- me when I left the ordinary world and crossed the line of the Gebiet. I
- suppose they did not tell you because you were a Lord, or because they
- hid from your strange war-robots."
- "I met no one, coming down."
- "Then they were hiding from you, my Lord."
- Sto Odin looked around at his legionaries to see if they would confirm
- that statement but neither Flavius nor Livius said anything at all.
- He turned back to the girl.
- "I didn't mean to pry. Can you tell me what kind of person you are? I
- don't need the particulars."
- "When I was alive, I was a once-born," she said.
- "I did not live long enough to be renewed. The robots and a
- Subcommissioner of the Instrumentality took a look at me to see if I
- could be trained for the Instrumentality. More than enough brains,
- they said, but no character at all. I thought about that a long
- time.
- "No character at all." I knew I couldn't kill myself, and I didn't
- want to live, so I looked happy every time I thought a monitor might be
- scanning me and I found my way to the Gebiet.
- It wasn't death, and it wasn't life, but it was an escape from endless
- fun. I hadn't been down here long" she pointed at the Gebiet above
- them "before I met him. We loved each other very soon and he said that
- the Gebiet was not much improvement on the surface. He said he had
- already been down here, in the Bezirk, looking for a fun-death."
- "A what?" said Sto Odin, as if he could not believe the words.
- "A fun-death. Those were his words and his idea. I followed him
- around and we loved each other. I waited for him when he went to the
- surface to get the congo helium I thought that his love for me would
- put the fun-death out of his mind."
- "Are you telling me the whole truth?" said Sto Odin.
- "Or is this just your part of the story?"
- She stammered protests but he did not ask again.
- The Lord Sto Odin said nothing but he looked heavily at her.
- She winced, bit her lip, and finally said, through all the music and
- the lights, very clearly indeed,
- "Stop it. You are hurting me."
- The Lord Sto Odin stared at her, said innocently,
- "I am doing nothing," and stared on. There was much to stare at. She
- was a girl the color of honey. Even through these lights and shadows
- he could see that she had no clothing at all. Nor did she have a
- single hair left on her body no head of
- hair, no eyebrows, probably no eyelashes, though he could not tell at
- that distance. She had traced golden eyebrows far up on her forehead,
- giving her the look of endless mocking inquiry. She had painted her
- mouth gold, so that when she spoke, her words cascaded from a golden
- source. She had painted her upper eyelids golden too, but the lower
- were black as carbon itself. The total effect was alien to all the
- previous experiences of mankind: it was lascivious grief to the
- thousandth power, dry wantonness perpetually unfulfilled, femaleness in
- the service of remote purposes, humanity enraptured by strange
- planets.
- He stood and stared. If she were still human at all, this would sooner
- or later force her to take the initiative. It did.
- She spoke again,
- "Who are you? You are living too fast, too fiercely. Why don't you go
- in and dance, like all the others?" She gestured past the open door,
- where the ragged unconscious shapes of all the people lay strewn about
- the floor.
- "You call that dancing?" said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "I do not.
- There is one man who dances. Those others lie on the floor. Let me
- ask you the same question. Why don't you dance yourself?"
- "I want him, not the dance. I am Santuna and he seized me once in
- human, mortal, ordinary love. But he becomes Sun-boy, more so every
- day, and he dances with those people who lie on the floor " "You call
- that dancing?" snapped the Lord Sto Odin. He shook his head and added
- grimly,
- "I see no dance."
- "You don't see it? You really don't see it?" she cried.
- He shook his head obstinately and grimly.
- She turned so that she looked into the room beyond her and she brought
- her high, clear penetrating wail which even cut through the five-beat
- pulse of the congo helium She cried: "Sun-boy, Sun-boy, hear me!"
- There was no break in the quick escape of the feet which pattered in
- the figure eight, no slowing down the fingers which beat against the
- shimmering non-focus of the metal which was carried in the dancer's
- arms.
- "My lover, my beloved, my man!" she cried again, her voice even more
- shrill and demanding than before.
- There was a break in the cadence of the music and the dance.
- The dancer sheered toward them with a perceptible slowing down of his
- cadence. The lights of the inner room, the great door, and the outer
- hall all became more steady. Sto Odin could see the girl more clearly;
- she really didn't have a single hair on her body. He could see the
- dancer too; the young man was tall, thin beyond the ordinary suffering
- of man, and the metal which he carried shimmered like water reflecting
- a thousand lights. The dancer spoke, quickly and angrily:
- "You called me. You have called me thousands of times.
- Come on in, if you wish. But don't call me."
- As he spoke, the music faded out completely, the bundles on the floor
- began to stir and to groan and to awaken.
- Santuna stammered hastily,
- "This time it wasn't me. It was these people. One of them is very
- strong. He cannot see the dancers."
- Sun-boy turned to the Lord Sto Odin.
- "Come in and dance then, if you wish. You are already here. You might
- as well.
- Those machines of yours" he nodded at the robot legionaries "they
- couldn't dance anyhow. Turn them off." The dancer started to turn
- away.
- "I shall not dance, but I would like to see it," said Sto Odin, with
- enforced mildness. He did not like this young man at all not the
- phosphorescence of his skin, the dangerous metal cradled in his arm,
- the suicidal recklessness of his prancing walk.
- Anyhow, there was too much light this far underground and too few
- explanations of what was being done.
- "Man, you're a peeper. That's real nasty, for an old man like you. Or
- do you just want to be a man?"
- The Lord Sto Odin felt his temper flare up.
- "Who are you, man, that you should call man man in such a tone? Aren't
- you still human, yourself?"
- "Who knows? Who cares? I have tapped the music of the universe. I
- have piped all imaginable happiness into this room.
- I am generous. I share it with these friends of mine." Sun-boy
- gestured at the ragged heaps on the floor, who had begun to squirm in
- their misery without the music. As Sto Odin saw into the room more
- clearly, he could see that the bundles on the floor were young people,
- mostly young men, though there were a few girls among them. They all
- of them looked sick and weak and pale.
- Sto Odin retorted,
- "I don't like the looks of this. I have half a mind to seize you and
- to take that metal."
- The dancer spun on the ball of his right foot, as though to leap away
- in a wild prance.
- The Lord Sto Odin stepped into the room after Sun-boy.
- Sun-boy turned full circle, so that he faced Sto Odin once again. He
- pushed the Lord out of the door, marching him firmly but irresistibly
- three steps backward.
- "Flavius, seize the metal. Livius, take the man," spat Sto Odin.
- Neither robot moved.
- Sto Odin, his senses and his strength set high by the severe twist
- upward which he had given his vitality button, stepped forward to seize
- the congo helium himself. Made one step and no more: he froze in the
- doorway, immobile.
- He had not felt like that since the last time the doctors put him in
- a
- surgery machine, when they found that part of his skull had developed
- bone-cancer from old, old radiation in space and from the subsequent
- effects of sheer age. They had given him a prosthetic half-skull and
- for the time of the operation he had been immobilized by straps and
- drugs. This time there were no straps, no drugs, but the forces which
- Sun-boy had invoked were equally strong.
- The dancer danced in an enormous figure-eight among the clothed bodies
- lying on the floor. He had been singing the song which the robot
- Flavius had repeated far up above, on the surface of the Earth the song
- about the weeping man.
- But Sun-boy did not weep.
- His ascetic, thin face was twisted in a broad grin of mockery.
- When he sang about sorrow it was not sorrow which he really expressed,
- but derision, laughter, contempt for ordinary human sorrow. The congo
- helium shimmered and the aurora borealis almost blinded Sto Odin. There
- were two other drums in the middle of the room, one with high notes and
- the other with even higher ones.
- The congo helium resonated: boom boom doom doom room!
- The large ordinary drum rattled out, when Sun-boy passed it and reached
- out his fingers: ritiplin, ritiplin, rataplan, ritiplin!
- The small, strange drum emitted only two notes, and it almost croaked
- them: kid-nork, kid-nork, kid-nork!
- As Sun-boy danced back the Lord Sto Odin thought that he could hear the
- voice of the girl Santuna, calling to Sun-boy, but he could not turn
- his head to see if she were speaking.
- Sun-boy stood in front of Sto Odin, his feet still weaving as he
- danced, his thumbs and his palms torturing hypnotic dissonances from
- the gleaming congo helium
- "Old man, you tried to trick me. You failed."
- The Lord Sto Odin tried to speak, but the muscles of his mouth and
- throat would not respond. He wondered what force this was, which could
- stop all unusual effort but still leave his heart free to beat, his
- lungs to breathe, his brain (both natural and prosthetic) to think.
- The boy danced on. He danced away a few steps, turned and danced back
- to Sto Odin.
- "You wear the feather of immunity. I am free to kill you. If I did,
- the Lady Mmona and the Lord Nuru-or and your other friends would never
- know what happened."
- If Sto Odin could have moved his eyelids that much, he would have
- opened his eyes in astonishment at the discovery that a superstitious
- dancer, far underground, knew the secret business of the
- Instrumentality.
- "You can't believe what you are looking at, even though you see it
- plainly," said Sun-boy more seriously.
- "You think that a lunatic has found a way to work wonders with a piece
- of the congo helium taken far underground. Foolish old man! No
- ordinary lunatic would have carried this metal down here without
- blowing up the fragment and himself with it. No man could have done
- what I have done. You are thinking. If the gambler who took the name
- Sun-boy is not a man, what is he? What brings the power and music of
- the Sun so far down underground? Who makes the wretched ones of the
- world dream in a crazy, happy sleep while their life spills and leaks
- into a thousand kinds of times, a thousand kinds of worlds? Who does
- it, if it is not mere me? You don't have to ask. I can tell perfectly
- well what you are thinking.
- I'll dance it for you. I am a very kind man, even though you do not
- like me."
- The dancer's feet had been moving in the same place while he spoke.
- Suddenly he whirled away, leaping and vaulting over the wretched human
- figures on the floor.
- He passed the big drum and touched it: ritiplin, rataplan! Left hand
- brushed the little drum: kid-nork, kid-nork! Both hands seized the
- congo helium as though the strong wrists were going to tear it apart.
- The whole room blazed with music, gleamed with thunder as the human
- senses interpenetrated each other. The Lord Sto Odin felt the air pass
- his skin like cool, wet oil. Sun-boy the dancer became transparent and
- through him the Lord Sto Odin could see a landscape which was not Earth
- and never would be.
- "Fluminescent, luminescent, incandescent, fluorescent," sang the
- dancer.
- "Those are the worlds of the Douglas-Ouyang planets, seven planets in a
- close group, all traveling together around a single sun. Worlds of
- wild magnetism and perpetual dust fall where the surfaces of the
- planets are changed by the forever shifting magnetism of their erratic
- orbits! Strange worlds, where stars dance dances wilder than any dance
- ever conceived by man planets which have a consciousness in common, but
- perhaps not intelligence planets which called across all space and all
- time for companionship until I me the gambler, came down to this cavern
- and found them. Where you had left them, my Lord Sto Odin, when you
- said to a robot: " I do not like the looks of those planets," said you,
- Sto Odin, speaking to a robot a long time ago.
- "People might get sick or crazy, just looking at them," said you, Sto
- Odin, long, long ago.
- "Hide the knowledge in some out of the way computer," you commanded,
- Sto Odin, before I was born. But the computer was that one, that one
- in the corner behind you, which you cannot turn to see. I came down to
- this room, looking for a fun-suicide, something really unusual which
- would bang the noddies when they found I had gotten away. I danced
- here in the darkness, almost the
- way I am dancing now, and I had taken about twelve different kinds of
- drugs, so that I was wild and free and very very receptive. That
- computer spoke to me, Sto Odin. Your computer, not mine. It spoke to
- me, and you know what it said?
- "You might as well know, Sto Odin, because you are dying.
- You set your vitality high in order to fight me. I have made you stand
- still. Could I do that if I were a mere man? Look. I will turn solid
- again."
- With a rainbow-like scream of chords and sounds, Sun-boy twisted the
- congo helium again until both the inner chamber and the outer bloomed
- with lights of a thousand colors and the deep underground air became
- drenched with music which seemed psychotic, because no human mind had
- ever invented it. The Lord Sto Odin, imprisoned in his own body with
- his two legionary robots frozen half a pace behind him, wondered if he
- really were dying in vain and tried to guess whether he would be
- blinded and deafened by this dancer before he died. The congo helium
- twisted and shone before him.
- Sun-boy danced backward over the bodies on the floor, danced backward
- with an odd cadenced run which looked as though he were plunging
- forward in a wild, competitive foot-race when the music and his own
- footsteps carried him back, toward the center of the inner room. The
- figure jumped in an odd stance, face looking so far downward that
- Sun-boy might have been studying his own steps on the floor, the congo
- helium held above and behind his neck, legs lifting high in the cruel
- high-kneed prance.
- The Lord Sto Odin thought he could hear the girl calling again, but he
- could not distinguish words.
- The drums spoke again: ritiplin, ritiplin, rataplan! and then
- kid-nork, kid-nork, kid-nork!
- The dancer spoke as the pandemonium subsided. He spoke, and his voice
- was high, strange, like a bad recording played on the wrong machine:
- "The something is talking to you. You can talk."
- The Lord Sto Odin found that his throat and lips moved.
- Quietly, secretly, like an old soldier, he tried his feet and fingers:
- these did not move. Only his voice could be used. He spoke, and he
- said the obvious: "Who are you, something?"
- Sun-boy looked across at Sto Odin. He stood erect and calm.
- Only his feet moved, and they did a wild, agile little jig which did
- not affect the rest of his body. Apparently some kind of dance was
- necessary to keep the connection going between the unexplained reach of
- the Douglas-Ouyang planets, the piece of the congo helium the more than
- human dancer, and the tortured blissful figures on the floor. The
- face, the face itself was quite composed and almost sad.
- "I have been told," said Sun-boy, "to show you who I am."
- He danced around the drums rataplan, rataplan! kid-norknork,
- kid-nork, kid-nork-nork!
- He held the congo helium high and wrenched it so that a great moan came
- out. Sto Odin felt sure that a sound as wild and forlorn as that would
- be sure to reach the surface of the Earth many kilometers above, but
- his prudent judgment assured him that this was a fanciful thought
- gestated by his personal situation, and that any real sound strong
- enough to reach all the way to the surface would also be strong enough
- to bring the bruised and shattered rock of the ceiling pouring down
- upon their heads.
- The congo helium ran down the colors of the spectrum until it stopped
- at a dark, wet liver-red, very close to black.
- The Lord Sto Odin, in that momentary near silence, found that the
- entire story had been thrust into his mind without being strung out and
- articulated with words. The true history of this chamber had entered
- his memory side-wise, as it were. In one moment he knew nothing of it;
- in the next instant it was as if he had remembered the whole narrative
- for most of his life. He also felt himself set free. He stumbled
- backward three or four steps.
- To his immense relief, his robots turned around, themselves free, and
- accompanied him. He let them put their hands in his armpits. His face
- was suddenly covered with kisses.
- His plastic cheek felt, thinly and dimly, the imprint, real and living,
- of female human lips. It was the odd girl beautiful, bald, naked, and
- golden-lipped who had waited and shouted from the door.
- Despite physical fatigue and the sudden shock of intruded knowledge,
- the Lord Sto Odin knew what he had to say.
- "Girl, you shouted for me." "Yes, my Lord."
- "You have had the strength to watch the congo helium and not to give in
- to it?"
- She nodded but said nothing.
- "You have been strong-willed enough not to go into that room?" "Not
- strong-willed, my Lord. I just love him, my man in there." "You have
- waited, girl, for many months?"
- "Not all the time. I go up the corridor when I have to eat or drink or
- sleep or do my personals. I even have mirrors and combs and tweezers
- and paint there, to make myself beautiful, the way that Sun-boy might
- want me."
- The Lord Sto Odin looked over his shoulder. The music was low and
- keening with some emotions other than grief. The dancer was doing a
- long, slow dance, full of creeping and reaches, as he passed the congo
- helium from one hand to the other.
- "Do you hear me, dancer?" called the Lord Sto Odin, the
- Instrumentality once more coursing through his veins.
- The dancer did not speak nor seem to change his course. But kid-nork,
- kid.-n.ork said the little drum, quite unexpectedly.
- "He, and the face behind him they will let the girl leave if she really
- forgets him and this place in the act of leaving. Won't you?" said
- Sto Odin to the dancer.
- Ritiplin, rataplan said the big drum, which had not sounded since Sto
- Odin was let free.
- "But I don't want to go," said the girl.
- "I know you don't want to go. You will go to please me. You can come
- back as soon as I have done my work." She stood mute so he
- continued.
- "One of my robots, Livius, the one imprinted by a psychiatrist general,
- will run with you, but I command him to forget this place and all
- things connected with it. Summa nulla est. Have you heard me, Livius?
- You will run with this girl and you will forget.
- You will run and forget. You too will run and forget, Santuna my dear,
- but two Earthnychthemerons from now you will remember just enough to
- come back here, should you wish to, should you need to. Otherwise you
- will go to the Lady Mmona and learn from her what you should do for the
- rest of your life."
- "You are promising, my Lord, that in two days and nights I can come
- back if I even feel like it."
- "Now run, my girl, run. Run to the surface. Livius, carry her if you
- must. But run! run! run! More than she depends upon it."
- Santuna looked at him very earnestly. Her nakedness was innocence. The
- gold upper eyelids met the black lower eyelids as she blinked and then
- brushed away wet tears.
- "Kiss me," she said, "and I will run."
- He leaned down and kissed her.
- She turned, looked back one last time at her dancer-lover, and then ran
- long-legged into the corridor. Livius ran after her, gracefully,
- untiringly. In twenty minutes they would be reaching the upper limits
- of the Gebiet.
- "You know what I am doing?" said Sto Odin to the dancer.
- This time the dancer and the force behind him did not deign to
- answer.
- Said Sto Odin,
- "Water. There is water in a jug in my litter.
- Take me there, Flavius."
- The robot-legionary took the aged and trembling Sto Odin to the
- litter.
- VIII
- The Lord Sto Odin then performed the trick which changed human history
- for many centuries to come and, in so doing, exploded an enormous
- cavern in the vitals of the Earth.
- He used one of the most secret ruses of the Instrumentality.
- He triple-thought.
- Only a few very adept persons could triple-think, when they were given
- every possible chance of training. Fortunately for mankind, the Lord
- Sto Odin had been one of the successful ones.
- He set three systems of thought into action. At the top level he
- behaved rationally as he explored the old room; at a lower level of his
- mind he planned a wild surprise for the dancer with the congo helium
- But at the third, lowest level, he decided what he must do in the time
- of a single blink and trusted his autonomic nervous system to carry out
- the rest.
- These are the commands he gave: Flavius should be set on the wild-alert
- and readied for attack.
- The computer should be reached and told to record the whole episode,
- everything which Sto Odin had learned, and should be shown how to take
- countermeasures while Sto Odin gave the matter no further conscious
- thought. The gestalt of action the general frame of retaliation was
- clear for thousandths of a second in Sto Odin's mind and then it
- dropped from sight.
- The music rose to a roar.
- White light covered Sto Odin.
- "You meant me harm!" called Sun-boy from beyond the Gothic door.
- "I meant you harm," Sto Odin acknowledged, "but it was a passing
- thought. I did nothing. You are watching me."
- "I am watching you," said the dancer grimly. Kid-nork, kidnork went
- the little drum.
- "Do not go out of my sight. When you are ready to come through my
- door, call me or just think of it. I will meet you and help you in."
- "Good enough," said Lord Sto Odin.
- Flavius still held him. Sto Odin concentrated on the melody which
- Sun-boy was creating, a wild new song never before suspected in the
- history of the world. He wondered if he could surprise the dancer by
- throwing his own song back at him. At the same instant, his fingers
- were performing a third set of actions which Sto Odin's mind no longer
- had to heed. Sto Odin's hand opened a lid in the robot's chest, right
- into the laminated controls of the brain. The hand itself changed
- certain adjustments, commanding that the robot should, within the
- quarter-hour, kill all forms of life within reach other than the
- command-transmitter.
- Flavius did not know what had been done to him; Sto Odin did not even
- notice what his own hand had done.
- "Take me over to the old computer," said Sto Odin to the robot
- Flavius.
- "I want to discover how the strange story which I have just learned may
- be true." Sto Odin kept thinking of music which would even startle the
- user of the congo helium
- He stood at the computer.
- His hand, responding to the triple-think command which it had been
- given, turned the computer up and pressed the button, Record this
- scene. The computer's old relays almost grunted as they came to the
- alert and complied.
- "Let me see the map," said Sto Odin to the computer.
- Far behind him, the dancer had changed his pace into a fast jog-trot of
- hot suspicion.
- The map appeared on the computer.
- "Beautiful," said Sto Odin.
- The entire labyrinth had become plain. Just above them was one of the
- ancient, sealed-off anti-seismic shafts a straight, empty tubular
- shaft, two hundred meters wide, kilometers high.
- At the top, it had a lid which kept out the mud and water of the ocean
- floor. At the bottom, since there was no pressure other than air to
- worry about, it had been covered with a plastic which looked like rock,
- so that neither people nor robots which might be passing would try to
- climb into it.
- "Watch what I am doing!" cried Sto Odin to the dancer.
- "I am watching," said Sun-boy, and there was almost a growl of
- perplexity in his sung-forth response.
- Sto Odin shook the computer and ran the fingers of his right hand over
- it and coded a very specific request. His left hand preconditioned by
- the triple-think coded the emergency panel at the side of the computer
- with two simple, clear engineering instructions.
- Sun-boy's laughter rang out behind him.
- "You are asking that a piece of the congo helium be sent down to you.
- Stop! Stop, before you sign it with your name and your authority as a
- Lord of the Instrumentality. Your unsigned request will do no harm.
- The central computer up top will just think that it is some of the
- crazy people in the Bezirk making senseless demands." The voice rose
- to a note of urgency,
- "Why did the machine signal 'received and complied with' to you just
- now?"
- The Lord Sto Odin lied blandly,
- "I don't know. Maybe they will send me a piece of the congo helium to
- match the one that you have there."
- "You're lying," cried the dancer.
- "Come over here to the door."
- Flavius led the Lord Sto Odin to the ridiculous-beautiful Gothic
- archway.
- The dancer was leaping from foot to foot. The congo helium shone a
- dull alert red. The music wept as though all the anger and suspicion
- of mankind had been incorporated into a new unforgettable fugue, like a
- delirious atonal counterpoint to Johann Sebastian Bach's Third
- Brandenburg Concerto.
- "I am here," the Lord Sto Odin spoke easily.
- "You are dying!" cried the dancer.
- "I was dying before you first noticed me. I set my vitality control to
- maximum after I entered the Bezirk."
- "Come on in, then," said Sun-boy, "and you will never die."
- Sto Odin took the edge of the door and let himself down to the stone
- floor. Only when he was comfortably seated did he speak: "I am dying,
- that is true. But I would rather not come in. I will just watch you
- dance as I die."
- "What are you doing? What have you done?" cried Sun-boy.
- He stopped dancing and walked over to the door.
- "Search me if you wish," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "I am searching you," said the dancer, "but I see nothing but your
- desire to get a piece of the congo helium for yourself and to out-dance
- me."
- At this point Flavius went berserk. He ran back to the litter, leaned
- over, and ran toward the door. In each hand he carried an enormous
- solid-steel bearing.
- "What's that robot doing?" cried the dancer.
- "I can see your mind but you are not telling him anything! He uses
- those steel balls to break obstructions " He gasped as the attack
- came.
- Quicker than the eye could follow the movement, Flavius's
- sixty-ton-capacity arm whistled through the air as he flung the first
- steel missile directly at Sun-boy. Sun-boy, or the power within him,
- leapt aside with insect speed. The ball plowed through two of the
- rag-clothed human bodies on the floor. One body said who of as it
- died, but the other body let out no sound at all: the head had been
- torn off in first impact. Before the dancer could speak, Flavius flung
- the second ball.
- This time the doorway caught it. The powers which had immobilized Sto
- Odin and his robots were back in operation. The ball sang as it
- plunged into the doorway, stopped in mid-air, sang again as the door
- flung it back at Flavius.
- The returning ball missed Flavius's head but crushed his chest utterly.
- That was where his real brain was. There was a flicker of light as the
- robot went out, but even in dying Flavius seized the ball one last time
- and flung it at Sun-boy. The robot terminated operation and the heavy
- ball, flung wild, caught the Lord Sto Odin in the right shoulder. The
- Lord Sto Odin felt pain until he dragged over his manikin meee and
- turned all pain off.
- Then he looked at the shoulder. It was almost totally demolished.
- Blood from his organic body and hydraulic fluid from his prosthetics
- joined in a slow, heavy stream as the liquids met, merged, and poured
- down his side.
- The dancer almost forgot to dance.
- Sto Odin wondered how far the girl had gone.
- of Man The air pressure changed.
- "What is happening to the air? Why did you think about the girl? What
- is happening?"
- "Read me," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "I will dance and get my powers first," said Sun-boy.
- For a few brief minutes it seemed that the dancer with the congo helium
- would cause a rock-fall.
- The Lord Sto Odin, dying, closed his eyes and found that it was restful
- to die. The blaze and noise of the world around him remained
- interesting, but had become unimportant.
- The congo helium with a thousand shifting rainbows and the dancer had
- attained near-transparency when Sun-boy came back to read Sto Odin's
- mind.
- "I see nothing," said Sun-boy worriedly.
- "Your vitality button is too high and you will die soon. Where is all
- that air coming from? I seem to hear a faraway roar. But you are not
- causing it.
- Your robot went wild. All you do is to look at me contentedly and die.
- That is very strange. You want to die your way when you could live
- unimaginable lives in here with us!"
- "That is right," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "I am dying my way.
- But dance for me, do dance for me with the congo helium while I tell
- you your own story as you told it to me. It would be a pleasure to get
- the story straight before I die."
- The dancer looked irresolute, started to dance, and then turned back to
- the Lord Sto Odin.
- "Are you sure you want to die right away? With the power of what you
- call the Douglas-Ouyang planets, which I receive right here with the
- help of the congo helium you could be comfortable enough while I danced
- and you could still die whenever you wished. Vitality buttons are much
- weaker than the powers which I command. I could even help to lift you
- across the threshold of my door. .."
- "No," said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "Just dance for me while I die.
- My way."
- IX
- Thus the world turned. Millions of tons of water were rushing toward
- them.
- Within minutes the Gebiet and the Bezirk would drown as the air
- whistled upward. Sto Odin noted contentedly that there was an
- air-shaft at the top of the dancer's room. He did not allow himself to
- third-think of what would happen when the matter and anti-matter of the
- congo helium
- were immersed in rushing salt water. Something like forty megatons,
- he supposed, with the tired feeling of a man who has thought a problem
- through long, long ago and remembers it briefly only after the
- situation has long passed.
- Sun-boy was acting out religion before the age of space. He chorused
- hymns, he lifted his eyes and his hands and his piece of the congo
- helium to the sun; he played the rattle of whirling dervishes, the
- temple bells of the Man on the Two Pieces of Wood, and the other temple
- bells of that saint who had escaped time simply by seeing it and
- stepping out of it. Buddha, was that his name? And he went on to the
- severe profanities which afflicted mankind after the Old World fell.
- The music kept measure.
- And the lights, too.
- Whole processions of ghostly shadows followed Sun-boy as he showed how
- old mankind had found the gods, and the Sun, and then other gods. He
- pantomimed man's most ancient mystery that man pretended to be afraid
- of death, when it was life that never understood it.
- And as he danced, the Lord Sto Odin repeated his own story to him: "You
- fled the surface. Sun-boy, because the people were stupid clods, happy
- and dull in their miserable happiness. You fled because you could not
- stand being a chicken in a poultry house, antiseptically bred, safely
- housed, and frozen when dead.
- You joined the other miserable, bright, restless people who sought
- freedom in the Gebiet. You learned about their drugs and their liquors
- and their smokes. You knew their women, and their parties, and their
- games. It wasn't enough. You became a gentleman-suicide, a hero
- seeking a fun-death which would stamp you with your individuality. You
- came on down to the Bezirk, the most forgotten and loathsome place of
- all. You found nothing.
- Just the old machines and the empty corridors. Here and there a few
- mummies or bones. Just the silent lights and the faint murmur of air
- through the corridors."
- "I hear water now," said the dancer, still dancing, "rushing water.
- Don't you hear it, my dying Lord?"
- "If I did hear it, I wouldn't care. Let's get on with your story.
- You came to this room. The weird door made it look like a good place
- for a fun-death, such as you poor castaways liked to seek, except that
- there was not much sport in dying unless other people know that you did
- it intentionally, and know how you did it.
- Anyway, it was a long climb back up into the Gebiet, where your friends
- were, so you slept by this computer.
- "In the night, while you slept, as you dreamed, the computer sang to
- you:
- of Man I need a temporary dog For a temporary job On a temporary place
- Like Earth!
- When you woke up you were surprised to find that you had dreamed an
- entire new kind of music. Really wild music which made people shudder
- with its delicious evil. And with the music, you had a job. To steal
- a piece of the congo helium
- "You were a clever man. Sun-boy, before the trip down here.
- The Douglas-Ouyang planets caught you and made you a thousand times
- cleverer. You and your friends, this is what you told me or what the
- presence behind you told me, just a half hour ago you and your friends
- stole a subspace communicator console, got a fix on the Douglas-Ouyang
- planets, and got drunk at the sight.
- Iridescent, luminescent. Waterfalls uphill. All that kind of
- thing."
- "And you did get the congo helium The congo helium is made of matter
- and antimatter laminated apart by a dual magnetic grid.
- With that the presence of the Douglas-Ouyang planets made you
- independent of organic processes. You did not need food or rest or
- even air or drink any more. The Douglas-Ouyang planets are very old.
- They kept you as a link. I have no idea of what they intended to do
- with Earth and with mankind. If this story gets out, future
- generations will call you the merchant of menace, because you used the
- normal human appetitiousness for danger to trap other people with
- hypnotics and with music."
- "I hear water," interrupted Sun-boy.
- "I do hear water!"
- "Never mind," said the Lord Sto Odin, "your story is more important.
- Anyhow, what could you and I do about it? I am dying, sitting in a
- pool of blood and effluvium. You can't leave this room with the congo
- helium Let me go on. Or perhaps the DouglasOuyang entity, whatever it
- was " "Is," said Sun-boy.
- " whatever it is, may just have been longing for sensuous
- companionship. Dance on, man, dance on."
- Sun-boy danced and the drums talked with him, rataplan, rataplan!
- kid-nork, kid-nork, nork! while the congo helium made music scream
- through the solid rock.
- The other sound persisted.
- Sun-boy stopped and stared.
- "It is water. It is."
- "Who knows?" said the Lord Sto Odin.
- "Look," screamed Sun-boy, holding the congo helium high.
- "Look!"
- The Lord Sto Odin did not need to look. He knew full well that the
- first
- few tons of water, mud-laden and heavy, had come frothing down the
- corridor and into their rooms.
- "But what do I do?" screamed the voice of Sun-boy. Sto Odin felt that
- it was not Sun-boy speaking, but some relay speaking from the power of
- the Douglas-Ouyang planets. A power which had tried to find friendship
- with man, but had found the wrong man and the wrong friendship.
- Sun-boy took control of himself. His feet splashed in the water as he
- danced. The colors shone on the water as it rose.
- Ritiplin, tip ling said the big drum. Kid-nork, kid-nork, said the
- little drum. Boom, boom, doom, doom, room, said the congo helium
- The Lord Sto Odin felt his old eyes blur but he could still see the
- blazing image of the wild dancer.
- "This is a good way to die," thought he, as he died.
- X
- Far above, on the surface of the planet, Santuna felt the continent
- itself heave beneath her feet and saw the eastern horizon grow dark as
- a volcano of muddy steam shot up from the calm blue sunlit ocean.
- "This must not, must not happen again!" she said, thinking of Sun-boy
- and the congo helium and the death of the Lord Sto Odin.
- "Something must be done about it," she added to herself.
- And she did it.
- In later centuries she brought disease, risk, and misery back to
- increase the happiness of man. She was one of the principal architects
- of the Rediscovery of Man, and at her most famous she was known as the
- Lady Alice More.
- Drunkboat Perhaps it is the saddest, maddest, wildest story in the
- whole long history of space. It is true that no one else had ever done
- anything like it before, to travel at such a distance, and at such
- speeds, and by such means. The hero looked like such an ordinary man
- when people looked at him for the first time. The second time, ah!
- that was different.
- And the heroine. Small she was, and ash-blonde, intelligent, perky,
- and hurt. Hurt yes, that's the right word. She looked as though she
- needed comforting or helping, even when she was perfectly all right.
- Men felt more like men when she was near.
- Her name was Elizabeth.
- Who would have thought that her name would ring loud and clear in the
- wild vomiting nothing which made up Space3?
- He took an old, old rocket, of an ancient design. With it he out flew
- out fled out jumped all the machines which had ever existed before.
- You might almost think that he went so fast that he shocked the great
- vaults of the sky, so that the ancient poem might have been written for
- him alone.
- "All the stars threw down their spears and watered heaven with their
- tears."
- Go he did, so fast, so far that people simply did not believe it at
- first. They thought it was a joke told by men, a farce spun forth by
- rumor, a wild story to while away the summer afternoon.
- We know his name now.
- And our children and their children will know it for always.
- Rambo. Artyr Rambo of Earth Four.
- But he followed his Elizabeth where no space was. He went where men
- could not go, had not been, did not dare, would not think.
- He did all this of his own free will.
- Of course people thought it was a joke at first, and got to making up
- silly songs about the reported trip.
- "Dig me a hole for that reeling feeling! . . ." sang one.
- "Push me the call for the umber number! . . ." sang another.
- "Where is the ship of the ochre joker? . . ." sang a third.
- Then people everywhere found it was true. Some stood stock still and
- got gooseflesh. Others turned quickly to everyday things.
- Space3 had been found, and it had been pierced. Their world would
- never be the same again. The solid rock had become an open door.
- Space itself, so clean, so empty, so tidy, now looked like a million
- million light-years of tapioca pudding gummy, mushy, sticky, not fit to
- breathe, not fit to swim in.
- How did it happen?
- Everybody took the credit, each in his own different way.
- "He came for me," said Elizabeth.
- "I died and he came for me because the machines were making a mess of
- my life when they tried to heal my terrible, useless death."
- II
- "I went myself," said Rambo.
- "They tricked me and lied to me and fooled me, but I took the boat and
- I became the boat and I got there. Nobody made me do it. I was angry,
- but I went. And I came back, didn't I?"
- He too was right, even when he twisted and whined on the green grass of
- Earth, his ship lost in a space so terribly far and strange that it
- might have been beneath his living hand, or might have been half a
- galaxy away.
- How can anybody tell, with Space3?
- It was Rambo who got back, looking for his Elizabeth. He loved her. So
- the trip was his, and the credit his.
- III
- But the Lord Crudelta said, many years later, when he spoke in a soft
- voice and talked confidentially among friends,
- "The experiment was mine. I designed it. I picked Rambo. I drove the
- selectors mad, trying to find a man who would meet those
- specifications. And I had that rocket built to the old, old plans. It
- was the sort of thing which human beings first used when they jumped
- out of the air a little bit, leaping like flying fish from one wave to
- the next and already thinking that they were eagles. If I had used one
- of the regular plano form ships, it would have disappeared with a
- Drunkboat sort of reverse gurgle, leaving space milky for a little bit
- while it faded into nastiness and obliteration. But I did not risk
- that. I put the rocket on a launching pad. And the launching pad
- itself was an interstellar ship! Since we were using an ancient
- rocket, we did it up right, with the old, old writing, mysterious
- letters printed all over the machine. We even had the name of our
- Organization I and 0 and M, for 'the Instrumentality of Mankind'
- written on it good and sharp.
- "How would I know," went on the Lord Crudelta, "that we would succeed
- more than we wanted to succeed, that Rambo would tear space itself
- loose from its hinges and leave that ship behind, just because he loved
- Elizabeth so sharply much, so fiercely much?"
- Crudelta sighed.
- "I know it and I don't know it. I'm like that ancient man who tried to
- take a water boat the wrong way around the planet Earth and found a new
- world instead. Columbus, he was called. And the land, that was
- Australia or America or something like that.
- That's what I did. I sent Rambo out in that ancient rocket and he
- found a way through space-three Now none of us will ever know who might
- come bulking through the floor or take shape out of the air in front of
- us."
- Crudelta added, almost wistfully,
- "What's the use of telling the story? Everybody knows it, anyhow. My
- part in it isn't very glorious. Now the end of it, that's pretty. The
- bungalow by the waterfall and all the wonderful children that other
- people gave to them, you could write a poem about that. But the next
- to the end, how he showed up at the hospital helpless and insane,
- looking for his own Elizabeth. That was sad and eerie, that was
- frightening.
- I'm glad it all came to the happy ending with the bungalow by the
- waterfall, but it took a crashing long time to get there. And there
- are parts of it that we will never quite understand, the naked skin
- against naked space, the eyeballs riding something much faster than
- light ever was. Do you know what an aoudad is? It's an ancient sheep
- that used to live on Old Earth, and here we are, thousands of years
- later, with a children's nonsense rhyme about it. The animals are gone
- but the rhyme remains. It'll be like that with Rambo someday.
- Everybody will know his name and all about his drunk boat but they will
- forget the scientific milestone that he crossed, hunting for Elizabeth
- in an ancient rocket that couldn't fly from peetle to pootle.... Oh,
- the rhyme? Don't you know that? It's a silly thing. It goes: Point
- your gun at a murky lurky.
- (Now you're talking ham or turkey!) Shoot a shot at a dying doudad.
- (Don't ask the lady why or how, dad!)
- Don't ask me what 'ham' and 'turkey' are. Probably parts of ancient
- animals, like beefsteak or sirloin. But the children still say the
- words. They'll do that with Rambo and his drunken boat some day. They
- may even tell the story of Elizabeth. But they will never tell the
- part about how he got to the hospital. That part is too terrible, too
- real, too sad and wonderful at the end. They found him on the grass.
- Mind you, naked on the grass, and nobody knew where he had come
- from!"
- IV
- They found him naked on the grass and nobody knew where he had come
- from. They did not even know about the ancient rocket which the Lord
- Crudelta had sent beyond the end of nowhere with the letters I, 0, and
- M written on it. They did not know that this was Rambo, who had gone
- through Space3. The robots noticed him first and brought him in,
- photographing everything that they did. They had been programmed that
- way, to make sure that anything unusual was kept in the records.
- Then the nurses found him in an outside room.
- They assumed that he was alive, since he was not dead, but they could
- not prove that he was alive, either.
- That heightened the puzzle.
- The doctors were called in. Real doctors, not machines. They were
- very important men. Citizen Doctor Timofeyev, Citizen Doctor Grosbeck,
- and the director himself. Sir and Doctor Vomact. They took the
- case.
- (Over on the other side of the hospital Elizabeth waited, unconscious,
- and nobody knew it at all. Elizabeth, for whom he had jumped space,
- and pierced the stars, but nobody knew it yet!) The young man could not
- speak. When they ran eye prints and fingerprints through the
- Population Machine, they found that he had been bred on Earth itself,
- but had been shipped out as a frozen and unborn baby to Earth Four. At
- tremendous cost, they queried Earth Four with an "instant message,"
- only to discover that the young man who lay before them in the hospital
- had been lost from an experimental ship on an intergalactic trip.
- Lost.
- No ship and no sign of ship.
- And here he was.
- They stood at the edge of space, and did not know what they were
- looking at. They were doctors and it was their business to repair or
- rebuild people, not to ship them around. How should such men know
- about Space3 when they did not even know about Space3 except for the
- fact that people got on the plano form ships and made trips through it?
- They were looking
- for sickness when their eyes saw engineering. They treated him when
- he was well.
- All he needed was time, to get over the shock of the most tremendous
- trip ever made by a human being, but the doctors did not know that and
- they tried to rush his recovery.
- When they put clothes on him, he moved from coma to a kind of
- mechanical spasm and tore the clothing off. Once again stripped, he
- lay himself roughly on the floor and refused food or speech.
- They fed him with needles while the whole energy of space, had they
- only known it, was radiating out of his body in new forms.
- They put him all by himself in a locked room and watched him through
- the peephole.
- He was a nice-looking young man, even though his mind was blank and his
- body was rigid and unconscious. His hair was very fair and his eyes
- were light blue but his face showed character a square chin; a
- handsome, resolute, sullen mouth; old lines in the face which looked as
- though, when conscious, he must have lived many days or months on the
- edge of rage.
- When they studied him the third day in the hospital, their patient had
- not changed at all.
- He had torn off his pajamas again and lay naked, face down, on the
- floor.
- His body was as immobile and tense as it had been on the day before.
- (One year later, this room was going to be a museum with a bronze sign
- reading,
- "Here lay Rambo after he left the Old Rocket for Space Three, " but the
- doctors still had no idea of what they were dealing with.) His face was
- turned so sharply to the left that the neck muscles showed. His right
- arm stuck out straight from the body.
- The left arm formed an exact right angle from the body, with the left
- forearm and hand pointing rigidly upward at 90 from the upper arm. The
- legs were in the grotesque parody of a running position.
- Doctor Grosbeck said,
- "It looks to me like he's swimming.
- Let's drop him in a tank of water and see if he moves." Grosbeck
- sometimes went in for drastic solutions to problems.
- Timofeyev took his place at the peephole.
- "Spasm, still," he murmured.
- "I hope the poor fellow is not feeling pain when his cortical defenses
- are down. How can a man fight pain if he does not even know what he is
- experiencing?"
- "And you. Sir and Doctor," said Grosbeck to Vomact, "what do you
- see?"
- Vomact did not need to look. He had come early and had looked long and
- quietly at the patient through the peephole before the other doctors
- arrived. Vomact was a wise man, with good insight and rich
- intuitions. He could guess in an hour more than a machine could
- diagnose in a year; he was already beginning to understand that this
- was a sickness which no man had ever had before. Still, there were
- remedies waiting.
- The three doctors tried them.
- They tried hypnosis, electrotherapy, massage, sub sonics atropine,
- surgital, a whole family of the digitalin ids and some quasi-narcotic
- viruses which had been grown in orbit where they mutated fast. They
- got the beginning of a response when they tried gas hypnosis combined
- with an electronically amplified tele path this showed that something
- still went on inside the patient's mind. Otherwise the brain might
- have seemed to be mere fatty tissue, without a nerve in it. The other
- attempts had shown nothing. The gas showed a faint stirring away from
- fear and pain. The tele path reported glimpses of unknown skies. (The
- doctors turned the tele path over to the Space Police promptly, so they
- could try to code the star patterns which he had seen in the patient's
- mind, but the patterns did not fit. The tele path though a keen-witted
- man, could not remember them in enough detail for them to be scanned
- against the samples of piloting sheets.) The doctors went back to their
- drugs and tried ancient, simple remedies morphine and caffeine to
- counteract each other, and a rough massage to make him dream again, so
- that the tele path could pick it up.
- There was no further result that day, or the next.
- Meanwhile the Earth authorities were getting restless. They thought,
- quite rightly, that the hospital had done a good job of proving that
- the patient had not been on Earth until a few moments before the robots
- found him on the grass. How had he gotten on the grass?
- The airspace of Earth reported no intrusion at all, no vehicle marking
- a blazing arc of air incandescing against metal, no whisper of the
- great forces which drove a plano form ship through Space2.
- (Crudelta, using faster-than-light ships, was creeping slow as a snail
- hack toward Earth, racing his best to see ifRambo had gotten there
- first.) On the fifth day, there was the beginning of a breakthrough.
- V
- Elizabeth had passed.
- This was found out only much later, by a careful check of the hospital
- records.
- The doctors only knew this much: Patients had been moved down the
- corridor, sheet-covered figures immobile on wheeled beds.
- Suddenly the beds stopped rolling.
- A nurse screamed.
- The heavy steel-and-plastic wall was bending inward. Some slow, silent
- force was pushing the wall into the corridor itself.
- The wall ripped.
- A human hand emerged.
- One of the quick-witted nurses screamed,
- "Push those beds!
- Push them out of the way."
- The nurses and robots obeyed.
- The beds rocked like a group of boats crossing a wave when they came to
- the place where the floor, bonded to the wall, had bent upward to meet
- the wall as it tore inward. The peach-colored glow of the lights
- flicked. Robots appeared.
- A second human hand came through the wall. Pushing in opposite
- directions, the hands tore the wall as though it had been wet paper.
- The patient from the grass put his head through.
- He looked blindly up and down the corridor, his eyes not quite
- focusing, his skin glowing a strange red-brown from the burns of open
- space.
- "No," he said. Just that one word.
- But that
- "No" was heard. Though the volume was not loud, it carried through the
- hospital. The internal telecommunications system relayed it. Every
- switch in the place went negative. Frantic nurses and robots, with
- even the doctors helping them, rushed to turn all the machines back on
- the pumps, the ventilators, the artificial kidneys, the brain
- re-recorders, even the simple air engines which kept the atmosphere
- clean.
- Far overhead an aircraft spun giddily. Its "off switch, surrounded by
- triple safeguards, had suddenly been thrown into the negative position.
- Fortunately the robot-pilot got it going again before crashing into
- earth.
- The patient did not seem to know that his word had this effect.
- (Later the world knew that this was part of the drunk boat effect." The
- man himself had developed the capacity for using his neuro physical
- system as a machine control.) In the corridor, the machine-robot who
- served as policeman arrived. He wore sterile, padded velvet gloves
- with a grip of sixty metric tons inside his hands. He approached the
- patient. The robot had been carefully trained to recognize all kinds
- of danger from delirious or psychotic humans; later he reported that he
- had an input of "danger, extreme" on every band of sensation. He had
- been expecting to seize the prisoner with irreversible firmness and to
- return him to his bed, but with this kind of danger sizzling in the
- air, the robot took no chances. His wrist itself contained a
- hypodermic pistol which operated on compressed argon.
- He reached out toward the unknown, naked man who stood in the big
- torn gap of the wall. The wrist-weapon hissed and a sizable injection
- of condamine, the most powerful narcotic in the known universe, spat
- its way through the skin of Rambo's neck.
- The patient collapsed.
- The robot picked him up gently and tenderly, lifted him through the
- torn wall, pushed the door open with a kick which broke the lock, and
- put the patient back on his bed. The robot could hear doctors coming,
- so he used his enormous hands to pat the steel wall back into its
- proper shape. Work-robots or under people could finish the job later,
- but meanwhile it looked better to have that part of the building set at
- right angles again.
- Doctor Vomact arrived, followed closely by Grosbeck.
- "What happened?" he yelled, shaken out of a lifelong calm.
- The robot pointed at the ripped wall.
- "He tore it open. I put it back," said the robot.
- The doctors turned to look at the patient. He had crawled off his bed
- again and was on the floor, but his breathing was light and natural.
- "What did you give him?" cried Vomact to the robot.
- "Condamine," said the robot, "according to rule forty-sevenB. The drug
- is not to be mentioned outside the hospital."
- "I know that," said Vomact absentmindedly and a little crossly.
- "You can go along now. Thank you."
- "It is not usual to thank robots," said the robot, "but you can read a
- commendation into my record if you want to."
- "Get the blazes out of here!" shouted Vomact at the officious robot.
- The robot blinked.
- "There are no blazes but I have the impression you mean me. I shall
- leave, with your permission."
- He jumped with odd gracefulness around the two doctors, fingered the
- broken door lock absent-mindedly, as though he might have wished to
- repair it, and then, seeing Vomact glare at him, left the room
- completely.
- A moment later soft muted thuds began. Both doctors listened a moment
- and then gave up. The robot was out in the corridor, gently patting
- the steel floor back into shape. He was a tidy robot, probably
- animated by an amplified chicken-brain, and when he got tidy he became
- obstinate.
- "Two questions, Grosbeck," said the Sir and Doctor Vomact.
- "Your service, sir!"
- "Where was the patient standing when he pushed the wall into the
- corridor, and how did he get the leverage to do it?"
- Grosbeck narrowed his eyes in puzzlement.
- "Now that you mention it, I have no idea of how he did it. In fact, he
- could not have done it. But he has. And the other question?"
- "What do you think of condamine?"
- "Dangerous, of course, as always. Addiction can " "Can you have
- addiction with no cortical activity?"
- interrupted Vomact.
- "Of course," said Grosbeck promptly.
- "Tissue addiction."
- "Look for it, then," said Vomact.
- Grosbeck knelt beside the patient and felt with his fingertips for the
- muscle endings. He felt where they knotted themselves into the base of
- the skull, the tips of the shoulders, the striped area of the back.
- When he stood up there was a look of puzzlement on his face.
- "I never felt a human body like this one before. I am not even sure
- that it is human any longer."
- Vomact said nothing. The two doctors confronted one another.
- Grosbeck fidgeted under the calm stare of the senior man. Finally he
- blurted out: "Sir and Doctor, I know what we could do."
- "And that," said Vomact levelly, without the faintest hint of
- encouragement or of warning, "is what?"
- "It wouldn't be the first time that it's been done in a hospital."
- "What?" said Vomact, his eyes those dreaded eyes! making Grosbeck say
- what he did not want to say.
- Grosbeck flushed. He leaned toward Vomact so as to whisper, even
- though there was no one standing near them. His words, when they came,
- had the hasty indecency of a lover's improper suggestion, "Kill the
- patient, Sir and Doctor. Kill him. We have plenty of records of him.
- We can get a cadaver out of the basement and make it into a good
- simulacrum. Who knows what we will turn loose among mankind if we let
- him get well?"
- "Who knows?" said Vomact without tone or quality to his voice.
- "But Citizen and Doctor, what is the twelfth duty of a physician?"
- " "Not to take the law into his own hands, keeping healing for the
- healers and giving to the state or the Instrumentality whatever
- properly belongs to the state or the Instrumentality." " Grosbeck
- sighed as he retracted his own suggestion.
- "Sir and Doctor, I take it back. It wasn't medicine which I was
- talking about. It was government and politics which were really in my
- mind."
- "And now ... ?" asked Vomact.
- "Heal him, or let him be until he heals himself."
- "And which would you do?"
- "I'd try to heal him."
- "How?" said Vomact.
- "Sir and Doctor," cried Grosbeck, "do not ride my weaknesses in this
- case! I know that you like me because I am a bold, confident sort of
- man. Do not ask me to be myself when we do not even know where this
- body came from. If I were bold as usual, I would give him typhoid and
- condamine, stationing tele paths nearby. But this is something new in
- the history of man. We are people and perhaps he is not a person any
- more. Perhaps he
- represents the combination of people with some kind of a new force.
- How did he get here from the far side of nowhere? How many million
- times has he been enlarged or reduced? We do not know what he is or
- what has happened to him. How can we treat a man when we are treating
- the cold of space, the heat of suns, the frigidity of distance? We
- know what to do with flesh, but this is not quite flesh any more. Feel
- him yourself. Sir and Doctor! You will touch something which nobody
- has ever touched before."
- "I have," Vomact declared, "already felt him. You are right.
- We will try typhoid and condamine for half a day. Twelve hours from
- now let us meet each other at this place. I will tell the nurses and
- the robots what to do in the interim."
- They both gave the red-tanned spreadeagled figure on the floor a
- parting glance. Grosbeck looked at the body with something like
- distaste mingled with fear; Vomact was expressionless, save for a wry
- wan smile of pity.
- At the door the head nurse awaited them. Grosbeck was surprised at his
- chiefs orders.
- "Ma'am and Nurse, do you have a weapon proof vault in this hospital?"
- "Yes, sir," she said.
- "We used to keep our records in it until we tele metered all our
- records into Computer Orbit. Now it is dirty and empty."
- "Clean it out. Run a ventilator tube into it. Who is your military
- protector?"
- "My what?" she cried, in surprise.
- "Everyone on Earth has military protection. Where are the forces, the
- soldiers, who protect this hospital of yours?"
- "My Sir and Doctor!" she called out.
- "My Sir and Doctor!
- I'm an old woman and I have been allowed to work here for three hundred
- years. But I never thought of that idea before.
- Why would I need soldiers?"
- "Find who they are and ask them to stand by. They are specialists too,
- with a different kind of art from ours. Let them stand by. They may
- be needed before this day is out. Give my name as authority to their
- lieutenant or sergeant. Now here is the medication which I want you to
- apply to this patient."
- Her eyes widened as he went on talking, but she was a disciplined woman
- and she nodded as she heard him out, point by point. Her eyes looked
- very sad and weary at the end but she was a trained expert herself and
- she had enormous respect for the skill and wisdom of the Sir and Doctor
- Vomact. She also had a warm, feminine pity for the motionless young
- male figure on the floor, swimming forever on the heavy floor, swimming
- between archipelagoes which no man living had ever dreamed before.
- VI
- Crisis came that night.
- The patient had worn hand prints into the inner wall of the vault, but
- he had not escaped.
- The soldiers, looking oddly alert with their weapons gleaming in the
- bright corridor of the hospital, were really very bored, as soldiers
- always become when they are on duty with no action.
- Their lieutenant was keyed up. The wire point in his hand buzzed like
- a dangerous insect. Sir and Doctor Vomact, who knew more about weapons
- than the soldiers thought he knew, saw that the wire point was set to
- high, with a capacity of paralyzing people five stories up, five
- stories down, or a kilometer sideways. He said nothing. He merely
- thanked the lieutenant and entered the vault, closely followed by
- Grosbeck and Timofeyev.
- The patient swam here too.
- He had changed to an arm-over-arm motion, kicking his legs against the
- floor. It was as though he had swum on the other floor with the sole
- purpose of staying afloat, and had now discovered some direction in
- which to go, albeit very slowly. His motions were deliberate, tense,
- rigid, and so reduced in time that it seemed as though he hardly moved
- at all. The ripped pajamas lay on the floor beside him.
- Vomact glanced around, wondering what forces the man could have used to
- make those hand prints on the steel wall. He remembered Grosbeck's
- warning that the patient should die, rather than subject all mankind to
- new and un thought risks, but though he shared the feeling, he could
- not condone the recommendation.
- Almost irritably, the great doctor thought to himself where could the
- man be going?
- (To Elizabeth, the truth was, to Elizabeth, now only sixty meters away.
- Not till much later did people understand what Rambo had been trying to
- do crossing sixty mere meters to reach his Elizabeth when he had
- already jumped an un count of light-years to return to her. To his
- own, his dear, his well beloved who needed him!) The condamine did not
- leave its characteristic mark of deep lassitude and glowing skin:
- perhaps the typhoid was successfully contradicting it. Rambo did seem
- more lively than before. The name had come through on the regular
- message system, but it still did not mean anything to the Sir and
- Doctor Vomact. It would. It would.
- Meanwhile the other two doctors, briefed ahead of time, got busy with
- the apparatus which the robots and the nurses had installed.
- Vomact murmured to the others,
- "I think he's better off.
- Looser all around. I'll try shouting."
- So busy were they that they just nodded.
- Vomact screamed at the patient,
- "Who are you? What are you?
- Where do you come from?"
- The sad blue eyes of the man on the floor glanced at him with a
- surprisingly quick glance, but there was no other real sign of
- communication. The limbs kept up their swim against the rough concrete
- floor of the vault. Two of the bandages which the hospital staff had
- put on him had worn off again. The right knee, scraped and bruised,
- deposited a sixty-centimeter trail of blood some old and black and
- coagulated, some fresh, new and liquid on the floor as it moved back
- and forth.
- Vomact stood up and spoke to Grosbeck and Timofeyev.
- "Now," he said, "let us see what happens when we apply the pain."
- The two stepped back without being told to do so.
- Timofeyev waved his hand at a small white-enameled orderly robot who
- stood in the doorway.
- The pain net, a fragile cage of wires, dropped down from the ceiling.
- It was Vomact's duty, as senior doctor, to take the greatest risk. The
- patient was wholly encased by the net of wires, but Vomact dropped to
- his hands and knees, lifted the net at one corner with his right hand,
- thrust his own head into it next to the head of the patient. Doctor
- Vomact's robe trailed on the clean concrete, touching the black old
- stains of blood left from the patient's "swim" throughout the night.
- Now Vomact's mouth was centimeters from the patient's ear.
- Said Vomact,
- "Oh."
- The net hummed.
- The patient stopped his slow motion, arched his back, looked
- steadfastly at the doctor.
- Doctor Grosbeck and Timofeyev could see Vomact's face go white with the
- impact of the pain machine, but Vomact kept his voice under control and
- said evenly and loudly to the patient: " Who are you ? " The patient
- said flatly,
- "Elizabeth."
- The answer was foolish but the tone was rational.
- Vomact pulled his head out from under the net, shouting again at the
- patient,
- "Who are you?"
- The naked man replied, speaking very clearly: "Chwinkle, chwinkle,
- little chweeble, I am feeling very feeble!"
- Vomact frowned and murmured to the robot,
- "More pain.
- Turn it up to pain ultimate."
- The body threshed under the net, trying to resume its swim on the
- concrete.
- A loud wild braying cry came from the victim under the net.
- It sounded like a screamed distortion of the name Elizabeth, echoing
- out from endless remoteness.
- It did not make sense.
- Vomact screamed back,
- "Who are you?"
- With unexpected clarity and resonance, the voice came back to the three
- doctors from the twisting body under the net of pain: "I'm the shipped
- man, the ripped man, the gypped man, the dipped man, the hipped man,
- the tripped man, the tipped man, the slipped man, the flipped man, the
- nipped man, the ripped man, the clipped man aah!" His voice choked off
- with a cry and he went back to swimming on the floor, despite the
- intensity of the pain net immediately above him.
- The doctor lifted his hand. The pain net stopped buzzing and lifted
- high into the air.
- He felt the patient's pulse. It was quick. He lifted an eyelid.
- The reactions were much closer to normal.
- "Stand back," he said to the others.
- "Pain on both of us," he said to the robot.
- The net came down on the two of them.
- "Who are you?"
- shrieked Vomact, right into the patient's ear, holding the man halfway
- off the floor and not quite knowing whether the body which tore steel
- walls might not, somehow, tear both of them apart as they stood.
- The man babbled back at him: "I'm the most man, the post man, the host
- man, the ghost man, the coast man, the boast man, the closed man, the
- grossed man, the toast man, the roast man, no!
- no! no!"
- He struggled in Vomact's arms. Grosbeck and Timofeyev stepped forward
- to rescue their chief when the patient added, very calmly and clearly:
- "Your procedure is all right. Doctor, whoever you are. More fever,
- please. More pain, please. Some of that dope to fight the pain.
- You're pulling me back. I know I am on Earth. Elizabeth is near. For
- the love of God, get me Elizabeth! But don't rush me.
- I need days and days to get well."
- The rationality was so startling that Grosbeck, without waiting for
- orders from Vomact, as chief doctor, ordered the pain net lifted.
- The patient began babbling again: "I'm the three man, the he man, the
- tree man, the me man, the three man, the three man...."
- His voice faded and he slumped unconscious.
- Vomact walked out of the vault. He was a little unsteady.
- His colleagues took him by the elbows.
- He smiled wanly at them.
- "I wish it were lawful.... I could use some of that condamine myself.
- No wonder the pain nets wake the patients up and even make dead people
- do twitches!
- Get me some liquor. My heart is old."
- Grosbeck sat him down while Timofeyev ran down the corridor in search
- of medicinal liquor.
- Vomact murmured,
- "How are we going to find his Elizabeth? There must be millions of
- them. And he's from Earth Four too."
- "Sir and Doctor, you have worked wonders," said Grosbeck.
- "To go under the net. To take those chances. To bring him to speech.
- I will never see anything like it again. It's enough for any one
- lifetime, to have seen this day."
- "But what do we do next?" asked Vomact wearily, almost in confusion.
- That particular question needed no answer.
- VII
- The Lord Crudelta had reached Earth.
- His pilot landed the craft and fainted at the controls with sheer
- exhaustion.
- Of the escort cats, who had ridden alongside the space craft in the
- miniature spaceships, three were dead, one was comatose, and the fifth
- was spitting and raving.
- When the port authorities tried to slow the Lord Crudelta down to
- ascertain his authority, he invoked Top Emergency, took over the
- command of troops in the name of the Instrumentality, arrested everyone
- in sight but the troop commander, and requisitioned the troop commander
- to take him to the hospital.
- The computers at the port had told him that one Rambo, "sans origine,"
- had arrived mysteriously on the grass of a designated hospital.
- Outside the hospital, the Lord Crudelta invoked Top Emergency again,
- placed all armed men under his own command, ordered a recording monitor
- to cover all his actions if he should later be channeled into a
- court-martial, and arrested everyone in sight.
- The tramp of heavily armed men, marching in combat order, overtook
- Timofeyev as he hurried back to Vomact with a drink.
- The men were jogging along on the double. All of them had live helmets
- and their wire points were buzzing.
- Nurses ran forward to drive the intruders out, ran backward when the
- sting of the stun-rays brushed cruelly over them. The whole hospital
- was in an uproar.
- The Lord Crudelta later admitted that he had made a serious mistake.
- The Two Minutes' War broke out immediately.
- You have to understand the pattern of the Instrumentality to see how it
- happened. The Instrumentality was a self-perpetuating body of men with
- enormous powers and a strict code. Each was a plenum of the low, the
- middle, and the high justice. Each could do anything he found
- necessary or proper to maintain the Instrumentality and to keep the
- peace between the worlds. But if he made a mistake or committed a
- wrong ah, then, it was suddenly different. Any Lord could put another
- Lord to death in an emergency, but he was assured of death and disgrace
- himself if he assumed this responsibility. The only difference between
- ratification and repudiation came in the fact that Lords who killed in
- an emergency and were proved wrong were marked down on a very shameful
- list, while those who killed other Lords rightly (as later examination
- might prove) were listed on a very honorable list, but still killed.
- With three Lords, the situation was different.
- Three Lords made an emergency court; if they acted together, acted in
- good faith, and reported to the computers of the Instrumentality, they
- were exempt from punishment, though not from blame or even reduction to
- citizen status. Seven Lords, or all the Lords on a given planet at a
- given moment, were beyond any criticism except that of a dignified
- reversal of their actions should a later ruling prove them wrong.
- This was all the business of the Instrumentality. The Instrumentality
- had the perpetual slogan: "Watch, but do not govern; stop war, but do
- not wage it; protect, but do not control; and first, survive!"
- The Lord Crudelta had seized the troops not his troops, but the light
- regular troops of Manhome Government because he feared that the
- greatest danger in the history of man might come from the person whom
- he himself had sent through Space3.
- He never expected that the troops would be plucked out from his command
- an overriding power reinforced by robotic telepathy and the
- incomparable communications net, both open and secret, reinforced by
- thousands of years in trickery, defeat, secrecy, victory, and sheer
- experience, which the Instrumentality had perfected since it emerged
- from the Ancient Wars.
- Overriding, overridden!
- These were the commands which the Instrumentality had used before
- recorded time began. Sometimes they suspended their antagonists on
- points of law, sometimes by the deft and deadly insertion of weapons,
- most often by cutting in on other people's mechanical and social
- controls and doing their will, only to drop the controls as suddenly as
- they had taken them.
- But not Crudelta's hastily called troops.
- VIII
- The war broke out with a change of pace.
- Two squads of men were moving into that part of the hospital where
- Elizabeth lay, waiting the endless returns to the jelly-baths which
- would rebuild her poor ruined body.
- The squads changed pace.
- The survivors could not account for what happened They all admitted to
- great mental confusion afterward.
- At the time it seemed that they had received a clear, logical command
- to turn and to defend the women's section by counterattacking their own
- main battalion right in their rear.
- The hospital was a very strong building. Otherwise it would have
- melted to the ground or shot up in flame.
- The leading soldiers suddenly turned around, dropped for cover, and
- blazed their wire points at the comrades who followed them. The wire
- points were cued to organic material, though fairly harmless to
- inorganic. They were powered by the power relays which every soldier
- wore on his back.
- In the first ten seconds of the turnaround, twenty-seven soldiers, two
- nurses, three patients, and one orderly were killed.
- One hundred and nine other people were wounded in that first exchange
- of fire.
- The troop commander had never seen battle, but he had been well
- trained. He immediately deployed his reserves around the external
- exits of the building and sent his favorite squad, commanded by a
- Sergeant Lansdale whom he trusted well, down into the basement, so that
- it could rise vertically from the basement into the women's quarters
- and find out who the enemy was.
- As yet, he had no idea that it was his own leading troops turning and
- fighting their comrades.
- He testified later, at the trial, that he personally had no sensations
- of eerie interference with his own mind. He merely knew that his men
- had unexpectedly come upon armed resistance from antagonists identity
- unknown! who had weapons identical with theirs. Since the Lord
- Crudelta had brought them along in case there might be a fight with
- unspecified antagonists, he felt right in assuming that a Lord of the
- Instrumentality knew what he was doing. This was the enemy, all
- right.
- In less than a minute, the two sides had balanced out. The line of
- fire had moved right into his own force. The lead men, some of whom
- were wounded, simply turned around and began defending themselves
- against the men immediately behind them. It was as though an invisible
- line, moving rapidly, had parted the two sections of the military
- force.
- The oily black smoke of dissolving bodies began to glut the
- ventilators.
- Patients were screaming, doctors cursing, robots stamping around, and
- nurses trying to call each other.
- The war ended when the troop commander saw Sergeant Lansdale, whom he
- himself had sent upstairs, leading a charge out of the women's quarters
- directly at his own commander!
- The officer kept his head.
- He dropped to the floor and rolled sidewise as the air chittered at
- him, the emanations of Lansdale's wire point killing all the tiny
- bacteria in the air. On his helmet phone he pushed the manual controls
- to top volume and to noncoms only and he commanded, with a sudden flash
- of brilliant mother-wit: "Good job, Lansdale!"
- Lansdale's voice came back as weak as if it had been off planet
- "We' LL keep them out of this section yet, sir!"
- The troop commander called back very loudly but calmly, not letting on
- that he thought his sergeant was psychotic,
- "Easy now.
- Hold on. I'll be with you."
- He changed to the other channel and said to his nearby men, "Cease
- fire. Take cover and wait."
- A wild scream came to him from the phones.
- It was Lansdale.
- "Sir! Sir! I'm fighting you, sir. I just caught on. It's getting me
- again. Watch out."
- The buzz and burr of the weapons suddenly stopped.
- The wild human uproar of the hospital continued.
- A tall doctor, with the insignia of high seniority, came gently to the
- troop commander and said,
- "You can stand up and take your soldiers out now, young fellow. The
- fight was a mistake."
- "I'm not under your orders," snapped the young officer.
- "I'm under the Lord Crudelta. He requisitioned this force from the
- Manhome Government. Who are you?"
- "You may salute me, captain," said the doctor.
- "I am Colonel General Vomact of the Earth Medical Reserve. But you had
- better not wait for the Lord Crudelta."
- "But where is he?"
- "In my bed," said Vomact.
- "Your bed?" cried the young officer in complete amazement.
- "In bed. Doped to the teeth. I fixed him up. He was excited.
- Take your men out. We'll treat the wounded on the lawn. You can see
- the dead in the refrigerators downstairs in a few minutes, except for
- the ones that went smoky from direct hits."
- "But the fight? . . ."
- "A mistake, young man, or else "
- "Or else what?" shouted the young officer, horrified at the utter
- mess of his own combat experience.
- "Or else a weapon no man has ever seen before. Your troops fought each
- other. Your command was intercepted."
- "I could see that," snapped the officer, "as soon as I saw Lansdale
- coming at me."
- "But do you know what took him over?" said Vomact gently, while taking
- the officer by the arm and beginning to lead him out of the hospital.
- The captain went willingly, not noticing where he was going, so eagerly
- did he watch for the other man's words.
- "I think I know," said Vomact.
- "Another man's dreams.
- Dreams which have learned how to turn themselves into electricity or
- plastic or stone. Or anything else. Dreams coming to us out of
- space-three."
- The young officer nodded dumbly. This was too much.
- "Space-three?" he murmured. It was like being told that the really
- alien invaders, whom men had been expecting for fourteen thousand years
- and had never met, were waiting for him on the grass. Until now Space3
- had been a mathematical idea, a romancer's daydream, but not a fact.
- The Sir and Doctor Vomact did not even ask the young officer. He
- brushed the young man gently at the nape of the neck and shot him
- through with tranquilizer. Vomact then led him out to the grass. The
- young captain stood alone and whistled happily at the stars in the sky.
- Behind him, his sergeants and corporals were sorting out the survivors
- and getting treatment for the wounded.
- The Two Minutes' War was over.
- Rambo had stopped dreaming that his Elizabeth was in danger. He had
- recognized, even in his deep sick sleep, that the tramping in the
- corridor was the movement of armed men.
- His mind had set up defenses to protect Elizabeth. He took over
- command of the forward troops and set them to stopping the main body.
- The powers which Space3 had worked into him made this easy for him to
- do, even though he did not know that he was doing it.
- IX
- "How many dead?" said Vomact to Grosbeck and Timofeyev.
- "About two hundred."
- "And how many irrecoverable dead?"
- "The ones that got turned into smoke. A dozen, maybe fourteen. The
- other dead can be fixed up, but most of them will have to get new
- personality prints."
- "Do you know what happened?" asked Vomact.
- "No, Sir and Doctor," they both chorused.
- "I do. I think I do. No, I know I do. It's the wildest story in the
- history of man. Our patient did it Rambo. He took over the troops and
- set them against each other. That Lord of the Instrumentality who came
- charging in Crudelta. I've known him for a long long time. He's
- behind this case. He thought that troops would help, not sensing that
- troops would invite attack upon themselves. And there is something
- else."
- "Yes?" they said, in unison.
- "Rambo's woman the one he's looking for. She must be here."
- "Why?" said Timofeyev.
- "Because he's here."
- "You're assuming that he came here because of his own will, Sir and
- Doctor."
- Vomact smiled the wise crafty smile of his family; it was almost a
- trademark of the Vomact house.
- "I am assuming all the things which I cannot otherwise prove.
- "First, I assume that he came here naked out of space itself, driven by
- some kind of force which we cannot even guess.
- "Second, I assume he came here because he wanted something. A woman
- named Elizabeth, who must already be here. In a moment we can go
- inventory all our Elizabeths.
- "Third, I assume that the Lord Crudelta knew something about it. He
- has led troops into the building. He began raving when he saw me. I
- know hysterical fatigue, as do you, my brothers, so I condamined him
- for a night's sleep.
- "Fourth, let's leave our man alone. There'll be hearings and trials
- enough, Space knows, when all these events get scrambled out."
- Voma ct was right.
- He usually was.
- Trials did follow.
- It was lucky that Old Earth no longer permitted newspapers or
- television news. The population would have been frothed up to riot and
- terror if they had ever found out what happened at the Old Main
- Hospital just to the west of Meeya Meefla.
- X
- Twenty-one days later, Vomact, Timofeyev, and Grosbeck were summoned to
- the trial of the Lord Crudelta. A full panel of seven Lords of the
- Instrumentality was there to give Crudelta an ample hearing and, if
- required, a sudden death. The doctors were present both as doctors for
- Elizabeth and Rambo and as witnesses for the Investigating Lord.
- Elizabeth, fresh up from being dead, was as beautiful as a newborn baby
- in exquisite, adult feminine form. Rambo could not take his eyes off
- her, but a look of bewilderment went over his face every time she gave
- him a friendly, calm, remote little smile. (She had been told that she
- was his girl, and she was prepared to believe it, but she had no memory
- of him or of anything else more than sixty hours back, when speech had
- been reinstalled in her mind; and he, for his part, was still thick of
- speech and subject to strains which the doctors could not quite figure
- out.) The Investigating Lord was a man named Starmount.
- He asked the panel to rise.
- They did so.
- He faced the Lord Crudelta with great solemnity.
- "You are obliged, my Lord Crudelta, to speak quickly and clearly to
- this court."
- "Yes, my Lord," he answered.
- "We have the summary power."
- "You have the summary power. I recognize it."
- "You will tell the truth or else you will lie."
- "I shall tell the truth or I will lie."
- "You may lie, if you wish, about matters of fact and opinion, but you
- will in no case lie about human relationships.
- If you do lie, nevertheless, you will ask that your name be entered in
- the Roster of Dishonor."
- "I understand the panel and the rights of this panel. I will lie if I
- wish though I don't think I will need to do so" and here Crudelta
- flashed a weary intelligent smile at all of them "but I will not lie
- about matters of relationship. If I do, I will ask for dishonor."
- "You have yourself been well trained as a Lord of the
- Instrumentality?"
- "I have been so trained and I love the Instrumentality well.
- In fact, I am myself the Instrumentality, as are you, and as are the
- honorable Lords beside you. I shall behave well, for as long as I live
- this afternoon."
- "Do you credit him, my Lords?" asked Starmount.
- The members of the panel nodded their mitred heads. They had dressed
- ceremonially for the occasion.
- "Do you have a relationship to the woman Elizabeth?"
- The members of the trial panel caught their breath as they saw Crudelta
- turn white.
- "My Lords!" he cried, and answered no further.
- "It is the custom," said Starmount firmly, "that you answer promptly or
- that you die."
- The Lord Crudelta got control of himself.
- "I am answering.
- I did not
- know who she was, except for the fact that Rambo loved her. I sent
- her to Earth from Earth Four, where I then was. Then I told Rambo that
- she had been murdered and hung desperately at the edge of death,
- wanting only his help to return to the green fields of life."
- Said Starmount,
- "Was that the truth?"
- "My Lord and Lords, it was a lie."
- "Why did you tell it?"
- "To induce rage in Rambo and to give him an overriding reason for
- wanting to come to Earth faster than any man has ever come before."
- "A-a-ah! A-a-ah!" Two wild cries came from Rambo, more like the call
- of an animal than like the sound of a man.
- Vomact looked at his patient, felt himself beginning to growl with a
- deep internal rage. Rambo's powers, generated in the depths of Space3,
- had begun to operate again. Vomact made a sign. The robot behind
- Rambo had been coded to keep Rambo calm. Though the robot had been
- enameled to look like a white gleaming hospital orderly, he was
- actually a police-robot of high powers, built up with an electronic
- cortex based on the frozen midbrain of an old wolf. (A wolf was a rare
- animal, something like a dog.) The robot touched Rambo, who dropped off
- to sleep.
- Doctor Vomact felt the anger in his own mind fade away. He lifted his
- hand gently; the robot caught the signal and stopped applying the
- narcoleptic radiation. Rambo slept normally; Elizabeth looked
- worriedly at the man who she had been told was her own.
- The Lords turned back from the glances at Rambo.
- Said Starmount, icily,
- "And why did you do that?"
- "Because I wanted him to travel through space-three."
- "Why?"
- "To show it could be done."
- "And do you, my Lord Crudelta, affirm that this man has in fact
- traveled through space-three?"
- "I do."
- "Are you lying?"
- "I have the right to lie, but I have no wish to do so. In the name of
- the Instrumentality itself, I tell you that this is the truth."
- The panel members gasped. Now there was no way out.
- Either the Lord Crudelta was telling the truth, which meant that all
- former times had come to an end and that a new age had begun for all
- the kinds of mankind, or else he was lying in the face of the most
- powerful form of affirmation which any of them knew.
- Even Starmount himself took a different tone. His teasing, restless,
- intelligent voice took on a new timbre of kindness.
- "You do therefore assert that this man has come back from outside our
- galaxy with nothing more than his own natural skin to cover him? No
- instruments? No power?"
- "I did not say that," said Crudelta.
- "Other people have begun to pretend I used such words. I tell you, my
- Lords, that I plano formed for twelve consecutive Earth days and
- nights.
- Some of you may remember where Outpost Baiter Gator is.
- Well, I had a good Go-Captain, and he took me four long jumps beyond
- there, out into intergalactic space. I left this man there. When I
- reached Earth, he had been here twelve days, more or less. I have
- assumed, therefore, that his trip was more or less instantaneous. I
- was on my way back to Baiter Gator, counting by Earth time, when the
- doctor here found this man on the grass outside the hospital."
- Vomact raised his hand. The Lord Starmount gave him the right to
- speak.
- "My Sirs and Lords, we did not find this man on the grass. The robots
- did, and made a record. But even the robots did not see or photograph
- his arrival."
- "We know that," said Starmount angrily, "and we know that we have been
- told that nothing came to Earth by any means whatever, in that
- particular quarter hour. Go on, my Lord Crudelta. What relation are
- you to Rambo?"
- "He is my victim."
- "Explain yourself!"
- "I compute red him out. I asked the machines where I would be most apt
- to find a man with a tremendous lot of rage in him, and was informed
- that on Earth Four the rage level had been left high because that
- particular planet had a considerable need for explorers and
- adventurers, in whom rage was a strong survival trait. When I got to
- Earth Four, I commanded the authorities to find out which border cases
- had exceeded the limits of allowable rage. They gave me four men. One
- was much too large. Two were old. This man was the only candidate for
- my experiment. I chose him."
- "What did you tell him?"
- "Tell him? I told him his sweetheart was dead or dying."
- "No, no," said Starmount.
- "Not at the moment of crisis.
- What did you tell him to make him cooperate in the first place?"
- "I told him," said the Lord Crudelta evenly, "that I was myself a Lord
- of the Instrumentality and that I would kill him myself if he did not
- obey, and obey promptly."
- "And under what custom or law did you act?"
- "Reserved material," said the Lord Crudelta promptly, "There are tele
- paths here who are not a part of the Instrumentality. I beg leave to
- defer until we have a shielded place."
- Several members of the panel nodded and Starmount agreed with them. He
- changed the line of questioning.
- "You forced this man, therefore, to do something which he did not wish
- to do?"
- "That is right," said the Lord Crudelta.
- "Why didn't you go yourself, if it is that dangerous?" "My Lords and
- Honorables, it was the nature of the experiment that the experimenter
- himself should not be expended in the first try. Artyr Rambo has
- indeed traveled through space-three. I shall follow him myself, in due
- course." (How the Lord Crudelta did do so is another tale, told about
- another time.) "If I had gone and if I had been lost, that would have
- been the end of the space-three trials. At least for our time."
- "Tell us the exact circumstances under which you last saw Artyr Rambo
- before you met after the battle in the Old Main Hospital."
- "We had put him in a rocket of the most ancient style. We also wrote
- writing on the outside of it, just the way the Ancients did when they
- first ventured into space. Ah, that was a beautiful piece of
- engineering and archeology! We copied everything right down to the
- correct models of fifteen thousand years ago, when the Paroskii and
- Murkins were racing each other into space. The rocket was white, with
- a red and white gantry beside it. The letters IOM were on the rocket,
- not that the words mattered. The rocket has gone into nowhere, but the
- passenger sits here. It rose on a stool of fire. The stool became a
- column. Then the landing field disappeared."
- "And the landing field," said Starmount quietly, "what was that?"
- "A modified plano form ship. We have had ships go milky in space
- because they faded molecule by molecule. We have had others disappear
- utterly. The engineers had changed this around.
- We took out all the machinery needed for circumnavigation, for
- survival, or for comfort. The landing field was to last three or four
- seconds, no more. Instead, we put in fourteen plano form devices, all
- operating in tandem, so that the ship would do what other ships do when
- they plano form namely, drop one of our familiar dimensions and pick up
- a new dimension from some unknown category of space but do it with such
- force as to get out of what people call space-two and move over into
- space three "And space-three, what did you expect of that?" "I thought
- that it was universal and instantaneous, in relation to our universe.
- That everything was equally distant from everything else. That Rambo,
- wanting to see his girl again, would move in a thousandth of a second
- from the empty space beyond Outpost Baiter Gator into the hospital
- where she was."
- "And, my Lord Crudelta, what made you think so?"
- "A hunch, my Lord, for which you are welcome to kill me."
- Starmount turned to the panel.
- "I suspect, my Lords, that you are more
- likely to doom him to long life, great responsibility, immense
- rewards, and the fatigue of being his own difficult and complicated
- self."
- The mitres moved gently and the members of the panel rose.
- "You, my Lord Crudelta, will sleep till the trial is finished."
- A robot stroked him and he fell asleep.
- "Next witness," said the Lord Starmount, "in five minutes."
- XI
- Vomact tried to keep Rambo from being heard as a witness.
- He argued fiercely with the Lord Starmount in the intermission.
- "You Lords have shot up my hospital, abducted two of my patients, and
- now you are going to torment both Rambo and Elizabeth. Can't you leave
- them alone? Rambo is in no condition to give coherent answers and
- Elizabeth may be damaged if she sees him suffer."
- The Lord Starmount said to him,
- "You have your rules, Doctor, and we have ours. This trial is being
- recorded, inch by inch and moment by moment. Nothing is going to be
- done to Rambo unless we find that he has planet-killing powers. If
- that is true, of course, we will ask you to take him back to the
- hospital and to put him to death very pleasantly. But I don't think it
- will happen. We want his story so that we can judge my colleague
- Crudelta. Do you think that the Instrumentality would survive if it
- did not have fierce internal discipline?"
- Vomact nodded sadly; he went back to Grosbeck and Timofeyev, murmuring
- sadly to them,
- "Rambo's in for it. There's nothing we could do."
- The panel reassembled. They put on their judicial mitres. The lights
- of the room darkened and the weird blue light of justice was turned
- on.
- The robot orderly helped Rambo to the witness chair.
- "You are obliged," said Starmount, "to speak quickly and clearly to
- this court."
- "You're not Elizabeth," said Rambo.
- "I am the Lord Starmount," said the investigating Lord, quickly
- deciding to dispense with the formalities.
- "Do you know me?"
- "No," said Rambo.
- "Do you know where you are?"
- "Earth," said Rambo.
- "Do you wish to lie or to tell the truth?"
- "A lie," said Rambo, "is the only truth which men can share with each
- other, so I will tell you lies, the way we always do."
- "Can you report your trip?"
- "No."
- "Why not, citizen Rambo?"
- "Words won't describe it."
- "Do you remember your trip?"
- "Do you remember your pulse of two minutes ago?" countered Rambo.
- "I am not playing with you," said Starmount.
- "We think you have been in space-three and we want you to testify about
- the Lord Crudelta."
- "Oh!" said Rambo.
- "I don't like him. I never did like him."
- "Will you nevertheless try to tell us what happened also to you?"
- "Should I, Elizabeth?" asked Rambo of the girl, who sat in the
- audience.
- She did not stammer.
- "Yes," she said, in a clear voice which rang through the big room.
- "Tell them, so that we can find our lives again."
- "I will tell you," said Rambo.
- "When did you last see the Lord Crudelta?"
- "When I was stripped and fitted to the rocket, four jumps out beyond
- Outpost Baiter Gator. He was on the ground. He waved good-bye to
- me."
- "And then what happened?"
- "The rocket rose. It felt very strange, like no craft I had ever been
- in before. I weighed many, many gravities."
- "And then?"
- "The engines went on. I was thrown out of space itself."
- "What did it seem like?"
- "Behind me I left the working ships, the cloth and the food which goes
- through space. I went down rivers which did not exist. I felt people
- around me though I could not see them, red people shooting arrows at
- live bodies."
- "Where were you?" asked a panel member.
- "In the wintertime where there is no summer. In an emptiness like a
- child's mind. In peninsulas which had torn loose from the land. And I
- was the ship."
- "You were what?" asked the same panel member.
- "The rocket nose. The cone. The boat. I was drunk. It was drunk. I
- was the drunk boat myself," said Rambo.
- "And where did you go?" resumed Starmount.
- "Where crazy lanterns stared with idiot eyes. Where the waves washed
- back and forth with the dead of all the ages.
- Where the stars became a pool and I swam in it. Where blue turns to
- liquor, stronger than alcohol, wilder than music, fermented with the
- red red reds of love. I saw all the things that men have ever thought
- they saw, but it was me who really saw them. I've heard
- phosphorescence singing and tides that seemed like crazy cattle clawing
- their way out of the ocean, their hooves beating the reefs. You will
- not believe me, but I found Floridas wilder than this, where the
- flowers had human skins and eyes like big cats."
- "What are you talking about?" asked the Lord Starmount.
- "What I found in space-three," snapped Artyr Rambo.
- "Believe it or not. This is what I now remember. Maybe it's a dream,
- but it's all I have. It was years and years and it was the blink of an
- eye. I dreamed green nights. I felt places where the whole horizon
- became one big waterfall. The boat that was me met children and I
- showed them El Dorado, where the gold men live. The people drowned in
- space washed gently past me.
- I was a boat where all the lost spaceships lay ruined and still.
- Seahorses which were not real ran beside me. The summer months came
- and hammered down the sun. I went past archipelagoes of stars, where
- the delirious skies opened up for wanderers. I cried for me. I wept
- for man. I wanted to be the drunk boat sinking. I sank. I fell. It
- seemed to me that the grass was a lake, where a sad child, on hands and
- knees, sailed a toy boat as fragile as a butterfly in spring. I can't
- forget the pride of unremembered flags, the arrogance of prisons which
- I suspected, the swimming of the businessmen! Then I was on the
- grass."
- "This may have scientific value," said the Lord Starmount, "but it is
- not of judicial importance. Do you have any comment on what you did
- during the battle in the hospital?"
- Rambo was quick and looked sane.
- "What I did, I did not do. What I did not do, I cannot tell. Let me
- go, because I am tired of you and space, big men and big things. Let
- me sleep and let me get well."
- Starmount lifted his hand for silence.
- The panel members stared at him.
- Only the few tele paths present knew that they had all said, "Aye. Let
- the man go. Let the girl go. Let the doctors go. But bring back the
- Lord Crudelta later on. He has many troubles ahead of him, and we wish
- to add to them."
- XII
- Between the Instrumentality, the Manhome Government, and the
- authorities at the Old Main Hospital, everyone wished to give Rambo and
- Elizabeth happiness.
- As Rambo got well, much of his Earth Four memory returned.
- The trip faded from his mind.
- When he came to know Elizabeth, he hated the girl.
- This was not his girl his bold, saucy Elizabeth of the markets and the
- valleys, of the snowy hills and the long boat rides. This was somebody
- meek, sweet, sad, and hopelessly loving.
- Vomact cured that.
- He sent Rambo to the Pleasure City of the Hesperides, where bold and
- talkative women pursued him because he was rich and famous.
- In a few weeks a very few indeed he wanted his Elizabeth, this strange
- shy girl who had been cooked back from the dead while he rode space
- with his own fragile bones.
- "Tell the truth, darling." He spoke to her once gravely and
- seriously.
- "The Lord Crudelta did not arrange the accident which killed you?"
- "They say he wasn't there," said Elizabeth.
- "They say it was an actual accident. I don't know. I will never
- know."
- "It doesn't matter now," said Rambo.
- "Crudelta's off among the stars, looking for trouble and finding it. We
- have our bungalow, and our waterfall and each other."
- "Yes, my darling," she said, "each other. And no fantastic Floridas
- for us."
- He blinked at this reference to the past, but he said nothing.
- A man who has been through Space3 needs very little in life, outside of
- not going back to Space3. Sometimes he dreamed he was the rocket
- again, the old rocket taking off on an impossible trip. Let other men
- follow! he thought. Let other men go! I have Elizabeth and I am
- here.
- Mother Hitton's Littul Kittons Poor communications deter theft; good
- communications promote theft; perfect communications stop theft. Van
- Braam The moon spun. The woman watched. Twenty-one facets had been
- polished at the moon's equator. Her function was to arm it.
- She was Mother Hitton, the weapons mistress of Old North Australia.
- She was a ruddy-faced, cheerful blonde of indeterminate age.
- Her eyes were blue, her bosom heavy, her arms strong. She looked like
- a mother, but the only child she had ever had died many generations
- ago. Now she acted as mother to a planet, not to a person; the
- Norstrilians slept well because they knew she was watching. The
- weapons slept their long, sick sleep.
- This night she glanced for the two-hundredth time at the warning bank.
- The bank was quiet. No danger lights shone. Yet she felt an enemy out
- somewhere in the universe an enemy waiting to strike at her and her
- world, to snatch at the immeasurable wealth of the Norstrilians and she
- snorted with impatience. Come along, little man, she thought. Come
- along, little man, and die. Don't keep me waiting.
- She smiled when she recognized the absurdity of her own thought.
- She waited for him.
- And he did not know it.
- He, the robber, was relaxed enough. He was Benjacomin Bozart, and was
- highly trained in the arts of relaxation.
- No one at Sunvale, here on Ttiolle, could suspect that he was a senior
- warden of the Guild of Thieves, reared under the light of the
- starry-violet star. No one could smell the odor of Viola Siderea upon
- him.
- "Viola
- Siderea," the Lady Ru had said, "was once the most beautiful of worlds
- and it is now the most rotten. Its people were once models for
- mankind, and now they are thieves, liars, and killers. You can smell
- their souls in the open day." The Lady Ru had died a long time ago.
- She was much respected, but she was wrong. The robber did not smell to
- others at all. He knew it. He was no more "wrong" than a shark
- approaching a school of cod. Life's nature is to live, and he had been
- nurtured to live as he had to live by seeking prey.
- How else could he live? Viola Siderea had gone bankrupt a long time
- ago, when the photonic sails had disappeared from space and the
- plano-forming ships began to whisper their way between the stars. His
- ancestors had been left to die on an off-trail planet. They refused to
- die. Their ecology shifted and they became predators upon man, adapted
- by time and genetics to their deadly tasks. And he, the robber, was
- champion of all his people the best of their best.
- He was Benjacomin Bozart.
- He had sworn to rob Old North Australia or to die in the attempt, and
- he had no intention of dying.
- The beach at Sunvale was warm and lovely. Ttiolle was a free and
- casual transit planet. His weapons were luck and himself: he planned
- to play both well.
- The Norstrilians could kill.
- So could he.
- At this moment, in this place, he was a happy tourist at a lovely
- beach. Elsewhere, else when he could become a ferret among conies, a
- hawk among doves.
- Benjacomin Bozart, thief and warden. He did not know that someone was
- waiting for him. Someone who did not know his name was prepared to
- waken death, just for him. He was still serene.
- Mother Hitton was not serene. She sensed him dimly but could not yet
- spot him.
- One of her weapons snored. She turned it over.
- A thousand stars away, Benjacomin Bozart smiled as he walked toward the
- beach.
- II
- Benjacomin felt like a tourist. His tanned face was tranquil.
- His proud, hooded eyes were calm. His handsome mouth, even without its
- charming smile, kept a suggestion of pleasantness at its corners. He
- looked attractive without seeming odd in the least.
- He looked much younger than he actually was. He walked with springy,
- happy steps along the beach of Sunvale.
- Mother Hitton's Littui Kittons The waves rolled in, white-crested,
- like the breakers of Mother Earth. The Sunvale people were proud of
- the way their world resembled Manhome itself. Few of them had ever
- seen Manhome, but they had all heard a bit of history and most of them
- had a passing anxiety when they thought of the ancient government still
- wielding political power across the depth of space. They did not like
- the old Instrumentality of Earth, but they respected and feared it. The
- waves might remind them of the pretty side of Earth; they did not want
- to remember the not-so pretty side.
- This man was like the pretty side of old Earth. They could not sense
- the power within him. The Sunvale people smiled absently at him as he
- walked past them along the shoreline.
- The atmosphere was quiet and everything around him serene.
- He turned his face to the sun. He closed his eyes. He let the warm
- sunlight beat through his eyelids, illuminating him with its comfort
- and its reassuring touch.
- Benjacomin dreamed of the greatest theft that any man had ever planned.
- He dreamed of stealing a huge load of the wealth from the richest world
- that mankind had ever built. He thought of what would happen when he
- would finally bring riches back to the planet of Viola Siderea where he
- had been reared.
- Benjacomin turned his face away from the sun and languidly looked over
- the other people on the beach.
- There were no Norstrilians in sight yet. They were easy enough to
- recognize. Big people with red complexions; superb athletes and yet,
- in their own way, innocent, young, and very tough. He had trained for
- this theft for two hundred years, his life prolonged for the purpose by
- the Guild of Thieves on Viola Siderea. He himself embodied the dreams
- of his own planet, a poor planet once a crossroads of commerce, now
- sunken to being a minor outpost for spoliation and pilferage.
- He saw a Norstrilian woman come out from the hotel and go down to the
- beach. He waited, and he looked, and he dreamed.
- He had a question to ask and no adult Australian would answer it.
- "Funny," thought he, "that I call them
- "Australians' even now.
- That's the old, old Earth name for them rich, brave, tough people.
- Fighting children standing on half the world . . . and now they are
- the tyrants of all mankind. They hold the wealth. They have the santa
- clara and other people live or die depending upon the commerce they
- have with the Norstrilians. But I won't. And my people won't. We're
- men who are wolves to man."
- Benjacomin waited gracefully. Tanned by the light of many suns, he
- looked forty though he was two hundred. He dressed casually, by the
- standards of a vacationer. He might have been an intercultural
- salesman, a senior gambler, an assistant star port manager. He might
- even have been a detective working along the commerce lanes. He
- wasn't. He was a thief.
- And he was so good a thief that people turned to him and put their
- property in his hands because he was reassuring, calm, gray-eyed,
- blond-haired. Benjacomin waited. The woman glanced at him, a quick
- glance full of open suspicion.
- What she saw must have calmed her. She went on past. She called back
- over the dune,
- "Come on, Johnny, we can swim out here." A little boy, who looked
- eight or ten years old, came over the dune top, running toward his
- mother.
- Benjacomin tensed like a cobra. His eyes became sharp, his eyelids
- narrowed.
- This was the prey. Not too young, not too old. If the victim had been
- too young he wouldn't know the answer; if the victim were too old it
- was no use taking him on. Norstrilians were famed in combat; adults
- were mentally and physically too strong to warrant attack.
- Benjacomin knew that every thief who had approached the planet of the
- Norstrilians who had tried to raid the dream world of Old North
- Australia had gotten out of contact with his people and had died. There
- was no word of any of them.
- And yet he knew that hundreds of thousands of Norstrilians must know
- the secret. They now and then made jokes about it.
- He had heard these jokes when he was a young man, and now he was more
- than an old man without once coming near the answer. Life was
- expensive. He was well into his third lifetime and the lifetimes had
- been purchased honestly by his people.
- Good thieves all of them, paying out hard-stolen money to obtain the
- medicine to let their greatest thief remain living.
- Benjacomin didn't like violence. But when violence prepared the way to
- the greatest theft of all time, he was willing to use it.
- The woman looked at him again. The mask of evil which had flashed
- across his face faded into benignity; he calmed. She caught him in
- that moment of relaxation. She liked him.
- She smiled and, with that awkward hesitation so characteristic of the
- Norstrilians, she said,
- "Could you mind my boy a bit while I go in the water? I think we've
- seen each other here at the hotel."
- "I don't mind," said he.
- "I'd be glad to. Come here, son."
- Johnny walked across the sunlit dunes to his own death. He came within
- reach of his mother's enemy.
- But the mother had already turned.
- The trained hand of Benjacomin Bozart reached out. He seized the child
- by the shoulder. He turned the boy toward him, forcing him down.
- Before the child could cry out, Benjacomin had the needle into him with
- the truth drug.
- All Johnny reacted to was pain, and then a hammer-blow inside his own
- skull as the powerful drug took force.
- Mother Hitton's Littul Kittons Benjacomin looked out over the water.
- The mother was swimming. She seemed to be looking back at them. She
- was obviously unworried. To her, the child seemed to be looking at
- something the stranger was showing him in a relaxed, easy way.
- "Now, sonny," said Benjacomin, "tell me, what's the outside defense?"
- The boy didn't answer.
- "What is the outer defense, sonny? What is the outer defense?"
- repeated Benjacomin. The boy still didn't answer.
- Something close to horror ran over the skin of Benjacomin Bozart as he
- realized that he had gambled his safety on this planet, gambled the
- plans themselves for a chance to break the secret of the
- Norstrilians.
- He had been stopped by simple, easy devices. The child had already
- been conditioned against attack. Any attempt to force knowledge out of
- the child brought on a conditioned reflex of total muteness. The boy
- was literally unable to talk.
- Sunlight gleaming on her wet hair, the mother turned around and called
- back,
- "Are you all right, Johnny?"
- Benjacomin waved to her instead.
- "I'm showing him my pictures, ma'am. He likes 'em. Take your time."
- The mother hesitated and then turned back to the water and swam slowly
- away.
- Johnny, taken by the drug, sat lightly, like an invalid, on
- Benjacomin's lap.
- Benjacomin said,
- "Johnny, you're going to die now and you will hurt terribly if you
- don't tell me what I want to know." The boy struggled weakly against
- his grasp. Benjacomin repeated,
- "I'm going to hurt you if you don't tell me what I want to know. What
- are the outer defenses? What are the outer defenses?"
- The child struggled and Benjacomin realized that the boy was putting up
- a fight to comply with the orders, not a fight to get away. He let the
- child slip through his hands and the boy put out a finger and began
- writing on the wet sand. The letters stood out.
- A man's shadow loomed behind them.
- Benjacomin, alert, ready to spin, kill, or run, slipped to the ground
- beside the child and said,
- "That's a jolly puzzle. That is a good one. Show me some more." He
- smiled up at the passing adult. The man was a stranger. The stranger
- gave him a very curious glance which became casual when he saw the
- pleasant face of Benjacomin, so tenderly and so agreeably playing with
- the child.
- The fingers were still making the letters in the sand.
- There stood the riddle in letters: mother hit ton littul kit tons
- The woman was coming back from the sea, the mother with questions.
- Benjacomin stroked the sleeve of his coat and brought out his second
- needle, a
- shallow poison which it would take days or weeks of laboratory work to
- detect. He thrust it directly into the boy's brain, slipping the
- needle up behind the skin at the edge of the hairline. The hair
- shadowed the tiny prick. The incredibly hard needle slipped under the
- edge of the skull. The child was dead.
- Murder was accomplished. Benjacomin casually erased the secret from
- the sand. The woman came nearer. He called to her, his voice full of
- pleasant concern,
- "Ma'am, you'd better come here, I think your son has fainted from the
- heat."
- He gave the mother the body of her son. Her face changed to alarm. She
- looked frightened and alert. She didn't know how to meet this.
- For a dreadful moment she looked into his eyes.
- Two hundred years of training took effect . . . She saw nothing. The
- murderer did not shine with murder. The hawk was hidden beneath the
- dove. The heart was masked by the trained face.
- Benjacomin relaxed in professional assurance. He had been prepared to
- kill her too, although he was not sure that he could kill an adult,
- female Norstrilian. Very helpfully said he,
- "You stay here with him. I'll run to the hotel and get help. I'll
- hurry."
- He turned and ran. A beach attendant saw him and ran toward him.
- "The child's sick," he shouted. He came to the mother in time to see
- blunt, puzzled tragedy on her face and with it, something more than
- tragedy: doubt.
- "He's not sick," said she.
- "He's dead."
- "He can't be." Benjacomin looked attentive. He felt attentive. He
- forced the sympathy to pour out of his posture, out of all the little
- muscles of his face.
- "He can't be. I was talking to him just a minute ago. We were doing
- little puzzles in the sand."
- The mother spoke with a hollow, broken voice that sounded as though it
- would never find the right chords for human speech again, but would go
- on forever with the ill-attuned flats of unexpected grief.
- "He's dead," she said.
- "You saw him die and I guess I saw him die, too. I can't tell what's
- happened. The child was full of santa clara He had a thousand years to
- live but now he's dead. What's your name?"
- Benjacomin said,
- "Eldon. Eldon the salesman, ma'am. I live here lots of times."
- III
- "Mother Hitton's littul kit tons Mother Hitton's littul kit tons The
- silly phrase ran in his mind. Who was Mother Hitton? Who was she the
- mother of? What were kit tons Were they a misspelling for "kittens"?
- Little cats? Or were they something else?
- Had he killed a fool to get a fool's answer?
- How many more days did he have to stay there with the doubtful,
- staggered woman? How many days did he have to watch and wait? He
- wanted to get back to Viola Siderea; to take the secret, bad as it was,
- for his people to study. Who was Mother Hitton?
- He forced himself out of his room and went downstairs.
- The pleasant monotony of a big hotel was such that the other guests
- looked interestedly at him. He was the man who had watched while the
- child died on the beach.
- Some lobby-living scandal mongers that stayed there had made up
- fantastic stories that he had killed the child. Others attacked the
- stories, saying they knew perfectly well who Eldon was. He was Eldon
- the salesman. It was ridiculous.
- People hadn't changed much, even though the ships with the Go-Captains
- sitting at their hearts whispered between the stars, even though people
- shuffled between worlds when they had the money to pay their passage
- back and forth like leaves falling in soft, playful winds. Benjacomin
- faced a tragic dilemma. He knew very well that any attempt to decode
- the answer would run directly into the protective devices set up by the
- Norstrilians.
- Old North Australia was immensely wealthy. It was known the length and
- breadth of all the stars that they had hired mercenaries, defensive
- spies, hidden agents, and alerting devices.
- Even Manhome Mother Earth herself, whom no money could buy was bribed
- by the drug of life. An ounce of the santa clara drug, reduced,
- crystallized, and called "stroon," could give forty to sixty years of
- life. Stroon entered the rest of the Earths by ounces and pounds, but
- it was refined back on North Australia by the ton. With treasure like
- this, the Norstrilians owned an unimaginable world whose resources
- overreached all conceivable limits of money. They could buy anything.
- They could pay with other people's lives.
- For hundreds of years they had given secret funds to buying foreigners'
- services to safeguard their own security.
- Benjacomin stood there in the lobby: "Mother Hitton's littul kit tons
- He had all the wisdom and wealth of a thousand worlds stuck in his mind
- but he didn't dare ask anywhere as to what it meant.
- Suddenly he brightened.
- He looked like a man who had thought of a good game to play, a pleasant
- diversion to be welcomed, a companion to be remembered, a new food to
- be tasted. He had had a very happy thought.
- There was one source that wouldn't talk. The library. He could at
- least check the obvious, simple things, and find out what there was
- already in the realm of public knowledge concerning the secret he had
- taken from the dying boy.
- of Man His own safety had not been wasted, Johnny's life had not been
- thrown away, if he could find any one of the four words as a key.
- Mother or Hitton or Littul, in its special meaning, or Kitton. He
- might yet break through to the loot of Norstrilia.
- He swung jubilantly, turning on the ball of his right foot. He moved
- lightly and pleasantly toward the billiard room, beyond which lay the
- library. He went in.
- This was a very expensive hotel and very old-fashioned. It even had
- books made out of paper, with genuine bindings.
- Benjacomin crossed the room. He saw that they had the Galactic
- Encyclopedia in two hundred volumes. He took down the volume headed
- "Hi-Hl." He opened it from the rear, looking for the name "Hitton,"
- and there it was.
- "Hitton, Benjamin pioneer of Old North Australia. Said to be
- originator of part of the defense system. Lived ad. 10719-17213."
- That was all. Benjacomin moved among the books. The word kit tons in
- that peculiar spelling did not occur anywhere, neither in the
- encyclopedia nor in any other list maintained by the library. He
- walked out and upstairs, back to his room.
- "Littul" had not appeared at all. It was probably the boy's own
- childish mistake.
- He took a chance. The mother, half blind with bewilderment and worry,
- sat in a stiff-backed chair on the edge of the porch.
- The other women talked to her. They knew her husband was coming.
- Benjacomin went up to her and tried to pay his respects.
- She didn't see him.
- "I'm leaving now, ma'am. I'm going on to the next planet, but I'll be
- back in two or three subjective weeks. And if you need me for urgent
- questions, I'll leave my addresses with the police here."
- Benjacomin left the weeping mother.
- Benjacomin left the quiet hotel. He obtained a priority passage.
- The easy-going Sunvale police made no resistance to his demand for a
- sudden departure visa. After all, he had an identity, he had his own
- funds, and it was not the custom of Sunvale to contradict its guests.
- Benjacomin went on the ship and as he moved toward the cabin in which
- he could rest for a few hours, a man stepped up beside him. A youngish
- man, hair parted in the middle, short of stature, gray of eyes.
- This man was the local agent of the Norstrilian secret police.
- Benjacomin, trained thief that he was, did not recognize the policeman.
- It never occurred to him that the library itself had been attuned and
- that the word kit tons in the peculiar Norstrilian spelling was itself
- an alert. Looking for that spelling had set off a minor alarm. He had
- touched the trip-wire.
- The stranger nodded. Benjacomin nodded back.
- "I'm a traveling man,
- waiting over between assignments. I haven't been doing very well.
- How are you making out?"
- "Doesn't matter to me. I don't earn money; I'm a technician, Liverant
- is the name."
- Benjacomin sized him up. The man was a technician all right.
- They shook hands perfunctorily. Liverant said,
- "I'll join you in the bar a little later. I think I'll rest a bit
- first."
- They both lay down then and said very little while the momentary flash
- of plano form went through the ship. The flash passed. From books and
- lessons they knew that the ship was leaping forward in two dimensions
- while, somehow or other, the fury of space itself was fed into the
- computers and that these in turn were managed by the Go-captain who
- controlled the ship.
- They knew these things but they could not feel them. All they felt was
- the sting of a slight pain.
- The sedative was in the air itself, sprayed in the ventilating system.
- They both expected to become a little drunk.
- The thief Benjacomin Bozart was trained to resist intoxication and
- bewilderment. Any sign whatever that a tele path had tried to read his
- mind would have been met with fierce animal resistance, implanted in
- his unconscious during early years of training.
- Bozart was not trained against deception by a technician; it never
- occurred to the Thieves' Guild back on Viola Siderea that it would be
- necessary for their own people to resist deceivers. Liverant had
- already been in touch with Norstrilia Norstrilia whose money reached
- across the stars, Norstrilia who had alerted a hundred thousand worlds
- against the mere thought of trespass.
- Liverant began to chatter.
- "I wish I could go further than this trip. I wish that I could go to
- Olympia. You can buy anything in Olympia."
- "I've heard of it," said Bozart.
- "It's sort of a funny trading planet with not much chance for
- businessmen, isn't it?"
- Liverant laughed and his laughter was merry and genuine.
- "Trading? They don't trade. They swap. They take all the stolen loot
- of a thousand worlds and sell it over again and they change it and they
- paint it and they mark it. That's their business there.
- The people are blind. It's a strange world, and all you have to do is
- to go in there and you can have anything you want. Man," said
- Liverant, "what I could do in a year in that place! Everybody is blind
- except me and a couple of tourists. And there's all the wealth that
- everybody thought he's mislaid, half the wrecked ships, the forgotten
- colonies (they've all been cleaned out), and bang! it all goes to
- Olympia."
- Olympia wasn't really that good and Liverant didn't know why it was his
- business to guide the killer there. All he knew was that he had a duty
- and the duty was to direct the trespasser.
- Many years before either man was born the code word had been planted
- in directories, in books, in packing cases and invoices: Kittens
- misspelled. This was the cover name for the outer moon of Norstrilian
- defense. The use of the cover name brought a raging alert ready into
- action, with systemic nerves as hot and quick as incandescent tungsten
- wire.
- By the time that they were ready to go to the bar and have
- refreshments, Benjacomin had half forgotten that it was his new
- acquaintance who had suggested Olympia rather than another place. He
- had to go to Viola Siderea to get the credits to make the flight to
- take the wealth, to win the world of Olympia.
- IV
- At home on his native planet Bozart was a subject of a gentle but very
- sincere celebration.
- The elders of the Guild of Thieves welcomed him. They congratulated
- him.
- "Who else could have done what you've done, boy? You've made the
- opening move in a brand new game of chess. There has never been a
- gambit like this before. We have a name; we have an animal. We'll try
- it right here." The Thieves' Council turned to their own encyclopedia.
- They turned through the name
- "Hitton" and then found the reference kit ton None of them knew that a
- false lead had been planted there by an agent in their world.
- The agent, in his turn, had been seduced years before, debauched in the
- middle of his career, forced into temporary honesty, blackmailed and
- sent home. In all the years that he had waited for a dreaded
- countersign a countersign which he himself never knew to be an
- extension of Norstrilian intelligence he never dreamed that he could
- pay his debt to the outside world so simply. All they had done was to
- send him one page to add to the encyclopedia. He added it and then
- went home, weak with exhaustion. The years of fear and waiting were
- almost too much for the thief. He drank heavily for fear that he might
- otherwise kill himself. Meanwhile, the pages remained in order,
- including the new one, slightly altered for his colleagues. The
- encyclopedia indicated the change like any normal revision, though the
- whole entry was new and falsified: Beneath this passage one revision
- read: Dated 24th year of second issue.
- The reported
- "Kittons" of Norstrilia are nothing more than the use of organic means
- to induce the disease in Earth-mutated sheep which produces a virus in
- its turn, refinable as the santa clara drug.
- The term
- "Kittons" enjoyed a temporary vogue as a reference term both to the
- disease and to the destructibility of the disease in the event of
- external attack. This is believed to have been connected with the
- career of Benjamin Hitton, one of the original pioneers of
- Norstrilia.
- The Council of Thieves read it and the Chairman of the Council said,
- "I've got your papers ready. You can go try them now. Where do you
- want to go? Through Neuhamburg?"
- "No," said Benjacomin.
- "I thought I'd try Olympia."
- "Olympia's all right," said the chairman.
- "Go easy. There's only one chance in a thousand you'll fail. But if
- you do, we might have to pay for it."
- He smiled wryly and handed Benjacomin a blank mortgage against all the
- labor and all the property of Viola Siderea.
- The Chairman laughed with a sort of snort.
- "It'd be pretty rough on us if you had to borrow enough on the trading
- planet to force us to become honest and then lost out anyhow."
- "No fear," said Benjacomin.
- "I can cover that."
- There are some worlds where all dreams die, but square clouded Olympia
- is not one of them. The eyes of men and women are bright on Olympia,
- for they see nothing.
- "Brightness was the color of pain," said Nachtigall, "when we could
- see. If thine eye offend thee, pluck thyself out, for the fault lies
- not in the eye but in the soul."
- Such talk was common in Olympia, where the settlers went blind a long
- time ago and now think themselves superior to sighted people. Radar
- wires tickle their living brains; they can perceive radiation as well
- as can an animal-type man with little aquariums hung in the middle of
- his face. Their pictures are sharp, and they demand sharpness. Their
- buildings soar at impossible angles. Their blind children sing songs
- as the tailored climate proceeds according to the numbers, geometrical
- as a kaleidoscope.
- There went the man, Bozart himself. Among the blind his dreams soared,
- and he paid money for information which no living person had ever
- seen.
- Sharp-clouded and aqua-skied, Olympia swam past him like another man's
- dream. He did not mean to tarry there, because he had a rendezvous
- with death in the sticky, sparky space around Norstrilia.
- Once in Olympia, Benjacomin went about his arrangements for the attack
- on Old North Australia. On his second day on the planet he had been
- very lucky. He met a man named Lavender and he was sure he had
- of Man heard the name before. Not a member of his own Guild of
- Thieves, but a daring rascal with a bad reputation among the stars.
- It was no wonder that he had found Lavender. His pillow had told him
- Lavender's story fifteen times during his sleep in the past week. And,
- whenever he dreamed, he dreamed dreams which had been planted in his
- mind by the Norstrilian counterintelligence. They had beaten him in
- getting to Olympia first and they were prepared to let him have only
- that which he deserved. The Norstrilian police were not cruel, but
- they were out to defend their world. And they were also out to avenge
- the murder of a child.
- The last interview which Benjacomin had with Lavender in striking a
- bargain before Lavender agreed was a dramatic one.
- Lavender refused to move forward.
- "I'm not going to jump off anywhere. I'm not going to raid anything.
- I'm not going to steal anything. I've been rough, of course I have.
- But I don't get myself killed and that's what you're bloody well asking
- for."
- "Think of what we'll have. The wealth. I tell you, there's more money
- here than anything else anybody's ever tried."
- Lavender laughed.
- "You think I haven't heard that before?
- You're a crook and I'm a crook. I don't do anything that's
- speculation. I want my hard cash down. I'm a fighting man and you're
- a thief and I'm not going to ask you what you're up to ... but I want
- my money first."
- "I haven't got it," said Benjacomin.
- Lavender stood up.
- "Then you shouldn't have talked to me. Because it's going to cost you
- money to keep me quiet whether you hire me or not."
- The bargaining process started.
- Lavender looked ugly indeed. He was a soft, ordinary man who had gone
- to a lot of trouble to become evil. Sin is a lot of work. The sheer
- effort it requires often shows in the human face.
- Bozart stared him down, smiling easily, not even contemptuously.
- "Cover me while I get something from my pocket," said Bozart.
- Lavender did not even acknowledge the comment. He did not show a
- weapon. His left thumb moved slowly across the outer edge of his hand.
- Benjacomin recognized the sign, but did not flinch.
- "See," he said.
- "A planetary credit."
- Lavender laughed.
- "I've heard that, too."
- "Take it," said Bozart.
- The adventurer took the laminated card. His eyes widened.
- "It's real," he breathed.
- "It is real." He looked up, incalculably more friendly.
- "I never even saw one of these before. What are your terms?"
- Meanwhile the bright, vivid Olympians walked back and forth past them,
- their clothing all white and black in dramatic contrast. Unbelievable
- geometric designs shone on their cloaks and their hats. The two
- bargainers ignored the natives. They concentrated on their own
- negotiations.
- Benjacomin felt fairly safe. He placed a pledge of one year's service
- of the entire planet of Viola Siderea in exchange for the full and
- unqualified services of Captain Lavender, once of the Imperial Marines
- Internal Space Patrol. He handed over the mortgage. The year's
- guarantee was written in. Even on Olympia there were accounting
- machines which relayed the bargain back to Earth itself, making the
- mortgage a valid and binding commitment against the whole planet of
- thieves.
- "This," thought Lavender, "was the first step of revenge."
- After the killer had disappeared his people would have to pay with
- sheer honesty. Lavender looked at Benjacomin with a clinical sort of
- concern.
- Benjacomin mistook his look for friendliness and Benjacomin smiled his
- slow, charming, easy smile. Momentarily happy, he reached out his
- right hand to give Lavender a brotherly solemnification of the bargain.
- The men shook hands, and Bozart never knew with what he shook hands.
- V
- "Gray lay the land oh. Gray grass from sky to sky. Not near the weir,
- dear. Not a mountain, low or high only hills and gray gray. Watch the
- dappled, dimpled twinkles blooming on the star bar.
- "That is Norstrilia.
- "All the muddy gubbery is gone all the work and the waiting and the
- pain.
- "Beige-brown sheep lie on blue-gray grass while the clouds rush past,
- low overhead, like iron pipes ceilinging the world.
- "Take your pick of sick sheep, man, it's the sick that pays.
- Sneeze me a planet, man, or cough me up a spot of immortality.
- If it's barmy there, where the noddies and the trolls like you live,
- it's too right here.
- "That's the book, boy.
- "If you haven't seen Norstrilia, you haven't seen it. If you did see
- it, you wouldn't believe it.
- "Charts call it Old North Australia."
- Here in the heart of the world was the farm which guarded the world.
- This was the Hitton place.
- Towers surrounded it, and wires hung between the towers, some of them
- drooping crazily and some gleaming with the sheen not shown by any
- other metal made by men from Earth. Within the towers there was open
- land. And within the open land there were twelve thousand hectares of
- concrete. Radar reached down to within millimeter smoothness of the
- of Man surface of the concrete and the other radar threw patterns back
- and forth, down through molecular thinness. The farm went on.
- In its center there was a group of buildings. That was where Katherine
- Hitton worked on the task which her family had accepted for the defense
- of her world.
- No germ came in, no germ went out. All the food came in by space
- transmitter. Within this, there lived animals. The animals depended
- on her alone. Were she to die suddenly, by mischance or as a result of
- an attack by one of the animals, the authorities of her world had
- complete facsimiles of herself with which to train new animal tenders
- under hypnosis.
- This was a place where the gray wind leapt forward released from the
- hills, where it raced across the gray concrete, where it blew past the
- radar towers. The polished, faceted, captive moon always hung due
- overhead. The wind hit the buildings, themselves gray, with the impact
- of a blow, before it raced over the open concrete beyond and whistled
- away into the hills.
- Outside the buildings, the valley had not needed much camouflage. It
- looked like the rest of Norstrilia. The concrete itself was tinted
- very slightly to give the impression of poor, starved, natural soil.
- This was the farm, and this the woman.
- Together they were the outer defense of the richest world mankind had
- ever built.
- Katherine Hitton looked out the window and thought to herself,
- "Forty-two days before I go to market and it's a welcome day that I get
- there and hear the jig of a music."
- Oh, to walk on market day, And see my people proud and gay!
- She breathed deeply of the air. She loved the gray hills though in her
- youth she had seen many other worlds. And then she turned back into
- the building to the animals and the duties which awaited her. She was
- the only Mother Hitton and these were her littul kit tons
- She moved among them. She and her father had bred them from Earth
- mink, from the fiercest, smallest, craziest little minks that had ever
- been shipped out from Manhome. Out of these minks they had made their
- lives to keep away other predators who might bother the sheep on whom
- the stroon grew. But these minks were born mad.
- Generations of them had been bred psychotic to the bone.
- They lived only to die and they died so that they could stay alive.
- These were the kit tons of Norstrilia. Animals in whom fear, rage,
- hunger, and sex were utterly intermixed; who could eat themselves or
- each other; who could eat their young, or people, or anything organic;
- animals who screamed with murder-lust when they felt love; animals born
- to loathe themselves with a fierce and livid hate and who survived only
- because their waking moments were spent on couches,
- strapped tight, claw by claw, so that they could not hurt each other
- or themselves. Mother Hitton let them waken only a few moments in each
- lifetime. They bred and killed. She wakened them only two at a
- time.
- All that afternoon she moved from cage to cage. The sleeping animals
- slept well. The nourishment ran into their blood streams; they lived
- sometimes for years without awaking. She bred them when the males were
- only partly awakened and the females aroused only enough to accept her
- veterinary treatments. She herself had to pluck the young away from
- their mothers as the sleeping mothers begot them. Then she nourished
- the young through a few happy weeks of kittonhood, until their adult
- natures began to take, their eyes ran red with madness and heat, and
- their emotions sounded in the sharp, hideous, little cries they uttered
- through the building; and the twisting of their neat, furry faces, the
- rolling of their crazy, bright eyes, and the tightening of their sharp,
- sharp claws.
- She woke none of them this time. Instead, she tightened them in their
- straps. She removed the nutrients. She gave them delayed stimulus
- medicine which would, when they were awakened, bring them suddenly full
- waking with no lulled stupor first.
- Finally, she gave herself a heavy sedative, leaned back in a chair, and
- waited for the call which would come.
- When the shock came and the call came through, she would have to do
- what she had done thousands of times before.
- She would ring an intolerable noise through the whole laboratory.
- Hundreds of the mutated minks would awaken. In awakening, they would
- plunge into life with hunger, with hate, with rage, and with sex;
- plunge against their straps; strive to kill each other, their young,
- themselves, her. They would fight everything and everywhere, and do
- everything they could to keep going.
- She knew this.
- In the middle of the room there was a tuner. The tuner was a direct,
- empathic relay, capable of picking up the simpler range of telepathic
- communications. Into this tuner went the concentrated emotions of
- Mother Hitton's littul kit tons
- The rage, the hate, the hunger, the sex were all carried far beyond the
- limits of the tolerable, and then all were thereupon amplified. And
- then the waveband on which this telepathic control went out was
- amplified, right there beyond the studio, on the high towers that swept
- the mountain ridge, up and beyond the valley in which the laboratory
- lay. And Mother Hitton's moon, spinning geometrically, bounced the
- relay into a hollow englobement.
- From the faceted moon, it went to the satellites sixteen of them,
- apparently part of the weather control system. These blanketed not
- only space, but nearby subspace. The Norstrilians had thought of
- everything.
- The short shocks of an alert came from Mother Hitton's transmitter
- bank.
- A call came. Her thumb went numb.
- The noise shrieked.
- The mink awakened.
- Immediately, the room was full of chattering, scraping, hissing,
- growling, and howling.
- Under the sound of the animal voices, there was the other sound: a
- scratchy, snapping sound like hail falling on a frozen lake. It was
- the individual claws of hundreds of mink trying to tear their way
- through metal panels.
- Mother Hitton heard a gurgle. One of the minks had succeeded in
- tearing its paw loose and had obviously started to work on its own
- throat. She recognized the tearing fur, the ripping of veins.
- She listened for the cessation of that individual voice, but she
- couldn't be sure. The others were making too much noise. One mink
- less.
- Where she sat, she was partly shielded from the telepathic relay, but
- not altogether. She herself, old as she was, felt queer wild dreams go
- through her. She thrilled with hate as she thought of beings suffering
- out beyond her suffering terribly, since they were not masked by the
- built-in defenses of the Norstrilian communications system.
- She felt the wild throb of long-forgotten lust.
- She hungered for things she had not known she remembered.
- She went through the spasms of fear that the hundreds of animals
- expressed.
- Underneath this, her sane mind kept asking.
- "How much longer can I take it? How much longer must I take it? Lord
- God, be good to your people here on this world! Be good to poor old
- me."
- The green light went on.
- She pressed a button on the other side of her chair. The gas hissed
- in. As she passed into unconsciousness, she knew that her kit tons
- passed into instant unconsciousness too.
- She would waken before they did and then her duties would begin:
- checking the living ones, taking out the one that had clawed out its
- own throat, taking out those who had died of heart attacks, rearranging
- them, dressing their wounds, treating them alive and asleep asleep and
- happy breeding, living in their sleep until the next call should come
- to waken them for the defense of the treasures which blessed and cursed
- her native world.
- VI
- Everything had gone exactly right. Lavender had found an illegal plano
- form ship. This was no inconsequential accomplishment, since plano
- form ships were very strictly licensed and obtaining an illegal one
- was a chore on which a planet full of crooks could easily have worked
- a lifetime.
- Lavender had been lavished with money Benjacomin's money.
- The honest wealth of the thieves' planet had gone in and had paid the
- falsifications and great debts, imaginary transactions that were fed to
- the computers for ships and cargoes and passengers that would be almost
- untraceably commingled in the commerce of ten thousand worlds.
- "Let him pay for it," said Lavender, to one of his confederates, an
- apparent criminal who was also a Norstrilian agent.
- "This is paying good money for bad. You better spend a lot of it."
- Just before Benjacomin took off Lavender sent on an additional
- message.
- He sent it directly through the Go-Captain, who usually did not carry
- messages. The Go-Captain was a relay commander of the Norstrilian
- fleet, but he had been carefully ordered not to look like it.
- The message concerned the plano form license another twenty-odd tablets
- of stroon which could mortgage Viola Siderea for hundreds upon hundreds
- of years. The captain said: "I don't have to send that through. The
- answer is yes."
- Benjacomin came into the control room. This was contrary to
- regulations, but he had hired the ship to violate regulations.
- The Captain looked at him sharply.
- "You're a passenger. Get out."
- Benjacomin said: "You have my little yacht on board. I am the only man
- here outside of your people."
- "Get out. There's a fine if you're caught here."
- "It does not matter," Benjacomin said.
- "I'll pay it."
- "You will, will you?" said the Captain.
- "You would not be paying twenty tablets of stroon. That's ridiculous.
- Nobody could get that much stroon."
- Benjacomin laughed, thinking of the thousands of tablets he would soon
- have. All he had to do was to leave the plano form ship behind, strike
- once, go past the kit tons and come back.
- His power and his wealth came from the fact that he knew he could now
- reach it. The mortgage of twenty tablets of stroon against this planet
- was a low price to pay if it would pay off at thousands to one. The
- Captain replied: "It's not worth it, it just is not worth risking
- twenty tablets for your being here. But I can tell you how to get
- inside the Norstrilian communications net if that is worth twenty-seven
- tablets."
- Benjacomin went tense.
- For a moment he thought he might die. All this work, all this training
- the dead boy on the beach, the gamble with the credit, and now this
- unsuspected antagonist!
- He decided to face it out.
- "What do you know?" said Benjacomin.
- "Nothing," said the Captain.
- "You said
- "Norstrilia." " "That I did," said the Captain.
- "If you said Norstrilia, you must have guessed it. Who told you?"
- "Where else would a man go if you look for infinite riches?
- If you get away with it. Twenty tablets is nothing to a man like
- you."
- "It's two hundred years' worth of work from three hundred thousand
- people," said Benjacomin grimly.
- "When you get away with it, you will have more than twenty tablets, and
- so will your people."
- And Benjacomin thought of the thousands and thousands of tablets.
- "Yes, that I know."
- "If you don't get away with it, you've got the card."
- "That's right. All right. Get me inside the net. I'll pay the
- twenty-seven tablets."
- "Give me the card."
- Benjacomin refused. He was a trained thief, and he was alert to
- thievery. Then he thought again. This was the crisis of his life. He
- had to gamble a little on somebody.
- He had to wager the card.
- "I'll mark it and then I'll give it back to you." Such was his
- excitement that Benjacomin did not notice that the card went into a
- duplicator, that the transaction was recorded, that the message went
- back to Olympia Center, that the loss and the mortgage against the
- planet of Viola Siderea should be credited to certain commercial
- agencies in Earth for three hundred years to come.
- Benjacomin got the card back. He felt like an honest thief.
- If he did die, the card would be lost and his people would not have to
- pay. If he won, he could pay that little bit out of his own pocket.
- Benjacomin sat down. The Go-captain signaled to his pin lighters The
- ship lurched.
- For half a subjective hour they moved, the Captain wearing a helmet of
- space upon his head, sensing and grasping and guessing his way,
- stepping stone to stepping stone, right back to his home. He had to
- fumble the passage, or else Benjacomin might guess that he was in the
- hands of double agents.
- But the captain was well trained. Just as well trained as
- Benjacomin.
- Agents and thieves, they rode together.
- They plano formed inside the communications net.
- Benjacomin shook hands with them.
- "You are allowed to materialize as soon as I call."
- "Good luck, Sir," said the Captain.
- "Good luck to me," said Benjacomin.
- Mother Hitton's Littul Kittens He climbed into his space yacht. For
- less than a second in real space, the gray expanse of Norstrilia loomed
- up. The ship which looked like a simple warehouse disappeared into
- plano form and the yacht was on its own.
- The yacht dropped.
- As it dropped, Benjacomin had a hideous moment of confusion and
- terror.
- He never knew the woman down below but she sensed him plainly as he
- received the wrath of the much-amplified kit tons
- His conscious mind quivered under the blow. With a prolongation of
- subjective experience which made one or two seconds seem like months of
- hurt drunken bewilderment, Benjacomin Bozart swept beneath the tide of
- his own personality.
- The moon relay threw minkish minds against him. The synapses of his
- brain re-formed to conjure up might-have-be ens terrible things that
- never happened to any man. Then his knowing mind whited out in an
- overload of stress.
- His sub cortical personality lived on a little longer.
- His body fought for several minutes. Mad with lust and hunger, the
- body arched in the pilot's seat, the mouth bit deep into his own arm.
- Driven by lust, the left hand tore at his face, ripping out his left
- eyeball. He screeched with animal lust as he tried to devour
- himself... not entirely without success.
- The overwhelming telepathic message of Mother Hitton's littul kit tons
- ground into his brain.
- The mutated minks were fully awake.
- The relay satellites had poisoned all the space around him with the
- craziness to which the minks were bred.
- Bozart's body did not live long. After a few minutes, the arteries
- were open, the head slumped forward, and the yacht was dropping
- helplessly toward the warehouses which it had meant to raid.
- Norstrilian police picked it up.
- The police themselves were ill. All of them were ill. All of them
- were white-faced. Some of them had vomited. They had gone through the
- edge of the mink defense. They had passed through the telepathic band
- at its thinnest and weakest point.
- This was enough to hurt them badly.
- They did not want to know.
- They wanted to forget.
- One of the younger policemen looked at the body and said, "What on
- earth could do that to a man?"
- "He picked the wrong job," said the police captain.
- The young policeman said: "What's the wrong job?"
- "The wrong job is trying to rob us, boy. We are defended, and we don't
- want to know how."
- The young policeman, humiliated and on the verge of anger, looked
- almost as if he would defy his superior, while keeping his eyes away
- from the body of Benjacomin Bozart.
- The older man said: "It's all right. He did not take long to die and
- this is the man who killed the boy Johnny, not very long ago."
- "Oh, him? So soon?"
- "We brought him." The old police officer nodded.
- "We let him find his death. That's how we live. Tough, isn't it?"
- The ventilators whispered softly, gently. The animals slept again. A
- jet of air poured down on Mother Hitton. The telepathic relay was
- still on. She could feel herself, the sheds, the faceted moon, the
- little satellites. Of the robber there was no sign.
- She stumbled to her feet. Her raiment was moist with perspiration. She
- needed a shower and fresh clothes . . .
- Back at Manhome, the Commercial Credit Circuit called shrilly for human
- attention. A junior subchief of the Instrumentality walked over to the
- machine and held out his hand.
- The machine dropped a card neatly into his fingers.
- He looked at the card.
- "Debit Viola Siderea credit Earth Contingency sub credit Norstrilian
- account four hundred million man megayears."
- Though all alone, he whistled to himself in the empty room.
- "We'll all be dead, stroon or no stroon, before they finish paying
- that!" He went off to tell his friends the odd news.
- The machine, not getting its card back, made another one.
- Alpha Ralpha Boulevard We were drunk with happiness in those early
- years.
- Everybody was, especially the young people. These were the first years
- of the Rediscovery of Man, when the Instrumentality dug deep in the
- treasury, reconstructing the old cultures, the old languages, and even
- the old troubles. The nightmare of perfection had taken our
- forefathers to the edge of suicide. Now under the leadership of the
- Lord Jestocost and the Lady Alice More, the ancient civilizations were
- rising like great land masses out of the sea of the past.
- I myself was the first man to put a postage stamp on a letter, after
- fourteen thousand years. I took Virginia to hear the first piano
- recital. We watched at the eye-machine when cholera was released in
- Tasmania, and we saw the Tasmanians dancing in the streets, now that
- they did not have to be protected any more.
- Everywhere, things became exciting. Everywhere, men and women worked
- with a wild will to build a more imperfect world.
- I myself went into a hospital and came out French. Of course I
- remembered my early life; I remembered it, but it did not matter.
- Virginia was French, too, and we had the years of our future lying
- ahead of us like ripe fruit hanging in an orchard of perpetual summers.
- We had no idea when we would die. Formerly, I would be able to go to
- bed and think,
- "The government has given me four hundred years. Three hundred and
- seventy-four years from now, they will stop the stroon injections and I
- will then die." Now I knew anything could happen. The safety devices
- had been turned off. The diseases ran free. With luck, and hope, and
- love, I might live a thousand years. Or I might die tomorrow. I was
- free.
- We revelled in every moment of the day.
- Virginia and I bought the first French newspaper to appear since the
- Most Ancient World fell. We found delight in the news, even in the
- advertisements. Some parts of the culture were hard to reconstruct. It
- was difficult to talk about foods of which only the names survived, but
- the homunculi and the machines, working tirelessly in Downdeep-down
- deep
- kept the surface of the world filled with enough novelties to fill
- anyone's heart with hope. We knew that all of this was make believe
- and yet it was not. We knew that when the diseases had killed the
- statistically correct number of people, they would be turned off; when
- the accident rate rose too high, it would stop without our knowing why.
- We knew that over us all, the Instrumentality watched. We had
- confidence that the Lord Jestocost and the Lady Alice More would play
- with us as friends and not use us as victims of a game.
- Take, for example, Virginia. She had been called Menerima, which
- represented the coded sounds of her birth number. She was small,
- verging on chubby; she was compact; her head was covered with tight
- brown curls; her eyes were a brown so deep and so rich that it took
- sunlight, with her squinting against it, to bring forth the treasures
- of her irises. I had known her well, but never known her. I had seen
- her often, but never seen her with my heart, until we met just outside
- the hospital, after becoming French.
- I was pleased to see an old friend and started to speak in the Old
- Common Tongue, but the words jammed, and as I tried to speak it was not
- Menerima any longer, but someone of ancient beauty, rare and strange
- someone who had wandered into these latter days from the treasure
- worlds of time past. All I could do was to stammer: "What do you call
- yourself now?" And I said it in ancient French.
- She answered in the same language,
- "Je m'appelle Virginie."
- Looking at her and falling in love was a single process. There was
- something strong, something wild in her, wrapped and hidden by the
- tenderness and youth of her girlish body. It was as though destiny
- spoke to me out of the certain brown eyes, eyes which questioned me
- surely and wonderingly, just as we both questioned the fresh new world
- which lay about us.
- "May I?" said I, offering her my arm, as I had learned in the hours of
- hypnopedia. She took my arm and we walked away from the hospital.
- I hummed a tune which had come into my mind, along with the ancient
- French language.
- She tugged gently on my arm, and smiled up at me.
- "What is it," she asked, "or don't you know?"
- The words came soft and unbidden to my lips and I sang it very quietly,
- muting my voice in her curly hair, half-singing half whispering the
- popular song which had poured into my mind with all the other things
- which the Rediscovery of Man had given me: She wasn't the woman I went
- to seek. I met her by the merest chance. She did not speak the French
- of France, But the surded French of Martinique.
- She wasn't rich. She wasn't chic. She had a most entrancing glance,
- And that was all... .
- Suddenly I ran out of words.
- "I seem to have forgotten the rest of it. It's called
- "Macouba' and it has something to do with a wonderful island which the
- ancient French called Martinique."
- "I know where that is," she cried. She had been given the same
- memories that I had.
- "You can see it from Earthport!"
- This was a sudden return to the world we had known.
- Earthport stood on its single pedestal, twelve miles high, at the
- eastern edge of the small continent. At the top of it, the Lords
- worked amid machines which had no meaning any more. There the ships
- whispered their way in from the stars. I had seen pictures of it, but
- I had never been there. As a matter of fact, I had never known anyone
- who had actually been up Earthport.
- Why should we have gone? We might not have been welcome, and we could
- always see it just as well through the pictures on the eye-machine. For
- Menerima familiar, dully pleasant, dear little Menerima to have gone
- there was uncanny. It made me think that in the Old Perfect World
- things had not been as plain or forthright as they seemed.
- Virginia, the new Menerima, tried to speak in the Old Common Tongue,
- but she gave up and used French instead: "My aunt," she said, meaning a
- kindred lady, since no one had had aunts for thousands of years, "was a
- Believer. She took me to the Abba-dingo. To get holiness and luck."
- The old me was a little shocked; the French me was disquieted by the
- fact that this girl had done something unusual even before mankind
- itself turned to the unusual. The Abbadingo was a long-obsolete
- computer set part way up the column of Earthport. The homunculi
- treated it as a god, and occasionally people went to it. To do so was
- tedious and vulgar.
- Or had been. Till all things became new again.
- Keeping the annoyance out of my voice, I asked her: "What was it
- like?"
- She laughed lightly, yet there was a trill to her laughter which gave
- me a shiver. If the old Menerima had had secrets, what might the new
- Virginia do? I almost hated the fate which made me love her, which
- made me feel that the touch of her hand on my arm was a link between me
- and time-forever.
- She smiled at me instead of answering my question. The surface way was
- under repair; we followed a ramp down to the level of the top
- underground, where it was legal for true persons and hominids and
- homunculi to walk.
- I did not like the feeling; I had never gone more than twenty minutes'
- trip from my birthplace. This ramp looked safe enough. There were few
- hominids around these days, men from the stars who (though of true
- human stock) had been changed to fit the conditions of a thousand
- worlds. The homunculi were morally repulsive, though many of them
- looked like very handsome people; bred from animals into the shape of
- men, they took over the tedious chores of working with machines where
- no real man would wish to go. It was whispered that some of them had
- even bred with actual people, and I would not want my Virginia to be
- exposed to the presence of such a creature.
- She had been holding my arm. When we walked down the ramp to the busy
- passage, I slipped my arm free and put it over her shoulders, drawing
- her closer to me. It was light enough, bright enough to be clearer
- than the daylight which we had left behind, but it was strange and full
- of danger. In the old days, I would have turned around and gone home
- rather than expose myself to the presence of such dreadful beings. At
- this time, in this moment, I could not bear to part from my new-found
- love, and I was afraid that if I went back to my own apartment in the
- tower, she might go to hers. Anyhow, being French gave a spice to
- danger.
- Actually, the people in the traffic looked commonplace enough. There
- were many busy machines, some in human form and some not. I did not
- see a single hominid. Other people, whom I knew to be homunculi
- because they yielded the right of way to us, looked no different from
- the real human beings on the surface. A brilliantly beautiful girl
- gave me a look which I did not like saucy, intelligent, provocative
- beyond all limits of flirtation. I suspected her of being a dog by
- origin. Among the homunculi, d'persons are the ones most apt to take
- liberties.
- They even have a dog-man philosopher who once produced a tape arguing
- that since dogs are the most ancient of men's allies, they have the
- right to be closer to man than any other form of life. When I saw the
- tape, I thought it amusing that a dog should be bred into the form of a
- Socrates; here, in the top underground, I was not so sure at all. What
- would I do if one of them became insolent? Kill him? That meant a
- brush with the law and a talk with the Sub-commissioners of the
- Instrumentality.
- Virginia noticed none of this.
- She had not answered my question, but was asking me questions about the
- top underground instead. I had been there only once before, when I was
- small, but it was flattering to have her wondering, husky voice
- murmuring in my ear.
- Then it happened.
- At first I thought he was a man, foreshortened by some trick of the
- underground light. When he came closer, I saw that he was not. He
- must
- have been five feet across the shoulders. Ugly red scars on his
- forehead showed where the horns had been dug out of his skull.
- He was a homunculus, obviously derived from cattle stock.
- Frankly, I had never known that they left them that ill-formed.
- And he was drunk.
- As he came closer I could pick up the buzz of his mind.... they're not
- people, they 're not hominids, and they 're not Us what are they doing
- here? The words they think confuse me.
- He had never telepathed French before.
- This was bad. For him to talk was common enough, but only a few of the
- homunculi were telepathic those with special jobs, such as in the
- Downdeep-down deep where only telepathy could relay instructions.
- Virginia clung to me.
- Thought I, in clear Common Tongue: True men are we. You must let us
- pass.
- There was no answer but a roar. I do not know where he got drunk, or
- on what, but he did not get my message.
- I could see his thoughts forming up into panic, helplessness, hate.
- Then he charged, almost dancing toward us, as though he could crush our
- bodies.
- My mind focused and I threw the stop order at him.
- It did not work.
- Horror-stricken, I realized that I had thought French at him.
- Virginia screamed.
- The bull-man was upon us.
- At the last moment he swerved, passed us blindly, and let out a roar
- which filled the enormous passage. He had raced beyond us.
- Still holding Virginia, I turned around to see what had made him pass
- us.
- What I beheld was odd in the extreme.
- Our figures ran down the corridor away from us my black purple cloak
- flying in the still air as my image ran, Virginia's golden dress
- swimming out behind her as she ran with me. The images were perfect
- and the bull-man pursued them.
- I stared around in bewilderment. We had been told that the safeguards
- no longer protected us.
- A girl stood quietly next to the wall. I had almost mistaken her for a
- statue. Then she spoke, "Come no closer. I am a cat. It was easy
- enough to fool him.
- You had better get back to the surface."
- "Thank you," I said, "thank you. What is your name?"
- "Does it matter?" said the girl.
- "I'm not a person."
- A little offended, I insisted,
- "I just wanted to thank you." As I spoke to her I saw that she was as
- beautiful and as bright as a flame. Her skin was clear, the color of
- cream, and her hair finer than any human hair could possibly he was the
- wild golden orange of a Persian cat.
- "I'm C'mell," said the girl, "and I work at Earthport."
- That stopped both Virginia and me. Cat-people were below us, and
- should be shunned, but Earthport was above us, and had to be respected.
- Which was C'mell?
- She smiled, and her smile was better suited for my eyes than for
- Virginia's. It spoke a whole world of voluptous knowledge. I knew she
- wasn't trying to do anything to me; the rest of her manner showed that.
- Perhaps it was the only smile she knew.
- "Don't worry," she said, "about the formalities. You'd better take
- these steps here. I hear him coming back."
- I spun around, looking for the drunken bull-man. He was not to be
- seen.
- "Go up here," urged C'mell.
- "They are emergency steps and you will be back on the surface. I can
- keep him from following.
- Was that French you were speaking?"
- "Yes," said I. "How did you ?"
- "Get along," she said.
- "Sorry I asked. Hurry!"
- I entered the small door. A spiral staircase went to the surface. It
- was below our dignity as true people to use steps, but with C'mell
- urging me, there was nothing else I could do. I nodded goodbye to
- C'mell and drew Virginia after me up the stairs.
- At the surface we stopped.
- Virginia gasped,
- "Wasn't it horrible?"
- "We're safe now," said I. "It's not safety," she said.
- "It's the dirtiness of it. Imagine having to talk to her!"
- Virginia meant that C'mell was worse than the drunken bull-man. She
- sensed my reserve because she said, "The sad thing is, you'll see her
- again . . ."
- "What! How do you know that?"
- "I don't know it," said Virginia.
- "I guess it. But I guess good, very good. After all, I went to the
- Abba-dingo."
- "I asked you, darling, to tell me what happened there."
- She shook her head mutely and began walking down the street way I had
- no choice but to follow her. It made me a little irritable.
- I asked again, more crossly,
- "What was it like?"
- With hurt girlish dignity she said,
- "Nothing, nothing. It was a long climb. The old woman made me go with
- her. It turned out that the machine
- was not talking that day, anyhow, so we got permission to drop down a
- shaft and to come back on the rolling road. It was just a wasted
- day."
- She had been talking straight ahead, not to me, as though the memory
- were a little ugly.
- Then she turned her face to me. The brown eyes looked into my eyes as
- though she were searching for my soul. (Soul. There's a word we have
- in French, and there is nothing quite like it in the Old Common
- Tongue.) She brightened and pleaded with me: "Let's not be dull on the
- new day. Let's be good to the new us, Paul. Let's do something really
- French, if that's what we are to be.
- "A cafe," I cried.
- "We need a cafe. And I know where one is."
- "Where?"
- "Two under grounds over. Where the machines come out and where they
- permit the homunculi to peer in the window." The thought of homunculi
- peering at us struck the new me as amusing, though the old me had taken
- them as much for granted as windows or tables. The old me never met
- any, but knew that they weren't exactly people, since they were bred
- from animals, but they looked just like people, and they could talk. It
- took a Frenchman like the new me to realize that they could be ugly, or
- beautiful, or picturesque. More than picturesque: romantic.
- Evidently Virginia now thought the same, for she said,
- "But they'renette just adorable. What is the cafe called?"
- "The Greasy Cat," said I. The Greasy Cat. How was I to know that this
- led to a nightmare between high waters, and to the winds which cried?
- How was I to suppose that this had anything to do with Alpha Ralpha
- Boulevard?
- No force in the world could have taken me there, if I had known.
- Other new-French people had gotten to the cafe before us.
- A waiter with a big brown moustache took our order. I looked closely
- at him to see if he might be a licensed homunculus, allowed to work
- among people because his services were indispensable; but he was not.
- He was pure machine, though his voice rang out with old-Parisian
- heartiness, and the designers had even built into him the nervous habit
- of mopping the back of his hand against his big moustache, and had
- fixed him so that little beads of sweat showed high up on his brow,
- just below the hairline.
- "Mamselle? M'sieu? Beer? Coffee? Red wine next month.
- The sun will shine in the quarter after the hour and after the half
- hour At twenty minutes to the hour it will rain for five minutes so
- that you can enjoy these umbrellas. I am a native of Alsace.
- You may speak French or German to me."
- "Anything," said Virginia.
- "You decide, Paul."
- "Beer, please," said I. "Blonde beer for both of us."
- "But certainly, M'sieu," said the waiter.
- He left, waving his cloth wildly over his arm.
- Virginia puckered up her eyes against the sun and said,
- "I
- wish it would rain now. I've never seen real rain."
- "Be patient, honey."
- She turned earnestly to me.
- "What is
- "German," Paul?"
- "Another language, another culture. I read they will bring it to life
- next year. But don't you like being French?"
- "I like it fine," she said.
- "Much better than being a number. But, Paul " And then she stopped,
- her eyes blurred with perplexity.
- "Yes, darling?"
- "Paul," she said, and the statement of my name was a cry of hope from
- some depth of her mind beyond new me, beyond old me, beyond even the
- contrivances of the Lords who moulded us. I reached for her hand.
- Said I,
- "You can tell me, darling."
- "Paul," she said, and it was almost weeping,
- "Paul, why does it all happen so fast? This is our first day, and we
- both feel that we may spend the rest of our lives together. There's
- something about marriage, whatever that is, and we're supposed to find
- a priest, and I don't understand that, either.
- Paul, Paul, Paul, why does it happen so fast? I want to love you. I
- do love you. But I don't want to be made to love you. I want it to be
- the real me," and as she spoke, tears poured from her eyes though her
- voice remained steady enough.
- Then it was that I said the wrong thing.
- "You don't have to worry, honey. I'm sure that the Lords of the
- Instrumentality have programmed everything well."
- At that, she burst into tears, loudly and uncontrollably. I had never
- seen an adult weep before. It was strange and frightening.
- A man from the next table came over and stood beside me, but I did not
- so much as glance at him.
- "Darling," said I, reasonably, "darling, we can work it out " "Paul,
- let me leave you, so that I may be yours. Let me go away for a few
- days or a few weeks or a few years. Then, if if if I do come back,
- you'll know it's me and not some program ordered by a machine. For
- God's sake, Paul for God's sake!" In a different voice she said,
- "What is God, Paul?
- They gave us the words to speak, but I do not know what they mean." The
- man beside me spoke.
- "I can take you to God," he said.
- "Who are you?" said I. "And who asked you to interfere?"
- This was not the kind of language that we had ever used when speaking
- the Old Common Tongue when they had given us a new language they had
- built in temperament as well.
- The stranger kept his politeness he was as French as we but he kept
- his temper well.
- "My name," he said, "is Maximilien Macht, and I used to be a
- Believer."
- Virginia's eyes lit up. She wiped her face absentmindedly while
- staring at the man. He was tall, lean, sunburned. (How could he have
- gotten sunburned so soon?) He had reddish hair and a moustache almost
- like that of the robot waiter.
- "You asked about God, Mamselle," said the stranger.
- "God is where he has always been around us, near us, in us."
- This was strange talk from a man who looked worldly. I rose to my feet
- to bid him goodbye. Virginia guessed what I was doing and she said:
- "That's nice of you, Paul. Give him a chair."
- There was warmth in her voice.
- The machine waiter came back with two conical beakers made of glass.
- They had a golden fluid in them with a cap of foam on top. I had never
- seen or heard of beer before, but I knew exactly how it would taste. I
- put imaginary money on the tray, received imaginary change, paid the
- waiter an imaginary tip. The Instrumentality had not yet figured out
- how to have separate kinds of money for all the new cultures, and of
- course you could not use real money to pay for food or drink. Food and
- drink are free.
- The machine wiped his moustache, used his serviette (checked red and
- white) to dab the sweat off his brow, and then looked inquiringly at
- Monsieur Macht.
- "M'sieu, you will sit here?"
- "Indeed," said Macht.
- "Shall I serve you here?"
- "But why not?" said Macht.
- "If these good people permit."
- "Very well," said the machine, wiping his moustache with the back of
- his hand. He fled to the dark recesses of the bar.
- All this time Virginia had not taken her eyes off Macht.
- "You are a Believer?" she asked.
- "You are still a Believer, when you have been made French like us? How
- do you know you're you? Why do I love Paul? Are the Lords and their
- machines controlling everything in us? I want to be me. Do you know
- how to be me?"
- "Not you, Mamselle," said Macht.
- "That would be too great an honor. But I am learning how to be myself.
- You see," he added, turning to me,
- "I have been French for two weeks now, and I know how much of me is
- myself, and how much has been added by this new process of giving us
- language and danger again."
- The waiter came back with a small beaker. It stood on a stem, so that
- it
- of Man looked like an evil little miniature of Earthport. The fluid
- it contained was milky white.
- Macht lifted his glass to us.
- "Your health!"
- Virginia stared at him as if she were going to cry again.
- When he and I sipped, she blew her nose and put her handkerchief away.
- It was the first time I had ever seen a person perform that act of
- blowing the nose, but it seemed to go well with our new culture.
- Macht smiled at both of us, as if he were going to begin a speech. The
- sun came out, right on time. It gave him a halo, and made him look
- like a devil or a saint.
- But it was Virginia who spoke first.
- "You have been there?"
- Macht raised his eyebrows a little, frowned, and said,
- "Yes,"
- very quietly.
- "Did you get a word?" she persisted.
- "Yes." He looked glum, and a little troubled.
- "What did it say?"
- For answer, he shook his head at her, as if there were things which
- should never be mentioned in public.
- I wanted to break in, to find out what this was all about.
- Virginia went on, heeding me not at all: "But it did say something!"
- "Yes," said Macht.
- "Was it important?"
- "Mamselle, let us not talk about it."
- "We must," she cried.
- "It's life or death." Her hands were clenched so tightly together that
- her knuckles showed white. Her beer stood in front of her, untouched,
- growing warm in the sunlight.
- "Very well," said Macht, "you may ask ... I cannot guarantee to
- answer."
- I controlled myself no longer.
- "What's all this about?"
- Virginia looked at me with scorn, but even her scorn was the scorn of a
- lover, not the cold remoteness of the past.
- "Please, Paul, you wouldn't know. Wait a while. What did it say to
- you, M'sieu Macht?"
- "That I, Maximilien Macht, would live or die with a brown haired girl
- who was already betrothed." He smiled wryly.
- "And I do not even quite know what 'betrothed' means."
- "We'll find out," said Virginia.
- "When did it say this?"
- "Who is 'it'?" I shouted at them.
- "For God's sake, what is this all about?"
- Macht looked at me and dropped his voice when he spoke: "The
- Abba-dingo." To her he said,
- "Last week."
- Virginia turned white.
- "So it does work, it does, it does. Paul darling, it
- said nothing to me. But it said to my aunt something which I can't
- ever forget!"
- I held her arm firmly and tenderly and tried to look into her eyes, but
- she looked away. Said I,
- "What did it say?"
- "Paul and Virginia."
- "So what?" said I. I scarcely knew her. Her lips were tense and
- compressed. She was not angry. It was something different, worse. She
- was in the grip of tension. I suppose we had not seen that for
- thousands of years, either.
- "Paul, seize this simple fact, if you can grasp it. The machine gave
- that woman our names but it gave them to her twelve years ago."
- Macht stood up so suddenly that his chair fell over, and the waiter
- began running toward us.
- "That settles it," he said.
- "We're all going back."
- "Going where?" I said.
- "To the Abba-dingo."
- "But why now?" said I; and,
- "Will it work?" said Virginia, both at the same time.
- "It always works," said Macht, "if you go on the northern side."
- "How do you get there?" said Virginia.
- Macht frowned sadly.
- "There's only one way. By Alpha Ralpha Boulevard." Virginia stood up.
- And so did I. Then, as I rose, I remembered. Alpha Ralpha Boulevard.
- It was a ruined street hanging in the sky, faint as a vapor trail. It
- had been a processional highway once, where conquerors came down and
- tribute went up. But it was ruined, lost in the clouds, closed to
- mankind for a hundred centuries.
- "I know it," said I. "It's ruined."
- Macht said nothing, but he stared at me as if I were an outsider . .
- .
- Virginia, very quiet and white of countenance, said,
- "Come along."
- "But why," said I. "Why?"
- "You fool," she said, "if we don't have a God, at least we have a
- machine. This is the only thing left on or off the world which the
- Instrumentality doesn't understand. Maybe it tells the future.
- Maybe it's an un-machine. It certainly comes from a different time.
- Can't you use it, darling? If it says we're us, we're us."
- "And if it doesn't?"
- "Then we're not." Her face was sullen with grief.
- "What do you mean?"
- "If we're not us," she said, "we're just toys, dolls, puppets that the
- Lords have written on. You're not you and I'm not me. But if the
- Abba-dingo, which knew the names Paul and Virginia twelve years before
- it
- happened if the Abba-dingo says that we are us, I don't care if it's a
- predicting machine or a god or a devil or a what. I don't care, but
- I'll have the truth."
- What could I have answered to that? Macht led, she followed, and I
- walked third in single file. We left the sunlight of The Greasy Cat;
- just as we left, a light rain began to fall.
- The waiter, looking momentarily like the machine that he was, stared
- straight ahead. We crossed the lip of the underground and went down to
- the fast expressway.
- When we came out, we were in a region of fine homes. All were in
- ruins. The trees had thrust their way into the buildings.
- Flowers rioted across the lawn, through the open doors, and blazed in
- the roofless rooms. Who needed a house in the open, when the
- population of Earth had dropped so that the cities were commodious and
- empty?
- Once I thought I saw a family of homunculi, including little ones,
- peering at me as we trudged along the soft gravel road.
- Maybe the faces I had seen at the edge of the house were fantasies.
- Macht said nothing.
- Virginia and I held hands as we walked beside him. I could have been
- happy at this odd excursion, but her hand was tightly clenched in mine.
- She bit her lower lip from time to time. I knew it mattered to her she
- was on a pilgrimage. (A pilgrimage was an ancient walk to some
- powerful place, very good for body and soul.) I didn't mind going
- along. In fact, they could not have kept me from coming, once she and
- Macht decided to leave the cafe. But I didn't have to take it
- seriously.
- Did I?
- What did Macht want?
- Who was Macht? What thoughts had that mind learned in two short weeks?
- How had he preceded us into a new world of danger and adventure? I did
- not trust him. For the first time in my life I felt alone. Always,
- always, up to now, I had only to think about the Instrumentality and
- some protector leaped fully armed into my mind. Telepathy guarded
- against all dangers, healed all hurts, carried each of us forward to
- the one hundred and forty-six thousand and ninety-seven days which had
- been allotted us. Now it was different. I did not know this man, and
- it was on him that I relied, not on the powers which had shielded and
- protected us.
- We turned from the ruined road into an immense boulevard. The pavement
- was so smooth and unbroken that nothing grew on it, save where the wind
- and dust had deposited random little pockets of earth.
- Macht stopped.
- "This is it," he said.
- "Alpha Ralpha Boulevard."
- We fell silent and looked at the causeway of forgotten empires.
- To our left the boulevard disappeared in a gentle curve. It led far
- north
- of the city in which I had been reared. I knew that there was another
- city to the north, but I had forgotten its name. Why should I have
- remembered it? It was sure to be just like my own.
- But to the right To the right the boulevard rose sharply, like a ramp.
- It disappeared into the clouds. Just at the edge of the cloud-line
- there was a hint of disaster. I could not see for sure, but it looked
- to me as though the whole boulevard had been sheared off by
- unimaginable forces. Somewhere beyond the clouds there stood the
- Abba-dingo, the place where all questions were answered ... Or so they
- thought.
- Virginia cuddled close to me.
- "Let's turn back," said I. "We are city people. We don't know anything
- about ruins."
- "You can if you want to," said Macht.
- "I was just trying to do you a favor."
- We both looked at Virginia.
- She looked up at me with those brown eyes. From the eyes there came a
- plea older than woman or man, older than the human race. I knew what
- she was going to say before she said it. She was going to say that she
- had to know.
- Macht was idly crushing some soft rocks near his foot.
- At last Virginia spoke up: "Paul, I don't want danger for its own sake.
- But I meant what I said back there. Isn't there a chance that we were
- told to love each other? What sort of a life would it be if our
- happiness, our own selves, depended on a thread in a machine or on a
- mechanical voice which spoke to us when we were asleep and learning
- French? It may be fun to go back to the old world. I guess it is. I
- know that you give me a kind of happiness which I never even suspected
- before this day. If it's really us, we have something wonderful, and
- we ought to know it.
- But if it isn't " She burst into sobs.
- I wanted to say,
- "If it isn't, it will seem just the same," but the ominous sulky face
- of Macht looked at me over Virginia's shoulder as I drew her to me.
- There was nothing to say.
- I held her close.
- From beneath Macht's foot there flowed a trickle of blood.
- The dust drank it up.
- "Macht," said I, "are you hurt?"
- Virginia turned around, too.
- Macht raised his eyebrows at me and said with unconcern, "No. Why?"
- "The blood. At your feet."
- He glanced down.
- "Oh, those," he said, "they're nothing. Just the eggs of some kind of
- an un-bird which does not even fly."
- of Man "Stop it!" I shouted telepathically, using the Old Common
- Tongue. I did not even try to think in our new-learned French.
- He stepped back a pace in surprise.
- Out of nothing there came to me a message: thank you thank you good
- great go home please thank you good great go away man bad man bad man
- bad... Somewhere an animal or bird was warning me against Macht. I
- thought a casual thanks to it and turned my attention to Macht.
- He and I stared at each other. Was this what culture was?
- Were we now men? Did freedom always include the freedom to mistrust,
- to fear, to hate?
- I liked him not at all. The words of forgotten crimes came into my
- mind: assassination, murder, abduction, insanity, rape, robbery . .
- .
- We had known none of these things and yet I felt them all.
- He spoke evenly to me. We had both been careful to guard our minds
- against being read telepathically, so that our only means of
- communication were empathy and French.
- "It's your idea," he said, most untruthfully, "or at least your
- lady's..."
- "Has lying already come into the world," said I, "so that we walk into
- the clouds for no reason at all?"
- "There is a reason," said Macht.
- I pushed Virginia gently aside and capped my mind so tightly that the
- anti-telepathy felt like a headache.
- "Macht," said I, and I myself could hear the snarl of an animal in my
- own voice, "tell me why you have brought us here or I will kill you."
- He did not retreat. He faced me, ready for a fight. He said, "Kill?
- You mean, to make me dead?" but his words did not carry conviction.
- Neither one of us knew how to fight, but he readied for defense and I
- for attack.
- Underneath my thought shield an animal thought crept in: good man good
- man take him by the neck no-air he-aaah no-air he-aaah like broken
- egg--- I took the advice without worrying where it came from. It was
- simple. I walked over to Macht, reached my hands around his throat,
- and squeezed. He tried to push my hands away. Then he tried to kick
- me. All I did was hang on to his throat. If I had been a Lord or a
- Go-captain, I might have known about fighting. But I did not, and
- neither did he.
- It ended when a sudden weight dragged at my hands.
- Out of surprise, I let go.
- Macht had become unconscious. Was that dead?
- It could not have been, because he sat up. Virginia ran to him. He
- rubbed his throat and said with a rough voice: "You should not have
- done that."
- This gave me courage.
- "Tell me," I spat at him, "tell me why you wanted us to come, or I will
- do it again."
- Macht grinned weakly. He leaned his head against Virginia's arm.
- "It's fear," he said.
- "Fear."
- "Fear?" I knew the word peur but not the meaning. Was it some kind of
- disquiet or animal alarm?
- I had been thinking with my mind open; he thought back yes.
- "But why do you like it?" I asked.
- It is delicious, he thought. It makes me sick and thrilly and alive.
- It is like strong medicine, almost as good as stroon. I went there
- before. High up, I had much fear. It was wonderful and bad and good,
- all at the same time. I lived a thousand years in a single hour. I
- wanted more of it, but I thought it would be even more exciting with
- other people.
- "Now I will kill you," said I in French.
- "You are very very ..." I had to look for the word.
- "You are very evil."
- "No," said Virginia, "let him talk."
- He thought at me, not bothering with words. This is what the Lords of
- the Instrumentality never let us have. Fear. Reality. We were born
- in a stupor and we died in a dream. Even the under people the animals,
- had more life than we did. The machines did not have fear. That's
- what we were. Machines who thought they were men. And now we are
- free.
- He saw the edge of raw, red anger in my mind, and he changed the
- subject. I did not lie to you. This is the way to the Abba-dingo. I
- have been there. It works. On this side, it always works.
- "It works," cried Virginia.
- "You see he says so. It works! He is telling the truth. Oh, Paul, do
- let's go on!"
- "All right," said I, "we'll go."
- I helped him rise. He looked embarrassed, like a man who has shown
- something of which he is ashamed.
- We walked onto the surface of the indestructible boulevard.
- It was comfortable to the feet.
- At the bottom of my mind the little unseen bird or animal babbled its
- thoughts at me: goodman goodman make him dead take water take water...
- I paid no attention as I walked forward with her and him, Virginia
- between us. I paid no attention.
- I wish I had.
- We walked for a long time.
- The process was new to us. There was something exhilarating in knowing
- that no one guarded us, that the air was free air, moving without
- benefit of weather machines. We saw many birds, and when I thought at
- them I found their minds startled and opaque; they were natural birds,
- the like of
- of Man which I had never seen before. Virginia asked me their names,
- and I outrageously applied all the bird-names which we had learned in
- French without knowing whether they were historically right or not.
- Maximilien Macht cheered up, too, and he even sang us a song, rather
- off key, to the effect that we would take the high road and he the low
- one, but that he would be in Scotland before us. It did not make
- sense, but the lilt was pleasant. Whenever he got a certain distance
- ahead of Virginia and me, I made up variations on
- "Macouba" and sang-whispered the phrases into her pretty ear: She wasn
- 't the woman I went to seek. I met her by the merest chance.
- She did not speak the French of France, But the surded French of
- Martinique.
- We were happy in adventure and freedom, until we became hungry. Then
- our troubles began.
- Virginia stepped up to a lamp-post, struck it lightly with her fist,
- and said,
- "Feed me." The post should either have opened, serving us a dinner, or
- else told us where, within the next few hundred yards, food was to be
- had. It did neither. It did nothing.
- It must have been broken.
- With that, we began to make a game of hitting every single post.
- Alpha Ralpha Boulevard had risen about half a kilometer above the
- surrounding countryside. The wild birds wheeled below us. There was
- less dust on the pavement, and fewer patches of weeds. The immense
- road, with no pylons below it, curved like an unsupported ribbon into
- the clouds.
- We wearied of beating posts and there was neither food nor water.
- Virginia became fretful: "It won't do any good to go back now.
- Food is even farther the other way. I do wish you'd brought
- something."
- How should I have thought to carry food? Who ever carries food? Why
- would they carry it, when it is everywhere? My darling was
- unreasonable, but she was my darling and I loved her all the more for
- the sweet imperfections of her temper.
- Macht kept tapping pillars, partly to keep out of our fight, and
- obtained an unexpected result.
- At one moment I saw him leaning over to give the pillar of a large lamp
- the usual hearty but guarded whop in the next instant he yelped like a
- dog and was sliding uphill at a high rate of speed.
- I heard him shout something, but could not make out the words, before
- he disappeared into the clouds ahead.
- Virginia looked at me.
- "Do you want to go back now? Macht is gone. We can say that I got
- tired."
- "Are you serious?"
- "Of course, darling."
- I laughed, a little angrily. She had insisted that we come, and now
- she was ready to turn around and give it up, just to please me.
- "Never mind," said I. "It can't be far now. Let's go on."
- "Paul . . ." She stood close to me. Her brown eyes were troubled, as
- though she were trying to see all the way into my mind through my eyes.
- I thought to her, Do you want to talk this way?
- "No," said she, in French.
- "I want to say things one at a time.
- Paul, I do want to go to the Abba-dingo. I need to go. It's the
- biggest need in my life. But at the same time, I don't want to go.
- There is something wrong up there. I would rather have you on the
- wrong terms than not have you at all. Something could happen."
- Edgily, I demanded,
- "Are you getting this 'fear' that Macht was talking about?"
- "Oh, no, Paul, not at all. This feeling isn't exciting. It feels like
- something broken in a machine " "Listen!" I interrupted her.
- From far ahead, from within the clouds, there came a sound like an
- animal wailing. There were words in it. It must have been Macht. I
- thought I heard "take care." When I sought him with my mind, the
- distance made circles and I got dizzy.
- "Let's follow, darling," said I. "Yes, Paul," said she, and in her
- voice there was an unfathomable mixture of happiness, resignation, and
- despair . . .
- Before we moved on, I looked carefully at her. She was my girl. The
- sky had turned yellow and the lights were not yet on. In the yellow
- rich sky her brown curls were tinted with gold, her brown eyes
- approached the black in their irises, her young and fate-haunted face
- seemed more meaningful than any other human face I had ever seen.
- "You are mine," I said.
- "Yes, Paul," she answered me and then smiled brightly.
- "You said it! That is doubly nice."
- A bird on the railing looked sharply at us and then left.
- Perhaps he did not approve of human nonsense, so flung himself downward
- into dark air. I saw him catch himself, far below, and ride lazily on
- his wings.
- "We're not as free as birds, darling," I told Virginia, "but we are
- freer than people have been for a hundred centuries."
- For answer she hugged my arm and smiled at me.
- "And now," I added, "to follow Macht. Put your arms around me and hold
- me tight. I'll try hitting that post. If we don't get dinner we may
- get a ride."
- of Man I felt her take hold tightly and then I struck the post.
- Which post? An instant later the posts were sailing by us in a blur.
- The ground beneath our feet seemed steady, but we were moving at a fast
- rate. Even in the service underground I had never seen a roadway as
- fast as this. Virginia's dress was blowing so hard that it made
- snapping sounds like the snap of fingers. In no time at all we were in
- the cloud and out of it again.
- A new world surrounded us. The clouds lay below and above.
- Here and there blue sky shone through. We were steady. The ancient
- engineers must have devised the walkway cleverly. We rode up, up, up
- without getting dizzy.
- Another cloud.
- Then things happened so fast that the telling of them takes longer than
- the event.
- Something dark rushed at me from up ahead. A violent blow hit me in
- the chest. Only much later did I realize that this was Macht's arm
- trying to grab me before we went over the edge. Then we went into
- another cloud. Before I could even speak to Virginia a second blow
- struck me. The pain was terrible. I had never felt anything like that
- in all my life. For some reason, Virginia had fallen over me and
- beyond me. She was pulling at my hands.
- I tried to tell her to stop pulling me, because it hurt, but I had no
- breath. Rather than argue, I tried to do what she wanted. I struggled
- toward her. Only then did I realize that there was nothing below my
- feet no bridge, no jetway nothing.
- I was on the edge of the boulevard, the broken edge of the upper side.
- There was nothing below me except for some looped cables, and, far
- underneath them, a tiny ribbon which was either a river or a road.
- We had jumped blindly across the great gap and I had fallen just far
- enough to catch the upper edge of the roadway on my chest.
- It did not matter, the pain.
- In a moment the doctor-robot would be there to repair me.
- A look at Virginia's face reminded me there was no doctor robot no
- world, no Instrumentality, nothing but wind and pain.
- She was crying. It took a moment for me to hear what she was saying.
- "I did it, I did it, darling, are you dead?"
- Neither one of us was sure what "dead" meant, because people always
- went away at their appointed time, but we knew that it meant a
- cessation of life. I tried to tell her that I was living, but she
- fluttered over me and kept dragging me farther from the edge of the
- drop.
- I used my hands to push myself into a sitting position.
- She knelt beside me and covered my face with kisses.
- At last I was able to gasp,
- "Where's Macht?"
- She looked back.
- "I don't see him."
- I tried to look too. Rather than have me struggle, she said, "You stay
- quiet. I'll look again."
- Bravely she walked to the edge of the sheared-off boulevard.
- She looked over toward the lower side of the gap, peering through the
- clouds which drifted past us as rapidly as smoke sucked by a
- ventilator. Then she cried out: "I see him. He looks so funny. Like
- an insect in the museum.
- He is crawling across on the cables."
- Struggling to my hands and knees, I neared her and looked too. There
- he was, a dot moving along a thread, with the birds soaring by beneath
- him. It looked very unsafe. Perhaps he was getting all the "fear"
- that he needed to keep himself happy. I did not want that "fear,"
- whatever it was. I wanted food, water, and a doctor-robot.
- None of these were here.
- I struggled to my feet. Virginia tried to help me but I was standing
- before she could do more than touch my sleeve.
- "Let's go on."
- "On?" she said.
- "On to the Abba-dingo. There may be friendly machines up there. Here
- there is nothing but cold and wind, and the lights have not yet gone
- on."
- She frowned.
- "But Macht. .. ?"
- "It will be hours before he gets here. We can come back."
- She obeyed.
- Once again we went to the left of the boulevard. I told her to squeeze
- my waist while I struck the pillars, one by one. Surely there must
- have been a reactivating device for the passengers on the road.
- The fourth time, it worked.
- Once again the wind whipped our clothing as we raced upward on Alpha
- Ralpha Boulevard.
- We almost fell as the road veered to the left. I caught my balance,
- only to have it veer the other way.
- And then we stopped.
- This was the Abba-dingo.
- A walkway littered with white objects knobs and rods and imperfectly
- formed balls about the size of my head.
- Virginia stood beside me, silent.
- About the size of my head? I kicked one of the objects aside and then
- knew, knew for sure, what it was. It was people. The inside parts. I
- had never seen such things before. And that, that on the ground, must
- once have been a hand. There were hundreds of such things along the
- wall.
- "Come, Virginia," said I, keeping my voice even, and my thoughts
- hidden.
- She followed without saying a word. She was curious about the things
- on the ground, but she did not seem to recognize them.
- For my part. I was watching the wall.
- At last I found them the little doors of Abba-dingo.
- One said meteorological. It was not Old Common Tongue, nor was it
- French, but it was so close that I knew it had something to do with the
- behavior of air. I put my hand against the panel of the door. The
- panel became translucent and ancient writing showed through. There
- were numbers which meant nothing, words which meant nothing, and then:
- Typhoon coming.
- My French had not taught me what a "coming" was, but "typhoon" was
- plainly typhon, a major air disturbance. Thought I, let the weather
- machines take care of the matter. It had nothing to do with us.
- "That's no help," said I. "What does it mean?" she said.
- "The air will be disturbed."
- "Oh," said she.
- "That couldn't matter to us, could it?"
- "Of course not."
- I tried the next panel, which said food. When my hand touched the
- little door, there was an aching creak inside the wall, as though the
- whole tower retched. The door opened a little bit and a horrible odor
- came out of it. Then the door closed again.
- The third door said help and when I touched it nothing happened.
- Perhaps it was some kind of tax-collecting device from the ancient
- days. It yielded nothing to my touch. The fourth door was larger and
- already partly open at the bottom. At the top, the name of the door
- was predictions. Plain enough, that one was, to anyone who knew Old
- French. The name at the bottom was more mysterious: put paper here it
- said, and I could not guess what it meant.
- I tried telepathy. Nothing happened. The wind whistled past us. Some
- of the calcium balls and knobs rolled on the pavement.
- I tried again, trying my utmost for the imprint of long-departed
- thoughts. A scream entered my mind, a thin long scream which did not
- sound much like people. That was all.
- Perhaps it did upset me. I did not feel "fear," but I was worried
- about Virginia.
- She was staring at the ground.
- "Paul," she said, "isn't that a man's coat on the ground among those
- funny things?"
- Once I had seen an ancient X-ray in the museum, so I knew that the coat
- still surrounded the material which had provided the inner structure of
- the man. There was no ball there, so that I was quite sure he was
- dead.
- How could that have happened in the old days? Why did the
- Instrumentality let it happen? But then, the Instrumentality had
- always forbidden this side of the tower. Perhaps the violators had met
- their own punishment in some way I could not fathom.
- "Look, Paul," said Virginia.
- "I can put my hand in."
- Before I could stop her, she had thrust her hand into the flat open
- slot which said put paper here.
- She screamed.
- Her hand was caught.
- I tried to pull at her arm, but it did not move. She began gasping
- with pain. Suddenly her hand came free.
- Clear words were cut into the living skin. I tore my cloak off and
- wrapped her hand.
- As she sobbed beside me I unbandaged her hand. As I did so she saw the
- words on her skin.
- The words said, in clear French: You will love Paul all your life.
- Virginia let me bandage her hand with my cloak and then she lifted her
- face to be kissed.
- "It was worth it," she said; "it was worth all the trouble, Paul. Let's
- see if we can get down. Now I know."
- I kissed her again and said, reassuringly,
- "You do know, don't you?"
- "Of course," she smiled through her tears.
- "The Instrumentality could not have contrived this. What a clever old
- machine! Is it a god or a devil, Paul?"
- I had not studied those words at that time, so I patted her instead of
- answering. We turned to leave.
- At the last minute I realized that I had not tried predictions
- myself.
- "Just a moment, darling. Let me tear a little piece off the
- bandage."
- She waited patiently. I tore a piece the size of my hand, and then I
- picked up one of the ex-person units on the ground. It may have been
- the front of an arm. I returned to push the cloth into the slot, but
- when I turned to the door, an enormous bird was sitting there.
- I used my hand to push the bird aside, and he cawed at me.
- He even seemed to threaten me with his cries and his sharp beak.
- I could not dislodge him.
- Then I tried telepathy. I am a true man. Go away!
- The bird's dim mind flashed back at me nothing but no-no-nono-no!
- With that I struck him so hard with my fist that he fluttered to the
- ground. He righted himself amid the white litter on the pavement and
- then, opening his wings, he let the wind carry him away.
- I pushed in the scrap of cloth, counted to twenty in my mind, and
- pulled the scrap out.
- The words were plain, but they meant nothing: You will love Virginia
- twenty-one more minutes.
- Her happy voice, reassured by the prediction but still unsteady from
- the pain in her written-on hand, came to me as though it were far
- away.
- "What does it say, darling?"
- Accidentally on purpose, I let the wind take the scrap. It fluttered
- away like a bird. Virginia saw it go.
- "Oh," she cried disappointedly.
- "We've lost it! What did it say?"
- "Just what yours did."
- "But what words, Paul? How did it say it?"
- With love and heartbreak and perhaps a little "fear," I lied to her and
- whispered gently, "It said,
- "Paul will always love Virginia." " She smiled at me radiantly. Her
- stocky, full figure stood firmly and happily against the wind. Once
- again she was the chubby, pretty Menerima whom I had noticed in our
- block when we both were children. And she was more than that. She was
- my new-found love in our new-found world. She was my mademoiselle from
- Martinique. The message was foolish. We had seen from the food-slot
- that the machine was broken.
- "There's no food or water here," said I. Actually, there was a puddle
- of water near the railing, but it had been blown over the human
- structural elements on the ground, and I had no heart to drink it.
- Virginia was so happy that, despite her wounded hand, her lack of
- water, and her lack of food, she walked vigorously and cheerfully.
- Thought I to myself. Twenty-one minutes. About six hours have passed.
- If we stay here we face unknown dangers.
- Vigorously we walked downward, down Alpha Ralpha Boulevard. We had met
- the Abba-dingo and were still "alive." I did not think that I was
- "dead," but the words had been meaningless so long that it was hard to
- think them.
- The ramp was so steep going down that we pranced like horses. The wind
- blew into our faces with incredible force. That's what it was, wind,
- but I looked up the word vent only after it was all over.
- We never did see the whole tower just the wall at which the ancient
- jetway had deposited us. The rest of the tower was hidden by clouds
- which fluttered like torn rags as they raced past the heavy material.
- The sky was red on one side and a dirty yellow on the other.
- Big drops of water began to strike at us.
- "The weather machines are broken," I shouted to Virginia.
- She tried to shout back to me but the wind carried her words away. I
- repeated what I had said about the weather machines. She nodded
- happily and warmly, though the wind was by now whipping her hair past
- her face and the pieces of water which fell from up above were spotting
- her flame-golden gown. It did not matter. She clung to my arm. Her
- happy face
- smiled at me as we stamped downward, bracing ourselves against the
- decline in the ramp. Her brown eyes were full of confidence and life.
- She saw me looking at her and she kissed me on the upper arm without
- losing step. She was my own girl forever, and she knew it.
- The water-from-above, which I later knew was actual "rain,"
- came in increasing volume. Suddenly it included birds. A large bird
- flapped his way vigorously against the whistling air and managed to
- stand still in front of my face, though his air speed was many leagues
- per hour. He cawed in my face and then was carried away by the wind.
- No sooner had that one gone than another bird struck me in the body. I
- looked down at it but it too was carried away by the racing current of
- air. All I got was a telepathic echo from its bright blank mind:
- no-no-no-no!
- Now what? thought I. A bird's advice is not much to go upon.
- Virginia grabbed my arm and stopped.
- I too stopped.
- The broken edge of Alpha Ralpha Boulevard was just ahead.
- Ugly yellow clouds swam through the break like poisonous fish hastening
- on an inexplicable errand.
- Virginia was shouting.
- I could not hear her, so I leaned down. That way her mouth could
- almost touch my ear.
- "Where is Macht?" she shouted.
- Carefully I took her to the left side of the road, where the railing
- gave us some protection against the heavy racing air, and against the
- water commingled with it. By now neither of us could see very far. I
- made her drop to her knees. I got down beside her.
- The falling water pelted our backs. The light around us had turned to
- a dark dirty yellow.
- We could still see, but we could not see much.
- I was willing to sit in the shelter of the railing, but she nudged me.
- She wanted us to do something about Macht. What anyone could do, that
- was beyond me. If he had found shelter, he was safe, but if he was out
- on those cables, the wild pushing air would soon carry him off and then
- there would be no more Maximilien Macht. He would be "dead" and his
- interior parts would bleach somewhere on the open ground.
- Virginia insisted.
- We crept to the edge.
- A bird swept in, true as a bullet, aiming for my face. I flinched. A
- wing touched me. It stung against my cheek like fire.
- I did not know that feathers were so tough. The birds must all have
- damaged mental mechanisms, thought I, if they hit people on Alpha
- Ralpha. That is not the right way to behave toward true people.
- At last we reached the edge, crawling on our bellies. I tried to dig
- the
- fingernails of my left hand into the stone like material of the
- railing, but it was flat, and there was nothing much to hold to, save
- for the ornamental fluting. My right arm was around Virginia. It hurt
- me badly to crawl forward that way, because my body was still damaged
- from the blow against the edge of the road, on the way coming up. When
- I hesitated, Virginia thrust herself forward.
- We saw nothing.
- The gloom was around us.
- The wind and the water beat at us like fists.
- Her gown pulled at her like a dog worrying its master. I wanted to get
- her back into the shelter of the railing, where we could wait for the
- air-disturbance to end.
- Abruptly, the light shone all around us. It was wild electricity,
- which the ancients called lightning. Later I found that it occurs
- quite frequently in the areas beyond the reach of the weather
- machines.
- The bright quick light showed us a white face staring at us.
- He hung on the cables below us. His mouth was open, so he must have
- been shouting. I shall never know whether the expression on his face
- showed "fear" or great happiness. It was full of excitement. The
- bright light went out and I thought that I heard the echo of a call. I
- reached for his mind telepathically and there was nothing there. Just
- some dim obstinate bird thinking at me, no-no-no-no-no!
- Virginia tightened in my arms. She squirmed around. I shouted at her
- in French. She could not hear.
- Then I called with my mind.
- Someone else was there.
- Virginia's mind blazed at me, full of revulsion, The cat girl.
- She is going to touch me!
- She twisted. My right arm was suddenly empty. I saw the gleam of a
- golden gown flash over the edge, even in the dim light. I reached with
- my mind, and I caught her cry: "Paul, Paul, I love you. Paul.. . help
- me!"
- The thoughts faded as her body dropped.
- The someone else was C'mell, whom we had first met in the corridor.
- I came to get you both, she thought at me, not that the birds cared
- about her.
- What have the birds got to do with it?
- You saved them. You saved their young, when the red topped man was
- killing them all. All of us have been worried about what you true
- people would do to us when you were free.
- We found out. Some of you are bad and kill other kinds of life.
- Others of you are good and protect life.
- Thought I, is that all there is to good and bad?
- Perhaps I should not have left myself off guard. People did not have
- to understand fighting, but the homunculi did. They were bred amidst
- battle and they served through troubles. C'mell, cat-girl that she
- was, caught me on the chin with a piston like fist. She had no
- anesthesia and the only way cat or no cat that she could carry me
- across the cables in the "typhoon" was to have me unconscious and
- relaxed.
- I awakened in my own room. I felt very well indeed. The robot-doctor
- was there. Said he: "You've had a shock. I've already reached the
- Subcommissioner of the Instrumentality, and I can erase the memories of
- the last full day, if you want me to."
- His expression was pleasant.
- Where was the racing wind? The air falling like stone around us? The
- water driving where no weather machines controlled it? Where was the
- golden gown and the wild fear-hungry face of Maximilien Macht?
- I thought these things, but the robot-doctor, not being telepathic,
- caught none of it. I stared hard at him.
- "Where," I cried, "is my own true love?"
- Robots cannot sneer, but this one attempted to do so.
- "The naked cat-girl with the blazing hair?
- She left to get some clothing."
- I stared at him.
- His fuddy-duddy little machine mind cooked up its own nasty little
- thoughts,
- "I must say, sir, you 'free people' change very fast indeed . . ."
- Who argues with a machine? It wasn't worth answering him.
- But that other machine? Twenty-one minutes.
- How could that work out? How could it have known? I did not want to
- argue with that other machine either. It must have been a very
- powerful left-over machine perhaps something used in ancient wars. I
- had no intention of finding out.
- Some people might call it a god. I call it nothing.
- I do not need "fear" and I do not propose to go back to Alpha Ralpha
- Boulevard again.
- But hear, oh heart of mine! how can you ever visit the cafe again?
- C'mell came in and the robot-doctor left.
- The Ballad of Lost C'mell She got the which of the what-she did Hid
- the bell with a blot, she did, But she fell in love with a hominid.
- Where is the which of the what-she did
- from THE BALLAD OF LOST C'MELL She was a girly girl and they were true
- men, the lords of creation, but she pitted her wits against them and
- she won. It had never happened before, and it is sure never to happen
- again, but she did win. She was not even of human extraction. She was
- cat derived though human in outward shape, which explains the C in
- front of her name. Her father's name was C'mackintosh and her name
- C'mell. She won her tricks against the lawful and assembled Lords of
- the Instrumentality.
- It all happened at Earthport, greatest of buildings, smallest of
- cities, standing twenty-five kilometers high at the western edge of the
- Smaller Sea of Earth.
- Jestocost had an office outside the fourth valve.
- Jestocost liked the morning sunshine, while most of the other Lords of
- the Instrumentality did not, so that he had no trouble in keeping the
- office and the apartments which he had selected. His main office was
- ninety meters deep, twenty meters high, twenty meters broad. Behind it
- was the "fourth valve," almost a thousand hectares in extent. It was
- shaped helically, like an enormous snail.
- Jestocost's apartment, big as it was, was merely one of the pigeonholes
- in the muffler of the rim of Earthport. Earthport stood like an
- enormous wineglass, reaching from the magma to the high atmosphere.
- Earthport had been built during mankind's biggest mechanical splurge.
- of Man Though men had had nuclear rockets since the beginning of
- consecutive history, they had used chemical rockets to load the
- interplanetary ion-drive and nuclear-drive vehicles or to assemble the
- photonic sail-ships for interstellar cruises. Impatient with the
- troubles of taking things bit by bit into the sky, they had worked out
- a billion-ton rocket, only to find that it ruined whatever countryside
- it touched in landing. The Daimoni people of Earth extraction, who
- came back from somewhere beyond the stars had helped men build it of
- weatherproof, rustproof, time proof stress proof material. Then they
- had gone away and had never come back.
- Jestocost often looked around his apartment and wondered what it might
- have been like when white-hot gas, muted to a whisper, surged out of
- the valve into his own chamber and the sixty-three other chambers like
- it. Now he had a back wall of heavy timber, and the valve itself was a
- great hollow cave where a few wild things lived. Nobody needed that
- much space any more. The chambers were useful, but the valve did
- nothing.
- Planoforming ships whispered in from the stars; they landed at
- Earthport as a matter of legal convenience, but they made no noise and
- they certainly had no hot gases.
- Jestocost looked at the high clouds far below him and talked to
- himself,
- "Nice day. Good air. No trouble. Better eat."
- Jestocost often talked like that to himself. He was an individual,
- almost an eccentric. One of the top council of mankind, he had
- problems, but they were not personal problems.
- He had a Rembrandt hanging above his bed the only Rembrandt known in
- the world, just as he was possibly the only person who could appreciate
- a Rembrandt. He had the tapestries of a forgotten empire hanging from
- his back wall. Every morning the sun played a grand opera for him,
- muting and lighting and shifting the colors so that he could almost
- imagine that the old days of quarrel, murder, and high drama had come
- back to Earth again. He had a copy of Shakespeare, a copy of
- Colegrove, and two pages of the Book of Ecclesiastes in a locked box
- beside his bed. Only forty-two people in the universe could read
- Ancient English, and he was one of them. He drank wine, which he had
- made by his own robots in his own vineyards on the Sunset Coast. He
- was a man, in short, who had arranged his own life to live comfortably,
- selfishly, and well on the personal side, so that he could give
- generously and impartially of his talents on the official side.
- When he awoke on this particular morning, he had no idea that a
- beautiful girl was about to fall hopelessly in love with him that he
- would find, after a hundred years and more of experience in government,
- another government on Earth just as strong and almost as ancient as his
- own that he would willingly fling himself into conspiracy and danger
- for a cause which he only half understood. All these things were
- mercifully hidden from him by time, so that his only question on
- arising was, should he or should he not have a
- The Ballad of Lost C'mell small cup of white wine with his breakfast.
- On the one hundred seventy-third day of each year, he always made a
- point of eating eggs. They were a rare treat, and he did not want to
- spoil himself by having too many, nor to deprive himself and forget a
- treat by having none at all. He puttered around the room, muttering,
- "White wine? White wine?"
- C'mell was coming into his life, but he did not know it. She was fated
- to win; that part, she herself did not know.
- Ever since mankind had gone through the Rediscovery of Man, bringing
- back governments, money, newspapers, national languages, sickness, and
- occasional death, there had been the problem of the under people people
- who were not human, but merely humanly shaped from the stock of Earth
- animals. They could speak, sing, read, write, work, love, and die; but
- they were not covered by human law, which simply defined them as
- "homunculi" and gave them a legal status close to animals or robots.
- Real people from off-world were always called "hominids."
- Most of the under people did their jobs and accepted their half-slave
- status without question. Some became famous C' mackintosh had been the
- first Earth-being to manage a fifty-meter broad-jump under normal
- gravity. His picture was seen in a thousand worlds. His daughter,
- C'mell, was a girly girl earning her living by welcoming human beings
- and hominids from the out worlds and making them feel at home when they
- reached Earth. She had the privilege of working at Earthport, but she
- had the duty of working very hard for a living which did not pay
- well.
- Human beings and hominids had lived so long in an affluent society that
- they did not know what it meant to be poor. But the Lords of the
- Instrumentality had decreed that under people derived from animal stock
- should live under the economics of the Ancient World; they had to have
- their own kind of money to pay for their rooms, their food, their
- possessions, and the education of their children. If they became
- bankrupt, they went to the Poorhouse, where they were killed painlessly
- by means of gas.
- It was evident that humanity, having settled all of its own basic
- problems, was not quite ready to let Earth animals, no matter how much
- they might be changed, assume a full equality with man.
- The Lord Jestocost, seventh of that name, opposed the policy.
- He was a man who had little love, no fear, freedom from ambition, and a
- dedication to his job: but there are passions of government as deep and
- challenging as the emotions of love. Two hundred years of thinking
- himself right and of being outvoted had instilled in Jestocost a
- furious desire to get things done his own way.
- Jestocost was one of the few true men who believed in the rights of the
- under people He did not think that mankind would ever get around to
- correcting ancient wrongs unless the under people themselves had some
- of
- of Man the tools of power weapons, conspiracy, wealth, and (above all)
- organization with which to challenge man. He was not afraid of revolt,
- but he thirsted for justice with an obsessive yearning which overrode
- all other considerations.
- When the Lords of the Instrumentality heard that there was the rumor of
- a conspiracy among the under people they left it to the robot police to
- ferret it out.
- Jestocost did not.
- He set up his own police, using under people themselves for the
- purpose, hoping to recruit enemies who would realize that he was a
- friendly enemy and who would in course of time bring him into touch
- with the leaders of the under people
- If those leaders existed, they were clever. What sign did a girly girl
- like C'mell ever give that she was the spearhead of a crisscross of
- agents who had penetrated Earthport itself? They must, if they
- existed, be very, very careful. The telepathic monitors, both robotic
- and human, kept every thought-band under surveillance by random
- sampling. Even the computers showed nothing more significant than
- improbable amounts of happiness in minds which had no objective reason
- for being happy.
- The death of her father, the most famous cat-athlete which the
- under-people had ever produced, gave Jestocost his first definite
- clue.
- He went to the funeral himself, where the body was packed in an
- ice-rocket to be shot into space. The mourners were thoroughly mixed
- with the curiosity-seekers. Sport is international, in terrace
- inter-world, interspe-cies. Hominids were there: true men, one hundred
- percent human, they looked weird and horrible because they or their
- ancestors had undergone bodily modifications to meet the life
- conditions of a thousand worlds.
- Underpeople, the animal-derived "homunculi," were there, most of them
- in their work clothes, and they looked more human than did the human
- beings from the outer worlds. None were allowed to grow up if they
- were less than half the size of man, or more than six times the size of
- man. They all had to have human features and acceptable human voices.
- The punishment for failure in their elementary schools was death.
- Jestocost looked over the crowd and wondered to himself,
- "We have set up the standards of the toughest kind of survival for
- these people and we give them the most terrible incentive, life itself,
- as the condition of absolute progress. What fools we are to think that
- they will not overtake us!" The true people in the group did not seem
- to think as he did.
- They tapped the under people peremptorily with their canes, even though
- this was an under person funeral, and the bear-men, bull men cat-men,
- and others yielded immediately and with a babble of apology.
- C'mell was close to her father's icy coffin.
- Jestocost not only watched her; she was pretty to watch. He
- committed
- an act which was an indecency in an ordinary citizen but lawful for a
- Lord of the Instrumentality: he peeped her mind.
- And then he found something which he did not expect.
- As the coffin left, she cried,
- "Ee-telly-kelly, help me! help me!"
- She had thought phonetically, not in script, and he had only the raw
- sound on which to base a search.
- Jestocost had not become a Lord of the Instrumentality without applying
- daring. His mind was quick, too quick to be deeply intelligent. He
- thought by gestalt, not by logic. He determined to force his
- friendship on the girl.
- He decided to await a propitious occasion, and then changed his mind
- about the time.
- As she went home from the funeral, he intruded upon the circle of her
- grim-faced friends, under people who were trying to shield her from the
- condolences of ill-mannered but well meaning sports enthusiasts.
- She recognized him, and showed him the proper respect.
- "My Lord, I did not expect you here. You knew my father?"
- He nodded gravely and addressed sonorous words of consolation and
- sorrow, words which brought a murmur of approval from humans and under
- people alike.
- But with his left hand hanging slack at his side, he made the perpetual
- signal of alarm! alarm! used with the Earthport staff a repeated
- tapping of the thumb against the third finger when they had to set one
- another on guard without alerting the off world transients.
- She was so upset that she almost spoiled it all. While he was still
- doing his pious doubletalk, she cried in a loud clear voice: "You mean
- me]" And he went on with his condolences: "... and I do mean you,
- C'mell, to be the worthiest carrier of your father's name. You are the
- one to whom we turn in this time of common sorrow. Who could I mean
- but you if I say that C'mackintosh never did things by halves, and died
- young as a result of his own zealous conscience? Good-bye, C'mell, I
- go back to my office."
- She arrived forty minutes after he did.
- II
- He faced her straightaway, studying her face.
- "This is an important day in your life." "Yes, my Lord, a sad one."
- "I do not," he said, "mean your father's death and burial. I speak of
- the future to which we all must turn. Right now, it's you and me."
- Her eyes widened. She had not thought that he was that kind of man
- at
- of Man all. He was an official who moved freely around Earthport,
- often greeting important off world visitors and keeping an eye on the
- bureau of ceremonies. She was a part of the reception team, when a
- girly girl was needed to calm down a frustrated arrival or to postpone
- a quarrel. Like the geisha of ancient Japan, she had an honorable
- profession; she was not a bad girl but a professionally flirtatious
- hostess. She stared at the Lord Jestocost. He did not look as though
- he meant anything improperly personal. But, thought she, you can never
- tell about men.
- "You know men," he said, passing the initiative to her.
- "I guess so," she said. Her face looked odd. She started to give him
- smile No. 3 (extremely adhesive) which she had learned in the girly
- girl school. Realizing it was wrong, she tried to give him an ordinary
- smile. She felt she had made a face at him.
- "Look at me," he said, "and see if you can trust me. I am going to
- take both our lives in my hands."
- She looked at him. What imaginable subject could involve him, a Lord
- of the Instrumentality, with herself, an under girl
- They never had anything in common. They never would.
- But she stared at him.
- "I want to help the under people
- He made her blink. That was a crude approach, usually followed by a
- very raw kind of pass indeed. But his face was illuminated by
- seriousness. She waited.
- "Your people do not have enough political power even to talk to us. I
- will not commit treason to the true human race, but I am willing to
- give your side an advantage. If you bargain better with us, it will
- make all forms of life safer in the long run."
- C'mell stared at the floor, her red hair soft as the fur of a Persian
- cat. It made her head seem bathed in flames. Her eyes looked human,
- except that they had the capacity of reflecting when light struck them;
- the irises were the rich green of the ancient cat. When she looked
- right at him, looking up from the floor, her glance had the impact of a
- blow.
- "What do you want from me?"
- He stared right back.
- "Watch me. Look at my face. Are you sure, sure that I want nothing
- from you personally?"
- She looked bewildered.
- "What else is there to want from me except personal things? I am a
- girly girl I'm not a person of any importance at all, and I do not have
- much of an education. You know more, sir, than I will ever know."
- "Possibly," he said, watching her.
- She stopped feeling like a girly girl and felt like a citizen. It made
- her uncomfortable.
- "Who," he said, in a voice of great solemnity, "is your own leader?"
- "Commissioner Teadrinker, sir. He's in charge of all out world
- visitors."
- She watched Jestocost carefully; he still did not look as if he were
- playing tricks.
- He looked a little cross.
- "I don't mean him. He's part of my own staff. Who's your leader among
- the under people
- "My father was, but he died."
- Jestocost said,
- "Forgive me. Please have a seat. But I don't mean that."
- She was so tired that she sat down into the chair with an innocent
- voluptuousness which would have disorganized any ordinary man's day.
- She wore girly girl clothes, which were close enough to the everyday
- fashion to seem agreeably modish when she stood up. In line with her
- profession, her clothes were designed to be unexpectedly and
- provocatively revealing when she sat down not revealing enough to shock
- the man with their brazenness, but so slit, tripped, and cut that he
- got far more visual stimulation than he expected.
- "I must ask you to pull your clothing together a little," said
- Jestocost in a clinical turn of voice.
- "I am a man, even if I am an official, and this interview is more
- important to you and to me than any distraction would be."
- She was a little frightened by his tone. She had meant no challenge.
- With the funeral that day, she meant nothing at all; these clothes were
- the only kind she had.
- He read all this in her face.
- Relentlessly, he pursued the subject.
- "Young lady, I asked about your leader. You name your boss and you
- name your father. I want your leader."
- "I don't understand," she said, on the edge of a sob.
- "I don't understand."
- Then, he thought to himself, I've got to take a gamble. He thrust the
- mental dagger home, almost drove his words like steel straight into her
- face.
- "Who . . .," he said slowly and icily, "is ... Ee ... telly . . .
- kelly?"
- The girl's face had been cream-colored, pale with sorrow.
- Now she went white. She twisted away from him. Her eyes glowed like
- twin fires.
- Her eyes . . . like twin fires.
- (No under girl thought Jestocost as he reeled, could hypnotize me.) Her
- eyes . . . were like cold fires.
- The room faded around him. The girl disappeared. Her eyes became a
- single white, cold fire.
- Within this fire stood the figure of a man. His arms were wings, but
- he had human hands growing at the elbows of his wings. His face was
- clear, white, cold as the marble of an ancient statue; his eyes were
- opaque white.
- "I am the E'telekeli. You will believe in me. You may speak to my
- daughter C'mell."
- The image faded.
- Jestocost saw the girl staring as she sat awkwardly on the chair,
- looking
- of Man blindly through him. He was on the edge of making ajoke about
- her hypnotic capacity when he saw that she was still deeply hypnotized
- even after he had been released. She had stiffened and again her
- clothing had fallen into its planned disarray. The effect was not
- stimulating; it was pathetic beyond words, as though an accident had
- happened to a pretty child. He spoke to her.
- He spoke to her, not really expecting an answer.
- "Who are you?" he said to her, testing her hypnosis.
- "I am he whose name is never said aloud," said the girl in a sharp
- whisper.
- "I am he whose secret you have penetrated. I have printed my image and
- my name in your mind."
- Jestocost did not quarrel with ghosts like this. He snapped out a
- decision.
- "If I open my mind, will you search it while I watch you? Are you good
- enough to do that?"
- "I am very good," hissed the voice in the girl's mouth.
- C" mell arose and put her two hands on his shoulders. She looked into
- his eyes. He looked back. A strong tele path himself, Jestocost was
- not prepared for the enormous thought-voltage which poured out of
- her.
- Look in my mind, he commanded, for the subject o/underpeople only.
- I see it, thought the mind behind C'mell.
- Do you see what I mean to do for the under people
- Jestocost heard the girl breathing hard as her mind served as a relay
- to his. He tried to remain calm so that he could see which part of his
- mind was being searched. Very good so far, he thought to himself. An
- intelligence like that on Earth itself, he thought and we of the Lords
- not knowing it!
- The girl hacked out a dry little laugh.
- Jestocost thought at the mind. Sorry. Go ahead.
- This plan of yours thought the strange mind may I see more of it?
- That's all there is.
- Oh, said the strange mind, you want me to think for you. Can you give
- me the keys in the Bell and Bank which pertain to destroying under
- people ?
- You can have the information keys if I can ever get them, thought
- Jestocost, but not the control keys and not the master switch of the
- Bell.
- Fair enough, thought the other mind, and what do I pay for them?
- You support me in my policies before the Instrumentality. You keep the
- under people reasonable, if you can, when the time comes to negotiate.
- You maintain honor and good faith in all subsequent agreements. But
- how can I get the keys? It would take me a year to figure them out
- myself.
- Let the girl look once, thought the strange mind, and I will be behind
- her. Fair?
- Fair, thought Jestocost.
- Break? thought the mind.
- How do we re-connect? thought Jestocost back.
- As before. Through the girl. Never say my name. Don't think it if
- you can help it. Break?
- Break! thought Jestocost.
- The girl, who had been holding his shoulders, drew his face down and
- kissed him firmly and warmly. He had never touched an under person
- before, and it never had occurred to him that he might kiss one. It
- was pleasant, but he took her arms away from his neck, half turned her
- around, and let her lean against him.
- "Daddy!" she sighed happily.
- Suddenly she stiffened, looked at his face, and sprang for the door.
- "Jestocost!" she cried.
- "Lord Jestocost! What am I doing here?"
- "Your duty is done, my girl. You may go."
- She staggered back into the room.
- "I'm going to be sick," she said. She vomited on his floor.
- He pushed a button for a cleaning robot and slapped his desktop for
- coffee.
- She relaxed and talked about his hopes for the under people
- She stayed an hour. By the time she left they had a plan. Neither of
- them had mentioned E'telekeli, neither had put purposes in the open. If
- the monitors had been listening, they would have found no single
- sentence or paragraph which was suspicious.
- When she had gone, Jestocost looked out of his window. He saw the
- clouds far below and he knew the world below him was in twilight. He
- had planned to help the under people and he had met powers of which
- organized mankind had no conception or perception. He was righter than
- he had thought. He had to go on through.
- But as partner C'mell herself!
- Was there ever an odder diplomat in the history of worlds?
- III
- In less than a week they had decided what to do. It was the Council of
- the Lords of the Instrumentality at which they would work the brain
- center itself. The risk was high, but the entire job could be done in
- a few minutes if it were done at the Bell itself.
- This is the sort of thing which interested Jestocost.
- He did not know that C'mell watched him with two different facets of
- her mind. One side of her was alertly and wholeheartedly his
- fellow-conspirator, utterly in sympathy with the revolutionary aims to
- which they were both committed. The other side of her was feminine.
- She had a womanliness which was truer than that of any hominid woman.
- She knew the value of her trained smile, her splendidly kept red hair
- with its unimaginably soft texture, her lithe young figure with firm
- breasts and persuasive hips. She knew down to the last millimeter the
- effect which her legs had on hominid men. True humans kept few secrets
- from her. The men betrayed themselves by their unfulfillable desires,
- the women by their irrepressible jealousies. But she knew people best
- of all by not being one herself. She had to learn by imitation, and
- imitation is conscious.
- A thousand little things which ordinary women took for granted, or
- thought about just once in a whole lifetime, were subjects of acute and
- intelligent study to her. She was a girl by profession; she was a
- human by assimilation; she was an inquisitive cat in her genetic
- nature. Now she was falling in love with Jestocost, and she knew it.
- Even she did not realize that the romance would sometime leak out into
- rumor, be magnified into legend, distilled into romance. She had no
- idea of the ballad about herself that would open with the lines which
- became famous much later: She got the which of the what-she did Hid the
- bell with a blot, she did, But she fell in love with a hominid.
- Where is the which of the what-she did
- All this lay in the future, and she did not know it.
- She knew her own past.
- She remembered the off-Earth prince who had rested his head in her lap
- and had said, sipping his glass of mott by way of farewell: "Funny,
- C'mell, you're not even a person and you're the most intelligent human
- being I've met in this place. Do you know it made my planet poor to
- send me here? And what did I get out of them? Nothing, nothing, and a
- thousand times nothing. But you, now. If you'd been running the
- government of Earth, I'd have gotten what my people need, and this
- world would be richer too.
- Manhome, they call it. Manhome, my eye! The only smart person on it
- is a female cat."
- He ran his fingers around her ankle. She did not stir. That was part
- of hospitality, and she had her own ways of making sure that
- hospitality did not go too far. Earth police were watching her; to
- them, she was a convenience maintained for out world people, something
- like a soft chair in the Earthport lobbies or a drinking fountain with
- acid-tasting water for strangers who could not tolerate the insipid
- water of Earth. She was not expected to have feelings or to get
- involved. If she had ever caused an incident, they would have punished
- her fiercely, as they often punished animals or under people or else
- (after a short formal hearing with
- no appeal) they would have destroyed her, as the law allowed and
- custom encouraged.
- She had kissed a thousand men, maybe fifteen hundred. She had made
- them feel welcome and she had gotten their complaints or their secrets
- out of them as they left. It was a living, emotionally tiring but
- intellectually very stimulating. Sometimes it made her laugh to look
- at human women with their pointed-up noses and their proud airs, and to
- realize that she knew more about the men who belonged to the human
- women than the human women themselves ever did.
- Once a policewoman had had to read over the record of two pioneers from
- New Mars. C'mell had been given the job of keeping in very close touch
- with them. When the policewoman got through reading the report she
- looked at C'mell and her face was distorted with jealousy and prudish
- rage.
- "Cat, you call yourself. Cat! You're a pig, you're adog, you're an
- animal. You may be working for Earth but don' t ever get the idea that
- you' re as good as a person. I think it's a crime that the
- Instrumentality lets monsters like you greet real human beings from
- outside! I can't stop it. But may the Bell help you, girl, if you
- ever touch a real Earth man! If you ever get near one! If you ever
- try tricks here! Do you understand me?"
- "Yes, Ma'am," C'mell had said. To herself she thought,
- "That poor thing doesn't know how to select her own clothes or how to
- do her own hair. No wonder she resents somebody who manages to be
- pretty."
- Perhaps the policewoman thought that raw hatred would be shocking to C'
- mell. It wasn't. Underpeople were used to hatred, and it was not any
- worse raw than it was when cooked with politeness and served like
- poison. They had to live with it.
- But now, it was all changed.
- She had fallen in love with Jestocost. Did he love her?
- Impossible. No, not impossible. Unlawful, unlikely, indecent yes, all
- these, but not impossible. Surely he felt something of her love. If
- he did, he gave no sign of it.
- People and under people had fallen in love many times before.
- The under people were always destroyed and the real people brainwashed.
- There were laws against that kind of thing. The scientists among
- people had created the under people had given them capacities which
- real people did not have (the fifty-meter jump, the tele path two miles
- underground, the turtle-man waiting a thousand years next to an
- emergency door, the cowman guarding a gate without reward), and the
- scientists had also given many of the under people the human shape. It
- was handier that way. The human eye, the five-fingered hand, the human
- size these were convenient for engineering reasons. By making under
- people the same size and shape as
- of Man people, more or less, the scientists eliminated the need for
- two or three or a dozen different sets of furniture. The human form
- was good enough for all of them.
- But they had forgotten the human heart.
- And now she, C'mell, had fallen in love with a man, a true man old
- enough to have been her own father's grandfather.
- But she didn't feel daughterly about him at all. She remembered that
- with her own father there was an easy comradeship, an innocent and
- forthcoming affection, which masked the fact that he was considerably
- more catlike than she was. Between them there was an aching void of
- forever-unspoken words things that couldn't quite be said by either of
- them, perhaps things that couldn't be said at all. They were so close
- to each other that they could get no closer. This created enormous
- distance, which was heart-breaking but unutterable. Her father had
- died, and now this true man was here with all the kindness "That" sit,"
- she whispered to herself.
- "With all the kindness that none of these passing men have ever really
- shown. With all the depth which my poor under people can never get.
- Not that it's not in them. But they're born like dirt, treated like
- dirt, put away like dirt when they die. How can any of my own men
- develop real kindness? There's a special sort of majesty to kindness.
- It's the best part there is to being people. And he has whole oceans
- of it in him. And it's strange, strange, strange that he's never given
- his real love to any human woman."
- She stopped, cold.
- Then she consoled herself and whispered on,
- "Or if he did, it's so long ago that it doesn't matter now. He's got
- me. Does he know it?"
- IV
- The Lord Jestocost did know, and yet he didn't. He was used to getting
- loyalty from people, because he offered loyalty and honor in his daily
- work. He was even familiar with loyalty becoming obsessive and seeking
- physical form, particularly from women, children, and under people He
- had always coped with it before. He was gambling on the fact that
- C'mell was a wonderfully intelligent person, and that as a girly girl
- working on the hospitality staff of the Earthport police, she must have
- learned to control her personal feelings.
- "We're born in the wrong age," he thought, "when I meet the most
- intelligent and beautiful female I've ever met, and then have to put
- business first. But this stuff about people and under people is
- sticky. Sticky. We've got to keep personalities out of it."
- So he thought. Perhaps he was right.
- If the nameless one, whom he did not dare to remember, commanded an
- attack on the Bell itself, that was worth their lives. Their emotions
- could not come into it. The Bell mattered; justice mattered; the
- perpetual return of mankind to progress mattered. He did not matter,
- because he had already done most of his work. C'mell did not matter,
- because their failure would leave her with mere under people forever.
- The Bell did count.
- The price of what he proposed to do was high, but the entire job could
- be done in a few minutes if it were done at the Bell itself.
- The Bell, of course, was not a Bell. It was a three dimensional
- situation table, three times the height of a man. It was set one story
- below the meeting room, and shaped roughly like an ancient bell. The
- meeting table of the Lords of the Instrumentality had a circle cut out
- of it, so that the Lords could look down into the Bell at whatever
- situation one of them called up either manually or telepathically. The
- Bank below it, hidden by the floor, was the key memory-bank of the
- entire system.
- Duplicates existed at thirty-odd other places on Earth. Two duplicates
- lay hidden in interstellar space, one of them beside the
- ninety-million-mile gold-colored ship left over from the war against
- Raumsog and the other masked as an asteroid.
- Most of the Lords were off-world on the business of the
- Instrumentality.
- Only three besides Jestocost were present the Lady Johanna Gnade, the
- Lord Issan Olascoaga, and the Lord William Notfrom-here. (The
- Not-from-heres were a great Norstrilian family which had migrated back
- to Earth many generations before.) The E'telekeli told Jestocost the
- rudiments of a plan.
- He was to bring C'mell into the chambers on a summons.
- The summons was to be serious.
- They should avoid her summary death by automatic justice, if the relays
- began to trip.
- C'mell would go into partial trance in the chamber.
- He was then to call the items in the Bell which E'telekeli wanted
- traced. A single call would be enough. E'telekeli would take the
- responsibility for tracing them. The other Lords would be distracted
- by him, E'telekeli.
- It was simple in appearance.
- The complication came in action.
- The plan seemed flimsy, but there was nothing which Jestocost could do
- at this time. He began to curse himself for letting his passion for
- policy involve him in the intrigue. It was too late to back out with
- honor; besides, he had given his word; besides, he liked C'mell as a
- being, not as a girly girl and he would hate to see her marked with
- disappointment for life. He knew how the under people cherished their
- identities and their status.
- With heavy heart but quick mind he went to the council chamber. A
- dog-
- of Man girl, one of the routine messengers whom he had seen many
- months outside the door, gave him the minutes.
- He wondered how C'mell or E'telekeli would reach him, once he was
- inside the chamber with its tight net of telepathic intercepts.
- He sat wearily at the table And almost jumped out of his chair.
- The conspirators had forged the minutes themselves, and the top item
- was: "C'mell daughter to C" mackintosh, cat stock (pure), lot 1138,
- confession of. Subject: conspiracy to export homuncular material.
- Reference: planet De Prinsensmacht."
- The Lady Johanna Gnade had already pushed the buttons for the planet
- concerned. The people there, Earth by origin, were enormously strong
- but they had gone to great pains to maintain the original Earth
- appearance. One of their first-men was at the moment on Earth. He
- bore the title of the Twilight Prince (Prins van de Schemering) and he
- was on a mixed diplomatic and trading mission.
- Since Jestocost was a little late, C' mell was being brought into the
- room as he glanced over the minutes.
- The Lord Not-from-here asked Jestocost if he would preside.
- "I beg you. Sir and Scholar," he said, "to join me in asking the Lord
- Issan to preside this time."
- The presidency was a formality. Jestocost could watch the Bell and
- Bank better if he did not have to chair the meeting too.
- C'mell wore the clothing of a prisoner. On her it looked good.
- He had never seen her wearing anything but girly girl clothes before.
- The pale-blue prison tunic made her look very young, very human, very
- tender, and very frightened. The cat family showed only in the fiery
- cascade of her hair and the lithe power of her body as she sat, demure
- and erect.
- Lord Issan asked her: "You have confessed. Confess again."
- "This man," and she pointed at a picture of the Twilight Prince,
- "wanted to go to the place where they torment human children for a
- show."
- "What!" cried three of the Lords together.
- "What place?" said the Lady Johanna, who was bitterly in favor of
- kindness.
- "It's run by a man who looks like this gentleman here," said C'mell,
- pointing at Jestocost. Quickly, so that nobody could stop her, but
- modestly, so that none of them thought to doubt her, she circled the
- room and touched Jestocost's shoulder. He felt a thrill of
- contact-telepathy and heard bird-cackle in her brain. Then he knew
- that the E'telekeli was in touch with her.
- "The man who has the place," said C'mell, "is five pounds lighter than
- this gentleman, two inches shorter, and he has red hair. His place is
- at the
- Cold Sunset corner of Earthport, down the boulevard and under the
- boulevard. Underpeople, some of them with bad reputations, live in
- that neighborhood."
- The Bell went milky, flashing through hundreds of combinations of bad
- under people in that part of the city. Jestocost felt himself staring
- at the casual milkiness with unwanted concentration.
- The Bell cleared.
- It showed the vague image of a room in which children were playing
- Hallowe'en tricks.
- The Lady Johanna laughed,
- "Those aren't people. They're robots. It's just a dull old play."
- "Then," added C'mell, "he wanted a dollar and a shilling to take home.
- Real ones. There was a robot who had found some."
- "What are those?" said Lord Issan.
- "Ancient money the real money of old America and old Australia," cried
- Lord William.
- "I have copies, but there are no originals outside the state museum."
- He was an ardent, passionate collector of coins.
- "The robot found them in an old hiding place right under Earthport."
- Lord William almost shouted at the Bell.
- "Run through every hiding place and get me that money."
- The Bell clouded. In finding the bad neighborhoods it had flashed
- every police point in the northwest sector of the tower.
- Now it scanned all the police points under the tower, and ran dizzily
- through thousands of combinations before it settled on an old toolroom.
- A robot was polishing circular pieces of metal.
- When Lord William saw the polishing, he was furious.
- "Get that here," he shouted.
- "I want to buy those myself!"
- "All right," said Lord Issan.
- "It's a little irregular, but all right."
- The machine showed the key search devices and brought the robot to the
- escalator.
- The Lord Issan said,
- "This isn't much of a case."
- C'mell sniveled. She was a good actress.
- "Then he wanted me to get a homunculus egg. One of the E-type, derived
- from birds, for him to take home."
- Issan put on the search device.
- "Maybe," said C'mell, "somebody has already put it in the disposal
- series."
- The Bell and Bank ran through all the disposal devices at high speed.
- Jestocost felt his nerves go on edge. No human being could have
- memorized these thousands of patterns as they flashed across the Bell
- too fast for human eyes, but the brain reading the Bell through his
- eyes was not human. It might even be locked into a computer of its
- own. It was, thought Jestocost,
- an indignity for a Lord of the Instrumentality to be used as a human
- spyglass.
- The machine blotted up.
- "You're a fraud," cried the Lord Issan.
- "There's no evidence."
- "Maybe the offworlder tried," said the Lady Johanna.
- "Shadow him," said Lord William.
- "If he would steal ancient coins he would steal anything."
- The Lady Johanna turned to C'mell.
- "You're a silly thing. You have wasted our time and you have kept us
- from serious inter-world business." "It is inter-world business," wept
- C'mell. She let her hand slip from Jestocost's shoulder, where it had
- rested all the time. The body to-body relay broke and the telepathic
- link broke with it.
- "We should judge that," said Lord Issan.
- "You might have been punished," said Lady Johanna. The Lord Jestocost
- had said nothing, but there was a glow of happiness in him. If the
- E'telekeli was half as good as he seemed, the under people had a list
- of checkpoints and escape routes which would make it easier to hide
- from the capricious sentence of painless death which human authorities
- meted out.
- V
- There was singing in the corridors that night.
- Underpeople burst into happiness for no visible reason.
- C'mell danced a wild cat dance for the next customer who came in from
- out world stations, that very evening. When she got home to bed, she
- knelt before the picture of her father C'mackintosh and thanked the
- E'telekeli for what Jestocost had done.
- But the story became known a few generations later, when the Lord
- Jestocost had won acclaim for being the champion of the under people
- and when the authorities, still unaware of E'telekeli, accepted the
- elected representatives of the under people as negotiators for better
- terms of life; and C'mell had died long since.
- She had first had a long, good life.
- She became a female chef when she was too old to be a girly girl Her
- food was famous. Jestocost once visited her. At the end of the meal
- he had asked,
- "There's a silly rhyme among the under people No human beings know it
- except me."
- "I don't care about rhymes," she said.
- "This is called
- "The what-she-did." " C' mell blushed all the way down to the neckline
- of her capacious blouse.
- She had filled out a lot in middle age. Running the restaurant had
- helped.
- "Oh, that rhyme!" she said.
- "It's silly."
- "It says you were in love with a hominid."
- "No," she said.
- "I wasn't." Her green eyes, as beautiful as ever, stared deeply into
- his. Jestocost felt uncomfortable. This was getting personal. He
- liked political relationships; personal things made him
- uncomfortable.
- The light in the room shifted and her cat eyes blazed at him; she
- looked like the magical fire-haired girl he had known.
- "I wasn't in love. You couldn't call it that. .."
- Her heart cried out. It was you, it was you, it was you.
- "But the rhyme," insisted Jestocost, "says it was a hominid. It wasn't
- that Prins van de Schemering?"
- "Who was he?" C'mell asked the question quietly, but her emotions
- cried out, Darling, will you never, never know?
- "The strong man."
- "Oh, him. I've forgotten him."
- Jestocost rose from the table.
- "You've had a good life, C'mell.
- You've been a citizen, a committeewoman, a leader. And do you even
- know how many children you have had?"
- "Seventy-three," she snapped at him.
- "Just because they're multiple doesn't mean we don't know them."
- His playfulness left him. His face was grave, his voice kindly.
- "I meant no harm, C'mell."
- He never knew that when he left she went back to the kitchen and cried
- for a while. It was Jestocost whom she had vainly loved ever since
- they had been comrades, many long years ago.
- Even after she died, at the full age of five-score and three, he kept
- seeing her about the corridors and shafts of Earthport. Many of her
- great-granddaughters looked just like her and several of them practiced
- the girly girl business with huge success.
- They were not half-slaves. They were citizens (reserved grade) and
- they had photo passes which protected their property, their identity,
- and their rights. Jestocost was the godfather to them all; he was
- often embarrassed when the most voluptuous creatures in the universe
- threw playful kisses at him. All he asked was fulfillment of his
- political passions, not his personal ones. He had always been in love,
- madly in love With justice itself.
- At last, his own time came, and he knew that he was dying, and he was
- not sorry. He had had a wife, hundreds of years ago, and had loved her
- well; their children had passed into the generations of man.
- In the ending, he wanted to know something, and he called to a
- nameless
- one (or to his successor) far beneath the world. He called with his
- mind till it was a scream.
- I have helped your people.
- "Yes," came back the faintest of faraway whispers, inside his head.
- I am dying. I must know. Did she love me?
- "She went on without you, so much did she love you. She let you go,
- for your sake, not for hers. She really loved you. More than death.
- More than life. More than time. You will never be apart."
- Never apart?
- "Not, not in the memory of man," said the voice, and was then still.
- Jestocost lay back on his pillow and waited for the day to end.
- A Planet Named Shayol There was was a tremendous difference between
- the liner and the ferry in Mercer's treatment. On the liner, the
- attendants made gibes when they brought him his food.
- "Scream good and loud," said one rat-faced steward, "and then we'll
- know it's you when they broadcast the sounds of punishment on the
- Emperor's birthday."
- The other, fat steward ran the tip of his wet, red tongue over his
- thick, purple-red lips one time and said,
- "Stands to reason, man. If you hurt all the time, the whole lot of you
- would die.
- Something pretty good must happen, along with the whatchamacallit.
- Maybe you turn into a woman. Maybe you turn into two people. Listen,
- cousin, if it's real crazy fun, let me know . . ." Mercer said
- nothing. Mercer had enough troubles of his own not to wonder about the
- daydreams of nasty men.
- At the ferry it was different. The bio pharmaceutical staff was deft,
- impersonal, quick in removing his shackles. They took off all his
- prison clothes and left them on the liner. When he boarded the ferry,
- naked, they looked him over as if he were a rare plant or a body on the
- operating table. They were almost kind in the clinical deftness of
- their touch. They did not treat him as a criminal, but as a
- specimen.
- Men and women, clad in their medical smocks, they looked at him as
- though he were already dead.
- He tried to speak. A man, older and more authoritative than the
- others, said firmly and clearly,
- "Do not worry about talking.
- I will talk to you myself in a very little time. What we are having
- now are the preliminaries, to determine your physical condition.
- Turn around, please."
- Mercer turned around. An orderly rubbed his back with a very strong
- antiseptic.
- "This is going to sting," said one of the technicians, "but it is
- nothing
- of Man serious or painful. We are determining the toughness of the
- different layers of your skin."
- Mercer, annoyed by this impersonal approach, spoke up just as a sharp
- little sting burned him above the sixth lumbar vertebra.
- "Don't you know who I am?"
- "Of course we know who you are," said a woman's voice.
- "We have it all in a file in the corner. The chief doctor will talk
- about your crime later, if you want to talk about it. Keep quiet now.
- We are making a skin test, and you will feel much better if you do not
- make us prolong it."
- Honesty forced her to add another sentence: "And we will get better
- results as well."
- They had lost no time at all in getting to work.
- He peered at them sidewise to look at them. There was nothing about
- them to indicate that they were human devils in the antechambers of
- hell itself. Nothing was there to indicate that this was the satellite
- of Shayol, the final and uttermost place of chastisement and shame.
- They looked like medical people from his life before he committed the
- crime without a name.
- They changed from one routine to another. A woman, wearing a surgical
- mask, waved her hand at a white table.
- "Climb up on that, please."
- No one had said "please" to Mercer since the guards had seized him at
- the edge of the palace. He started to obey her and then he saw that
- there were padded handcuffs at the head of the table. He stopped.
- "Get along, please," she demanded. Two or three of the others turned
- around to look at both of them.
- The second "please" shook him. He had to speak. These were people,
- and he was a person again. He felt his voice rising, almost cracking
- into shrillness as he asked her,
- "Please, Ma'am, is the punishment going to begin?"
- "There's no punishment here," said the woman.
- "This is the satellite. Get on the table. We're going to give you
- your first skin toughening before you talk to the head doctor. Then
- you can tell him all about your crime " "You know my crime?" he said,
- greeting it almost like a neighbor.
- "Of course not," said she, "but all the people who come through here
- are believed to have committed crimes. Somebody thinks so or they
- wouldn't be here. Most of them want to talk about their personal
- crimes. But don't slow me down. I'm a skin technician, and down on
- the surface of Shayol you're going to need the very best work that any
- of us can do for you. Now get on that table. And when you are ready
- to talk to the chief you'll have something to talk about besides your
- crime."
- He complied.
- Another masked person, probably a girl, took his hands in cool, gentle
- fingers and fitted them to the padded cuffs in a way he had never
- sensed before. By now he thought he knew every interrogation machine
- in the whole empire, but this was nothing like any of them.
- The orderly stepped back.
- "All clear. Sir and Doctor."
- "Which do you prefer?" said the skin technician.
- "A great deal of pain or a couple of hours' unconsciousness?"
- "Why should I want pain?" said Mercer.
- "Some specimens do," said the technician, "by the time they arrive
- here. I suppose it depends on what people have done to them before
- they got here. I take it you did not get any of the
- dream-punishments."
- "No," said Mercer.
- "I missed those." He thought to himself, I didn't know that I missed
- anything at all.
- He remembered his last trial, himself wired and plugged in to the
- witness stand. The room had been high and dark. Bright blue light
- shone on the panel of judges, their judicial caps a fantastic parody of
- the episcopal mitres of long, long ago. The judges were talking, but
- he could not hear them. Momentarily the insulation slipped and he
- heard one of them say,
- "Look at that white, devilish face. A man like that is guilty of
- everything. I vote for Pain Terminal." "Not Planet Shayol?" said a
- second voice.
- "The dromozoa place," said a third voice.
- "That should suit him,"
- said the first voice. One of the judicial engineers must then have
- noticed that the prisoner was listening illegally. He was cut off.
- Mercer then thought that he had gone through everything which the
- cruelty and intelligence of mankind could devise.
- But this woman said he had missed the dream-punishments.
- Could there be people in the universe even worse off than himself?
- There must be a lot of people down on Shayol. They never came back.
- He was going to be one of them; would they boast to him of what they
- had done, before they were made to come to this place?
- "You asked for it," said the woman technician.
- "It is just an ordinary anesthetic. Don't panic when you awaken. Your
- skin is going to be thickened and strengthened chemically and
- biologically."
- "Does it hurt?"
- "Of course," said she.
- "But get this out of your head. We're not punishing you. The pain
- here is just ordinary medical pain.
- Anybody might get it if they needed a lot of surgery. The punishment,
- if that's what you want to call it, is down on Shayol.
- Our only job is to make sure that you are fit to survive after you are
- landed. In a way, we are saving your life ahead of time. You can be
- grateful for that if you want to be. Meanwhile, you will save yourself
- a lot of trouble if you realize that your nerve endings will
- of Man respond to the change in the skin. You had better expect to be
- very uncomfortable when you recover. But then, we can help that, too."
- She brought down an enormous lever and Mercer blacked out.
- When he came to, he was in an ordinary hospital room, but he did not
- notice it. He seemed bedded in fire. He lifted his hand to see if
- there were flames on it. It looked the way it always had, except that
- it was a little red and a little swollen. He tried to turn in the bed.
- The fire became a scorching blast which stopped him in mid-turn.
- Uncontrollably, he moaned.
- A voice spoke,
- "You are ready for some pain-killer."
- It was a girl nurse.
- "Hold your head still," she said, "and I will give you half an amp of
- pleasure. Your skin won't bother you then."
- She slipped a soft cap on his head. It looked like metal but it felt
- like silk.
- He had to dig his fingernails into his palms to keep from threshing
- about on the bed.
- "Scream if you want to," she said.
- "A lot of them do. It will just be a minute or two before the cap
- finds the right lobe in your brain."
- She stepped to the corner and did something which he could not see.
- There was the flick of a switch.
- The fire did not vanish from his skin. He still felt it; but suddenly
- it did not matter. His mind was full of delicious pleasure which
- throbbed outward from his head and seemed to pulse down through his
- nerves. He had visited the pleasure palaces, but he had never felt
- anything like this before.
- He wanted to thank the girl, and he twisted around in the bed to see
- her. He could feel his whole body flash with pain as he did so, but
- the pain was far away. And the pulsating pleasure which coursed out of
- his head, down his spinal cord, and into his nerves was so intense that
- the pain got through only as a remote, unimportant signal.
- She was standing very still in the corner.
- "Thank you, nurse," said he.
- She said nothing.
- He looked more closely, though it was hard to look while enormous
- pleasure pulsed through his body like a symphony written in
- nerve-messages. He focused his eyes on her and saw that she too wore a
- soft metallic cap.
- He pointed at it.
- She blushed all the way down to her throat.
- She spoke dreamily,
- "You looked like a nice man to me. I didn't think you'd tell on me . .
- ."
- He gave her what he thought was a friendly smile, but with the pain in
- his skin and the pleasure bursting out of his head, he really had no
- idea of what his actual expression might be.
- "It's against the law," he said.
- "It's terribly against the law. But it is nice."
- "How do you think we stand it here?" said the nurse.
- "You specimens come in here talking like ordinary people and then you
- go down to Shayol. Terrible things happen to you on Shayol. Then the
- surface station sends up parts of you, over and over again. I may see
- your head ten times, quick-frozen and ready for cutting up, before my
- two years are up. You prisoners ought to know how we suffer," she
- crooned, the pleasure-charge still keeping her relaxed and happy.
- "You ought to die as soon as you get down there and not pester us with
- your torments. We can hear you screaming, you know. You keep on
- sounding like people even after Shayol begins to work on you. Why do
- you do it, Mr. Specimen?" She giggled sillily.
- "You hurt our feelings so. No wonder a girl like me has to have a
- little jolt now and then. It's real, real dreamy and I don't mind
- getting you ready to go down on Shayol." She staggered over to his
- bed.
- "Pull this cap off me, will you? I haven't got enough will power left
- to raise my hands."
- Mercer saw his hand tremble as he reached for the cap.
- His fingers touched the girl's soft hair through the cap. As he tried
- to get his thumb under the edge of the cap, in order to pull it off, he
- realized this was the loveliest girl he had ever touched.
- He felt that he had always loved her, that he always would. Her cap
- came off. She stood erect, staggering a little before she found a
- chair to hold to. She closed her eyes and breathed deeply.
- "Just a minute," she said in her normal voice.
- "I'll be with you in just a minute. The only time I can get a jolt of
- this is when one of you visitors gets a dose to get over the skin
- trouble."
- She turned to the room mirror to adjust her hair. Speaking with her
- back to him, she said,
- "I hope I didn't say anything about downstairs."
- Mercer still had the cap on. He loved this beautiful girl who had put
- it on him. He was ready to weep at the thought that she had had the
- same kind of pleasure which he still enjoyed. Not for the world would
- he say anything which could hurt her feelings.
- He was sure she wanted to be told that she had not said anything about
- "downstairs" probably shop talk for the surface of Shayol so he assured
- her warmly,
- "You said nothing. Nothing at all."
- She came over to the bed, leaned, kissed him on the lips. The kiss was
- as far away as the pain; he felt nothing; the Niagara of throbbing
- pleasure which poured through his head left no room for more sensation.
- But he liked the friendliness of it. A grim, sane corner of his mind
- whispered to him that this was probably the last time he would ever
- kiss a woman, but it did not seem to matter.
- With skilled fingers she adjusted the cap on his head.
- "There, now. You're a sweet guy. I'm going to pretend-forget and
- leave the cap on you till the doctor comes."
- of Man With a bright smile she squeezed his shoulder.
- She hastened out of the room.
- The white of her skirt flashed prettily as she went out the door. He
- saw that she had very shapely legs indeed.
- She was nice, but the cap... ah, it was the cap that mattered!
- He closed his eyes and let the cap go on stimulating the pleasure
- centers of his brain. The pain in his skin was still there, but it did
- not matter any more than did the chair standing in the corner. The
- pain was just something that happened to be in the room.
- A firm touch on his arm made him open his eyes.
- The older, authoritative-looking man was standing beside the bed,
- looking down at him with a quizzical smile.
- "She did it again," said the old man.
- Mercer shook his head, trying to indicate that the young nurse had done
- nothing wrong.
- "I'm Doctor Vomact," said the older man, "and I am going to take this
- cap off you. You will then experience the pain again, but I think it
- will not be so bad. You can have the cap several more times before you
- leave here."
- With a swift, firm gesture he snatched the cap off Mercer's head.
- Mercer promptly doubled up with the inrush of fire from his skin. He
- started to scream and then saw that Doctor Vomact was watching him
- calmly.
- Mercer gasped,
- "It is easier now."
- "I knew it would be," said the doctor.
- "I had to take the cap off to talk to you. You have a few choices to
- make."
- "Yes, Doctor," gasped Mercer.
- "You have committed a serious crime and you are going down to the
- surface of Shayol."
- "Yes," said Mercer.
- "Do you want to tell me your crime?"
- Mercer thought of the white palace walls in perpetual sunlight, and the
- soft mewing of the little things when he reached them. He tightened
- his arms, legs, back, and jaw.
- "No," he said, "I don't want to talk about it. It's the crime without
- a name.
- Against the Imperial family ..."
- "Fine," said the doctor, "that's a healthy attitude. The crime is
- past. Your future is ahead. Now, I can destroy your mind before you
- go down if you want me to."
- "That's against the law," said Mercer.
- Doctor Vomact smiled warmly and confidently.
- "Of course it is. A lot of things are against human law. But there
- are laws of science, too. Your body, down on Shayol, is going to serve
- science. It doesn't matter to me
- whether the body has Mercer's mind or the mind of a low-grade
- shellfish. I have to leave enough mind in you to keep the body going,
- but I can wipe out the historic you and give your body a better chance
- of being happy. It's your choice. Mercer. Do you want to be you or
- not?"
- Mercer shook his head back and forth,
- "I don't know."
- "I'm taking a chance," said Doctor Vomact, "in giving you this much
- leeway. I'd have it done if I were in your position. It's pretty bad
- down there."
- Mercer looked at the full, broad face. He did not trust the
- comfortable smile. Perhaps this was a trick to increase his
- punishment. The cruelty of the Emperor was proverbial. Look at what
- he had done to the widow of his predecessor, the Dowager Lady Da. She
- was younger than the Emperor himself, and he had sent her to a place
- worse than death. If he had been sentenced to Shayol, why was this
- doctor trying to interfere with the rules?
- Maybe the doctor himself had been conditioned, and did not know what he
- was offering.
- Doctor Vomact read Mercer's face.
- "All right. You refuse.
- You want to take your mind down with you. It's all right with me.
- I don't have you on my conscience. I suppose you'll refuse the next
- offer too. Do you want me to take your eyes out before you go down?
- You'll be much more comfortable without vision. I know that, from the
- voices that we record for the warning broadcasts. I can sear the optic
- nerves so that there will be no chance of your getting vision again."
- Mercer rocked back and forth. The fiery pain had become a universal
- itch, but the soreness of his spirit was greater than the discomfort of
- his skin.
- "You refuse that, too?" said the doctor.
- "I suppose so," said Mercer.
- "Then all I have to do is to get ready. You can have the cap for a
- while, if you want."
- Mercer said,
- "Before I put the cap on, can you tell me what happens down there?"
- "Some of it," said the doctor.
- "There is an attendant. He is a man, but not a human being. He is a
- homunculus fashioned out of cattle material. He is intelligent and
- very conscientious. You specimens are turned loose on the surface of
- Shayol. The dromozoa are a special life form there. When they settle
- in your body, B'dikkat that's the attendant carves them out with an
- anesthetic and sends them up here. We freeze the tissue cultures, and
- they are compatible with almost any kind of oxygen-based life. Half
- the surgical repair you see in the whole universe comes out of buds
- that we ship from here. Shayol is a very healthy place, so far as
- survival is concerned. You won't die."
- of Man "You mean," said Mercer, "that I am getting perpetual
- punishment."
- "I didn't say that," said Doctor Vomact.
- "Or if I did, I was wrong. You won't die soon. I don't know how long
- you will live down there. Remember, no matter how uncomfortable you
- get, the samples which B'dikkat sends up will help thousands of people
- in all the inhabited worlds. Now take the cap."
- "I'd rather talk," said Mercer.
- "It may be my last chance."
- The doctor looked at him strangely.
- "If you can stand that pain, go ahead and talk."
- "Can I commit suicide down there?"
- "I don't know," said the doctor.
- "It's never happened. And to judge by the voices, you'd think they
- wanted to."
- "Has anybody ever come back from Shayol?"
- "Not since it was put off limits about four hundred years ago."
- "Can I talk to other people down there?"
- "Yes," said the doctor.
- "Who punishes me down there?"
- "Nobody does, you fool," cried Doctor Vomact.
- "It's not punishment. People don't like it down on Shayol, and it's
- better, I guess, to get convicts instead of volunteers. But there
- isn't anybody against you at all."
- "No jailers?" asked Mercer, with a whine in his voice.
- "No jailers, no rules, no prohibitions. Just Shayol, and B'dikkat to
- take care of you. Do you still want your mind and your eyes?"
- "I'll keep them," said Mercer.
- "I've gone this far and I might as well go the rest of the way."
- "Then let me put the cap on you for your second dose," said Doctor
- Vomact.
- The doctor adjusted the cap just as lightly and delicately as had the
- nurse; he was quicker about it. There was no sign of his picking out
- another cap for himself. The inrush of pleasure was like a wild
- intoxication. His burning skin receded into distance.
- The doctor was near in space, but even the doctor did not matter.
- Mercer was not afraid of Shayol. The pulsation of happiness out of his
- brain was too great to leave room for fear or pain.
- Doctor Vomact was holding out his hand.
- Mercer wondered why, and then realized that the wonderful, kindly
- cap-giving man was offering to shake hands. He lifted his own. It was
- heavy, but his arm was happy, too.
- They shook hands. It was curious, thought Mercer, to feel the
- handshake beyond the double level of cerebral pleasure and dermal
- pain.
- "Goodbye, Mr. Mercer," said the doctor.
- "Goodbye and a good night..."
- II
- The ferry satellite was a hospitable place. The hundreds of hours that
- followed were like a long, weird dream.
- Twice again the young nurse sneaked into his bedroom with him when he
- was being given the cap and had a cap with him.
- There were baths which calloused his whole body. Under strong local
- anesthetics, his teeth were taken out and stainless steel took their
- place. There were irradiations under blazing lights which took away
- the pain of his skin. There were special treatments for his
- fingernails and toenails. Gradually they changed into formidable
- claws; he found himself stropping them on the aluminum bed one night
- and saw that they left deep marks.
- His mind never became completely clear.
- Sometimes he thought he was home with his mother, that he was little
- again, and in pain. Other times, under the cap, he laughed in his bed
- to think that people were sent to this place for punishment when it was
- all so terribly much fun. There were no trials, no questions, no
- judges. Food was good, but he did not think about it much; the cap was
- better. Even when he was awake, he was drowsy.
- At last, with the cap on him, they put him into an adiabatic pod a
- one-body missile which could be dropped from the ferry to the planet
- below. He was all closed in, except for his face.
- Doctor Vomact seemed to swim into the room.
- "You are strong, Mercer," the doctor shouted, "you are very strong! Can
- you hear me?"
- Mercer nodded.
- "We wish you well, Mercer. No matter what happens, remember you are
- helping other people up here."
- "Can I take the cap with me?" said Mercer.
- For an answer, Doctor Vomact removed the cap himself. Two men closed
- the lid of the pod, leaving Mercer in total darkness.
- His mind started to clear, and he panicked against his wrappings.
- There was the roar of thunder and the taste of blood.
- The next thing that Mercer knew, he was in a cool, cool room, much
- chillier than the bedrooms and operating rooms of the satellite.
- Someone was lifting him gently onto a table.
- He opened his eyes.
- An enormous face, four times the size of any human face Mercer had ever
- seen, was looking down at him. Huge brown eyes, cow like in their
- gentle in offensiveness moved back and forth as the big face examined
- Mercer's wrappings. The face was that of a handsome man of middle
- years, clean-shaven, hair chestnut-brown, with sensual, full lips and
- gig an-
- of Man tic but healthy yellow teeth exposed in a half-smile. The face
- saw Mercer's eyes open, and spoke with a deep friendly roar.
- "I'm your best friend. My name is B'dikkat, but you don't have to use
- that here. Just call me Friend, and I will always help you."
- "I hurt," said Mercer.
- "Of course you do. You hurt all over. That's a big drop," said
- B'dikkat.
- "Can I have a cap, please," begged Mercer. It was not a question; it
- was a demand; Mercer felt that his private inward eternity depended on
- it.
- B'dikkat laughed.
- "I haven't any caps down here. I might use them myself. Or so they
- think. I have other things, much better.
- No fear, fellow, I'll fix you up."
- Mercer looked doubtful. If the cap had brought him happiness on the
- ferry, it would take at least electrical stimulation of the brain to
- undo whatever torments the surface of Shayol had to offer.
- B'dikkat's laughter filled the room like a bursting pillow.
- "Have you ever heard of condamine?"
- "No," said Mercer.
- "It's a narcotic so powerful that the pharmacopoeias are not allowed to
- mention it."
- "You have that?" said Mercer hopefully.
- "Something better. I have super-condamine. It's named after the New
- French town where they developed it. The chemists hooked in one more
- hydrogen molecule. That gave it a real jolt.
- If you took it in your present shape, you'd be dead in three minutes,
- but those three minutes would seem like ten thousand years of happiness
- to the inside of your mind." B'dikkat rolled his brown cow eyes
- expressively and smacked his rich red lips with a tongue of enormous
- extent.
- "What's the use of it, then?"
- "You can take it," said B'dikkat.
- "You can take it after you have been exposed to the dromozoa outside
- this cabin. You get all the good effects and none of the bad. You
- want to see something?"
- What answer is there except yes, thought Mercer grimly; does he think I
- have an urgent invitation to a tea party?
- "Look out the window," said B'dikkat, "and tell me what you see."
- The atmosphere was clear. The surface was like a desert, ginger-yellow
- with streaks of green where lichen and low shrubs grew, obviously
- stunted and tormented by high, dry winds. The landscape was
- monotonous. Two or three hundred yards away there was a herd of bright
- pink objects which seemed alive, but Mercer could not see them well
- enough to describe them clearly.
- Further away, on the extreme right of his frame of vision, there was
- the statue of an enormous human foot, the height of a six story
- building. Mercer could not see what the foot was connected to.
- "I see a big foot," said he, "but "
- "But what?" said B'dikkat, like an enormous child hiding the
- denouement of a hugely private joke. Large as he was, he would have
- been dwarfed by any one of the toes on that tremendous foot.
- "But it can't be a real foot," said Mercer.
- "It is," said B'dikkat.
- "That's Go-Captain Alvarez, the man who found this planet. After six
- hundred years he's still in fine shape. Of course, he's mostly
- dromozootic by now, but I think there is some human consciousness
- inside him. You know what I do?"
- "What?" said Mercer.
- "I give him six cubic centimeters of super-condamine and he snorts for
- me. Real happy little snorts. A stranger might think it was a
- volcano. That's what super-condamine can do. And you're going to get
- plenty of it. You're a lucky, lucky man, Mercer. You have me for a
- friend, and you have my needle for a treat. I do all the work and you
- get all the fun. Isn't that a nice surprise?"
- Mercer thought, You're lying! Lying! Where do the screams come from
- that we have all heard broadcast as a warning on Punishment Day? Why
- did the doctor offer to cancel my brain or to take out my eyes?
- The cow-man watched him sadly, a hurt expression on his face.
- "You don't believe me," he said, very sadly.
- "It's not quite that," said Mercer, with an attempt at heartiness, "but
- I think you're leaving something out."
- "Nothing much," said B'dikkat.
- "You jump when the dromozoa hit you. You'll be upset when you start
- growing new parts heads, kidneys, hands. I had one fellow in here who
- grew thirty-eight hands in a single session outside. I took them all
- off, froze them, and sent them upstairs. I take good care of
- everybody.
- You'll probably yell for a while. But remember, just call me Friend,
- and I have the nicest treat in the universe waiting for you.
- Now, would you like some fried eggs? I don't eat eggs myself, but most
- true men like them."
- "Eggs?" said Mercer.
- "What have eggs got to do with it?"
- "Nothing much. It's just a treat for you people. Get something in
- your stomach before you go outside. You'll get through the first day
- better."
- Mercer, unbelieving, watched as the big man took two precious eggs from
- a cold chest, expertly broke them into a little pan, and put the pan in
- the heat-field at the center of the table Mercer had awakened on.
- "Friend, eh?" B'dikkat grinned.
- "You'll see I'm a good friend.
- When you go outside, remember that."
- An hour later, Mercer did go outside.
- Strangely at peace with himself, he stood at the door. B'dikkat pushed
- him in a brotherly way, giving him a shove which was gentle enough to
- be an encouragement.
- of Man "Don't make me put on my lead suit, fellow." Mercer had seen a
- suit, fully the size of an ordinary space-ship cabin, hanging on the
- wall of an adjacent room.
- "When I close this door, the outer one will open. Just walk on out."
- "But what will happen?" said Mercer, the fear turning around in his
- stomach and making little grabs at his throat from the inside.
- "Don't start that again," said B'dikkat. For an hour he had fended off
- Mercer's questions about the outside. A map? B'dikkat had laughed at
- the thought. Food? He said not to worry. Other people? They'd be
- there. Weapons? What for, B'dikkat had replied. Over and over again,
- B'dikkat had insisted that he was Mercer's friend. What would happen
- to Mercer? The same that happened to everybody else.
- Mercer stepped out.
- Nothing happened. The day was cool. The wind moved gently against his
- toughened skin.
- Mercer looked around apprehensively.
- The mountainous body of Captain Alvarez occupied a good part of the
- landscape to the right. Mercer had no wish to get mixed up with that.
- He glanced back at the cabin. B'dikkat was not looking out the
- window.
- Mercer walked slowly, straight ahead.
- There was a flash on the ground, no brighter than the glitter of
- sunlight on a fragment of glass. Mercer felt a sting in the thigh, as
- though a sharp instrument had touched him lightly. He brushed the
- place with his hand.
- It was as though the sky fell in.
- A pain it was more than a pain; it was a living throb ran from his hip
- to his foot on the right side. The throb reached up to his chest,
- robbing him of breath. He fell, and the ground hurt him.
- Nothing in the hospital-satellite had been like this. He lay in the
- open air, trying not to breathe, but he did breathe anyhow. Each time
- he breathed, the throb moved with his thorax. He lay on his back,
- looking at the sun. At last he noticed that the sun was
- violet-white.
- It was no use even thinking of calling. He had no voice.
- Tendrils of discomfort twisted within him. Since he could not stop
- breathing, he concentrated on taking air in the way that hurt him
- least. Gasps were too much work. Little tiny sips of air hurt him
- least.
- The desert around him was empty. He could not turn his head to look at
- the cabin. Is this it? he thought. Is an eternity of this the
- punishment of Shayol?
- There were voices near him.
- Two faces, grotesquely pink, looked down at him. They might have been
- human. The man looked normal enough, except for having two noses side
- by side. The woman was a caricature beyond belief. She had grown a
- breast on each cheek and a cluster of naked baby-like fingers hung
- limp from her forehead.
- "It's a beauty," said the woman, "a new one."
- "Come along," said the man.
- They lifted him to his feet. He did not have strength enough to
- resist. When he tried to speak to them a harsh cawing sound, like the
- cry of an ugly bird, came from his mouth.
- They moved with him efficiently. He saw that he was being dragged to
- the herd of pink things.
- As they approached, he saw that they were people. Better, he saw that
- they had once been people. A man with the beak of a flamingo was
- picking at his own body. A woman lay on the ground; she had a single
- head, but beside what seemed to be her original body, she had a boy's
- naked body growing sidewise from her neck. The boy-body, clean, new,
- paralytic ally helpless, made no movement other than shallow breathing.
- Mercer looked around. The only one of the group who was wearing
- clothing was a man with his overcoat on sidewise. Mercer stared at
- him, finally realizing that the man had two or was it three? stomachs
- growing on the outside of his abdomen. The coat held them in place.
- The transparent peritoneal wall looked fragile.
- "New one," said his female captor. She and the two-nosed man put him
- down.
- The group lay scattered on the ground.
- Mercer lay in a state of stupor among them.
- An old man's voice said,
- "I'm afraid they're going to feed us pretty soon."
- "Oh, no!" "It's too early!" "Not again!" Protests echoed from the
- group.
- The old man's voice went on,
- "Look, near the big toe of the mountain!"
- The desolate murmur in the group attested their confirmation of what he
- had seen.
- Mercer tried to ask what it was all about, but produced only a caw.
- A woman was it a woman? crawled over to him on her hands and knees.
- Besides her ordinary hands, she was covered with hands all over her
- trunk and halfway down her thighs. Some of the hands looked old and
- withered. Others were as fresh and pink as the baby-fingers on his cap
- tress face. The woman shouted at him, though it was not necessary to
- shout.
- "The dromozoa are coming. This time it hurts. When you get used to
- the place, you can dig in " She waved at a group of mounds which
- surrounded the herd of people.
- "They're dug in," she said.
- of Man Mercer cawed again.
- "Don't you worry," said the hand-covered woman, and gasped as a flash
- of light touched her.
- The lights reached Mercer too. The pain was like the first contact but
- more probing. Mercer felt his eyes widen as odd sensations within his
- body led to an inescapable conclusion: these lights, these things,
- these whatever they were, were feeding him and building him up.
- Their intelligence, if they had it, was not human, but their motives
- were clear. In between the stabs of pain he felt them fill his
- stomach, put water in his blood, draw water from his kidneys and
- bladder, massage his heart, move his lungs for him.
- Every single thing they did was well meant and beneficent in intent.
- And every single action hurt.
- Abruptly, like the lifting of a cloud of insects, they were gone.
- Mercer was aware of a noise somewhere outside a brainless, bawling
- cascade of ugly noise. He started to look around. And the noise
- stopped.
- It had been himself, screaming. Screaming the ugly screams of a
- psychotic, a terrified drunk, an animal driven out of understanding or
- reason.
- When he stopped, he found he had his speaking voice again.
- A man came to him, naked like the others. There was a spike sticking
- through his head. The skin had healed around it on both sides.
- "Hello, fellow," said the man with the spike.
- "Hello," said Mercer. It was a foolishly commonplace thing to say in a
- place like this.
- "You can't kill yourself," said the man with the spike through his
- head.
- "Yes, you can," said the woman covered with hands.
- Mercer found that his first pain had disappeared.
- "What's happening to me?"
- "You got a part," said the man with the spike.
- "They're always putting parts on us. After a while B'dikkat comes and
- cuts most of them off, except for the ones that ought to grow a little
- more. Like her," he added, nodding at the woman who lay with the
- boy-body growing from her neck.
- "And that's all?" said Mercer.
- "The stabs for the new parts and the stinging for the feeding?"
- "No," said the man.
- "Sometimes they think we're too cold and they fill our insides with
- fire. Or they think we're too hot and they freeze us, nerve by
- nerve."
- The woman with the boy-body called over,
- "And sometimes they think we're unhappy, so they try to force us to be
- happy. I think that's the worst of all."
- Mercer stammered,
- "Are you people I mean are you the only herd?"
- The man with the spike coughed instead of laughing.
- "Herd!
- That's
- funny. The land is full of people. Most of them dig in. We're the
- ones who can still talk. We stay together for company. We get more
- turns with B'dikkat that way."
- Mercer started to ask another question, but he felt the strength run
- out of him. The day had been too much.
- The ground rocked like a ship on water. The sky turned black.
- He felt someone catch him as he fell. He felt himself being stretched
- out on the ground. And then, mercifully and magically, he slept.
- III
- Within a week, he came to know the group well. They were an
- absent-minded bunch of people. Not one of them ever knew when a
- dromozoon might flash by and add another part. Mercer was not stung
- again, but the incision he had obtained just outside the cabin was
- hardening. Spike-head looked at it when Mercer modestly undid his belt
- and lowered the edge of his trouser-top so they could see the wound.
- "You've got a head," he said.
- "A whole baby head. They'll be glad to get that one upstairs when
- B'dikkat cuts it off you."
- The group even tried to arrange his social life. They introduced him
- to the girl of the herd. She had grown one body after another, pelvis
- turning into shoulders and the pelvis below that turning into shoulders
- again until she was five people long.
- Her face was unmarred. She tried to be friendly to Mercer.
- He was so shocked by her that he dug himself into the soft dry crumbly
- earth and stayed there for what seemed like a hundred years. He found
- later that it was less than a full day.
- When he came out, the long many-bodied girl was waiting for him.
- "You didn't have to come out just for me," said she.
- Mercer shook the dirt off himself.
- He looked around. The violet sun was going down, and the sky was
- streaked with blues, deeper blues, and trails of orange sunset.
- He looked back at her.
- "I didn't get up for you. It's no use lying there, waiting for the
- next time."
- "I want to show you something," she said. She pointed to a low
- hummock.
- "Dig that up."
- Mercer looked at her. She seemed friendly. He shrugged and attacked
- the soil with his powerful claws. With tough skin and heavy
- digging-nails on the ends of his fingers, he found it was easy to dig
- like a dog. The earth cascaded beneath his busy hands. Something pink
- appeared down in the hole he had dug. He proceeded more carefully.
- He knew what it would be.
- It was. It was a man, sleeping. Extra arms grew down one side of his
- body in an orderly series. The other side looked normal.
- Mercer turned back to the many-bodied girl, who had writhed closer.
- "That's what I think it is, isn't it?"
- "Yes," she said.
- "Doctor Vomact burned his brain out for him.
- And took his eyes out, too."
- Mercer sat back on the ground and looked at the girl.
- "You told me to do it. Now tell me what for."
- "To let you see. To let you know. To let you think."
- "That's all?" said Mercer.
- The girl twisted with startling suddenness. All the way down her
- series of bodies, her chests heaved. Mercer wondered how the air got
- into all of them. He did not feel sorry for her; he did not feel sorry
- for anyone except himself. When the spasm passed the girl smiled at
- him apologetically.
- "They just gave me a new plant."
- Mercer nodded grimly.
- "What now, a hand? It seems you have enough."
- "Oh, those," she said, looking back at her many torsos.
- "I
- promised B'dikkat that I'd let them grow. He's good. But that man,
- stranger. Look at that man you dug up. Who's better off, he or we?"
- Mercer stared at her.
- "Is that what you had me dig him up for?"
- "Yes," said the girl.
- "Do you expect me to answer?"
- "No," said the girl, "not now."
- "Who are you?" said Mercer.
- "We never ask that here. It doesn't matter. But since you're new,
- I'll tell you. I used to be the Lady Da the Emperor's stepmother."
- "You!" he exclaimed.
- She smiled, ruefully.
- "You're still so fresh you think it matters! But I have something more
- important to tell you." She stopped and bit her lip.
- "What?" he urged.
- "Better tell me before I get another bite. I won't be able to think or
- talk then, not for a long time. Tell me now."
- She brought her face close to his. It was still a lovely face, even in
- the dying orange of this violet-sunned sunset.
- "People never live forever."
- "Yes," said Mercer.
- "I knew that."
- "Believe it," ordered the Lady Da.
- Lights flashed across the dark plain, still in the distance. Said
- she,
- "Dig in, dig in for the night. They may miss you."
- Mercer started digging. He glanced over at the man he had dug up. The
- brainless body, with motions as soft as those of a starfish under
- water, was pushing its way back into the earth.
- Five or seven days later, there was a shouting through the herd.
- Mercer had come to know a half-man, the lower part of whose body was
- gone and whose viscera were kept in place with what resembled a
- translucent plastic bandage. The half-man had shown him how to lie
- still when the dromozoa came with their inescapable errands of doing
- good.
- Said the half-man,
- "You can't fight them. They made Alvarez as big as a mountain, so that
- he never stirs. Now they're trying to make us happy. They feed us and
- clean us and sweeten us up. Lie still. Don't worry about screaming.
- We all do."
- "When do we get the drug?" said Mercer.
- "When B'dikkat comes."
- B'dikkat came that day, pushing a sort of wheeled sled ahead of him.
- The runners carried it over the hillocks; the wheels worked on the
- surface.
- Even before he arrived, the herd sprang into furious action.
- Everywhere, people were digging up the sleepers. By the time B'dikkat
- reached their waiting place, the herd must have uncovered twice their
- own number of sleeping pink bodies men and women, young and old. The
- sleepers looked no better and no worse than the waking ones.
- "Hurry! "said the Lady Da.
- "He never gives any of us a shot until we're all ready."
- B'dikkat wore his heavy lead suit.
- He lifted an arm in friendly greeting, like a father returning home
- with treats for his children. The herd clustered around him but did
- not crowd him.
- He reached into the sled. There was a harnessed bottle which he threw
- over his shoulders. He snapped the locks on the straps.
- From the bottle there hung a tube. Midway down the tube there was a
- small pressure-pump. At the end of the tube there was a glistening
- hypodermic needle.
- When ready, B'dikkat gestured for them to come closer. They approached
- him with radiant happiness. He stepped through their ranks and past
- them, to the girl who had the boy growing from her neck. His
- mechanical voice boomed through the loudspeaker set in the top of his
- suit.
- "Good girl. Good, good girl. You get a big, big present." He thrust
- the hypodermic into her so long that Mercer could see an air bubble
- travel from the pump up to the bottle.
- Then he moved back to the others, booming a word now and then, moving
- with improbable grace and speed amid the people.
- His needle flashed as he gave them hypodermics under pressure.
- The people dropped to sitting positions or lay down on the ground as
- though half-asleep.
- He knew Mercer.
- "Hello, fellow. Now you can have the fun.
- It would have killed you in the cabin. Do you have anything for me?"
- Mercer stammered, not knowing what B'dikkat meant, and the two-
- nosed man answered for him.
- "I think he has a nice baby head, but it isn't big enough for you to
- take yet."
- Mercer never noticed the needle touch his arm.
- B'dikkat had turned to the next knot of people when the super-condamine
- hit Mercer.
- He tried to run after B'dikkat, to hug the lead space suit, to tell
- B'dikkat that he loved him. He stumbled and fell, but it did not
- hurt.
- The many-bodied girl lay near him. Mercer spoke to her.
- "Isn't it wonderful? You're beautiful, beautiful, beautiful.
- I'm so happy to be here."
- The woman covered with growing hands came and sat beside them. She
- radiated warmth and good fellowship. Mercer thought that she looked
- very distinguished and charming. He struggled out of his clothes. It
- was foolish and snobbish to wear clothing when none of these nice
- people did.
- The two women babbled and crooned at him.
- With one corner of his mind he knew that they were saying nothing, just
- expressing the euphoria of a drug so powerful that the known universe
- had forbidden it. With most of his mind he was happy. He wondered how
- anyone could have the good luck to visit a planet as nice as this. He
- tried to tell the Lady Da, but the words weren't quite straight.
- A painful stab hit him in the abdomen. The drug went after the pain
- and swallowed it. It was like the cap in the hospital, only a thousand
- times better. The pain was gone, though it had been crippling the
- first time.
- He forced himself to be deliberate. He rammed his mind into focus and
- said to the two ladies who lay pinkly nude beside him in the desert.
- "That was a good bite. Maybe I will grow another head. That would
- make B'dikkat happy!"
- The Lady Da forced the foremost of her bodies into an upright position.
- Said she,
- "I'm strong, too. I can talk.
- Remember, man, remember. People never live forever. We can die, too,
- we can die like real people. I do so believe in death!"
- Mercer smiled at her through his happiness.
- "Of course you can. But isn't this nice . . ."
- With this he felt his lips thicken and his mind go slack. He was wide
- awake, but he did not feel like doing anything. In that beautiful
- place, among all those companionable and attractive people, he sat and
- smiled.
- B'dikkat was sterilizing his knives.
- Mercer wondered how long the super-condamine had lasted him. He
- endured the ministrations of the dromozoa without screams or movement.
- The agonies of nerves and itching of skin were phenomena which happened
- somewhere near him, but meant nothing. He watched his own body with
- remote, casual interest. The Lady Da and the hand-covered woman
- stayed near him. After a long time the half-man dragged himself over
- to the group with his powerful arms. Having arrived, he blinked
- sleepily and friendlily at them, and lapsed back into the restful
- stupor from which he had emerged. Mercer saw the sun rise on occasion,
- closed his eyes briefly, and opened them to see stars shining. Time
- had no meaning. The dromozoa fed him in their mysterious way; the drug
- canceled out his needs for cycles of the body.
- At last he noticed a return of the inwardness of pain.
- The pains themselves had not changed; he had.
- He knew all the events which could take place on Shayol. He remembered
- them well from his happy period. Formerly he had noticed them now he
- felt them.
- He tried to ask the Lady Da how long they had had the drug, and how
- much longer they would have to wait before they had it again. She
- smiled at him with benign, remote happiness; apparently her many
- torsos, stretched out along the ground, had a greater capacity for
- retaining the drug than did his body. She meant him well, but was in
- no condition for articulate speech.
- The half-man lay on the ground, arteries pulsating prettily behind the
- half-transparent film which protected his abdominal cavity.
- Mercer squeezed the man's shoulder.
- The half-man woke, recognized Mercer, and gave him a healthily sleepy
- grin.
- " "A good morrow to you, my boy." That's out of a play. Did you ever
- see a play?"
- "You mean a game with cards?"
- "No," said the half-man, "a son of eye-machine with real people doing
- the figures."
- "I never saw that," said Mercer, "but I " "But you want to ask me when
- B'dikkat is going to come back with the needle."
- "Yes," said Mercer, a little ashamed of his obviousness.
- "Soon," said the half-man.
- "That's why I think of plays. We all know what is going to happen. We
- all know when it is going to happen. We all know what the dummies will
- do" he gestured at the hummocks in which the decorticated men were
- cradled "and we all know what the new people will ask. But we never
- know how long a scene is going to take."
- "What's a 'scene'?" asked Mercer.
- "Is that the name for the needle?"
- The half-man laughed with something close to real humor.
- "No, no, no. You've got the lovelies on the brain. A scene is just
- part of a play. I mean we know the order in which things happen, but
- we have no clocks and nobody cares enough to count days or to make
- calendars and there's
- not much climate here, so none of us know how long anything takes. The
- pain seems short and the pleasure seems long. I'm inclined to think
- that they are about two Earth-weeks each."
- Mercer did not know what an
- "Earth-week" was, since he had not been a well-read man before his
- conviction, but he got nothing more from the half-man at that time. The
- half-man received a dromozootic implant, turned red in the face,
- shouted senselessly at Mercer,
- "Take it out, you fool! Take it out of me!"
- While Mercer looked on helplessly, the half-man twisted over on his
- side, his pink dusty back turned to Mercer, and wept hoarsely and
- quietly to himself.
- Mercer himself could not tell how long it was before B'dikkat came
- back. It might have been several days. It might have been several
- months.
- Once again B'dikkat moved among them like a father; once again they
- clustered like children. This time B'dikkat smiled pleasantly at the
- little head which had grown out of Mercer's thigh a sleeping child's
- head, covered with light hair on top and with dainty eyebrows over the
- resting eyes. Mercer got the blissful needle.
- When B'dikkat cut the head from Mercer's thigh, he felt the knife
- grinding against the cartilage which held the head to his own body. He
- saw the child-face grimace as the head was cut; he felt the far, cool
- flash of unimportant pain, as B'dikkat dabbed the wound with a
- corrosive antiseptic which stopped all bleeding immediately.
- The next time it was two legs growing from his chest.
- Then there had been another head beside his own.
- Or was that after the torso and legs, waist to toe-tips, of the little
- girl which had grown from his side?
- He forgot the order.
- He did not count time.
- Lady Da smiled at him often, but there was no love in this place. She
- had lost the extra torsos. In between teratologies, she was a pretty
- and shapely woman; but the nicest thing about their relationship was
- her whisper to him, repeated some thousands of times, repeated with
- smiles and hope,
- "People never live forever."
- She found this immensely comforting, even though Mercer did not make
- much sense out of it.
- Thus events occurred, and victims changed in appearance, and new ones
- arrived. Sometimes B'dikkat took the new ones, resting in the
- everlasting sleep of their burned-out brains, in a ground-truck to be
- added to other herds. The bodies in the truck threshed and bawled
- without human speech when the dromozoa struck them.
- Finally, Mercer did manage to follow B'dikkat to the door of the
- cabin. He had to fight the bliss of super-condamine to do it. Only
- the memory of previous hurt, bewilderment, and perplexity made him sure
- that if he did not ask B'dikkat when he, Mercer, was happy, the answer
- would no longer be available when he needed it. Fighting pleasure
- itself, he begged B'dikkat to check the records and to tell him how
- long he had been there.
- B'dikkat grudgingly agreed, but he did not come out of the doorway. He
- spoke through the public address box built into the cabin, and his
- gigantic voice roared out over the empty plain, so that the pink herd
- of talking people stirred gently in their happiness and wondered what
- their friend B'dikkat might be wanting to tell them. When he said it,
- they thought it exceedingly profound, though none of them understood
- it, since it was simply the amount of time that Mercer had been on
- Shayol: "Standard years eighty-four years, seven months, three days,
- two hours, eleven and one half minutes. Good luck, fellow."
- Mercer turned away.
- The secret little corner of his mind, which stayed sane through
- happiness and pain, made him wonder about B'dikkat.
- What persuaded the cow-man to remain on Shayol? What kept him happy
- without super-condamine? Was B'dikkat a crazy slave to his own duty or
- was he a man who had hopes of going back to his own planet some day,
- surrounded by a family of little cow people resembling himself?
- Mercer, despite his happiness, wept a little at the strange fate of
- B'dikkat. His own fate he accepted.
- He remembered the last time he had eaten actual eggs from an actual
- pan. The dromozoa kept him alive, but he did not know how they did
- it.
- He staggered back to the group. The Lady Da, naked in the dusty plain,
- waved a hospitable hand and showed that there was a place for him to
- sit beside her. There were unclaimed square miles of seating space
- around them, but he appreciated the kindliness of her gesture none the
- less.
- IV
- The years, if they were years, went by. The land of Shayol did not
- change.
- Sometimes the bubbling sound of geysers came faintly across the plain
- to the herd of men; those who could talk declared it to be the
- breathing of Captain Alvarez. There was night and day, but no setting
- of crops, no change of season, no generations of men. Time stood still
- for these people, and their load of pleasure was so commingled with the
- shocks and pains of the dromozoa that the words of the Lady Da took on
- very remote meaning.
- "People never live forever."
- Her statement was a hope, not a truth in which they could believe.
- They did not have the wit to follow the stars in their courses, to
- exchange names with each other, to harvest the experience of each for
- the wisdom of all. There was no dream of escape for these people.
- Though they saw the old-style chemical rockets lift up from the field
- beyond B'dikkat's cabin, they did not make plans to hide among the
- frozen crop of transmuted flesh.
- Far long ago, some other prisoner than one of these had tried to write
- a letter. His handwriting was on a rock. Mercer read it, and so had a
- few of the others, but they could not tell which man had done it. Nor
- did they care.
- The letter, scraped on stone, had been a message home. They could
- still read the opening: "Once, I was like you, stepping out of my
- window at the end of day, and letting the winds blow me gently toward
- the place I lived in. Once, like you, I had one head, two hands, ten
- fingers on my hands. The front part of my head was called a face, and
- I could talk with it. Now I can only write, and that only when I get
- out of pain. Once, like you, I ate foods, drank liquid, had a name. I
- cannot remember the name I had. You can stand up, you who get this
- letter. I cannot even stand up. I just wait for the lights to put my
- food in me molecule by molecule, and to take it out again. Don't think
- that I am punished any more.
- This place is not a punishment. It is something else."
- Among the pink herd, none of them ever decided what was "something
- else."
- Curiosity had died among them long ago.
- Then came the day of the little people.
- It was a time not an hour, not a year: a duration somewhere between
- them when the Lady Da and Mercer sat wordless with happiness and filled
- with the joy of super-condamine. They had nothing to say to one
- another; the drug said all things for them.
- A disagreeable roar from B'dikkat's cabin made them stir mildly.
- Those two, and one or two others, looked toward the speaker of the
- public address system.
- The Lady Da brought herself to speak, though the matter was unimportant
- beyond words.
- "I do believe," said she, "that we used to call that the War Alarm."
- They drowsed back into their happiness.
- A man with two rudimentary heads growing beside his own crawled over to
- them. All three heads looked very happy, and Mercer thought it
- delightful of him to appear in such a whimsical shape. Under the
- pulsing glow of super-condamine, Mercer regretted that he had not used
- times when his mind was clear to ask him who he had once been. He
- answered it for them. Forcing his eyelids open by sheer will power, he
- gave the Lady
- Da and Mercer the lazy ghost of a military salute and said, "Suzdal,
- Ma'am and Sir, former cruiser commander. They are sounding the alert.
- Wish to report that I am ... I am ... I am not quite ready for
- battle."
- He dropped off to sleep.
- The gentle peremptorinesses of the Lady Da brought his eyes open
- again.
- "Commander, why are they sounding it here? Why did you come to us?"
- "You, Ma'am, and the gentleman with the ears seem to think best of our
- group. I thought you might have orders."
- Mercer looked around for the gentleman with the ears. It was himself.
- In that time his face was almost wholly obscured with a crop of fresh
- little ears, but he paid no attention to them, other than expecting
- that B'dikkat would cut them all off in due course and that the
- dromozoa would give him something else.
- The noise from the cabin rose to a higher, ear-splitting intensity.
- Among the herd, many people stirred.
- Some opened their eyes, looked around, murmured,
- "It's a noise," and went back to the happy drowsing with
- supercondamine.
- The cabin door opened.
- B'dikkat rushed out, without his suit. They had never seen him on the
- outside without his protective metal suit.
- He rushed up to them, looked wildly around, recognized the Lady Da and
- Mercer, picked them up, one under each arm, and raced with them back to
- the cabin. He flung them into the double door. They landed with
- bone-splitting crashes, and found it amusing to hit the ground so hard.
- The floor tilted them into the room. Moments later, B'dikkat
- followed.
- He roared at them,
- "You're people, or you were. You understand people; I only obey them.
- But this I will not obey.
- Look at that!"
- Four beautiful human children lay on the floor. The two smallest
- seemed to be twins, about two years of age. There was a girl of five
- and a boy of seven or so. All of them had slack eyelids. All of them
- had thin red lines around their temples and their hair, shaved away,
- showed how their brains had been removed.
- B'dikkat, heedless of danger from dromozoa, stood beside the Lady Da
- and Mercer, shouting.
- "You're real people. I'm just a cow. I do my duty. My duty does not
- include this. These are children."
- The wise, surviving recess of Mercer's mind registered shock and
- disbelief. It was hard to sustain the emotion, because the
- super-condamine washed at his consciousness like a great tide, making
- everything seem lovely. The forefront of his mind, rich with the drug,
- told him,
- "Won't it be nice to have
- some children with us!" But the undestroyed interior of his mind,
- keeping the honor he knew before he came to Shayol, whispered, "This is
- a crime worse than any crime we have committed! And the Empire has
- done it."
- "What have you done?" said the Lady Da.
- "What can we do?"
- "I tried to call the satellite. When they knew what I was talking
- about, they cut me off. After all, I'm not people. The head doctor
- told me to do my work."
- "Was it Doctor Vomact?" Mercer asked.
- "Vomact?" said B'dikkat.
- "He died a hundred years ago, of old age. No, a new doctor cut me off.
- I don't have people-feeling, but I am Earth-born, of Earth blood. I
- have emotions myself. Pure cattle emotions! This I cannot permit."
- "What have you done?"
- B'dikkat lifted his eyes to the window. His face was illuminated by a
- determination which, even beyond the edges of the drug which made them
- love him, made him seem like the father of this world responsible,
- honorable, unselfish.
- He smiled.
- "They will kill me for it, I think. But I have put in the Galactic
- Alert all ships here. " The Lady Da, sitting back on the floor,
- declared,
- "But that's only for new invaders! It is a false alarm." She pulled
- herself together and rose to her feet.
- "Can you cut these things off me, right now, in case people come? And
- get me a dress. And do you have anything which will counteract the
- effect of the supercondamine?"
- "That's what I wanted!" cried B'dikkat.
- "I will not take these children. You give me leadership."
- There and then, on the floor of the cabin, he trimmed her down to the
- normal proportions of mankind.
- The corrosive antiseptic rose like smoke in the air of the cabin.
- Mercer thought it all very dramatic and pleasant, and dropped off in
- catnaps part of the time. Then he felt B'dikkat trimming him too.
- B'dikkat opened a long, long drawer and put the specimens in; from the
- cold in the room it must have been a refrigerated locker.
- He sat them both up against the wall.
- "I've been thinking," he said.
- "There is no antidote for supercondamine. Who would want one? But I
- can give you the hypos from my rescue boat. They are supposed to bring
- a person back, no matter what has happened to that person out in
- space."
- There was a whining over the cabin roof. B'dikkat knocked a window out
- with his fist, stuck his head out of the window and looked up.
- "Come on in," he shouted.
- There was the thud of a landing craft touching ground quickly.
- Doors
- whirred. Mercer wondered, mildly, why people dared to land on Shayol.
- When they came in he saw that they were not people; they were Customs
- Robots, who could travel at velocities which people could never match.
- One wore the insigne of an inspector.
- "Where are the invaders?"
- "There are no " began B'dikkat.
- The Lady Da, imperial in her posture though she was completely nude,
- said in a voice of complete clarity,
- "I am a former Empress, the Lady Da. Do you know me?"
- "No, Ma'am," said the robot inspector. He looked as uncomfortable as a
- robot could look. The drug made Mercer think that it would be nice to
- have robots for company, out on the surface of Shayol.
- "I declare this Top Emergency, in the ancient words. Do you
- understand? Connect me with the Instrumentality."
- "We can't " said the inspector.
- "You can ask," said the Lady Da.
- The inspector complied.
- The Lady Da turned to B'dikkat.
- "Give Mercer and me those shots now. Then put us outside the door so
- the dromozoa can repair these scars. Bring us in as soon as a
- connection is made.
- Wrap us in cloth if you do not have clothes for us. Mercer can stand
- the pain."
- "Yes," said B'dikkat, keeping his eyes away from the four soft children
- and their collapsed eyes.
- The injection burned like no fire ever had. It must have been capable
- of fighting the super-condamine, because B'dikkat put them through the
- open window, so as to save time going through the door. The dromozoa,
- sensing that they needed repair, flashed upon them. This time the
- super-condamine had something else fighting it.
- Mercer did not scream but he lay against the wall and wept for ten
- thousand years; in objective time, it must have been several hours.
- The Customs Robots were taking pictures. The dromozoa were flashing
- against them too, sometimes in whole swarms, but nothing happened.
- Mercer heard the voice of the communicator inside the cabin calling
- loudly for B'dikkat.
- "Surgery Satellite calling Shayol.
- B'dikkat, get on the line!"
- He obviously was not replying.
- There were soft cries coming from the other communicator, the one which
- the customs officials had brought into the room.
- Mercer was sure that the eye-machine was on and that people in other
- worlds were looking at Shayol for the first time.
- B'dikkat came through the door. He had torn navigation charts out of
- his lifeboat. With these he cloaked them.
- Mercer noted that the Lady Da changed the arrangement of the cloak in
- a few minor ways and suddenly looked like a person of great
- importance.
- They re-entered the cabin door.
- B'dikkat whispered, as if filled with awe,
- "The Instrumentality has been reached, and a Lord of the
- Instrumentality is about to talk to you."
- There was nothing for Mercer to do, so he sat back in a corner of the
- room and watched. The Lady Da, her skin healed, stood pale and nervous
- in the middle of the floor.
- The room filled with an odorless intangible smoke. The smoke clouded.
- The full communicator was on.
- A human figure appeared.
- A woman, dressed in a uniform of radically conservative cut, faced the
- Lady Da.
- "This is Shayol. You are the Lady Da. You called me."
- The Lady Da pointed to the children on the floor.
- "This must not happen," she said.
- "This is a place of punishments, agreed upon between the
- Instrumentality and the Empire. No one said anything about
- children."
- The woman on the screen looked down at the children.
- "This is the work of insane people!" she cried.
- She looked accusingly at the Lady Da.
- "Are you imperial?"
- "I was an Empress, Madam," said the Lady Da.
- "And you permit this!"
- "Permit it?" cried the Lady Da.
- "I had nothing to do with it." Her eyes widened.
- "I am a prisoner here myself. Don't you understand?"
- The image-woman snapped,
- "No, I don't."
- "I," said the Lady Da, "am a specimen. Look at the herd out there. I
- came from them a few hours ago."
- "Adjust me," said the image-woman to B'dikkat.
- "Let me see that herd."
- Her body, standing upright, soared through the wall in a flashing arc
- and was placed in the very center of the herd.
- The Lady Da and Mercer watched her. They saw even the image lose its
- stiffness and dignity. The image-woman waved an arm to show that she
- should be brought back into the cabin.
- B'dikkat tuned her back into the room.
- "I owe you an apology," said the image.
- "I am the Lady Johanna Gnade, one of the Lords of the
- Instrumentality."
- Mercer bowed, lost his balance, and had to scramble up from the floor.
- The Lady Da acknowledged the introduction with a royal nod.
- The two women looked at each other.
- "You will investigate," said the Lady Da, "and when you have
- investigated, please put us all to death. You know about the drug?"
- "Don't mention it," said B'dikkat.
- "Don't even say the name into a communicator. It is a secret of the
- Instrumentality!"
- "I am the Instrumentality," said the Lady Johanna.
- "Are you in pain? I did not think that any of you were alive. I had
- heard of the surgery banks on your off-limits planet, but I thought
- that robots tended parts of people and sent up the new grafts by
- rocket. Are there any people with you? Who is in charge? Who did
- this to the children?"
- B'dikkat stepped in front of the image. He did not bow.
- "I'm in charge."
- "You're under people cried the Lady Johanna.
- "You're a cow!"
- "A bull, Ma'am. My family is frozen back on Earth itself, and with a
- thousand years' service I am earning their freedom and my own. Your
- other questions, Ma'am. I do all the work. The dromozoa do not affect
- me much, though I have to cut a part off myself now and then. I throw
- those away. They don't go into the bank. Do you know the secret of
- this place?"
- The Lady Johanna talked to someone behind her on another world. Then
- she looked at B'dikkat and commanded,
- "Just don't name the drug or talk too much about it. Tell me the
- rest."
- "We have," said B'dikkat very formally, "thirteen hundred and
- twenty-one people who can still be counted on to supply pans when the
- dromozoa implant them. There are about seven hundred more, including
- Go-Captain Alvarez, who have been so thoroughly absorbed by the planet
- that it is no use trimming them. The Empire set up this place as a
- point of uttermost punishment. But the Instrumentality gave secret
- orders for medicine" he accented the word strangely, meaning
- supercondamine "to be issued so that the punishment would be
- counteracted. The Empire supplies our convicts. The Instrumentality
- distributes the surgical material."
- The Lady Johanna lifted her right hand in a gesture of silence and
- compassion. She looked around the room. Her eyes came back to the
- Lady Da. Perhaps she guessed what effort the Lady Da had made in order
- to remain standing erect while the two drugs, the super-condamine and
- the lifeboat drug, fought within her veins.
- "You people can rest. I will tell you now that all things possible
- will be done for you. The Empire is finished. The Fundamental
- Agreement, by which the Instrumentality surrendered the Empire a
- thousand years ago, has been set aside.
- We did not know that you people existed. We would have found out in
- time, but I am sorry we did not find out sooner. Is there anything we
- can do for you right away?"
- "Time is what we all have," said the Lady Da.
- "Perhaps we cannot ever leave Shayol, because of the dromozoa and the
- medicine. The one could be dangerous. The other must never be
- permitted to be known."
- The Lady Johanna Gnade looked around the room. When her glance
- reached him, B'dikkat fell to his knees and lifted his enormous hands
- in complete supplication.
- "What do you want?" said she.
- "These," said B'dikkat, pointing to the mutilated children.
- "Order a stop on children. Stop it now!" He commanded her with the
- last cry, and she accepted his command.
- "And, Lady " he stopped as if shy.
- "Yes? Go on."
- "Lady, I am unable to kill. It is not in my nature. To work, to help,
- but not to kill. What do I do with these?" He gestured at the four
- motionless children on the floor.
- "Keep them," she said.
- "Just keep them."
- "I can't," he said.
- "There's no way to get off this planet alive.
- I do not have food for them in the cabin. They will die in a few
- hours. And governments," he added wisely, "take a long, long time to
- do things."
- "Can you give them the medicine?"
- "No, it would kill them if I give them that stuff first before the
- dromozoa have fortified their bodily processes."
- The Lady Johanna Gnade filled the room with tinkling laughter that was
- very close to weeping.
- "Fools, poor fools, and the more fool I! If super-condamine works only
- after the dromozoa, what is the purpose of the secret?"
- B'dikkat rose to his feet, offended. He frowned, but he could not get
- the words with which to defend himself.
- The Lady Da, ex-empress of a fallen empire, addressed the other Lady
- with ceremony and force: "Put them outside, so they will be touched.
- They will hurt. Have B'dikkat give them the drug as soon as he thinks
- it safe. I beg your leave, my Lady . . ."
- Mercer had to catch her before she fell.
- "You've all had enough," said the Lady Johanna.
- "A storm ship with heavily armed troops is on its way to your ferry
- satellite. They will seize the medical personnel and find out who
- committed this crime against children."
- Mercer dared to speak.
- "Will you punish the guilty doctor?"
- "You speak of punishment." she cried.
- "You!"
- "It's fair. I was punished for doing wrong. Why shouldn't he be?"
- "Punish punish!" she said to him.
- "We will cure that doctor.
- And we will cure you too, if we can."
- Mercer began to weep. He thought of the oceans of happiness which
- super-condamine had brought him, forgetting the hideous pain and the
- deformities on Shayol. Would there be no next needle? He could not
- guess what life would be like off Shayol.
- Was there to be no more tender, fatherly B'dikkat coming with his
- knives?
- He lifted his tear-stained face to the Lady Johanna Gnade and choked
- out the words.
- "Lady, we are all insane in this place. I do not think we want to
- leave."
- She turned her face away, moved by enormous compassion.
- Her next words were to B'dikkat.
- "You are wise and good, even if you are not a human being. Give them
- all of the drug they can take. The Instrumentality will decide what to
- do with all of you.
- I will survey your planet with robot soldiers. Will the robots be
- safe, cowman?"
- B'dikkat did not like the thoughtless name she called him, but he held
- no offense.
- "The robots will be all right, Ma'am, but the dromozoa will be excited
- if they cannot feed them and heal them.
- Send as few as you can. We do not know how the dromozoa live or
- die."
- "As few as I can," she murmured. She lifted her hand in command to
- some technician unimaginable distances away. The odorless smoke rose
- about her and the image was gone.
- A shrill cheerful voice spoke up.
- "I fixed your window," said the Customs Robot. B'dikkat thanked him
- absentmindedly. He helped Mercer and the Lady Da into the doorway.
- When they had gotten outside, they were promptly stung by the dromozoa.
- It did not matter.
- B'dikkat himself emerged, carrying the four children in his two
- gigantic, tender hands. He lay the slack bodies on the ground near the
- cabin. He watched as the bodies went into spasm with the onset of the
- dromozoa. Mercer and the Lady Da saw that his brown cow eyes were
- rimmed with red and that his huge cheeks were dampened by tears.
- Hours or centuries.
- Who could tell them apart?
- The herd went back to its usual life, except that the intervals between
- needles were much shorter. The once-commander, Suzdal, refused the
- needle when he heard the news. Whenever he could walk, he followed the
- Customs Robots around as they photographed, took soil samples, and made
- a count of the bodies.
- They were particularly interested in the mountain of Go-Captain Alvarez
- and professed themselves uncertain as to whether there was organic life
- there or not. The mountain did appear to react to super-condamine, but
- they could find no blood, no heart-beat.
- Moisture, moved by the dromozoa, seemed to have replaced the once-human
- bodily processes.
- V
- And then, early one morning, the sky opened.
- Ship after ship landed. People emerged, wearing clothes.
- The dromozoa ignored the newcomers. Mercer, who was in a state of
- bliss, confusedly tried to think this through until he realized that
- the ships were loaded to their skins with communications machines; the
- "people" were either robots or images of persons in other places.
- The robots swiftly gathered together the herd. Using wheelbarrows,
- they brought the hundreds of mindless people to the landing area.
- Mercer heard a voice he knew. It was the Lady Johanna Gnade.
- "Set me high," she commanded.
- Her form rose until she seemed one-fourth the size of Alvarez.
- Her voice took on more volume.
- "Wake them all," she commanded.
- Robots moved among them, spraying them with a gas which was both
- sickening and sweet. Mercer felt his mind go clear. The
- super-condamine still operated in his nerves and veins, but his
- cortical area was free of it. He thought clearly.
- "I bring you," cried the compassionate feminine voice of the gigantic
- Lady Johanna, "the judgment of the Instrumentality on the planet
- Shayol.
- "Item: the surgical supplies will be maintained and the dromozoa will
- not be molested. Portions of human bodies will be left here to grow,
- and the grafts will be collected by robots.
- Neither man nor homunculus will live here again.
- "Item: the under man B'dikkat, of cattle extraction, will be rewarded
- by an immediate return to Earth. He will be paid twice his expected
- thousand years of earnings."
- The voice of B'dikkat, without amplification, was almost as loud as
- hers through the amplifier. He shouted his protest,
- "Lady, Lady!"
- She looked down at him, his enormous body reaching to ankle height on
- her swirling gown, and said in a very informal tone, "What do you
- want?"
- "Let me finish my work first," he cried, so that all could hear.
- "Let me finish taking care of these people."
- The specimens who had minds all listened attentively. The brainless
- ones were trying to dig themselves back into the soft earth of Shayol,
- using their powerful claws for the purpose.
- Whenever one began to disappear, a robot seized him by a limb and
- pulled him out again.
- "Item: cephalectomies will be performed on all persons with
- irrecoverable minds. Their bodies will be left here. Their heads will
- be taken away and killed as pleasantly as we can manage, probably by an
- over dosage of super-condamine."
- "The last big jolt," murmured Commander Suzdal, who stood near
- Mercer.
- "That's fair enough."
- "Item: the children have been found to be the last heirs of the Empire.
- An over-zealous official sent them here to prevent their committing
- treason when they grew up. The doctor obeyed orders without
- questioning them. Both the official and the doctor have been cured and
- their memories of this have been erased, so that they need have no
- shame or grief for what they have done."
- "It's unfair," cried the half-man.
- "They should be punished as we were!"
- The Lady Johanna Gnade looked down at him.
- "Punishment is ended. We will give you anything you wish, but not the
- pain of another. I shall continue.
- "Item: since none of you wish to resume the lives which you led
- previously, we are moving you to another planet nearby. It is similar
- to Shayol, but much more beautiful. There are no dromozoa."
- At this an uproar seized the herd. They shouted, wept, cursed,
- appealed. They all wanted the needle, and if they had to stay on
- Shayol to get it, they would stay.
- "Item," said the gigantic image of the lady, overriding their babble
- with her great but feminine voice, "you will not have super-condamine
- on the new planet, since without dromozoa it would kill you. But there
- will be caps. Remember the caps. We will try to cure you and to make
- people of you again. But if you give up, we will not force you. Caps
- are very powerful; with medical help you can live under them many
- years."
- A hush fell on the group. In their various ways, they were trying to
- compare the electrical caps which had stimulated their pleasure-lobes
- with the drug which had drowned them a thousand times in pleasure.
- Their murmur sounded like assent.
- "Do you have any questions?" said the Lady Johanna.
- "When do we get the caps?" said several. They were human enough that
- they laughed at their own impatience.
- "Soon," said she reassuringly.
- "Very soon."
- "Very soon," echoed B'dikkat, reassuring his charges even though he was
- no longer in control.
- "Question," cried the Lady Da.
- "My Lady ... ?" said the Lady Johanna, giving the ex-empress her due
- courtesy.
- "Will we be permitted marriage?"
- The Lady Johanna looked astonished.
- "I don't know." She smiled.
- "I don't know any reason why not " "I claim this man Mercer," said the
- Lady Da.
- "When the drugs were deepest, and the pain was greatest, he was the one
- who always tried to think. May I have him?"
- Mercer thought the procedure arbitrary but he was so happy that he said
- nothing. The Lady Johanna scrutinized him and then she nodded. She
- lifted her arms in a gesture of blessing and farewell.
- The robots began to gather the pink herd into two groups.
- One group was to whisper in a ship over to a new world, new problems
- and new lives. The other group, no matter how much its members tried
- to scuttle into the dirt, was gathered for the last honor which
- humanity could pay their manhood.
- B'dikkat, leaving everyone else, jogged with his bottle across the
- plain to give the mountain-man Alvarez an especially large gift of
- delight.
- On the Gem Planet Consider the horse. He climbed up through the
- crevasses of a cliff of gems; the force which drove him was the love of
- man.
- Consider Mizzer, the resort planet, where the dictator Colonel Wedder
- reformed the culture so violently that whatever had been slovenly now
- became atrocious.
- Consider Genevieve, so rich that she was the prisoner of her own
- wealth, so beautiful that she was the victim of her own beauty, so
- intelligent that she knew there was nothing, nothing to be done about
- her fate.
- Consider Casher O'Neill, a wanderer among the planets, thirsting for
- justice and yet hoping in his innermost thoughts that "justice" was not
- just another word for revenge.
- Consider Pontoppidan, that literal gem of a planet, where the people
- were too rich and busy to have good food, open air, or much fun. All
- they had were diamonds, rubies, tour malines and emeralds.
- Add these together and you have one of the strangest stories ever told
- from world to world.
- When Casher O'Neill came to Pontoppidan, he found that the capital city
- was appropriately called Andersen.
- This was the second century of the Rediscovery of Man.
- People everywhere had taken up old names, old languages, old customs,
- as fast as the robots and the under people could retrieve the data from
- the rubbish of forgotten star lanes or the subsurface ruins of Manhome
- itself.
- Casher knew this very well, to his bitter cost. Re-acculturation had
- brought him revolution and exile. He came from the dry, beautiful
- planet of Mizzer. He was himself the nephew of the ruined ex-ruler,
- Kuraf, whose collection of objectionable books had at one time been
- unmatched in the settled galaxy; he had stood aside, half-assenting,
- when the colonels
- of Man Gibna and Wedder took over the planet in the name of reform; he
- had implored the Instrumentality, vainly, for help when Wedder became a
- tyrant; and now he traveled among the stars, looking for men or weapons
- who might destroy Wedder and make Kaheer again the luxurious, happy
- city which it once had been.
- He felt that his cause was hopeless when he landed on Pontoppidan. The
- people were warm-hearted, friendly, intelligent, but they had no
- motives to fight for, no weapons to fight with, no enemies to fight
- against. They had little public spirit, such as Casher O'Neill had
- seen back on his native planet of Mizzer. They were concerned about
- little things.
- Indeed, at the time of his arrival, the Pontoppidans were wildly
- excited about a horse.
- A horse! Who worries about one horse?
- Casher O'Neill himself said so.
- "Why bother about a horse?
- We have lots of them on Mizzer. They are four-handed beings, eight
- times the weight of a man, with only one finger on each of the four
- hands. The fingernail is very heavy and permits them to run fast.
- That's why our people have them, for running."
- "Why run?" said the Hereditary Dictator of Pontoppidan.
- "Why run, when you can fly? Don't you have ornithopters?"
- "We don't run with them," said Casher indignantly.
- "We make them run against each other and then we pay prizes to the one
- which runs fastest."
- "But then," said Philip Vincent, the Hereditary Dictator, "you get a
- very illogical situation. When you have tried out these four fingered
- beings, you know how fast each one goes. So what? Why bother?"
- His niece interrupted. She was a fragile little thing, smaller than
- Casher O'Neill liked women to be. She had clear gray eyes, well-marked
- eyebrows, a very artificial coiffure of silver-blonde hair, and the
- most sensitive little mouth he had ever seen. She conformed to the
- local fashion by wearing some kind of powder or face cream which was
- flesh-pink in color but which had overtones of lilac. On a woman as
- old as twenty-two, such a coloration would have made the wearer look
- like an old hag, but on Genevieve it was pleasant, if rather startling.
- It gave the effect of a happy child playing grown-up and doing the job
- joyfully and well. Casher knew that it was hard to tell ages in these
- off-trail planets. Genevieve might be a grande dame in her third or
- fourth rejuvenation.
- He doubted it, on second glance. What she said was sensible, young,
- and pert: "But uncle, they're animals!"
- "I know that," he rumbled.
- "But uncle, don't you see it?"
- "Stop saying 'but uncle' and tell me what you mean,"
- growled the Dictator, very fondly.
- "Animals are always uncertain."
- "Of course," said the uncle.
- "That makes it a game, uncle," said Genevieve.
- "They're never sure that any one of them would do the same thing
- twice.
- Imagine the excitement the beautiful big beings from earth running
- around and around on their four middle fingers, the big fingernails
- making the gems jump loose from the ground!"
- "I'm not at all sure it's that way. Besides, Mizzer may be covered
- with something valuable, such as earth or sand, instead of gemstones
- like the ones we have here on Pontoppidan. You know, your flower-pots
- with their rich, warm, wet, soft earth?"
- "Of course I do, uncle. And I know what you paid for them.
- You were very generous. And still are," she added diplomatically,
- glancing quickly at Casher O'Neill to see how the familial piety went
- across with the visitor.
- "We're not that rich on Mizzer. It's mostly sand, with farmland along
- the Twelve Niles, our big rivers."
- "I've seen pictures of rivers," said Genevieve.
- "Imagine living on a whole world full of flower-pot stuff!"
- "You're getting off the subject, darling. We were wondering why anyone
- would bring one horse, just one horse, to Pontoppidan. I suppose you
- could race a horse against himself, if you had a stopwatch. But would
- it be fun? Would you do that, young man?"
- Casher O'Neill tried to be respectful.
- "In my home we used to have a lot of horses. I've seen my uncle time
- them one by one."
- "Your uncle?" said the Dictator interestedly.
- "Who was your uncle that he had all these four-fingered 'horses'
- running around? They're all Earth animals and very expensive."
- Casher felt the coming of the low, slow blow he had met so many times
- before, right from the whole outside world into the pit of his
- stomach.
- "My uncle" he stammered "my uncle I thought you knew was the old
- Dictator of Mizzer, Kuraf."
- Philip Vincent jumped to his feet, very lightly for so well fleshed a
- man. The young mistress, Genevieve, clutched at the throat of her
- dress.
- "Kuraf!" cried the old Dictator.
- "Kuraf! We know about him, even here. But you were supposed to be a
- Mizzer patriot, not one of Kuraf's people."
- "He doesn't have any children " Casher began to explain.
- "I should think not, not with those habits!" snapped the old man.
- " so I'm his nephew and his heir. But I'm not trying to put the
- of Man Dictatorship back, even though I should be dictator. I just
- want to get rid of Colonel Wedder. He has ruined my people, and I am
- looking for money or weapons or help to make my home-world free." This
- was the point, Casher O'Neill knew, at which people either started
- believing him or did not. If they did not, there was not much he could
- do about it. If they did, he was sure to get some sympathy. So far,
- no help. Just sympathy.
- But the Instrumentality, while refusing to take action against Colonel
- Wedder, had given young Casher O'Neill an all-world travel pass
- something which a hundred lifetimes of savings could not have purchased
- for the ordinary man. (His obscene old uncle had gone off to Sunvale,
- on Ttiolle, the resort planet, to live out his years between the casino
- and the beach.) Casher O'Neill held the conscience of Mizzer in his
- hand. Only he, among the star travelers, cared enough to fight for the
- freedom of the Twelve Niles. Here, now, in this room, there was a
- turning point.
- "I won't give you anything," said the Hereditary Dictator, but he said
- it in a friendly voice. His niece started tugging at his sleeve.
- The older man went on.
- "Stop it, girl. I won't give you anything, not if you're part of that
- rotten lot of Kuraf's, not unless " "Anything, sir, anything, just so
- that I get help or weapons to go home to the Twelve Niles!"
- "All right, then. Unless you open your mind to me. I'm a good tele
- path myself."
- "Open my mind! Whatever for?" The incongruous indecency of it shocked
- Casher O'Neill. He'd had men and women and governments ask a lot of
- strange things from him, but no one before had had the cold impudence
- to ask him to open his mind.
- "And why you?" he went on,
- "What would you get out of it?
- There's nothing much in my mind."
- "To make sure," said the Hereditary Dictator, "that you are not too
- honest and sharp in your beliefs. If you're positive that you know
- what to do, you might be another Colonel Wedder, putting your people
- through a dozen torments for a Utopia which never quite comes true. If
- you don't care at all, you might be like your uncle. He did no real
- harm. He just stole his planet blind and he had some extraordinary
- habits which got him talked about between the stars. He never killed a
- man in his life, did he?"
- "No, sir," said Casher O'Neill, "he never did." It relieved him to
- tell the one little good thing about his uncle; there was so very, very
- little which could be said in Kuraf's favor.
- "I don't like slobbering old libertines like your uncle," said Philip
- Vincent, "but I don't hate them either. They don't hurt other people
- much. As a matter of actual fact, they don't hurt anyone but
- themselves. They waste property, though. Like these horses you have
- on Mizzer. We'd never bring living beings to this world of
- Pontoppidan. just to play games
- with. And you know we're not poor. We're no Old North Australia, but
- we have a good income here."
- That, thought Casher O'Neill, is the understatement of the year, but he
- was a careful young man with a great deal at stake, so he said
- nothing.
- The Dictator looked at him shrewdly. He appreciated the value of
- Casher's tactful silence. Genevieve tugged at his sleeve, but he
- frowned her interruption away.
- "If," said the Hereditary Dictator, "if," he repeated, "you pass two
- tests, I will give you a green ruby as big as my head. If my Committee
- will allow me to do so. But I think I can talk them around. One test
- is that you let me peep all over your mind, to make sure that I am not
- dealing with one more honest fool. If you're too honest, you're a fool
- and a danger to mankind. I'll give you a dinner and ship you
- off-planet as fast as I can. And the other test is solve the puzzle of
- this horse. The one horse on Pontoppidan. Why is the animal here?
- What should we do with it? If it's good to eat, how should we cook it?
- Or can we trade to some other world, like your planet Mizzer, which
- seems to set a value on horses?"
- "Thank you, sir " said Casher O'Neill.
- "But, uncle," said Genevieve.
- "Keep quiet, my darling, and let the young man speak," said the
- Dictator.
- " all I was going to ask, is," said Casher O'Neill, "what's a green
- ruby good for? I didn't even know they came green."
- "That, young man, is a Pontoppidan specialty. We have a geology based
- on ultra-heavy chemistry. This planet was once a fragment from a giant
- planet which imploded. The use is simple.
- With a green ruby you can make a laser beam which will boil away your
- city of Kaheer in a single sweep. We don't have weapons here and we
- don't believe in them, so I won't give you a weapon. You'll have to
- travel further to find a ship and to get the apparatus for mounting
- your green ruby. If I give it to you.
- But you will be one more step along in your fight with Colonel
- Wedder."
- "Thank you, thank you, most honorable sir!" cried Casher O'Neill.
- "But uncle," said Genevieve, "you shouldn't have picked those two
- things because I know the answers."
- "You know all about him," said the Hereditary Dictator, "by some means
- of your own?"
- Genevieve flushed under her lilac-hued foundation cream.
- "I
- know enough for us to know."
- "How do you know it, my darling?"
- "I just know," said Genevieve.
- Her uncle made no comment, but he smiled widely and indulgently as if
- he had heard that particular phrase before.
- She stamped her foot.
- "And I know about the horse, too. All about it."
- "Have you seen it?"
- "No."
- "Have you talked to it?"
- "Horses don't talk, uncle."
- "Most under people do," he said.
- "This isn't an under person uncle. It's a plain unmodified Old Earth
- animal. It never did talk."
- "Then what do you know, my honey?" The uncle was affectionate, but
- there was the crackle of impatience under his voice.
- "I taped it. The whole thing. The story of the horse of Pontoppidan.
- And I've edited it, too. I was going to show it to you this morning,
- but your staff sent that young man in."
- Casher O'Neill looked his apologies at Genevieve.
- She did not notice him. Her eyes were on her uncle.
- "Since you've done this much, we might as well see it." He turned to
- the attendants.
- "Bring chairs. And drinks. You know mine. The young lady will take
- tea with lemon. Real tea. Will you have coffee, young man?"
- "You have coffee!" cried Casher O'Neill. As soon as he said it, he
- felt like a fool. Pontoppidan was a rich planet. On most worlds'
- exchanges, coffee came out to about two man-years per kilo. Here half
- tracks crunched their way through gems as they went to load up the
- frequent trading vessels.
- The chairs were put in place. The drinks arrived. The Hereditary
- Dictator had been momentarily lost in a brown study, as though he were
- wondering about his promise to Casher O'Neill.
- He had even murmured to the young man,
- "Our bargain stands?
- Never mind what my niece says." Casher had nodded vigorously.
- The old man had gone back to frowning at the servants and did not relax
- until a tiger-man bounded into the room, carrying a tray with acrobatic
- precision. The chairs were already in place.
- The uncle held his niece's chair for her as a command that she sit
- down. He nodded Casher O'Neill into a chair on the other side of
- himself.
- He commanded,
- "Dim the lights..."
- The room plunged into semi-darkness.
- Without being told, the people took their places immediately behind the
- three main seats and the under people perched or sat on benches and
- tables behind them. Very little was spoken. Casher O'Neill could
- sense that Pontoppidan was a well-run place. He began to wonder if the
- Hereditary Dictator had much real work left to do, if he could fuss
- that much over a single horse. Perhaps all he did was boss his niece
- and watch the robots load truckloads of gems into sacks while the under
- people weighed them, listed them, and wrote out the bills for the
- customers.
- II
- There was no screen; this was a good machine.
- The planet Pontoppidan came into view, its airless brightness giving
- strong hints of the mineral riches which might be found.
- Here and there enormous domes, such as the one in which this palace was
- located, came into view.
- Genevieve's own voice, girlish, impulsive, and yet didactic, rang out
- with the story of her planet. It was as though she had prepared the
- picture not only for her own uncle but for off-world visitors as well.
- By Joan, that's it! thought Casher O'Neill. If they don't raise much
- food here, outside of the hydroponics, and don't have any real People
- Places, they have to trade: that does mean visitors and many, many of
- them.
- The story was interesting, but the girl herself was more interesting.
- Her face shone in the shifting light which the images a meter, perhaps
- a little more, from the floor reflected across the room. Casher
- O'Neill thought that he had never before seen a woman who so peculiarly
- combined intelligence and charm. She was girl, girl, girl, all the way
- through; but she was also very smart and pleased with being smart. It
- betokened a happy life. He found himself glancing covertly at her.
- Once he caught her glancing, equally covertly, at him. The darkness of
- the scene enabled them both to pass it off as an accident without
- embarrassment.
- Her view tape had come to the story of the dipsies, enormous canyons
- which lay like deep gashes on the surface of the planet.
- Some of the color views were spectacular beyond belief. Casher
- O'Neill, as the "appointed one" of Mizzer, had had plenty of time to
- wander through the non-salacious parts of his uncle's collections, and
- he had seen pictures of the most notable worlds.
- Never had he seen anything like this. One view showed a sunset against
- a six-kilometer cliff of a material which looked like solid emerald.
- The peculiar bright sunshine of Pontoppidan's small, penetrating,
- lilac-hued sun ran like living water over the precipice of gems. Even
- the reduced image, one meter by one meter, was enough to make him catch
- his breath.
- The bottom of the dipsy had vapor emerging in curious cylindrical
- columns which seemed to erode as they reached two or three times the
- height of a man. The recorded voice of Genevieve was explaining that
- the very thin atmosphere of Pontoppidan would not be breathable for
- another 2,520 years, since the settlers did not wish to squander their
- resources on a luxury like breathing when the whole planet only had
- 60,000 inhabitants; they would rather go on with masks and use their
- wealth in other ways. After all, it was not as though they did not
- have their domed cities, some of them many kilometers in radius.
- Besides the usual hydroponics, they had
- of Man even imported 7.2 hectares of garden soil, 5.5 centimeters
- deep, together with enough water to make the gardens rich and
- fruitful.
- They had bought worms, too, at the price of eight carats of diamond per
- living worm, in order to keep the soil of the gardens loose and
- living.
- Genevieve's transcribed voice rang out with pride as she listed these
- accomplishments of her people, but a note of sadness came in which she
- returned to the subject of the dipsies. "... and though we would like
- to live in them and develop their atmospheres, we dare not. There is
- too much escape of radioactivity. The geysers themselves may or may
- not be contaminated from one hour to the next. So we just look at
- them. Not one of them has ever been settled, except for the Hippy
- Dipsy, where the horse came from. Watch this next picture."
- The camera sheered up, up, up from the surface of the planet.
- Where it had wandered among mountains of diamonds and valleys of tour
- malines it now took to the blue-black of near, inner space. One of the
- canyons showed (from high altitude) the grotesque pattern of a human
- woman's hips and legs, though what might have been the upper body was
- lost in a confusion of broken hills which ended in a bright
- almost-iridescent plain to the North.
- "That," said the real Genevieve, overriding her own voice on the
- screen, "is the Hippy Dipsy. There, see the blue? That's the only
- lake on all of Pontoppidan. And here we drop to the hermit's house."
- Casher O'Neill almost felt vertigo as the camera plummeted from
- off-planet into the depths of that immense canyon. The edges of the
- canyon almost seemed to move like lips with the plunge, opening and
- folding inward to swallow him up.
- Suddenly they were beside a beautiful little lake.
- A small hut stood beside the shore.
- In the doorway there sat a man, dead.
- His body had been there a long time; it was already mummified.
- Genevieve's recorded voice explained the matter: ". . . in Norstrilian
- law and custom, they told him that his time had come.
- They told him to go to the Dying House, since he was no longer fit to
- live. In Old North Australia, they are so rich that they let everyone
- live as long as he wants, unless the old person can't take rejuvenation
- any more, even with stroon, and unless he or she gets to be a real pest
- to the living. If that happens, they are invited to go to the Dying
- House, where they shriek and pant with delirious joy for weeks or days
- until they finally die of an overload of sheer happiness and
- excitement. . . ." There was a hesitation, even in the recording.
- "We never knew why this man refused. He stood off-planet and said that
- he had seen views of the Hippy Dipsy. He said it was the most
- beautiful place on all the worlds, and that he wanted to build a cabin
- there,
- to live alone, except for his non-human friend. We thought it was
- some small pet. When we told him that the Hippy Dipsy was very
- dangerous, he said that this did not matter in the least to him, since
- he was old and dying anyhow. Then he offered to pay us twelve times
- our planetary income if we would lease him twelve hectares on the
- condition of absolute privacy. No pictures, no scanners, no help, no
- visitors. Just solitude and scenery. His name was Perino. My
- great-grandfather asked for nothing more, except the written transfer
- of credit. When he paid it, Perino even asked that he be left alone
- after he was dead. Not even a vault rocket so that he could either
- orbit Pontoppidan forever or start a very slow journey to nowhere, the
- way so many people like it. So this is our first picture of him. We
- took it when the light went off in the People Room and one of the
- tiger-men told us that he was sure a human consciousness had come to an
- end in the Hippy Dipsy.
- "And we never even thought of the pet. After all, we had never made a
- picture of him. This is the way he arrived from Perino's shack."
- A robot was shown in a control room, calling excitedly in the old
- Common Tongue.
- "People, people! Judgment needed! Moving object coming out of the
- Hippy Dipsy. Object has improper shape. Not a correct object. Should
- not rise. Does so anyhow. People, tell me, people, tell me! Destroy
- or not destroy? This is an improper object. It should fall, not rise.
- Coming out of the Hippy Dipsy."
- A firm click shut off the robot's chatter. A well-shaped woman took
- over. From the nature of her work and the lithe, smooth tread with
- which she walked, Casher O'Neill suspected that she was of cat origin,
- but there was nothing in her dress or in her manner to show that she
- was under people
- The woman in the picture lighted a screen.
- She moved her hands in the air in front of her, like a blind person
- feeling his way through open day.
- The picture on the inner screen came to resolution.
- A face showed in it.
- What a face! thought Casher O'Neill, and he heard the other people
- around him in the viewing room.
- The horse!
- Imagine a face like that of a newborn cat, thought Casher.
- Mizzer is full of cats. But imagine the face with a huge mouth, with
- big yellow teeth a nose long beyond imagination. Imagine eyes which
- look friendly. In the picture they were rolling back and forth with
- exertion, but even there when they did not feel observed there was
- nothing hostile about the set of the eyes.
- They were tame, companionable eyes. Two ridiculous ears stood high,
- and a little tuft of golden hair showed on the crest of the head
- between the ears.
- of Man The viewed scene was comical, too. The cat-woman was as
- astonished as the viewers. It was lucky that she had touched the
- emergency switch, so that she not only saw the horse, but had recorded
- herself and her own actions while bringing him into view.
- Genevieve whispered across the chest of the Hereditary Dictator: "Later
- we found he was a palomino pony. That's a very special kind of horse.
- And Perino had made him immortal, or almost immortal."
- "Sh-h!" said her uncle.
- The screen-within-the-screen showed the cat-woman waving her hands in
- the air some more. The view broadened.
- The horse had four hands and no legs, or four legs and no hands,
- whichever way you want to count them.
- The horse was fighting his way up a narrow cleft of rubies which led
- out of the Hippy Dipsy. He panted heavily. The oxygen bottles on his
- sides swung wildly as he clambered. He must have seen something,
- perhaps the image of the cat-woman, because he said a word:
- Whay-yay-yay-yay-whay-yay!
- The cat-woman in the nearer picture spoke very distinctly: "Give your
- name, age, species, and authority for being on this planet." She spoke
- clearly and with the utmost possible authority.
- The horse obviously heard her. His ears tipped forward. But his reply
- was the same as before: Whay-yay-yay!
- Casher O'Neill realized that he had followed the mood of the picture
- and had seen the horse the way that the people on Pontoppidan would
- have seen him. On second thought, the horse was nothing special, by
- the standards of the Twelve Niles or the Little Horse Market in the
- city of Kaheer. It was an old pony stallion, no longer fit for
- breeding and probably not for riding either. The hair had whitened
- among the gold; the teeth were worn. The animal showed many injuries
- and burns. Its only use was to be killed, cut up, and fed to the
- racing dogs. But he said nothing to the people around him. They were
- still spellbound by the picture.
- The cat-woman repeated: "Your name isn't Whayayay. Identify yourself
- properly; name first."
- The horse answered her with the same word in a higher key.
- Apparently forgetting that she had recorded herself as well as the
- emergency screen, the cat-woman said,
- "I'll call real people if you don't answer! They'll be annoyed at
- being bothered."
- The horse rolled his eyes at her and said nothing.
- The cat-woman pressed an emergency button on the side of the room. One
- could not see the other communication screen which lighted up, but her
- end of the conversation was plain.
- "I want an ornithopter. Big one. Emergency."
- A mumble from the side screen.
- "To go to the Hippy Dipsy. There's an under person there, and he's in
- so much trouble that he won't talk." From the screen beside her, the
- horse seemed to have understood the sense of the message, if not the
- words, because he repeated: Whay-yay-whay-yay-yay!
- "See," said the cat-woman to the person in the other screen, "that's
- what he's doing. It's obviously an emergency."
- The voice from the other screen came through, tinny and remote by
- double recording: "Fool, yourself, cat-woman! Nobody can fly an
- ornithopter into a dipsy. Tell your silly friend to go back to the
- floor of the dipsy and we'll pick him up by space rocket."
- Whay-yay-yay! said the horse impatiently.
- "He's not my friend," said the cat-woman with brisk annoyance.
- "I just discovered him a couple of minutes ago. He's asking for help.
- Any idiot can see that, even if we don't know his language."
- The picture snapped off.
- The next scene showed tiny human figures working with searchlights at
- the top of an immeasurably high cliff. Here and there, the beam of the
- searchlight caught the cliff face; the translucent faceted material of
- the cliff looked almost like rows of eerie windows, their lights
- snapping on and off, as the searchlight moved.
- Far down there was a red glow. Fire came from inside the mountain.
- Even with telescopic lenses the cameraman could not get the close-up of
- the glow. On one side there was the figure of the horse, his four arms
- stretched at impossible angles as he held himself firm in the crevasse;
- on the other side of the fire there were the even tinier figures of
- men, laboring to fit some sort of sling to reach the horse.
- For some odd reason having to do with the techniques of recording, the
- voices came through very plainly, even the heavy, tired breathing of
- the old horse. Now and then he uttered one of the special horse-words
- which seemed to be the limit of his vocabulary. He was obviously
- watching the men, and was firmly persuaded of their friendliness to
- him. His large, tame, yellow eyes rolled wildly in the light of the
- searchlight and every time the horse looked down, he seemed to
- shudder.
- Casher O'Neill found this entirely understandable. The bottom of the
- Hippy Dipsy was nowhere in sight; the horse, even with nothing more
- than the enlarged fingernails of his middle fingers to help him climb,
- had managed to get about four of the six kilometers' height of the
- cliff face behind him.
- of Man The voice of a tiger-man sounded clearly from among the shift
- of men, under people and robots who were struggling on the face of the
- cliff.
- "It's a gamble, but not much of a gamble. I weigh six hundred kilos
- myself, and, do you know, I don't think I've ever had to use my full
- strength since I was a kitten. I know that I can jump across the fire
- and help that thing be more comfortable. I can even tie a rope around
- him so that he won't slip and fall after all the work we've done. And
- the work he's done, too," added the tiger-man grimly.
- "Perhaps I can just take him in my arms and jump back with him. It
- will be perfectly safe if you have a safety rope around each of us.
- After all, I never saw a less prehensile creature in my life. You
- can't call those fingers of his 'fingers."
- They look like little boxes of bone, designed for running around and
- not much good for anything else."
- There was a murmur of other voices and then the command of the
- supervisor.
- "Go ahead."
- No one was prepared for what happened next.
- The cameraman got the tiger-man right in the middle of his frame,
- showing the attachment of one rope around the tiger-man's broad waist.
- The tiger-man was a modified type whom the authorities had not bothered
- to put into human cosmetic form. He still had his ears on top of his
- head, yellow and black fur over his face, huge incisors overlapping his
- lower jaw, and enormous antenna-like whiskers sticking out from his
- moustache. He must have been thoroughly modified inside, however,
- because his temperament was calm, friendly, and even a little humorous;
- he must have had a carefully re-done mouth, because the utterance of
- human speech came to him clearly and without distortion.
- He jumped a mighty jump, right through the top edges of the flame.
- The horse saw him.
- The horse jumped too, almost in the same moment, also through the top
- of the flame, going the other way.
- The horse had feared the tiger-man more than he did the cliff.
- The horse landed right in the group of workers. He tried not to hurt
- them with his flailing limbs, but he did knock one man a true man, at
- that off the cliff. The man's scream faded as he crashed into the
- impenetrable darkness below.
- The robots were quick. Having no emotions except on, off, and high,
- they did not get excited. They had the horse trussed and, before the
- true men and under people had ensured their footing, they had signaled
- the crane operator at the top of the cliff. The horse, his four arms
- swinging limply, disappeared upward.
- The tiger-man jumped back through the flames to the nearer ledge. The
- picture went off.
- In the viewing room, the Hereditary Dictator Philip Vincent stood up.
- He stretched, looking around.
- Genevieve looked at Casher O'Neill expectantly.
- "That's the story," said the Dictator mildly.
- "Now you solve it."
- "Where is the horse now?" said Casher O'Neill.
- "In the hospital, of course. My niece can take you to see him."
- III
- After a short, painful, and very thorough peeping of his own mind by
- the Hereditary Dictator, Casher O'Neill and Genevieve set off for the
- hospital in which the horse was being kept in bed.
- The people of Pontoppidan had not known what else to do with him, so
- they had placed him under strong sedation and were trying to feed him
- with sugar-water compounds going directly into his veins. Genevieve
- told Casher that the horse was wasting away.
- They walked to the hospital over amethyst pebbles.
- Instead of wearing his spacesuit, Casher wore a surface helmet which
- enriched his oxygen. His hosts had not counted on his getting spells
- of uncontrollable itching from the sharply reduced atmospheric
- pressure. He did not dare mention the matter, because he was still
- hoping to get the green ruby as a weapon in his private war for the
- liberation of the Twelve Niles from the rule of Colonel Wedder.
- Whenever the itching became less than excruciating, he enjoyed the walk
- and the company of the slight, beautiful girl who accompanied him
- across the fields of jewels to the hospital. (In later years, he
- sometimes wondered what might have happened. Was the itching a part of
- his destiny, which saved him for the freedom of the city of Kaheer and
- the planet Mizzer? Might not the innocent brilliant loveliness of the
- girl have otherwise tempted him to forswear his duty and stay forever
- on Pontoppidan?) The girl wore a new kind of cosmetic for outdoor
- walking a warm peach-hued powder which let the natural pink of her
- cheeks show through. Her eyes, he saw, were a living, deep gray; her
- eyelashes, long; her smile, innocently provocative beyond all ordinary
- belief. It was a wonder that the Hereditary Dictator had not had to
- stop duels and murders between young men vying for her favor.
- They finally reached the hospital, just as Casher O'Neill thought he
- could stand it no longer and would have to ask Genevieve for some kind
- of help or carriage to get indoors and away from the frightful
- itching.
- The building was underground.
- The entrance was sumptuous. Diamonds and rubies, the size of
- building-bricks on Mizzer, had been set to frame the doorway, which was
- apparently enameled steel. Kuraf at his most lavish had never wasted
- money on anything like this door-frame. Genevieve saw his glance.
- "It did cost a lot of credits. We had to bring a blind artist all the
- way from Olympia to paint that enamel-work. The poor man.
- He spent most of his time trying to steal extra gem-stones when he
- should have known that we pay justly and never allowed anyone to get
- away with stealing."
- "What do you do?" asked Casher O'Neill.
- "We cut thieves up in space, just at the edge of the atmosphere. We
- have more manned boats in orbit than any other planet I know of. Maybe
- Old North Australia has more, but, then, nobody ever gets close enough
- to Old North Australia to come back alive and tell."
- They went on into the hospital.
- A respectful chief surgeon insisted on keeping them in the office and
- entertaining them with tea and confectionery, when they both wanted to
- go see the horse; common politeness prohibited their pushing through.
- Finally they got past the ceremony and into the room in which the horse
- was kept.
- Close up, they could see how much he had suffered. There were cuts and
- abrasions over almost all of his body. One of his hooves the doctor
- told them that was the correct name, hoof, for the big middle
- fingernail on which he walked was split; the doctor had put a
- cadmium-silver bar through it. The horse lifted his head when they
- entered, but he saw that they were just more people, not horsey people,
- so he put his head down, very patiently.
- "What's the prospect, doctor?" asked Casher O'Neill, turning away from
- the animal.
- "Could I ask you, sir, a foolish question first?"
- Surprised, Casher could only say yes.
- "You're an O'Neill. Your uncle is Kuraf. How do you happen to be
- called
- "Casher'?"
- "That's simple," laughed Casher.
- "This is my young-man name On Mizzer, everybody gets a baby name, which
- nobody uses. Then he gets a nickname. Then he gets a young-man-name,
- based on some characteristic or some friendly joke, until he picks out
- his career. When he enters his profession, he picks out his own career
- name. If I liberate Mizzer and overthrow Colonel Wedder, I'll have to
- think up a suitable career name for myself."
- "But why
- "Casher," sir?" persisted the doctor.
- "When I was a little boy and people asked me what I wanted, I always
- asked for cash. I guess that contrasted with my uncle's wastefulness,
- so they called me Casher."
- "But what is cash? One of your crops?"
- It was Casher's time to look amazed.
- "Cash is money. Paper credits. People pass them back and forth when
- they buy things."
- "Here on Pontoppidan, all the money belongs to me. All of it,"
- said Genevieve.
- "My uncle is trustee for me. But I have never been allowed to touch it
- or to spend it. It's all just planet business."
- The doctor blinked respectfully.
- "Now this horse, sir, if you will pardon my asking about your name, is
- a very strange case.
- Physiologically he is a pure Earth type. He is suited only for a
- vegetable diet, but otherwise he is a very close relative of man.
- He has a single stomach and a very large cone-shaped heart.
- That's where the trouble is. The heart is in bad condition. He is
- dying."
- "Dying?" cried Genevieve.
- "That's the sad, horrible part," said the doctor.
- "He is dying but he cannot die. He could go on like this for many
- years. Perino wasted enough stroon on this animal to make a planet
- immortal.
- Now the animal is worn out but cannot die."
- Casher O'Neill let out a long, low, ululating whistle.
- Everybody in the room jumped. He disregarded them. It was the whistle
- he had used near the stables, back among the Twelve Niles, when he
- wanted to call a horse.
- The horse knew it. The large head lifted. The eyes rolled at him so
- imploringly that he expected tears to fall from them, even though he
- was pretty sure that horses could not lachrymate.
- He squatted on the floor, close to the horse's head, with a hand on its
- mane.
- "Quick," he murmured to the surgeon.
- "Get me a piece of sugar and an under person-tele path The under
- person-tele path must not be of carnivorous origin."
- The doctor looked stupid. He snapped
- "Sugar" at an assistant, but he squatted down next to Casher O'Neill
- and said,
- "You will have to repeat that about an under person This is not an
- under person hospital at all. We have very few of them here. The
- horse is here only by command of His Excellency Philip Vincent, who
- said that the horse of Perino should be given the best of all possible
- care. He even told me," said the doctor, "that if anything wrong
- happened to this horse, I would ride patrol for it for the next eighty
- years. So I'll do what I can. Do you find me too talkative? Some
- people do. What kind of an under person do you want?"
- "I need," said Casher, very calmly, "a telepathic under person both to
- find out what this horse wants and to tell the horse that I am here to
- help him. Horses are vegetarians and they do not like meat-eaters. Do
- you have a vegetarian under person around the hospital?"
- "We used to have some squirrel-men," said the chief surgeon, "but
- when we changed the air circulating system the squirrel-men went away
- with the old equipment. I think they went to a mine. We have
- tiger-men, cat-men, and my secretary is a wolf."
- "Oh, no!" said Casher O'Neill.
- "Can you imagine a sick horse confiding in a wolf?"
- "It's no more than you are doing," said the surgeon, very softly,
- glancing up to see if Genevieve were in hearing range, and apparently
- judging that she was not.
- "The Hereditary Dictators here sometimes cut suspicious guests to
- pieces on their way off the planet. That is, unless the guests are
- licensed, regular traders.
- You are not. You might be a spy, planning to rob us. How do I know? I
- wouldn't give a diamond chip for your chances of being alive next week.
- What do you want to do about the horse? That might please the
- Dictator. And you might live."
- Casher O'Neill was so staggered by the confidence of the surgeon that
- he squatted there thinking about himself, not about the patient. The
- horse licked him, seemingly sensing that he needed solace.
- The surgeon had an idea.
- "Horses and dogs used to go together, didn't they, back in the old days
- of Manhome, when all the people lived on planet Earth?"
- "Of course," said Casher.
- "We still run them together in hunts on Mizzer, but under these new
- laws of the Instrumentality we've run out of under people-criminals to
- hunt."
- "I have a good dog," said the chief surgeon.
- "She talks pretty well, but she is so sympathetic that she upsets the
- patients by loving them too much. I have her down in the second under
- basement tending the dish-sterilizing machinery."
- "Bring her up," said Casher in a whisper.
- He remembered that he did not need to whisper about this, so he stood
- up and spoke to Genevieve: "They have found a good dog-tele path who
- may reach through to the mind of the horse. It may give us the
- answer."
- She put her hand on his forearm gently, with the approbatory gesture of
- a princess. Her fingers dug into his flesh. Was she wishing him well
- against her uncle's habitual treachery, or was this merely the impulse
- of a kind young girl who knew nothing of the way the world was run?
- IV
- The interview went extremely well.
- The dog-woman was almost perfectly humani form She looked like a tired,
- cheerful, worn-out old woman, not valuable enough to be given
- the life-prolonging santa clara drug called stroon. Work had been her
- life and she had had plenty of it. Casher O'Neill felt a twinge of
- envy when he realized that happiness goes by the petty chances of life
- and not by the large destiny. This dog-woman, with her haggard face
- and her stringy gray hair, had more love, happiness, and sympathy than
- Kuraf had found with his pleasures, Colonel Wedder with his powers, or
- himself with his crusade. Why did life do that? Was there no justice,
- ever? Why should a worn-out worthless old under woman be happy when he
- was not?
- "Never mind," she said, "you'll get over it and then you will be
- happy."
- "Over what?" he said.
- "I didn't say anything."
- "I'm not going to say it," she retorted, meaning that she was
- telepathic.
- "You're a prisoner of yourself. Some day you will escape to un
- importance and happiness. You're a good man. You're trying to save
- yourself, but you really like this horse."
- "Of course I do," said Casher O'Neill.
- "He's a brave old horse, climbing out of that hell to get back to
- people."
- When he said the word hell her eyes widened, but she said nothing. In
- his mind, he saw the sign of a fish scrawled on a dark wall and he felt
- her think at him, So you too know something of the "dark wonderful
- knowledge " which is not yet to be revealed to all mankind?
- He thought a cross back at her and then turned his thinking to the
- horse, lest their telepathy be monitored and strange punishments await
- them both.
- She spoke in words,
- "Shall we link?"
- "Link," he said.
- Genevieve stepped up. Her clear-cut, pretty, sensitive face was alight
- with excitement.
- "Could I could I be cut in?"
- "Why not?" said the dog-woman, glancing at him. He nodded.
- The three of them linked hands and then the dog-woman put her left hand
- on the forehead of the old horse.
- The sand splashed beneath their feet as they ran toward Kaheer. The
- delicious pressure of a man's body was on their backs. The red sky of
- Mizzer gleamed over them. There came the shout: "I'm a horse, I'm a
- horse, I'm a horse!"
- "You're from Mizzer," thought Casher O'Neill, "from Kaheer itself!"
- "I don't know names," thought the horse, "but you're from my land. The
- land, the good land."
- "What are you doing here?"
- "Dying," thought the horse.
- "Dying for hundreds and thousands of sundowns. The old one brought me.
- No riding, no running, no people. Just the old one and the small
- ground. I have been dying since I came here."
- of Man Casher O'Neill got a glimpse of Perino sitting and watching the
- horse, unconscious of the cruelty and loneliness which he had inflicted
- on his large pet by making it immortal and then giving it no work to
- do.
- "Do you know what dying is?"
- Thought the horse promptly: "Certainly. No-horse."
- "Do you know what life is?"
- "Yes. Being a horse."
- "I'm not a horse," thought Casher O'Neill, "but I am alive."
- "Don't complicate things," thought the horse at him, though Casher
- realized it was his own mind and not the horse's which supplied the
- words.
- "Do you want to die?"
- "To no-horse? Yes, if this room, forever, is the end of things."
- "What would you like better?" thought Genevieve, and her thoughts were
- like a cascade of newly-minted silver coins falling into all their
- minds: brilliant, clean, bright, innocent.
- The answer was quick: "Dirt beneath my hooves, and wet air again, and a
- man on my back."
- The dog-woman interrupted: "Dear horse, you know me?"
- "You're a dog," thought the horse.
- "Goo-oo-oo-ood dog!"
- "Right," thought the happy old slattern, "and I can tell these people
- how to take care of you. Sleep now, and when you waken you will be on
- the way to happiness."
- She thought the command sleep so powerfully at the old horse that
- Casher O'Neill and Genevieve both started to fall unconscious and had
- to be caught by the hospital attendants.
- As they re-gathered their wits, she was finishing her commands to the
- surgeon. " and put about 40% supplementary oxygen into the air. He'll
- have to have a real person to ride him, but some of your orbiting
- sentries would rather ride a horse up there than do nothing. You can't
- repair the heart. Don't try it.
- Hypnosis will take care of the sand of Mizzer. Just load his mind with
- one or two of the drama-cubes packed full of desert adventure. Now,
- don't you worry about me. I'm not going to give you any more
- suggestions. People-man, you!" She laughed.
- "You can forgive us dogs anything, except for being right. It makes
- you feel inferior for a few minutes. Never mind. I'm going back
- downstairs to my dishes. I love them, I really do. Good-bye, you
- pretty thing,"
- she said to Genevieve.
- "And good-bye, wanderer! Good luck to you," she said to Casher
- O'Neill.
- "You will remain miserable as long as you seek justice, but when you
- give up, righteousness will come to you and you will be happy. Don't
- worry. You're young and it won't hurt you to suffer a few more years.
- Youth is an extremely curable disease, isn't it?"
- She gave them a full curtsy, like one Lady of the Instrumentality
- saying
- good-bye to another. Her wrinkled old face was lit up with smiles, in
- which happiness was mixed with a tiniest bit of playful mockery.
- "Don't mind me, boss," she said to the surgeon.
- "Dishes, here I come." She swept out of the room.
- "See what I mean?" said the surgeon.
- "She's so horribly happy\ How can anyone run a hospital if a dishwasher
- gets all over the place, making people happy? We'd be out of jobs. Her
- ideas were good, though."
- They were. They worked. Down to the last letter of the dog woman
- instructions.
- There was argument from the council. Casher O'Neill went along to see
- them in session.
- One councillor, Bashnack, was particularly vociferous in objecting to
- any action concerning the horse.
- "Sire," he cried, "sire! We don't even know the name of the animal! I
- must protest this action, when we don't know " "That we don't,"
- assented Philip Vincent.
- "But what does a name have to do with it?"
- "The horse has no identity, not even the identity of an animal.
- It is just a pile of meat left over from the estate of Perino. We
- should kill the horse and eat the meat ourselves. Or, if we do not
- want to eat the meat, then we should sell it off-planet. There are
- plenty of peoples around here who would pay a pretty price for genuine
- Earth meat. Pay no attention to me, sire! You are the Hereditary
- Dictator and I am nothing. I have no power, no property, nothing. I
- am at your mercy. All I can tell you is to follow your own best
- interests. I have only a voice. You cannot reproach me for using my
- voice when I am trying to help you, sire, can you? That's all I am
- doing, helping you. If you spend any credits at all on this animal you
- will be doing wrong, wrong, wrong. We are not a rich planet. We have
- to pay for expensive defenses just in order to stay alive. We cannot
- even afford to pay for air that our children can go out and play. And
- you want to spend money on a horse which cannot even talk! I tell you,
- sire, this council is going to vote against you, just to protect your
- own interests and the interests of the Honorable Genevieve as Eventual
- Title-holder of all Pontoppidan. You are not going to get away with
- this, sire! We are helpless before your power, but we will insist on
- advising you " "Hear! Hear!" cried several of the councillors, not
- the least dismayed by the slight frown of the Hereditary Dictator.
- "I will take the word," said Philip Vincent himself.
- Several had had their hands raised, asking for the floor. One
- obstinate man kept his hand up even when the Dictator announced his
- intention to speak. Philip Vincent took note of him, too:
- "You can talk when I am through, if you want to."
- He looked calmly around the room, smiled imperceptibly at his niece,
- gave Casher O'Neill the briefest of nods, and then announced:
- "Gentlemen, it's not the horse which is on trial. It's Pontoppidan.
- It's we who are trying ourselves. And before whom are we trying
- ourselves, gentlemen? Each of us is before that most awful of courts,
- his own conscience.
- "If we kill that horse, gentlemen, we will not be doing the horse a
- great wrong. He is an old animal, and I do not think that he will mind
- dying very much, now that he is away from the ordeal of loneliness
- which he feared more than death. After all, he has already had his
- great triumph the climb up the cliff of gems, the jump across the
- volcanic vent, the rescue by people whom he wanted to find. The horse
- has done so well that he is really beyond us. We can help him, a
- little, or we can hurt him, a little; beside the immensity of his
- accomplishment, we cannot really do very much either way.
- "No, gentlemen, we are not judging the case of the horse. We are
- judging space. What happens to a man when he moves out into the Big
- Nothing? Do we leave Old Earth behind? Why did civilization fall?
- Will it fall again? Is civilization a gun or a blaster or a laser or a
- rocket? Is it even a plano forming ship or a pin lighter at his work?
- You know as well as I do, gentlemen, that civilization is not what we
- can do. If it had been, there would have been no fall of Ancient Man.
- Even in the Dark Ages they had a few fusion bombs, they could make some
- small guided missiles, and they even had weapons like the Kaskaskas
- Effect, which we have never been able to rediscover. The Dark Ages
- weren't dark because people lost techniques or science. They were dark
- because people lost people. It's a lot of work to be human, and it's
- work which must be kept up, or it begins to fade.
- Gentlemen, the horse judges us.
- "Take the word, gentlemen.
- "Civilization' is itself a lady's word. There were female writers in a
- country called France who made that word popular in the third century
- before space travel.
- To be 'civilized' meant for people to be tame, to be kind, to be
- polished. If we kill this horse, we are wild. If we treat the horse
- gently, we are tame. Gentlemen, I have only one witness and that
- witness will utter only one word. Then you shall vote and vote
- freely."
- There was a murmur around the table at this announcement.
- Philip Vincent obviously enjoyed the excitement he had created.
- He let them murmur on for a full minute or two before he slapped the
- table gently and said,
- "Gentlemen, the witness. Are you ready?"
- There was a murmur of assent. Bashnack tried to say
- "It's still a question of public funds!" but his neighbors shushed
- him. The table became quiet. All faces turned toward the Hereditary
- Dictator.
- "Gentlemen, the testimony. Genevieve, is that what you yourself told
- me to say? Is civilization always a woman's choice first, and only
- later a man's?"
- "Yes," said Genevieve, with a happy, open smile.
- The meeting broke up amid laughter and applause.
- V
- A month later Casher O'Neill sat in a room in a medium-size plano
- forming liner. They were out of reach of Pontoppidan. The Hereditary
- Dictator had not changed his mind and cut him down with green beams.
- Casher had strange memories, not bad ones for a young man.
- He remembered Genevieve weeping in the garden.
- "I'm romantic," she cried, and wiped her eyes on the sleeve of his
- cape.
- "Legally I'm the owner of this planet, rich, powerful, free. But I
- can't leave here. I'm too important. I can't marry whom I want to
- marry. I'm too important. My uncle can't do what he wants to do he's
- Hereditary Dictator and he always must do what the Council decides
- after weeks of chatter. I can't love you.
- You're a prince and a wanderer, with travels and battles and justice
- and strange things ahead of you. I can't go. I'm too important. I'm
- too sweet! I'm too nice; I hate, hate, hate myself sometimes. Please,
- Casher, could you take a flier and run away with me into space."
- "Your uncle's lasers could cut us to pieces before we got out."
- He held her hands and looked gently down into her face. At this moment
- he did not feel the fierce, aggressive, happy glow which an able young
- man feels in the presence of a beautiful and tender young woman. He
- felt something much stranger, softer, quieter an emotion very sweet to
- the mind and restful to the nerves. It was the simple, clear
- compassion of one person for another. He took a chance for her sake,
- because the "dark knowledge" was wonderful but very dangerous in the
- wrong hands.
- He took both her beautiful little hands in his, so that she looked up
- at him and realized that he was not going to kiss her.
- Something about his stance made her realize that she was being offered
- a more precious gift than a sky-lit romantic kiss in a garden. Besides,
- it was just touching helmets.
- He said to her, with passion and kindness in his voice: "You remember
- that dog-woman, the one who works with the dishes in the hospital?"
- "Of course. She was good and bright and happy, and helped us all."
- "Go work with her, now and then. Ask her nothing. Tell her nothing.
- Just work with her at her machines. Tell her I said so. Happiness is
- catching. You might catch it. I think I did myself, a little."
- "I think I understand you," said Genevieve softly.
- "Casher, good-bye and good, good luck to you. My uncle expects us."
- Together they went back into the palace.
- Another memory was the farewell to Philip Vincent, the Hereditary
- Dictator of Pontoppidan. The calm, clean-shaven, ruddy, well-fleshed
- face looked at him with benign regard. Casher O'Neill felt more
- respect for this man when he realized that ruthlessness is often the
- price of peace, and vigilance the price of wealth.
- "You're a clever young man. A very clever young man. You may win back
- the power of your Uncle Kuraf."
- "I don't want that power!" cried Casher O'Neill.
- "I have advice for you," said the Hereditary Dictator, "and it is good
- advice or I would not be here to give it. I have learned the political
- arts well: otherwise I would not be alive. Do not refuse power. Just
- take it and use it wisely. Do not hide from your wicked uncle's name.
- Obliterate it. Take the name yourself and rule so well that, in a few
- decades, no one will remember your uncle. Just you. You are young.
- You can't win now. But it is in your fate to grow and to triumph. I
- know it. I am good at these things. I have given you your weapon. I
- am not tricking you. It is packed safely and you may leave with it."
- Casher O'Neill was breathing softly, believing it all, and trying to
- think of words to thank the stout, powerful older man when the dictator
- added, with a little laugh in his voice: "Thank you, too, for saving me
- money. You've lived up to your name, Casher."
- "Saved you money?"
- "The alfalfa. The horse wanted alfalfa."
- "Oh, that idea!" said Casher O'Neill.
- "It was obvious. I don't deserve much credit for that."
- "I didn't think of it," said the Hereditary Dictator, "and my staff
- didn't either. We're not stupid. That shows you are bright.
- You realized that Perino must have had a food converter to keep the
- horse alive in the Hippy Dipsy. All we did was set it to alfalfa and
- we saved ourselves the cost of a shipload of horse food twice a year.
- We're glad to save that credit. We're well off here, but we don't like
- to waste things. You may bow to me now, and leave."
- Casher O'Neill had done so, with one last glance at the lovely
- Genevieve, standing fragile and beautiful beside her uncle's chair.
- His last memory was very recent.
- He had paid two hundred thousand credits for it, right on this liner.
- He had found the Stop-Captain, bored now that the ship was in flight
- and the Go-Captain had taken over.
- "Can you get me a telepathic fix on a horse?"
- "What's a horse?" said the Stop-Captain.
- "Where is it? Do you want to pay for it?"
- "A horse," said Casher O'Neill patiently, "is an unmodified earth
- animal. Not under people A big one, but quite intelligent.
- This one is in orbit right around Pontoppidan. And I will pay the
- usual price."
- "A million Earth credits," said the Stop-Captain.
- "Ridiculous!" cried Casher O'Neill.
- They settled on two hundred thousand credits for a good fix and ten
- thousand for the use of the ship's equipment even if there were
- failure. It was not a failure. The technician was a snake man he was
- deft, cool, and superb at his job. In only a few minutes he passed the
- headset to Casher O'Neill, saying politely, "This is it, I think."
- It was. He had reached right into the horse's mind.
- The endless sands of Mizzer swam before Casher O'Neill. The long lines
- of the Twelve Niles converged in the distance. He galloped steadily
- and powerfully. There were other horses nearby, other riders, other
- things, but he himself was conscious only of the beat of the hooves
- against the strong moist sand, the firmness of the appreciative rider
- upon his back. Dimly, as in a hallucination, Casher O'Neill could also
- see the little orbital ship in which the old horse cantered in mid-air,
- with an amused cadet sitting on his back. Up there, with no weight,
- the old worn-out heart would be good for many, many years. Then he saw
- the horse's paradise again. The flash of hooves threatened to overtake
- him, but he outran them all. There was the expectation of a stable at
- the end, a rubdown, good succulent green food, and the glimpse of a
- filly in the morning.
- The horse of Pontoppidan felt extremely wise. He had trusted people
- people, the source of all kindness, all cruelty, all power among the
- stars. And the people had been good. The horse felt very much horse
- again. Casher felt the old body course along the river's edge like a
- dream of power, like a completion of service, like an ultimate
- fulfillment of companionship.
- On the Storm Planet "At two seventy-five in the morning," said the
- Administrator to Casher O'Neill, "you will kill this girl with a knife.
- At two seventy-seven, a fast ground car will pick you up and bring you
- back here. Then the power cruiser will be yours. Is that a deal?"
- He held out his hand as if he wanted Casher O'Neill to shake it then
- and there, making some kind of an oath or bargain.
- Casher did not want to slight the man, so he picked up his glass and
- said,
- "Let's drink to the deal, first!"
- The Administrator's quick, restless, darting eyes looked Casher up and
- down very suspiciously. The warm sea-wet air blew through the room.
- The Administrator seemed wary, suspicious, alert, but underneath his
- slight hostility there was another emotion, of which Casher could
- perceive just the edge.
- Fatigue with its roots in bottomless despair: despair set deep in
- irrecoverable fatigue?
- That other emotion, which Casher could barely discern, was very strange
- indeed. On all his voyages back and forth through the inhabited
- worlds, Casher had met many odd types of men and women. He had never
- seen anything like this Administrator before brilliant, erratic,
- boastful. His title was
- "Mr.
- Commissioner" and he was an ex-Lord of the Instrumentality on this
- planet of Henriada, where the population had dropped from six hundred
- million persons down to some forty thousand. Indeed, local government
- had disappeared into limbo, and this odd man, with the title of
- "Administrator," was the only law and civil authority which the planet
- knew.
- Nevertheless, he had a surplus power cruiser and Casher O'Neill was
- determined to get that cruiser as a part of his long plot to return to
- his home planet of Mizzer and to unseat the usurper, Colonel Wedder.
- The Administrator stared sharply, wearily at Casher and then he, too,
- lifted his glass. The green twilight colored his liquor and made it
- seem like some strange poison. It was only Earth-byegarr, though a
- little on the strong side.
- With a sip, only a sip, the older man relaxed a little.
- "You may be out to trick me, young man. You may think that I am an old
- fool running an abandoned planet. You may even be thinking that
- killing this girl is some kind of a crime. It is not a crime at all. I
- am the Administrator of Henriada and I have ordered that girl killed
- every year for the last eighty years. She isn't even a girl, to start
- with. Just an under person Some kind of an animal turned into a
- domestic servant. I can even appoint you a deputy sheriff.
- Or chief of detectives. That might be better. I haven't had a chief
- of detectives for a hundred years and more. You are my chief of
- detectives. Go in tomorrow. The house is not hard to find. It's the
- biggest and best house left on this planet. Go in tomorrow morning.
- Ask for her master and be sure that you use the correct title,
- "Mister and Owner Murray Madigan." The robots will tell you to keep
- out. If you persist, she will come to the door. That's when you will
- stab her through the heart, right there in the doorway. My ground car
- will race up one metric minute later. You jump in and come back here.
- We've been through this before.
- Why don't you agree? Don't you know who I am?"
- "I know perfectly well" Casher O'Neill smiled "who you are, Mr.
- Commissioner and Administrator. You are the honorable Rankin
- Meiklejohn, once of Earth Two. After all, the Instrumentality itself
- gave me a permit to land on this planet on private business. They knew
- who I was, too, and what I wanted.
- There's something funny about all this. Why should you give me a power
- cruiser the best ship, you yourself say, in your whole fleet just for
- killing one modified animal which looks and talks like a girl? Why me?
- Why the visitor? Why the man from off world Why should you care
- whether this particular under person is killed or not? If you've given
- the order for her death eighty times in eighty years, why hasn't it
- been carried out long ago?
- Mind you, Mr. Administrator, I'm not saying no. I want that cruiser.
- I want it very much indeed. But what's the deal? What's the trick? Is
- it the house you want?"
- "Beauregard? No, I don't want Beauregard. Old Madigan can rot in it
- for all that I care. It's between Ambiloxi and Mottile, on the Gulf of
- Esperanza. You can't miss it. The road is good. You could drive
- yourself there."
- "What is it, then?" Casher's voice had an edge of persistence to it.
- The Administrator's response was singular indeed. He filled his huge
- inhaler-glass with the potent byegarr. He stared over the full glass
- at Casher O'Neill as if he were an enemy. He drained the glass. Casher
- knew that that much liquor, taken suddenly, could kill the normal human
- being.
- The Administrator did not fall over dead.
- He did not even become noticeably more drunk.
- His face turned red and his eyes almost popped out, as the harsh
- 160-proof liquor took effect, but he still did not say anything. He
- just stared at Casher. Casher, who had learned in his long exile to
- play many games, just stared back.
- The Administrator broke first.
- He leaned forward and burst into a bird-like shriek of laughter. The
- laughter went on and on until it seemed that the man had hogged all the
- merriment in the galaxy. Casher snorted a little laugh along with the
- man, more out of nervous reflex than anything else, but he waited for
- the Administrator to stop laughing.
- The Administrator finally got control of himself. With a broad grin
- and a wink at Casher, he poured himself four fingers more of the
- byegarr into his glass, drank it down as if he had had a sip of cream,
- and then only very slightly unsteady stood up, came over, and patted
- Casher on the shoulder.
- "You're a smart boy, my lad. I'm cheating you. I don't care whether
- the power cruiser is there or not. I'm giving you something which has
- no value at all to me. Who's ever going to take a power cruiser off
- this planet? It's ruined. It's abandoned.
- And so am I. Go ahead. You can have the cruiser. For nothing.
- Just take it. Free. Unconditionally."
- This time it was Casher who leaped to his feet and stared down into the
- face of the feverish, wanton little man.
- "Thank you, Mr. Administrator!" he cried, trying to catch the hand of
- the Administrator so as to seal the deal.
- Rankin Meiklejohn looked awfully sober for a man with that much liquor
- in him. He held his right hand behind his back and would not shake.
- "You can have the cruiser all right. No terms. No conditions.
- No deal. It's yours. But kill that girl first! Just as a favor to
- me.
- I've been a good host. I like you. I want to do you a favor. Do me
- one. Kill that girl. At two seventy-five in the morning.
- Tomorrow."
- "Why?" asked Casher, his voice loud and cold, trying to wring some
- sense out of the chattering man.
- "Just just just because I say so...." stammered the Administrator.
- "Why?" asked Casher, cold and loud again.
- The liquor suddenly took over inside the Administrator. He groped back
- for the arm of his chair, sat down suddenly, and then looked up at
- Casher. He was very drunk indeed. The strange emotion, the elusive
- fatigue-despair, had vanished from his face.
- He spoke straightforwardly. Only the excessive care of his
- articulation would have shown a passer-by that he was drunk.
- "Because, you fool," said Meiklejohn, "those people, more than eighty
- in eighty years, that I have sent to Beauregard with orders to kill the
- girl. Those people " he repeated, and stopped speaking, clamping his
- lips together.
- "What happened to them?" asked Casher calmly and persuasively.
- The Administrator grinned again and seemed to be on the edge of one of
- his wild laughs.
- "What happened?" shouted Casher at him.
- "I don't know," said the Administrator.
- "For the life of me, I don't know. Not one of them ever came back."
- "What happened to them? Did she kill them?" cried Casher.
- "How would I know?" said the drunken man, getting visibly more
- sleepy.
- "Why didn't you report it?"
- This seemed to rouse the Administrator.
- "Report that one little girl had stopped me, the planetary
- Administrator? Just one little girl, and not even a human being! They
- would have sent help, and laughed at me. By the Bell, young man, I've
- been laughed at enough! I need no help from outside. You're going in
- there tomorrow morning. At two seventy-five, with a knife. And a
- ground car waiting."
- He stared fixedly at Casher and then suddenly fell asleep in his chair.
- Casher called to the robots to show him to his room; they tended to the
- master as well.
- II
- The next morning at two seventy-five sharp, nothing happened. Casher
- walked down the baroque corridor, looking into beautiful barren rooms.
- All the doors were open.
- Through one door he heard a sick, deep bubbling snore.
- It was the Administrator, sure enough. He lay twisted on his bed. A
- small nursing machine was beside him, her white enameled body only
- slightly rusty. She held up a mechanical hand for silence and somehow
- managed to make the gesture seem light, delicate, and pretty, even from
- a machine.
- Casher walked lightly back to his own room, where he ordered hotcakes,
- bacon, and coffee. He studied a tornado through the armored glass of
- his window, while the robots prepared his food. The elastic trees
- clung to the earth with a fury which matched the fury of the wind. The
- trunk of the tornado reached like the nose of a mad elephant down into
- the gardens, but the flora fought back. A few animals whipped upward
- and out of sight. The tornado then came straight for the house, but
- did not damage it outside of making a lot of noise.
- "We have two or three hundred of those a day," said a butler robot.
- "That is why we store all space-craft underground and have no weather
- machines. It would cost more, the people said, to make this planet
- livable than the planet could possibly yield. The radio and news are
- in the library, sir. I do not think that the honorable Rankin
- Meiklejohn will wake until evening, say seven-fifty or eight
- o'clock."
- "Can I go out?"
- "Why not, sir? You are a true man. You can do what you wish."
- "I mean, is it safe for me to go out?"
- "Oh, no, sir! The wind would tear you apart or carry you away."
- "Don't people ever go out?"
- "Yes, sir. With ground cars or with automatic body armor. I have been
- told that if it weighs fifty tons or better, the person inside is safe.
- I would not know, sir. As you see, I am a robot. I was made here,
- though my brain was formed on Earth Two, and I have never been outside
- this house."
- Casher looked at the robot. This one seemed unusually talkative. He
- chanced the opportunity of getting some more information.
- "Have you ever heard of Beauregard?"
- "Yes, sir. It is the best house on this planet. I have heard people
- say that it is the most solid building on Henriada. It belongs to the
- Mister and Owner Murray Madigan. He is an Old North Australian, a
- renunciant who left his home planet and came here when Henriada was a
- busy world. He brought all his wealth with him. The under people and
- robots say that it is a wonderful place on the inside."
- "Have you seen it?"
- "Oh, no, sir, I have never left this building."
- "Does the man Madigan ever come here?"
- The robot seemed to be trying to laugh, but did not succeed.
- He answered, very unevenly,
- "Oh, no, sir. He never goes anywhere."
- "Can you tell me anything about the female who lives with him?"
- "No, sir," said the robot.
- "Do you know anything about her?"
- "Sir, it is not that. I know a great deal about her."
- "Why can't you talk about her, then?"
- "I have been commanded not to, sir."
- "I am," said Casher O'Neill, "a true human being. I herewith
- countermand those orders. Tell me about her."
- The robot's voice became formal and cold.
- "The orders cannot be countermanded, sir."
- "Why not?" snapped Casher.
- "Are they the Administrator's?"
- "No, sir."
- "Whose, then?"
- "Hers," said the robot softly, and left the room.
- III
- Casher O'Neill spent the rest of the day trying to get information; he
- obtained very little.
- The Deputy Administrator was a young man who hated his chief.
- When Casher, who dined with him the two of them having a poorly-cooked
- state luncheon in a dining room which would have seated five hundred
- people tried to come to the point by asking bluntly,
- "What do you know about Murray Madigan?" he got an answer which was
- blunt to the point of incivility.
- "Nothing."
- "You never heard of him?" cried Casher.
- "Keep your troubles to yourself, mister visitor," said the Deputy
- Administrator.
- "I've got to stay on this planet long enough to get promoted off. You
- can leave. You shouldn't have come."
- "I have," said Casher, "an all-world pass from the Instrumentality."
- "All right," said the young man, "that shows that you are more
- important than I am. Let's not discuss the matter. Do you like your
- lunch?"
- Casher had learned diplomacy in his childhood, when he was the heir
- apparent to the Dictatorship of Mizzer. When his horrible uncle,
- Kuraf, lost the ruler ship Casher had approved of the coup by the
- Colonels Wedder and Gibna; but now Wedder was supreme and enforcing a
- period of terror and virtue. Casher thus knew courts and ceremony, big
- talk and small talk, and on this occasion, he let the small talk do.
- The young Deputy Administrator had only one ambition, to get off the
- planet Henriada and never to see or hear of Rankin Meiklejohn again.
- Casher could understand the point.
- Only one curious thing happened during dinner.
- Toward the end, Casher slipped in the question, very informally: "Can
- under people give orders to robots?"
- "Of course," said the young man.
- "That's one of the reasons we use under people They have more
- initiative. They amplify our orders to robots on many occasions."
- Casher smiled.
- "I didn't mean it quite that way. Could an under person give an order
- to a robot which a real human being could not then countermand?"
- The young man started to answer, even though his mouth was full of
- food. He was not a very polished young man. Suddenly he stopped
- chewing and his eyes grew wide. Then, with his mouth half full, he
- said: "You are trying to talk about this planet, I guess.
- You can't help it. You're on the track. Stay on the track, then.
- Maybe you will get out of it alive. I refuse to get mixed up with it,
- with you, with him and his hateful schemes. All I want to do is to
- leave when my time comes."
- The young man resumed chewing, his eyes fixed steadfastly on his
- plate.
- Before Casher could pass off the matter by making some casual remark,
- the butler-robot stopped behind him and leaned over.
- "Honorable sir, I heard your question. May I answer it?"
- "Of course," said Casher, softly.
- "The answer, sir," said the butler-robot, softly but clearly, "to your
- question is no, no, never. That is the general rule of the civilized
- worlds. But on this planet of Henriada, sir, the answer is yes."
- "Why?" asked Casher.
- "It is my duty, sir," said the robot butler, "to recommend to you this
- dish of fresh artichokes. I am not authorized to deal with other
- matters."
- "Thank you," said Casher, straining a little to keep himself looking
- imperturbable.
- Nothing much happened that night, except that Meiklejohn got up long
- enough to get drunk all over again. Though he invited Casher to come
- and drink with him, he never seriously discussed the girl except for
- one outburst.
- "Leave it till tomorrow. Fair and square. Open and aboveboard. Frank
- and honest. That's me. I'll take you around Beauregard myself. You'll
- see it's easy. A knife, eh? A traveled young man like you would know
- what to do with a knife. And a little girl, too. Not very big. Easy
- job. Don't give it another thought. Would you like some apple juice
- in your byegarr?"
- Casher had taken three contra intoxicant pills before going to drink
- with the ex-Lord, but even at that, he could not keep up with
- Meiklejohn. He accepted the dilution of apple juice gravely,
- gracefully, and gratefully.
- The little tornadoes stamped around the house. Meiklejohn, now
- launched into some drunken story of ancient injustices which had been
- done to him on other worlds, paid no attention to them. In the middle
- of the night, past nine-fifty in the evening, Casher woke alone in his
- chair, very stiff and uncomfortable. The robots must have had standing
- instructions concerning the Administrator, and had apparently taken him
- off to bed. Casher walked wearily to his own room, cursed the
- thundering ceiling, and went to sleep again.
- IV
- The next day was very different indeed.
- The Administrator was as sober, brisk, and charming as if he had never
- taken a drink in his life.
- He had the robots call Casher to join him at breakfast and said, by way
- of greeting,
- "I'll wager you thought I was drunk last night."
- "Well. . .," said Casher.
- "Planet fever. That's what it was. Planet fever. A bit of alcohol
- keeps it from developing too far. Let's see. It's three-sixty now.
- Could you be ready to leave by four?"
- Casher frowned at his watch, which had the conventional twenty-four
- hours.
- The Administrator saw the glance and apologized.
- "Sorry! My fault, a thousand times. I'll get you a metric watch right
- away. Ten hours a day, a hundred minutes an hour. We're very
- progressive here on Henriada."
- He clapped his hands and ordered that a watch be taken to Casher's
- room, along with the watch-repairing robot to adjust it to Casher's
- body rhythms.
- "Four, then," he said, rising briskly from the table.
- "Dress for a trip by ground car The servants will show you how."
- There was a man already waiting in Casher's room. He looked like a
- plump, wise ancient Hindu, as shown in the archaeology books. He bowed
- pleasantly and said,
- "My name is Gosigo. I am a for getty settled on this planet, but for
- this day I am your guide and driver from this place to the mansion of
- Beauregard."
- Forgetties were barely above under people in status. They were persons
- convicted of various major crimes, to whom the courts of the worlds, or
- the Instrumentality, had allowed total amnesia instead of death or some
- punishment worse than death, such as the planet Shayol.
- Casher looked at him seriously. The man did not carry with him the
- permanent air of bewilderment which Casher had noticed in many forget
- ties Gosigo saw the glance and interpreted it.
- "I'm well enough, now, sir. And I am strong enough to break your back
- if I had the orders to do it."
- "You mean, damage my spine? What a hostile, unpleasant thing to do!"
- said Casher.
- "Anyhow, I rather think I could kill you first if you tried it.
- Whatever gave you such an idea?"
- "The Administrator is always threatening people that he will have me do
- it to them."
- "Have you ever really broken anybody's back?" asked Casher, looking
- Gosigo over very carefully and re-judging him. The man, though shorter
- than Casher, was luxuriously muscled; like many plump men, he looked
- pleasant on the outside but could be very formidable to an enemy.
- Gosigo smiled briefly, almost happily.
- "Well, no, not exactly."
- "Why haven't you? Does the Administrator always countermand his own
- orders? I should think that he would sometimes be too drunk to
- remember to do it?"
- "It's not that.. .," said Gosigo.
- "Why don't you, then?"
- "I have other orders," said Gosigo, rather hesitantly.
- "Like the orders I have today. One set from the Administrator, one set
- from the Deputy Administrator, and a third set from an outside
- source."
- "Who's the outside source?"
- "She has told me not to explain just yet."
- Casher stood stock still.
- "Do you mean who I think you mean?"
- Gosigo nodded very slowly, pointing at the ventilator as though it
- might have a microphone in it.
- "Can you tell me what your orders are?"
- "Oh, certainly. The Administrator has told me to drive both himself
- and you to Beauregard, to take you to the door, to watch you stab the
- under girl and to call the second ground car to your rescue. The
- Deputy Administrator has told me to take you to Beauregard and to let
- you do as you please, bringing you back here by way of Ambiloxi if you
- happen to come out of Mister Murray's house alive."
- "And the other orders?"
- "To close the door upon you when you enter and to think of you no more
- in this life, because you will be very happy."
- "Are you crazy?" cried Casher.
- "I am a for getty said Gosigo, with some dignity, "but I am not
- insane."
- "Whose orders are you going to obey, then?"
- Gosigo smiled a warmly human smile at him.
- "Doesn't that depend on you, sir, and not on me? Do I look like a man
- who is going to kill you soon?"
- "No, you don't," said Casher.
- "Do you think what you look like to me?" went on Gosigo, with a
- purr.
- "Do you really think that I would help you if I thought that you would
- kill a small girl?"
- "You know it!" cried Casher, feeling his face go white.
- "Who doesn't?" said Gosigo.
- "What else have we got to talk about, here on Henriada? Let me help
- you on with these clothes, so that you will at least survive the ride."
- With this he handed shoulder padding and padded helmet to Casher, who
- began to put on the garments, very clumsily.
- Gosigo helped him.
- When Casher was fully dressed, he thought that he had never dressed
- this elaborately for space itself. The world of Henriada must be a
- tumultuous place if people needed this kind of clothing to make a short
- trip.
- Gosigo had put on the same kind of clothes.
- He looked at Casher in a friendly manner, with an arch smile which came
- close to humor.
- "Look at me, honorable visitor. Do I remind you of anybody?"
- Casher looked honestly and carefully, and then said,
- "No, you don't."
- The man's face fell.
- "It's a game," he said.
- "I can't help trying to find out who I really am. Am I a Lord of the
- Instrumentality who has betrayed his trust? Am I a scientist who
- twisted knowledge into unimaginable wrong? Am I a dictator so foul
- that even the Instrumentality, which usually leaves things alone, had
- to step in and wipe me out? Here I am, healthy, wise, alert. I have
- the name Gosigo on this planet.
- Perhaps I am a mere native of this planet, who has committed a local
- crime. I am triggered. If anyone ever did tell me my true name or my
- actual past, I have been conditioned to shriek loud, fall unconscious,
- and forget anything which might be said on such an occasion. People
- told me that I must have chosen this instead of death. Maybe. Death
- sometimes looks tidy to a for getty
- "Have you ever screamed and fainted?"
- "I don't even know that," said Gosigo, "no more than you know where you
- are going this very day."
- Casher was tied to the man's mystifications, so he did not let himself
- be provoked into a useless show of curiosity.
- Inquisitive about the for getty himself, he asked: "Does it hurt...
- does it hurt to be a for getty
- "No," said Gosigo, "it doesn't hurt, no more than you will."
- Gosigo stared suddenly at Casher. His voice changed tone and became at
- least one octave higher. He clapped his hands to his face and panted
- through his hands as if he would never speak again.
- "But Oh! The fear the eerie, dreary fear of being me . . .
- !"
- He still stared at Casher.
- Quieting down at last, he pulled his hands away from his face, as if by
- sheer force, and said in an almost-normal voice, "Shall we get on with
- our trip?"
- Gosigo led the way out into the bare bleak corridor. A perceptible
- wind was blowing through it, though there was no sign of an open window
- or door. They followed a majestic staircase, with steps so broad that
- Casher had to keep changing pace on them, all the way down to the
- bottom of the building.
- This must, at some time, have been a formal reception hall.
- Now it was full of cars.
- Curious cars.
- Land vehicles of a kind which Casher had never seen before. They
- looked a little bit like the ancient "fighting tanks" which he had seen
- in pictures. They also looked a little like submarines ofasingularly
- short and ugly shape. They had high spiked wheels, but their most
- complicated feature was a set of giant corkscrews, four on each side,
- attached to the car by intricate yet operational apparatus. Since
- Casher had been landed right into the palace by plano form he had never
- had occasion to go outside among the tornadoes of Henriada.
- The Administrator was waiting, wearing a coverall on which was
- stenciled his insignia of rank.
- Casher gave him a polite bow. He glanced down at the handsome metric
- wristwatch which Gosigo had strapped on his wrist, outside the
- coverall. It read: 3:95.
- Casher bowed to Rankin Meiklejohn and said,
- "I'm ready, sir, if you are."
- "Watch him!" whispered Gosigo, half a step behind Casher.
- The Administrator said,
- "Might as well be going." The man's voice trembled.
- Casher stood polite, alert, immobile. Was this danger? Was this
- foolishness? Could the Administrator already be drunk again?
- Casher watched the Administrator carefully but quietly, waiting for the
- older man to precede him into the nearest ground car which had its door
- standing opened.
- Nothing happened, except that the Administrator began to turn pale.
- There must have been six or eight people present. The others must have
- seen the same sort of thing before, because they showed no sign of
- curiosity or bewilderment. The Administrator began to tremble. Casher
- could see it, even through the bulk of the travel wear The man's hands
- shook.
- The Administrator said, in a high nervous voice: "Your knife.
- You have it with you?"
- Casher nodded.
- "Let me see it," said the Administrator.
- Casher reached down to his boot and brought out the beautiful,
- sit-perbly-balanced knife. Before he could stand erect, he felt the
- clamp of Gosigo's heavy fingers on his shoulder.
- "Master," said Gosigo to Meiklejohn, "tell your visitor to put his
- weapon away. It is not allowed for any of us to show weapons in your
- presence."
- Casher tried to squirm out of the heavy grip without losing his balance
- or his dignity. He found that Gosigo was knowledgeable about karate
- too. The for getty held ground, even when the two men waged an
- immobile, invisible sort of wrestling match, the leverage of Casher's
- shoulder working its way hither and yon against the strong grip of
- Gosigo's powerful hand.
- The Administrator ended it. He said,
- "Put away your knife...."
- in that high funny voice of his.
- The watch had almost reached 4:00, but no one had yet gotten into the
- car.
- Gosigo spoke again, and when he did there was a contemptuous laugh from
- the Deputy Administrator, who had stood by in ordinary indoor
- clothes.
- of Man "Master, isn't it time for 'one for the road'?"
- "Of course, of course," chattered the Administrator. He began
- breathing almost normally again.
- "Join me," he said to Casher.
- "It's a local custom."
- Casher had let his knife slip back into his boot sheath When the knife
- dropped out of sight, Gosigo released his shoulder; he now stood facing
- the Administrator and rubbed his bruised shoulder. He said nothing,
- but shook his head gently, showing that he did not want a drink.
- One of the robots brought the Administrator a glass, which appeared to
- contain at least a liter and a half of water. The Administrator said,
- very politely,
- "Sure you won't share it?"
- This close, Casher could smell the reek of it. It was pure byegarr,
- and at least 160-proof. He shook his head again, firmly but also
- politely.
- The Administrator lifted the glass.
- Casher could see the muscles of the man's throat work as the liquid
- went down. He could hear the man breathing heavily between swallows.
- The clear liquid went lower and lower in the gigantic glass.
- At last it was all gone.
- The Administrator cocked his head sidewise and said to Casher in a
- parrot-like voice,
- "Well, toodle-oo!"
- "What do you mean, sir?" asked Casher.
- The Administrator had a pleasant glow on his face. Casher was
- surprised that the man was not dead after that big and sudden a
- drink.
- "I just mean, g'bye. I'm not feeling well."
- With that he fell straight forward, as stiff as a rock tower. One of
- the servants, perhaps another for getty caught him before he hit the
- ground.
- "Does he always do this?" asked Casher of the miserable and
- contemptuous Deputy Administrator.
- "Oh, no," said the Deputy.
- "Only at times like these."
- "What do you mean, 'like these'?"
- "When he sends one more armed man against the girl at Beauregard. They
- never come back. You won't come back, either.
- You could have left earlier, but you can't now. Go along and try to
- kill the girl. I'll see you here about 5:25 if you succeed. As a
- matter of fact, if you come back at all, I'll try to wake him up. But
- you won't come back. Good luck. I suppose that's what you need.
- Good luck."
- Casher shook hands with the man without removing his gloves. Gosigo
- had already climbed into the driver's seat of the machine and was
- testing the electric engines. The big corkscrews began to plunge down,
- but before they touched the floor, Gosigo had reversed them and thrown
- them back into the "up" position.
- The people in the room ran for cover as Casher entered the machine,
- though there was no immediate danger in sight. Two of the human
- servants dragged the Administrator up the stairs, the Deputy
- Administrator following them rapidly.
- "Seat belt," said Gosigo.
- Casher found it and snapped it closed.
- "Head belt," said Gosigo.
- Casher stared at him. He had never heard of a head belt.
- "Pull it down from the roof, sir. Put the net under your chin."
- Casher glanced up.
- There was a net fitted snug against the roof of the vehicle, just above
- his head. He started to pull it down, but it did not yield.
- Angrily, he pulled harder, and it moved slowly downward. By the Bell
- and Bank, do they want to hang me in this! he thought to himself as he
- dragged the net down. There was a strong fibre belt attached to each
- end of the net, while the net itself was only fifteen to twenty
- centimeters wide. He ended up in a foolish position, holding the head
- belt with both hands lest it snap back into the ceiling and not knowing
- what to do with it. Gosigo leaned over and, half-impatiently, helped
- him adjust the web under his chin. It pinched for a moment and Casher
- felt as though his head were being dragged by a heavy weight.
- "Don't fight it," said Gosigo.
- "Relax."
- Casher did. His head was lifted several centimeters into a foam
- pocket, which he had not previously noticed, in the back of the seat.
- After a second or two, he realized that the position was odd but
- comfortable.
- Gosigo had adjusted his own head belt and had turned on the lights of
- the vehicle. They blazed so bright that Casher almost thought they
- might be a laser, capable of charring the inner doors of the big
- room.
- The lights must have keyed the door.
- V
- Two panels slid open and a wild uproar of wind and vegetation rushed
- in. It was rough and stormy but far below hurricane velocity.
- The machine rolled forward clumsily and was out of the house and on the
- road very quickly.
- The sky was brown, bright luminous brown, shot through with streaks of
- yellow. Casher had never seen a sky of that color on any other world
- he had visited, and in his long exile he had seen many planets.
- Gosigo, staring straight ahead, was preoccupied with keeping the
- vehicle right in the middle of the black, soft, tarry road.
- "Watch it!" said a voice speaking right into his head.
- It was Gosigo, using an intercom which must have been built into the
- helmets.
- Casher watched, though there was nothing to see except for the rush of
- mad wind. Suddenly the ground car turned dark, spun upside down, and
- was violently shaken. An oily, pungent stench of pure fetor
- immediately drenched the whole car.
- Gosigo pulled out a panel with a console of buttons. Light and fire,
- intolerably bright, burned in on them through the windshield and the
- portholes on the side.
- The battle was over before it began.
- The ground car lay in a sort of swamp. The road was visible thirty or
- thirty-five meters away.
- There was a grinding sound inside the machine and the ground car
- righted itself. A singular sucking noise followed, then the grinding
- sound stopped. Casher could glimpse the big corkscrews on the side of
- the car eating their way into the ground.
- At last the machine was steady, pelted only by branches, leaves, and
- what seemed like kelp.
- A small tornado was passing over them.
- Gosigo took time to twist his head sidewise and to talk to Casher.
- "An air-whale swallowed us and I had to burn our way out."
- "A what?" cried Casher.
- "An air-whale," repeated Gosigo calmly on the intercom.
- "There are no indigenous forms of life on this planet, but the imported
- Earth forms have changed wildly since we brought them in. The
- tornadoes lifted the whales around enough so that some of them got
- adapted to flying. They were the meat-eating kind, so they like to
- crack our ground cars open and eat the goodies inside.
- We're safe enough from them for the time being, provided we can make it
- back to the road. There are a few wild men who live in the wind, but
- they would not become dangerous to us unless we found ourselves really
- helpless. Pretty soon I can unscrew us from the ground and try to get
- back on the road. It's not really too far from here to Ambiloxi."
- The trip to the road was a long one, even though they could see the
- road itself all the time that they tried various approaches.
- The first time, the ground car tipped ominously forward. Red lights
- showed on the panel and buzzers buzzed. The great spiked wheels spun
- in vain as they chewed their way into a bottomless quagmire.
- Gosigo, calling back to his passenger, cried,
- "Hold steady!
- We're going to have to shoot ourselves out of this one backward!"
- Casher did not know how he could be any steadier, belted, hooded, and
- strapped as he was, but he clutched the arms of his seat.
- The world went red with fire as the front of the car spat flame in
- rocket-like quantities. The swamp ahead of them boiled into steam, so
- that they could see nothing. Gosigo changed the windshield over from
- visual to radar, and even with radar there was not much to be seen
- nothing but a gray swirl of formless wraiths, and the weird lurching
- sensation as the machine fought its way back to solid ground. The
- console suddenly showed green and Gosigo cut the controls. They were
- back where they had been, with the repulsive burnt entrails of the
- air-whale scattered among the coral trees.
- "Try again," said Gosigo, as though Casher had something to do with the
- matter.
- He fiddled with the controls and the ground car rose several feet. The
- spikes on the wheels had been hydraulically extended until they were
- each at least 150 centimeters long. In sensation, the car felt like a
- large enclosed bicycle as it teetered on its big wheels. The wind was
- strong and capricious but there was no tornado in sight.
- "Here we go," said Gosigo redundantly. The ground car pressed forward
- in a mad rush, hastening obliquely through the vegetation and making
- for the highway on Casher's right.
- A bone-jarring crash told them that they had not made it. For a moment
- he was too dizzy to see where they were.
- He was glad of his helmet and happy about the web brace which held his
- neck. That crash would have killed him if he had not had full
- protection.
- Gosigo seemed to think the trip normal. His classic Hindu features
- relaxed in a wise smile as he said,
- "Hit a boulder. Fell on our side. Try again."
- Casher managed to gasp,
- "Is the machine unbreakable?"
- There was a laugh in Gosigo's voice when he answered, "Almost. We're
- the most vulnerable items in it."
- Again fire spat at the ground, this time from the side of the ground
- car It balanced itself precariously on the four high wheels.
- Gosigo turned on the radar screen to look through the steam which their
- own jets had called up.
- There the road was, plain and near.
- "Try again!" he shouted, as the machine lunged forward and then
- performed a veritable ballet on the surface of the marsh. It rushed,
- slowed, turned around on a hummock, gave itself an assist with the
- jets, and then scrambled through the water.
- Casher saw the inverted cone of a tornado, half a kilometer or less
- away, veering toward them.
- Gosigo sensed his unspoken thought, because he answered, "Problem: who
- gets to the road first, that or we?"
- The machine bucked, lurched, twisted, spun.
- Casher could see nothing any more from the wind screen in front, but it
- was obvious that Gosigo knew what he was doing.
- There was the sickening, stomach-wrenching twist of a big drop and then
- a new sound was heard a grinding as of knives.
- Gosigo, unworried, took his head out of the head net and looked over at
- Casher with a smile.
- "The twister will probably hit us in a minute or two, but it doesn't
- matter now. We're on the road and I've bolted us to the surface."
- "Bolted?" gasped Casher.
- "You know, those big screws on the outside of the car. They were made
- to go right into the road. All the roads here are neoasphaltum and
- self-repairing. There will be traces of them here when the last known
- person on the last known planet is dead.
- These are good roads." He stopped for the sudden hush.
- "Storm's going over us . . ."
- It began again before he could finish his sentence. Wild raving winds
- tore at the machine, which sat so solid that it seemed bedded in
- permastone.
- Gosigo pushed two buttons and then calibrated a dial. He squinted at
- his instruments and then pressed a button mounted on the edge of his
- navigator's seat. There was a sharp explosion, like a blasting of rock
- by chemical methods.
- Casher started to speak but Gosigo held out a warning hand for
- silence.
- He tuned his dials quickly. The windscreen faded out, radar came on
- and then went off, and at last a bright map bright red in background
- with sharp gold lines appeared across the whole width of the screen.
- There were a dozen or more bright points on the map. Gosigo watched
- these intently.
- The map blurred, faded, dissolved into red chaos.
- Gosigo pushed another button and then could see out of the front glass
- screen again.
- "What was that?" asked Casher.
- "Miniaturized radar rocket. I sent it up twelve kilometers for a look
- around. It transmitted a map of what it saw and I put it on our radar
- screen. The tornadoes are heavier than usual, but I think we can make
- it. Did you notice the top right of the map?"
- "The top right?" asked Casher.
- "Yes, the top right. Did you see what was there?"
- "Why, nothing," said Casher.
- "Nothing was there."
- "You're utterly right," said Gosigo.
- "What does that mean to you?"
- "I don't understand you," said Casher.
- "I suppose it means that there is nothing there."
- "Right again. But let me tell you something. There never is."
- "Never is what?"
- "Anything," said Gosigo.
- "There never is anything on the maps at that point. That's east of
- Ambiloxi. That's Beauregard. It never shows on the maps. Nothing
- happens there."
- "No bad weather ever?" asked Casher.
- "Never," said Gosigo.
- "Why not?" asked Casher.
- "She will not permit it," said Gosigo firmly, as though his words made
- sense.
- "You mean, her weather machines work?" said Casher, grasping for the
- only rational explanation possible.
- "Yes," said Gosigo.
- "Why?"
- "She pays for them."
- "How can she?" exclaimed Casher.
- "Your whole world of Henriada is bankrupt!"
- "Her part isn't."
- "Stop mystifying me," said Casher.
- "Tell me who she is and what this is all about."
- "Put your head in the net," said Gosigo.
- "I'm not making puzzles because I want to do so. I have been commanded
- not to talk."
- "Because you are a for getty
- "What's that got to do with it? Don't talk to me that way.
- Remember, I am not an animal or an under person I may be your servant
- for a few hours, but I am a man. You'll find out, soon enough. Hold
- tight!"
- The ground car came to a panic stop, the spiked teeth eating into the
- resilient firm neo-asphaltum of the road. At the instant they stopped,
- the outside corkscrews began chewing their way into the ground. First
- Casher felt as though his eyes were popping out, because of the
- suddenness of the deceleration; now he felt like holding the arms of
- his seat as the tornado reached directly for their car, plucking at it
- again and again. The enormous outside screws held and he could feel
- the car straining to meet the gigantic suction of the storm.
- "Don't worry," shouted Gosigo over the noise of the storm.
- "I
- always pin us down a little bit more by firing the quick-rockets
- straight up. These cars don't often go off the road."
- Casher tried to relax.
- The funnel of the tornado, which seemed almost like a living being,
- plucked after them once or twice more and then was gone.
- This time, Casher had seen no sign of the air-whales which rode the
- storms. He had seen nothing but rain and wind and desolation.
- The tornado was gone in a moment. Ghostlike shapes trailed after it in
- enormous prancing leaps.
- "Wind-men," said Gosigo, glancing at them in curiously
- "Wild people who have learned to live on Henriada. They aren't much
- more than animals. We are close to the territory of the lady. They
- would not dare attack us here."
- Casher O'Neill was too stunned to query the man or to challenge him.
- Once more the car picked itself up and coursed along the smooth,
- narrow, winding neo-asphaltum road, almost as though the machine itself
- were glad to function and to function well.
- VI
- Casher could never quite remember when they went from the howling
- wildness of Henriada into the stillness and beauty of the domains of
- Mister Murray Madigan. He could recall the feeling but not the
- facts.
- The town of Ambiloxi eluded him completely. It was so normal a town,
- so old-fashioned a little town that he could not think of it very much.
- Old people sat on the wooden boardwalk taking their afternoon look at
- the strangers who passed through.
- Horses were tethered in a row along the main street, between the parked
- machines. It looked like a peaceful picture from the ancient ages.
- Of tornadoes there was no sign, nor of the hurt and ruin which showed
- around the house of Rankin Meiklejohn. There were few under people or
- robots about, unless they were so cleverly contrived as to look almost
- exactly like real people.
- How can you remember something which is pleasant and non memorable Even
- the buildings did not show signs of being fortified against the
- frightful storms which had brought the prosperous planet of Henriada to
- a condition of abandonment and ruin.
- Gosigo, who had a remarkable talent for stating the obvious, said
- tonelessly,
- "The weather machines are working here. There is no need for special
- precaution."
- But he did not stop in the town for rest, refreshments, conversation,
- or fuel. He went through deftly and quietly, the gigantic armored
- ground car looking out of place among the peaceful and defenseless
- vehicles. He went as though he had been on the same route many times
- before, and knew the routine well.
- Once beyond Ambiloxi he speeded up, though at a moderate pace, compared
- to the frantic elusive action he had taken against storms in the
- earlier part of the trip. The landscape was earth like ... wet ... and
- most of the ground was covered with vegetation.
- Old radar counter missile towers stood along the road. Casher could
- not imagine their possible use, even though he was sure, from the looks
- of
- them, that they were long obsolete.
- "What's the counter missile radar for?" he asked, speaking comfortably
- now that his head was out of the head net.
- Gosigo turned around and gave him a tortured glance in which pain and
- bewilderment were mixed.
- "Countermissile radar?
- Countermissile radar? I don't know that word, though it seems as
- though I should.. . ."
- "Radar is what you were using to see with, back in the storm, when the
- ceiling and visibility were zero."
- Gosigo turned back to his driving, narrowly missing a tree.
- "That? That's just artificial vision. Why did you use the word
- counter missile radar'? There isn't any of that stuff here except what
- we have on our machine, though the mistress may be watching us if her
- set is on."
- "Those towers," said Casher.
- "They look like countermissle towers from the ancient times."
- "Towers. There aren't any towers here," snapped Gosigo.
- "Look," cried Casher.
- "Here are two more of them."
- "No man made those. They aren't buildings. It's just air coral.
- Some of the coral which people brought from earth mutated and got so it
- could live in the air. People used to plant it for windbreaks, before
- they decided to give up Henriada and move out. They didn't do much
- good, but they are pretty to look at."
- They rode along a few minutes without asking questions. Tail trees had
- Spanish moss trailing over them. They were close to a sea. Small
- marshes appeared to the right and left of the road; here, where the
- endless tornadoes were kept out, everything had a park-like effect. The
- domains of the estate of Beauregard were unlike anything else on
- Henriada an area of peaceful wildness in a world which was rushing
- otherwise toward uninhabitability and ruin. Even Gosigo seemed more
- relaxed, more cheerful as he steered the ground car along the pleasant
- elevated road.
- Gosigo sighed, leaned forward, managed the controls, and brought the
- car to a stop.
- He turned around calmly and looked full-face at Casher O'Neill.
- "You have your knife?"
- Casher automatically felt for it. It was there, safe enough in his
- boot-sheath. He simply nodded.
- "You have your orders."
- "You mean, killing the girl?"
- "Yes," said Gosigo, "killing the girl."
- "I remember that. You didn't have to stop the car to tell me that."
- "I'm telling you now," said Gosigo, his wise Hindu face showing neither
- humor nor outrage.
- "Do it."
- "You mean, kill her? Right at first sight?"
- of Man "Do it," said Gosigo.
- "You have your orders."
- "I'm the judge of that," said Casher.
- "It will be on my conscience. Are you watching me for the
- Administrator?"
- "That drunken fool?" said Gosigo.
- "I don't care about him, except that I am a for getty and I belong to
- him. We're in her territory now. You are going to do whatever she
- wants. You have orders to kill her. All right. Kill her."
- "You mean she wants to be murdered?"
- "Of course not!" said Gosigo, with the irritation of an adult who has
- to explain too many things to an inquisitive child.
- "Then how can I kill her without finding out what this is all about?"
- "She knows. She knows herself. She knows her master. She knows this
- planet. She knows me and she knows something about you. Go ahead and
- kill her, since those are your orders. If she wants to die, that's not
- for you or me to decide. It's her business.
- If she does not want to die, you will not succeed."
- "I'd like to see the person," said Casher, "who could stop me in a
- sudden knife attack. Have you told her that I am coming?"
- "I've told her nothing, but she knows we are coming and she is pretty
- sure what you have been sent for. Don't think about it.
- Just do what you are told. Jump for her with the knife. She will take
- care of the matter."
- "But " cried Casher.
- "Stop asking questions," said Gosigo.
- "Just follow orders and remember that she will take care of you. Even
- you." He started up the ground car
- Within less than a kilometer they had crossed a low ridge of land and
- there before them lay Beauregard the mansion at the edge of the waters,
- its white pillars shining, its pergolas glistening in the bright air,
- its yards and palmettos tidy.
- Casher was a brave man, but he felt the palms of his hands go wet when
- he realized that in a minute or two he would have to commit a murder.
- VII
- The ground car swung up the drive. It stopped. Without a word, Gosigo
- activated the door. The air smelled calm, sea-wet, salt and yet coolly
- fresh. Casher jumped out and ran to the door. He was surprised to
- feel that his legs trembled as he ran. He had killed before, real men
- in real quarrels. Why should a mere animal matter to him? The door
- stopped him. Without thinking, he tried to wrench it open.
- The knob did not yield and there was no automatic control in sight.
- This was indeed a very antique sort of house. He struck the door with
- his hands. The thuds sounded around him. He could not tell whether
- they resounded in the house. No sound or echo came from beyond the
- door.
- He began rehearsing the phrase,
- "I want to see Mister and Owner Madigan. . . ."
- The door did open.
- A little girl stood there.
- He knew her. He had always known her. She was his sweetheart, come
- back out of his childhood. She was the sister he had never had. She
- was his own mother, when young. She was at the marvelous age,
- somewhere between ten and thirteen, where the child as the phrase goes
- "becomes an old child and not a raw grown-up." She was kind, calm,
- intelligent, expectant, quiet, inviting, unafraid. She felt like
- someone he had never left behind: yet, at the same moment, he knew he
- had never seen her before.
- He heard his voice asking for the Mister and Owner Madigan while he
- wondered, at the back of his mind, who the girl might be. Madigan's
- daughter? Neither Rankin Meiklejohn nor the deputy had said anything
- about a human family.
- The child looked at him levelly.
- He must have finished braying his question at her.
- "Mister and Owner Madigan," said the child, "sees no one this day, but
- you are seeing me." She looked at him levelly and calmly. There was
- an odd hint of humor, of fearlessness, in her stance.
- "Who are you?" he blurted out.
- "I am the housekeeper of this house."
- "You?" he cried, wild alarm beginning in his throat.
- "My name," she said, "is Truth."
- His knife was in his hand before he knew how it had gotten there. He
- remembered the advice of the Administrator: plunge, plunge, stab, stab,
- run!
- She saw the knife but her eyes did not waver from his face.
- He looked at her uncertainly.
- If this was an under person it was the most remarkable one he had ever
- seen. But even Gosigo had told him to do his duty, to stab, to kill
- the woman named Truth. Here she was. He could not do it.
- He spun the knife in the air, caught it by its tip, and held it out to
- her, handle first.
- "I was sent to kill you," he said, "but I find I cannot do it. I have
- lost a cruiser."
- "Kill me if you wish," she said, "because I have no fear of you."
- Her calm words were so far outside his experience that he took the
- knife in his left hand and lifted his arm as if to stab toward her.
- He dropped his arm.
- "I cannot do it," he whined.
- "What have you done to me?"
- "I have done nothing to you. You do not wish to kill a child and I
- look to you like a child. Besides, I think you love me. If this is
- so, it must be very uncomfortable for you."
- Casher heard his knife clatter to the floor as he dropped it. He had
- never dropped it before.
- "Who are you," he gasped, "that you should do this to me?"
- "I am me," she said, her voice as tranquil and happy as that of any
- girl, provided that the girl was caught at a moment of great happiness
- and poise.
- "I am the housekeeper of this house." She smiled almost impishly and
- added,
- "It seems that I must almost be the ruler of this planet as well." Her
- voice turned serious.
- "Man,"
- she said, "can't you see it, man? I am an animal, a turtle. I am
- incapable of disobeying the word of man. When I was little I was
- trained and I was given orders. I shall carry out those orders as long
- as I live. When I look at you, I feel strange. You look as though you
- loved me already, but you do not know what to do.
- Wait a moment. I must let Gosigo go."
- The shining knife on the floor of the doorway, she saw; she stepped
- over it.
- Gosigo had gotten out of the ground car and was giving her a formal,
- low bow.
- "Tell me," she cried, "what have you just seen?" There was
- friendliness in her call, as though the routine were an old game.
- "I saw Casher O'Neill bound up the steps. You yourself opened the
- door. He thrust his dagger into your throat and the blood spat out in
- a big stream, rich and dark and red. You died in the doorway. For
- some reason Casher O'Neill went on into the house without saying
- anything to me. I became frightened and I fled."
- He did not look frightened at all.
- "If I am dead," she said, "how can I be talking to you?"
- "Don't ask me," cried Gosigo.
- "I am just a for getty I always go back to the Honorable Rankin
- Meiklejohn, each time that you are murdered, and I tell him the truth
- of what I saw. Then he gives me the medicine and I tell him something
- else. At that point he will get drunk and gloomy again, the way that
- he always does."
- "It's a pity," said the child.
- "I wish I could help him, but I can't. He won't come to Beauregard."
- "Him?" Gosigo laughed.
- "Oh, no, not him! Never! He just sends other people to kill you."
- "And he's never satisfied," said the child sadly, "no matter how many
- times he kills me!"
- "Never," said Gosigo cheerfully, climbing back into the ground car
- "Bye now."
- "Wait a moment," she called.
- "Wouldn't you like something to eat or drink before you drive back?
- There's a bad clutch of storms on the road."
- "Not me," said Gosigo.
- "He might punish me and make me a for getty all over again. Say, maybe
- that's already happened.
- Maybe I'm a for getty who's been put through it several times, not just
- once." Hope surged into his voice.
- "Truth! Truth! Can you tell me?"
- "Suppose I did tell you," said she.
- "What would happen?"
- His face became sad.
- "I'd have a convulsion and forget what I told you. Well, good-bye
- anyhow. I'll take a chance on the storms. If you ever see that Casher
- O'Neill again," called Gosigo, looking right through Casher O'Neill,
- "tell him I liked him but that we'll never meet again."
- "I'll tell him," said the girl gently. She watched as the heavy brown
- man climbed nimbly into the car. The top crammed shut with no sound.
- The wheels turned and in a moment the car had disappeared behind the
- palmettoes in the drive.
- While she had talked to Gosigo in her clear warm high girlish voice,
- Casher had watched her. He could see the thin shape of her shoulders
- under the light blue shift that she wore. There was the suggestion of
- a pair of panties under the dress, so light was the material. Her hips
- had not begun to fill. When he glanced at her in one-quarter profile,
- he could see that her cheek was smooth, her hair well-combed, her
- little breasts just beginning to bud on her chest. Who was this child
- who acted like an empress?
- She turned back to him and gave him a warm, apologetic smile.
- "Gosigo and I always talk over the story together. Then he goes back
- and Meiklejohn does not believe it and spends unhappy months planning
- my murder all over again. I suppose, since I am just an animal, that I
- should not call it a 'murder' when somebody tries to kill me, but I
- resist, of course. I do not care about me, but I have orders, strong
- orders, to keep my master and his house safe from harm."
- "How old are you?" asked Casher. He added, " if you can tell the
- truth."
- "I can tell nothing but the truth. I am conditioned. I am nine
- hundred and six Earth-years old."
- "Nine hundred?" he cried.
- "But you look like a child. ..."
- "I am a child," said the girl, "and not a child. I am an Earth turtle,
- changed into human form by the convenience of man. My life expectancy
- was increased three hundred times when I was modified. They tell me
- that
- my normal life span should have been three hundred years.
- Now it is ninety thousand years, and sometimes I am afraid.
- You will be dead of happy old age, Casher O'Neill, while I am still
- opening the drapes in this house to let the sunlight in. But let's not
- stand in the door and talk. Come on in and get some refreshments.
- You're not going anywhere, you know."
- Casher followed her into the house but he put his worry into words.
- "You mean I am your prisoner."
- "Not my prisoner, Casher. Yours. How could you cross that ground
- which you traveled in the ground car You could get to the ends of my
- estate all right, but then the storms would pick you up and whirl you
- away to a death which nobody would even see."
- She turned into a big old room, bright with light-colored wooden
- furniture.
- Casher stood there, awkwardly. He had returned his knife to its
- boot-sheath when they left the vestibule. Now he felt very odd,
- sitting with his victim on a sun-porch.
- T'ruth was untroubled. She rang a brass bell which stood on an
- old-fashioned round table. Feminine footsteps clattered in the hall. A
- female servant entered the room, dressed in a black dress with a white
- apron. Casher had seen such servants in the old drama cubes, but he
- had never expected to meet one in the flesh.
- "We'll have high tea," said T'ruth.
- "Which do you prefer, tea or coffee, Casher? Or I have beer and wines.
- Even two bottles of whiskey brought all the way from Earth."
- "Coffee would be fine for me," said Casher.
- "And you know what I want, Eunice," said T'ruth to the servant.
- "Yes, ma'am," said the maid, disappearing.
- Casher leaned forward.
- "That servant is she human?"
- "Certainly," said T'ruth.
- "Then why is she working for an under person like you? I mean I don't
- mean to be unpleasant or anything but I mean that's against all
- laws."
- "Not here, on Henriada, it isn't."
- "And why not?" persisted Casher.
- "Because, on Henriada. I am myself the law."
- "But the government ?"
- "It's gone."
- "The Instrumentality?"
- T'ruth frowned. She looked like a wise, puzzled child.
- "Maybe you know that part better than I do. They leave an
- Administrator here, probably because they do not have any other place
- to put him and because he
- needs some kind of work to keep him alive. Yet they do not give him
- enough real power to arrest my master or to kill me. They ignore me.
- It seems to me that if I do not challenge them, they leave me alone."
- "But their rules ?" insisted Casher.
- "They don't enforce them, neither here in Beauregard nor over in the
- town of Ambiloxi. They leave it up to me to keep these places going. I
- do the best I can."
- "That servant, then? Did they lease her to you?"
- "Oh, no," laughed the girl-woman.
- "She came to kill me twenty years ago, but she was a for getty and she
- had no place else to go, so I trained her as a maid. She has a
- contract with my master, and her wages are paid every month into the
- satellite above the planet. She can leave if she ever wants to. I
- don't think she will."
- Casher sighed.
- "This is all too hard to believe. You are a child, but you are almost
- a thousand years old. You're an under person but you command a whole
- planet " "Only when I need to!" she interrupted him.
- "You are wiser than most of the people I have ever known and yet you
- look young. How old do you feel?"
- "I feel like a child," she said, "a child one thousand years old.
- And I have had the education and the memory and the experience of a
- wise lady stamped right into my brain."
- "Who was the lady?" asked Casher.
- "The Owner and Citizen Agatha Madigan. The wife of my master. As she
- was dying they transcribed her brain on mine.
- That's why I speak so well and know so much."
- "But that's illegal!" cried Casher.
- "I suppose it was," said T'ruth, "but my master had it done, anyhow."
- Casher leaned forward in his chair. He looked earnestly at the person.
- One part of him still loved her for the wonderful little girl that he
- had thought she was, but another part was in awe of a being more
- powerful than anyone he had seen before. She returned his gaze with
- that composed half-smile which was wholly feminine and completely
- self-possessed; she looked tenderly upon him as their faces were
- reflected by the yellow morning light of Henriada.
- "I begin to understand," he said, "that you are what you have to be. It
- is very strange, here in this forgotten world."
- "Henriada is strange," she said, "and I suppose that I must seem
- strange to you. You are right, though, about each of us being what she
- has to be. Isn't that liberty itself? If we each one must be
- something, isn't liberty the business of finding it out and then doing
- it that one job, that uttermost mission compatible with our natures?
- How terrible it would be, to be something and never know what!"
- "Like who?" said Casher.
- "Like Gosigo, perhaps. He was a great king and he was a good king, on
- some faraway world where they still need kings.
- But he committed an intolerable mistake and the Instrumentality made
- him into a for getty and sent him here."
- "So that's the mystery!" said Casher.
- "And what am I?"
- She looked at him calmly and steadfastly before she answered.
- "You are a killer, too. It must make your life very hard in many ways.
- You keep having to justify yourself."
- This was so close to the truth so close to Casher's long worries as to
- whether justice might not just be a cover name for "revenge" that it
- was his turn to gasp and be silent.
- "And I have work for you," added the amazing child.
- "Work? Here?"
- "Yes. Something much worse than killing. And you must do it, Casher,
- if you want to go away from here before I die, eighty-nine thousand
- years from now." She looked around.
- "Hush!" she added.
- "Eunice is coming and I do not want to frighten her by letting her know
- the terrible things that you are going to have to do."
- "Here?" he whispered urgently.
- "Right here, in this house?"
- "Right here in this house," she said in a normal voice, as Eunice
- entered the room bearing a huge tray covered with plates of food and
- two pots of beverage.
- Casher stared at the human woman who worked so cheerfully for an
- animal; but neither Eunice, who was busy setting things out on the
- table, nor T'ruth, who, turtle and woman that she was, could not help
- rearranging the dishes with gentle peremptories, paid the least
- attention to him.
- The words rang in his head.
- "In this house . . . something worse than killing." They made no
- sense. Neither did it make sense to have high tea before five hours,
- decimal time.
- He sighed and they both glanced at him, Eunice with amused curiosity,
- T'ruth with affectionate concern.
- "He's taking it better than most of them do, ma'am," said Eunice.
- "Most of them who come here to kill you are very upset when they find
- out that they cannot do it."
- "He's a killer, Eunice, a real killer, so I think he wasn't too
- bothered."
- Eunice turned to him very pleasantly and said,
- "A killer, sir. It's a pleasure to have you here. Most of them are
- terrible amateurs and then the lady has to heal them before we can find
- something for them to do."
- Casher couldn't resist a spot inquiry.
- "Are all the other would-be killers still here?"
- "Most of them, sir. The ones that nothing happened to.
- Like me. Where
- else would we go? Back to the Administrator, Rankin Meiklejohn?" She
- said the last with heavy scorn indeed, curtsied to him, bowed deeply to
- the woman-girl T'ruth, and left the room.
- T'ruth looked friendlily at Casher O'Neill.
- "I can tell that you will not digest your food if you sit here waiting
- for bad news.
- When I said you had to do something worse than killing, I suppose I was
- speaking from a woman's point of view. We have a homicidal maniac in
- the house. He is a house guest and he is covered by Old North
- Australian law. That means we cannot kill him or expel him, though he
- is almost as immortal as I am. I hope that you and I can frighten him
- away from molesting my master.
- I cannot cure him or love him. He is too crazy to be reached through
- his emotions. Pure, utter awful fright might do it, and it takes a man
- for that job. If you do this, I will reward you richly."
- "And if I don't?" said Casher.
- Again she stared at him as though she were trying to see through his
- eyes all the way down to the bottom of his soul; again he felt for her
- that tremor of compassion, ever so slightly tinged with male desire,
- which he had experienced when he first met her in the doorway of
- Beauregard.
- Their locked glances broke apart.
- T'ruth looked at the floor.
- "I cannot lie," she said, as though it were a handicap.
- "If you do not help me I shall have to do the things which it is in my
- power to do. The chief thing is nothing.
- To let you live here, to let you sleep and eat in this house until you
- get bored and ask me for some kind of routine work around the estate. I
- could make you work," she went on, looking up at him and blushing all
- the way to the top of her bodice, "by having you fall in love with me,
- but that would not be kind. I will not do it that way. Either you
- make a deal with me or you do not. It's up to you. Anyhow, let's eat
- first. I've been up since dawn, expecting one more killer. I even
- wondered if you might be the one who would succeed. That would be
- terrible, to leave my master all alone!"
- "But you wouldn't you yourself mind being killed?"
- "Me? When I've already lived a thousand years and have eighty-nine
- thousand more to go! It couldn't matter less to me.
- Have some coffee."
- And she poured his coffee.
- VIII
- Two or three times Casher tried to get the conversation back to the
- work at hand, but T'ruth diverted him with trivialities. She even made
- him walk to the enormous window, where they could see far across the
- marshes and the bay. The sky in the remote distance was dark and full
- of worms.
- of Man Those were tornadoes, beyond the reach of her weather machines,
- which coursed around the rest of Henriada but stopped short at the
- boundaries of Ambiloxi and Beauregard. She made him admire the weird
- coral castles which had built themselves up from the bay bottom,
- hundreds of feet into the air. She tried to make him see a family of
- wild wind people who were slyly and gently stealing apples from her
- orchard, but either his eyes were not used to the landscape or T'ruth
- could see much further than he could.
- This was a world rich in water. If it had not been located within a
- series of bad pockets of space, the water itself could have become an
- export. Mankind had done the best it could, raising kelp to provide
- the iron and phosphorus so often lacking in off-world diets,
- controlling the weather at great expense.
- Finally the Instrumentality recommended that they give up. The exports
- of Henriada never quite balanced the imports. The subsidies had gone
- far beyond the usual times. The Earth life had adapted with a vigor
- which was much too great. Ordinary forms rapidly found new shapes,
- challenged by the winds, the rains, the novel chemistry, and the odd
- radiation patterns of Henriada.
- Killer whales became airborne, coral took to the air, human babies lost
- in the wind sometimes survived to become subhuman and wild, jellyfish
- became sky-sweepers. The former inhabitants of Henriada had chosen a
- planet at a reasonable price not cheap, but reasonable from the owner
- who had in turn bought it from a post-Soviet settling cooperative. They
- had leased the new planet, had worked out an ecology, had emigrated,
- and were now doing well.
- Henriada kept the wild weather, the lost hopes, and the ruins.
- And of these ruins, the greatest was Murray Madigan.
- Once a prime landholder and host, a gentleman among gentlemen, the
- richest man on the whole world, Madigan had become old, senile, weak.
- He faced death or catalepsis. The death of his wife made him fear his
- own death, and with his turtle-girl T'ruth, he had chosen catalepsis.
- Most of the time he was frozen in a trance, his heartbeat
- imperceptible, his metabolism very slow. Then, for a few hours or
- days, he was normal. Sometimes the sleeps were for weeks, sometimes
- for years. The Instrumentality doctors had looked him over more out of
- scientific curiosity than from any judicial right and had decided that
- though this was an odd way to live, it was a legal one. They went away
- and left him alone. He had had the whole personality of his dying wife
- Agatha Madigan impressed on the turtle-child, though this was illegal;
- the doctor had, quite simply, been bribed.
- All this was told by T'ruth to Casher as they ate and drank their way
- slowly through an immense repast.
- An archaic wood fire roared in a real fireplace.
- While she talked, Casher watched the gentle movement of her shoulder
- blades when she moved forward, the loose movement of her light dress
- as she moved, the childish face which was so tender, so appealing, and
- yet so wise.
- Knowing as little as he did about the planet of Henriada, Casher tried
- desperately to fit his own thinking together and to make sense out of
- the predicament in which he found himself.
- Even if the girl were attractive, this told him nothing of the real
- challenges which he still faced inside this very house. No longer was
- his preoccupation with getting the power cruiser his main job on
- Henriada; no evidence was at hand to show that the drunken, deranged
- Administrator, Rankin Meiklejohn, would give him anything at all unless
- he, Casher, killed the girl.
- Even that had become a forgotten mission. Despite the fact that he had
- come to the estate of Beauregard for the purpose of killing her, he was
- now on a journey without a destination. Years of sad experience had
- taught him that when a project went completely to pieces, he still had
- the mission of personal survival, if his life were to mean anything to
- his home planet, Mizzer, and if his return, in any way or any fashion,
- could bring real liberty back to the Twelve Niles.
- So he looked at the girl with a new kind of unconcern. How could she
- help his plans? Or hinder them? The promises she made were too vague
- to be of any real use in the sad complicated world of politics.
- He just tried to enjoy her company and the strange place in which he
- found himself.
- The Gulf of Esperanza lay just within his vision. At the far horizon
- he could see the helpless tornadoes trying to writhe their way past the
- weather machines which still functioned, at the expense of Beauregard,
- all along the coast from Ambiloxi to Mottile. He could see the
- shoreline choked with kelp, which had once been a cash crop and was now
- a nuisance. Ruined buildings in the distance were probably the
- leftovers of processing plants; the artificial-looking coral castles
- obscured his view of them.
- And this house how much sense did this house make? An under girl
- eerily wise, who herself admitted that she had obtained an unlawful
- amount of conditioning; a master who was a living corpse; a threat
- which could not even be mentioned freely within the house; a household
- which seemed to have displaced the planetary government; a planetary
- government which the Instrumentality, for unfathomable reasons of its
- own, had let fall into ruin. Why? Why? And why again?
- The turtle-girl was looking at him. If he had been an art student, he
- would have said that she was giving him the tender, feminine, and
- irrecoverably remote smile of a Madonna, but he did not know the motifs
- of the ancient pictures; he just knew that it was a smile
- characteristic of T'ruth herself.
- "You are wondering . . . ?" she said.
- He nodded, suddenly feeling miserable that mere words had come between
- them.
- "You are wondering why the Instrumentality let you come here ... ?"
- He nodded again.
- "I don't know either," said she, reaching out and taking his hand. His
- hand felt and looked like the hairy paw of a giant as she held his
- right hand with her two pretty, well-kept little-girl hands; but the
- strength of her eyes and the steadfastness of her voice showed that it
- was she who was giving the reassurance, not he.
- The child was helping him\ The idea was outrageous, impossible, true.
- It was enough to alarm him, to make him begin to pull his hand again.
- She clutched him with tender softness, with weak strength, and he could
- not resist her. Again he had the feeling, which had gripped him so
- strongly when he first met her at the door of Beauregard and failed to
- kill her, that he had always known her and had always loved her. (Was
- there not some planet on which eccentric people believed a weird cult,
- thinking that human beings were endlessly reborn with fragmentary
- recollections of their own previous human lives? It was almost like
- that. Here. Now. He did not know the girl but he had always known
- her. He did not love the girl and yet he had loved her from the
- beginning of time.) Said she, so softly that it was almost a whisper:
- "Wait. . . .
- Wait. . . . Your death may come through that door pretty soon and I
- will tell you how to meet it. But before that, even, I have to show
- you the most beautiful thing in the world."
- Despite her little hand lying tenderly and firmly on his, Casher spoke
- irritably: "I'm tired of talking riddles here on Henriada. The
- Administrator gives me the mission of killing you and I fail in it.
- Then you promise me a battle and give me a good meal instead. Now you
- talk about the battle and start off with some other irrelevance. You're
- going to make me angry if you keep on and, and, and" he stammered at
- last "and I get pretty useless if I'm angry. If you want me to do a
- fight for you, let me know the fight and let me go do it now. I'm
- willing enough."
- Her remote, kind half-smile did not waver.
- "Casher," she said, "what I am going to show you is your most important
- weapon in the fight."
- With her free left hand she tugged at the fine chain of a thin gold
- necklace. Some kind of a piece of jewelry came out of the top of her
- shift dress, where she had kept it hidden. It was the image of two
- pieces of wood with a man nailed to them.
- Casher stared and then he burst into hysterical laughter.
- "Now you've done it, ma'am," he cried.
- "I'm no use to you or to anybody else. I know what that is, and up to
- now I've just suspected it. It's
- what the robot, rat, and Copt agreed on when they went exploring back
- in space-three. It's the Old Strong Religion. You've put it in my
- mind and now the next person who meets me will peep it and will wipe it
- out. Me too, probably, along with it. That's no weapon. That's a
- defeat. You've done me in. I knew the Sign of the Fish a long time
- ago, but I had a chance of getting away with just that little bit."
- "Casher!" she cried.
- "Casher! Get hold of yourself. You will know nothing about this
- before you leave Beauregard. You will forget. You will be safe."
- He stood on his feet, not knowing whether to run away, to laugh out
- loud, or to sit down and weep at the silly sad misfortune which had
- befallen him. To think that he himself had become brain-branded as a
- fanatic forever denied travel between the stars just because an under
- girl had shown him an odd piece of jewelry!
- "It's not as bad as you think," said the little girl, and stood up
- too.
- Her face peered lovingly at Casher's.
- "Do you think, Casher, that I am afraid?" "No," he admitted.
- "You will not remember this, Casher. Not when you leave. I am not
- just the turtle-girl T'ruth. I am also the imprint of the citizen
- Agatha. Have you ever heard of her?"
- "Agatha Madigan?" He shook his head slowly.
- "No. I don't see how .. . No, I'm sure that I never heard of her."
- "Didn't you ever hear the story of the Hechizera of Gonfalon?"
- Casher looked surprised.
- "Sure I saw it. It's a play. A drama. It is said to be based on some
- legend out of immemorial time. The 'space-witch' they called her, and
- she conjured fleets out of nothing by sheer hypnosis. It's an old
- story."
- "Eleven hundred years isn't so long," said the girl.
- "Eleven hundred years, fourteen local months come tonight."
- "You weren't alive eleven hundred years ago," said Casher accusingly
- He stood up from the remains of their meal and wandered over toward the
- window. That terrible piece of religious jewelry made him
- uncomfortable. He knew that it was against all laws to ship religion
- from world to world. What would he do, what could he do, now that he
- had actually beheld an image of the God Nailed High? That was exactly
- the kind of contraband which the police and customs robots of hundreds
- of worlds were looking for.
- The Instrumentality was easy about most things, but the transplanting
- of religion was one of its hostile obsessions.
- Religions leaked from world to world, anyhow. It was said that
- sometimes even the under people and robots carried bits of religion
- through space, though this seemed improbable. The Instrumentality left
- religion alone when it had a settled place on a single planet, but the
- Lords of the Instrumentality themselves shunned other people's
- devotional lives and simply took good care that fanaticisms did not
- once more flare up between the stars, once again bringing wild hope and
- great death to all the man kinds
- And now, thought Casher, the Instrumentality has been good to me in its
- big impersonal collective way, but what will it do when my brain is on
- fire with forbidden knowledge?
- The girl's voice called him back to himself.
- "I have the answer to your problem, Casher," said she, "if you would
- only listen to me. I am the Hechizera of Gonfalon, at least I am as
- much as any one person can be printed on another."
- His jaw dropped as he turned back to her.
- "You mean that you, child, really are imprinted with this woman Agatha
- Madigan? Really imprinted?"
- "I have all her skills, Casher," said the girl quietly, "and a few more
- which I have learned on my own."
- "But I thought it was just a story. . . ." said Casher.
- "If you're that terrible woman from Gonfalon, you don't need me.
- I'm quitting. Now."
- Casher walked toward the door. Disgusted, finished, through. She
- might be a child, she might be charming, she might need help, but if
- she came from that terrible old story, she did not need him.
- "Oh, no, you don't," said she.
- IX
- Unexpectedly, she took her place in the doorway, barring it.
- In her hand was the image of the man on the two pieces of wood.
- Ordinarily Casher would not have pushed a lady. Such was his haste
- that he did so this time. When he touched her, it was like welded
- steel; neither her gown nor her body yielded a thousandth of a
- millimeter to his strong hand and heavy push.
- "And now what?" she asked gently.
- Looking back, he saw that the real T'ruth, the smiling girl woman still
- stood soft and real in the window.
- Deep within, he began to give up; he had heard of hypnotists who could
- project, but he had never met one as strong as this.
- She was doing it. How was she doing it? Or was she doing it?
- The operation could be sub volitional There might be some art carried
- over from her animal past which even her re-formed mind could not
- explain. Operations too subtle, too primordial for analysis. Or
- skills which she used without understanding.
- "I project," she said.
- "I see you do,"
- he replied glumly and flatly.
- "I do kinesthetics," she said. His knife whipped out of his boot
- sheath and floated in the air in front of him.
- He snatched it out of the air instinctively. It wormed a little in his
- grasp, but the force on the knife was nothing more than he had felt
- when passing big magnetic engines.
- "I blind," she said. The room went totally dark for him.
- "I hear,"
- he said, and prowled at her like a beast, going by his memory of the
- room and by the very soft sound of her breathing. He had noticed by
- now that the simulacrum of herself which she had put in the doorway did
- not make any sound at all, not even that of breathing.
- He knew that he was near her. His fingertips reached out for her
- shoulder or her throat. He did not mean to hurt her, merely to show
- her that two could play at tricks.
- "I stun," she said, and her voice came at him from all directions. It
- echoed from the ceiling, came from all five walls of the old odd room,
- from the open windows, from both the doors.
- He felt as though he were being lifted into space and turned slowly in
- a condition of weightlessness. He tried to retain selfcontrol, to
- listen for the one true sound among the many false sounds, to trap the
- girl by some outside chance.
- "I make you remember," said her multiple echoing voice. For an instant
- he did not see how this could be a weapon, even if the turtle-girl had
- learned all the ugly tricks of the Hechizera of Gonfalon. But then he
- knew.
- He saw his uncle, Kuraf, again. He saw his old apartments vividly
- around himself. Kuraf was there. The old man was pitiable, hateful,
- drunk, horrible; the girl on Kuraf s lap laughed at him, Casher
- O'Neill, and she laughed at Kuraf, too. Casher had once had a
- teenager's passionate concern with sex and at the same time had had a
- teenager's dreadful fear of all the unstated, invisible implications of
- what the man-woman relationship, gone sour, gone wrong, gone bad, might
- be. The present-moment Casher remembered the long-ago Casher and as he
- spun in the web of T'ruth's hypnotic powers he found himself back with
- the ugliest memory he had.
- The killings in the palace at Mizzer.
- The colonels had taken Kaheer itself, and they ultimately let Kuraf run
- away to the pleasure planet of Ttiolle.
- But Kuraf s companions, who had debauched the old republic of the
- Twelve Niles, those people! They did not go. The soldiers, stung to
- fury, had cut them down with knives. Casher thought of the blood,
- blood sticky on the floors, blood gushing purple into the carpets,
- blood bright red and leaping like a fountain when a white throat ended
- its last gurgle, blood
- turning brown where hand prints themselves bloody, had left it on
- marble tables. The warm palace, long ago, had gotten the sweet sick
- stench of blood all the way through it. The young Casher had never
- known that people had so much blood inside them, or that so much could
- pour out on the perfumed sheets, the tables still set with food and
- drink, or that blood could creep across the floor in growing pools as
- the bodies of the dead yielded up their last few nasty sounds and their
- terminal muscular spasms.
- Before that day of butchery had ended, one thousand, three hundred and
- eleven human bodies, ranging in age from two months to eighty-nine
- years, had been carried out of the palaces once occupied by Kuraf.
- Kuraf, under sedation, was waiting for a starship to take him to
- perpetual exile and Casher Casher himself O'Neill! was shaking the
- hand of Colonel Wedder, whose orders had caused all the blood. The
- hand was washed and the nails pared and cleaned, but the cuff of the
- sleeve was still rimmed with the dry blood of some other human being.
- Colonel Wedder either did not notice his own cuff, or he did not
- care.
- "Touch and yield!" said the girl-voice out of nowhere.
- Casher found himself on all fours in the room, his sight suddenly back
- again, the room unchanged, and T'ruth smiling.
- "I fought you," she said.
- He nodded. He did not trust himself to speak.
- He reached for his water-glass, looking at it closely to see if there
- were any blood on it.
- Of course not. Not here. Not this time, not this place.
- He pulled himself to his feet.
- The girl had sense enough not to help him.
- She stood there in her thin modest shift, looking very much like a wise
- female child, while he stood up and drank thirstily.
- He refilled the glass and drank again.
- Then, only then, did he turn to her and speak: "Do you do all that?"
- She nodded.
- "Alone? Without drugs or machinery?"
- She nodded again.
- "Child," he cried out, "you're not a person! You're a whole weapons
- system all by yourself. What are you, really? Who are you?"
- "I am the turtle-child T'ruth," she said, "and I am the loyal property
- and loving servant of my good master, the Mister and Owner Murray
- Madigan."
- "Madam," said Casher, "you are almost a thousand years old. I am at
- your service. I do hope you will let me go free later on. And
- especially, that you will take that religious picture out of my
- mind."
- As Casher spoke, she picked a locket from the table. He had not
- noticed it. It was an ancient watch or a little round box, swinging on
- a thin gold chain.
- "Watch this," said the child, "if you trust me, and repeat what I then
- say."
- (Nothing at all happened: nothing anywhere.) Casher said to her,
- "You're making me dizzy, swinging that ornament. Put it back on. Isn't
- that the one you were wearing?"
- "No, Casher, it isn't."
- "What were we talking about?" demanded Casher.
- "Something," said she.
- "Don't you remember?"
- "No," said Casher brusquely.
- "Sorry, but I'm hungry again."
- He wolfed down a sweet roll encrusted with sugar and decorated with
- fruits. His mouth full, he washed the food down with water. At last
- he spoke to her.
- "Now what?"
- She had watched with timeless grace.
- "There's no hurry, Casher. Minutes or hours, they don't matter."
- "Didn't you want me to fight somebody after Gosigo left me here?"
- "That's right," she said, with terrible quiet.
- "I seem to have had a fight right here in this room." He stared around
- stupidly.
- She looked around the room, very cool.
- "It doesn't look as though anybody's been fighting here, does it?"
- "There's no blood here, no blood at all. Everything is clean,"
- said he.
- "Pretty much so."
- "Then why," said Casher, "should I think I had a fight?"
- "This wild weather on Henriada sometimes upsets off worlders until they
- get used to it," said T'ruth mildly.
- "If I didn't have a fight in the past, am I going to get into one in
- the future?"
- The old room with the golden-oak furniture swam around him. The world
- outside was strange with the sunlit marshes and wide bayous trailing
- off to the forever-thundering storm, just over the horizon, which lay
- beyond the weather machines.
- Casher shrugged and shivered. He looked straight at the girl.
- She stood erect and looked at him with the even regard of a reigning
- empress. Her young budding breasts barely showed through the thinness
- of her shift; she wore golden flat-heeled shoes. Around her neck there
- was a thin gold chain, but the object on the chain hung down inside her
- dress. It excited him a little to think of her flat chest barely
- budding into womanhood.
- He had never been a man who had an improper
- taste for children, but there was something about this person which
- was not childlike at all.
- "You are a girl and not a girl. .. ." he said in bewilderment.
- She nodded gravely.
- "You are that woman in the story, the Hechizera of Gonfalon.
- You are reborn."
- She shook her head, equally seriously.
- "No, I am not reborn.
- I am a turtle-child, an under person with a very long life, and I have
- been imprinted with the personality of the Citizen Agatha.
- This is all."
- "You stun," he said, "but I do not know how you do it."
- "I stun," she said flatly and around the edge of his mind there
- flickered up hot little torments of memory.
- "Now I remember," he cried.
- "You have me here to kill somebody. You are sending me into a
- fight."
- "You are going to a fight, Casher. I wish I could send somebody else,
- not you, but you are the only person here strong enough to do the
- job."
- Impulsively he took her hand. The moment he touched her, she ceased to
- be a child or an under person She felt tender and exciting, like the
- most desirable and important person he had ever known. His sister? But
- he had no sister. He felt that he was himself terribly, unendurably
- important to her. He did not want to let her hand go, but she withdrew
- from his touch with an authority which no decent man could resist.
- "You must fight to the death, now, Casher," she said, looking at him as
- evenly as might a troop commander examining a special soldier selected
- for a risky mission.
- He nodded. He was tired of having his mind confused. He knew
- something had happened to him after the for getty Gosigo, had left him
- at the front door, but he was not at all sure of what it was. They
- seemed to have had a sort of meal together in this room. He felt
- himself in love with the child. He knew that she was not even a human
- being. He remembered something about her living ninety thousand years
- and he remembered something else about her having gotten the name and
- the skills of the greatest battle hypnotist of all history, the
- Hechizera of Gonfalon.
- There was something strange, something frightening about that chain
- around her neck: there were things he hoped he would never have to
- know.
- He strained at the thought and it broke like a bubble.
- "I'm a fighter," he said.
- "Give me my fight and let me know."
- "He can kill you. I hope not. You must not kill him. He is immortal
- and insane. But in the law of Old North Australia, from which my
- master, the Mister and Owner Murray Madigan, is an exile, we must not
- hurt a house guest, nor may we turn him away in a time of great need."
- "What do I do" snapped Casher impatiently.
- "You fight him. You frighten him. You make his poor crazy mind
- fearful that he will meet you again."
- "I'm supposed to do this."
- "You can," she said very seriously.
- "I've already tested you.
- That's where you have the little spot of amnesia about this room."
- "But why? Why bother? Why not get some of your human servants and
- have them tie him up or put him in a padded room?"
- "They can't deal with him. He is too strong, too big, too clever, even
- though insane. Besides, they don't dare follow him."
- "Where does he go?" said Casher sharply.
- "Into the control room," replied T'ruth, as if it were the saddest
- phrase ever uttered.
- "What's wrong with that? Even a place as fine as Beauregard can't have
- too much of a control room. Put locks on the control."
- "It's not that kind of a control room."
- Almost angry, he shouted,
- "What is it, then?"
- "The control room," she answered, "is for a plano form ship.
- This house. These counties, all the way to Mottile on the one side and
- to Ambiloxi on the other. The sea itself, way out into the Gulf of
- Esperanza. All this is one ship."
- Casher's professional interest took over.
- "If it's turned off, he can't do any harm."
- "It's not turned off," she said.
- "My master leaves it on a very little bit. That way, he can keep the
- weather machines going and make this edge of Henriada a very pleasant
- place."
- "You mean," said Casher, "that you'd risk letting a lunatic fly all
- these estates off into space."
- "He doesn't even fly," said T'ruth gloomily.
- "What does he do, then?" yelled Casher.
- "When he gets at the controls, he just hovers."
- "He hovers? By the Bell, girl, don't try to fool me. If you hover a
- place as big as this, you could wipe out the whole planet any moment.
- There have been only two or three pilots in the history of space who
- would be able to hover a machine like this one."
- "He can, though," insisted the little girl.
- "Who is he, anyhow?"
- "I thought you knew. Or had heard somewhere about it. His name is
- John Joy Tree."
- "Tree the Go-Captain?" Casher shivered in the warm room.
- "He died a long time ago after he made that record flight."
- "He did not die. He bought immortality and went mad. He came here
- sand he lives under my master's protection."
- ' "Oh," said Casher. There was nothing else he could say.
- John Joy Tree, the great Norstrilian who took the first of the Long
- Plunges outside the galaxy: he was like Magno Taliano of ages ago, who
- could fly space on his living brain alone.
- But fight him? How could anybody fight him? Pilots are for piloting;
- killers are for killing; women are for loving or forgetting. When you
- mix up the purposes, everything goes wrong. Casher sat down
- abruptly.
- "Do you have any more of that coffee?" "You don't need coffee," she
- said. He looked up, inquiringly.
- "You're a fighter. You need a war. That's it," she said, pointing
- with her girlish hand to a small doorway which looked like the entrance
- to a closet.
- "Just go in there. He's in there now. Tinkering with the machines
- again. Making me wait for my master to get blown to bits at any
- minute!
- And I've put up with it for over a hundred years." "Go yourself," he
- said.
- "You've been in a ship's control room," she declared.
- "Yes," he nodded.
- "You know how people go all naked and frightened inside. You know how
- much training it takes to make a GoCaptain. What do you think happens
- to me?" At last, long last, her voice was shrill, angry, excited,
- childish.
- "What happens?" said Casher dully, not caring very much; he felt weary
- in every bone. Useless battles, murder he had to try, dead people
- arguing after their ballads had already grown out of fashion. Why
- didn't the Hechizera of Gonfalon do her own work?
- Catching his thought, she screeched at him, "Because I can'?" "All
- right," said Casher.
- "Why not?" "Because I turn into me." "You what?" said Casher, a
- little startled.
- "I'm a turtle-child. My shape is human. My brain is big.
- But I'm a turtle. No matter how much my master needs me, I'm just a
- turtle." "What's that got to do with it?"
- "What do turtles do when they're faced with danger? Not under
- people-turtles, but real turtles, little animals. You must have heard
- of them somewhere."
- "I've even seen them," said Casher, "on some world or other. They pull
- into their shells."
- "That's what I do" she wept "when I should be defending my master. I
- can meet most things. I am not a coward. But in that control room, I
- forget, forget, forget!"
- "Send a robot, then!"
- She almost screamed at him.
- "A robot against John Joy Tree?
- Are you mad, too?"
- Casher admitted, in a mumble, that on second thought it wouldn't do
- much good to send a robot against the greatest GoCaptain of them all.
- He concluded, lamely,
- "I'll go, if you want me to."
- "Go now," she shouted, "go right in!"
- She pulled at his arm, half-dragging and half-leading him to the little
- brightened door which looked so innocent.
- "But " he said.
- "Keep going," she pleaded.
- "This is all we ask of you. Don't kill him, but frighten him, fight
- him, wound him if you must.
- You can do it. I can't." She sobbed as she tugged at him.
- "I'd just be me."
- Before he knew quite what had happened she had opened the door. The
- light beyond was clear and bright and tinged with blue, the way the
- skies of Manhome, Mother Earth, were shown in all the viewers.
- He let her push him in.
- He heard the door click behind him.
- Before he even took in the details of the room or noticed the man in
- the Go-Captain's chair, the flavor and meaning of the room struck him
- like a blow against his throat.
- This room, he thought, is hell.
- He wasn't even sure that he remembered where he had learned the word
- "hell." It denoted all good turned to evil, all hope to anxiety, all
- wishes to greed.
- Somehow, this room was it. And then....
- X
- And then the chief occupant of hell turned and looked squarely at
- him.
- If this was John Joy Tree, he did not look insane.
- He was a handsome, chubby man with a red complexion, bright eyes,
- dancing-blue in color, and a mouth which was as mobile as the mouth of
- a temptress.
- "Good day," said John Joy Tree.
- "How do you do," said Casher inanely.
- "I do not know your name," said the ruddy brisk man, speaking in a tone
- of voice which was not the least bit insane.
- "I am Casher O'Neill, from the city of Kaheer on the planet Mizzer."
- "Mizzer?" John Joy Tree laughed.
- "I spent a night there, long, long ago. The entertainment was most
- unusual. But we have other things to talk
- of Man about. You have come here to kill the under girl T'ruth. You
- received your orders from the honorable Rankin Meiklejohn, may he soak
- in drink! The child has caught you and now she wants you to kill me,
- but she does not dare utter those words."
- John Joy Tree, as he spoke, shifted the spaceship controls to standby,
- and got ready to get out of his captain's seat.
- Casher protested,
- "She said nothing about killing you. She said you might kill me."
- "I might, at that." The immortal pilot stood on the floor. He was a
- full head shorter than Casher but he was a strong and formidable man.
- The blue light of the room made him look clear, sharp, distinct.
- The whole flavor of the situation tickled the fear-nerves inside
- Casher's body. He suddenly felt that he wanted very much to go to a
- bathroom, but he felt quite surely that if he turned his back on this
- man, in this place, he would die like a felled ox in a stockyard. He
- had to face John Joy Tree.
- "Go ahead," said the pilot.
- "Fight me."
- "I didn't say that I would fight you," said Casher.
- "I am supposed to frighten you and I do not know how to do it."
- "This isn't getting us anywhere," said John Joy Tree.
- "Shall we go into the outer room and let poor little T'ruth give us a
- drink? You can just tell her that you failed."
- "I think," said Casher, "that I am more afraid of her than I am of
- you."
- John Joy Tree flung himself into a comfortable passenger's chair.
- "All right, then. Do something. Do you want to box?
- Gloves? Bare fists? Or would you like swords? Or wire points
- There are some over there in the closet. Or we can each take a pilot
- ship and have a ship-duel out in space."
- "That wouldn't make much sense," said Casher, "me fighting a ship
- against the greatest Go-Captain of them all. . . ."
- John Joy Tree greeted this with an ugly under laugh a barely audible
- sound which made Casher feel that the whole situation was ridiculous.
- "But I do have one advantage," said Casher.
- "I know who you are and you do not know who I am."
- "How could I tell," said John Joy Tree, "when people keep on getting
- born all over the place?"
- He gave Casher a scornful, comfortable grin. There was charm in the
- man's poise. Keeping his eyes focused directly on Casher, he felt for
- a carafe and poured himself a drink.
- He gave Casher an ironic toast and Casher took it, standing frightened
- and alone. More alone than he had ever been before in his life.
- Suddenly John Joy Tree sprang lightly to his feet and stared with a
- complete change of expression past Casher. Casher did not dare look
- around. This was some old fight trick.
- Tree spat out the words,
- "You've done it then. This time you will violate all the laws and kill
- me. This fashionable oaf is not just one more trick."
- A voice behind Casher called very softly,
- "I don't know." It was a man's voice, old, slow, and tired.
- Casher had heard no one come in.
- Casher's years of training stood him in good stead. He skipped
- side-wise in four or five steps, never taking his eyes off John Joy
- Tree, until the other man had come into his field of vision.
- The man who stood there was tall, thin, yellow-skinned, and
- yellow-haired. His eyes were an old sick blue. He glanced at Casher
- and said,
- "I'm Madigan."
- Was this the master? thought Casher. Was this the being whom that
- lovely child had been imprinted to adore?
- He had no more time for thought.
- Madigan whispered, as if to no one in particular,
- "You find me waking. You find him sane. Watch out."
- Madigan lunged for the pilot's controls, but his tall, thin old body
- could not move very fast.
- John Joy Tree jumped out of his chair and ran for the controls, too.
- Casher tripped him.
- Tree fell, rolled over, and got halfway up, one knee and one foot on
- the floor. In his hand there shimmered a knife very much like Casher's
- own.
- Casher felt the flame of his body as some unknown force flung him
- against the wall. He stared, wild with fear.
- Madigan had climbed into the pilot's seat and was fiddling with the
- controls as though he might blow Henriada out of space at any second.
- John Joy Tree glanced at his old host and then turned his attention to
- the man in front of him.
- There was another man there.
- Casher knew him.
- He looked familiar.
- It was himself, rising and leaping like a snake, left arm weaving the
- knife for the neck of John Joy Tree.
- The image-Casher hit Tree with a thud that resounded through the
- room.
- Tree's bright blue eyes had turned crazy-mad. His knife caught the
- image-Casher in the abdomen, thrust hard and deep, and left the young
- man gasping on the floor, trying to push the bleeding entrails back
- into his belly. The blood poured from the image-Casher all over the
- rug.
- Blood!
- Casher suddenly knew what he had to do and how he could do it all
- without anybody telling him.
- of Man He created a third Casher on the far side of the room and gave
- him iron gloves. There was himself, unheeded against the wall; there
- was the dying Casher on the floor; there was the third, stalking toward
- John Joy Tree.
- "Death is here," screamed the third Casher, with a voice which Casher
- recognized as a fierce crazy simulation of his own.
- Tree whirled around.
- "You're not real," he said.
- Image-Casher stepped around the console and hit Tree with an iron
- glove. The pilot jumped away, a hand reaching up to his bleeding
- face.
- John Joy Tree screamed at Madigan, who was playing with the dials
- without even putting on the pin lighter helmet.
- "You got her in here," he screamed, "you got her in here with this
- young man! Get her out!"
- "Who?" said Madigan softly and absentmindedly.
- "T'ruth. That witch of yours. I claim guest-right by all the ancient
- laws. Get her out."
- The real-Casher, standing at the wall, did not know how he controlled
- the image-Casher with the iron gloves, but control him he did. He made
- him speak, in a voice as frantic as Tree's own voice: "John Joy Tree, I
- do not bring you death. I bring you blood.
- My iron hands will pulp your eyes. Blind sockets will stare in your
- face. My iron hands will split your teeth and break your jaw a
- thousand times, so that no doctor, no machine will ever fix you.
- My iron hands will crush your arms, turn your hands into living rags.
- My iron hands will break your legs. Look at the blood, John Joy Tree..
- .. There will be a lot more blood. You have killed me once. See that
- young man on the floor."
- They both glanced at the first image-Casher, who had finally shuddered
- into death in the great rug. A pool of blood lay in front of the body
- of the youth.
- John Joy Tree turned to the image-Casher and said to him, "You're the
- Hechizera of Gonfalon. You can't scare me. You're a turtle-girl and
- can't really hurt me."
- "Look at me," said real-Casher.
- John Joy Tree glanced back and forth between the duplicates.
- Fright began to show.
- Both the Cashers now shouted, in crazy voices which came from the
- depths of Casher's own mind: "Blood you shall have! Blood and ruin.
- But we will not kill you. You will live in ruin, blind, emasculated,
- armless, legless.
- You will be fed through tubes. You cannot die and you will weep for
- death but no one will hear you."
- "Why?" screamed Tree.
- "Why? What have I done to you?"
- "You remind me," howled Casher, "of my home. You remind me of
- the blood poured by Colonel Wedder when the poor useless victims of my
- uncle's lust paid with their blood for his revenge.
- You remind me of myself, John Joy Tree, and I am going to punish you as
- I myself might be punished."
- Lost in the mists of lunacy, John Joy Tree was still a brave man.
- He flung his knife unexpectedly at real-Casher. Image-Casher, in a
- tremendous bound, leaped across the room and caught the knife on an
- iron glove. It clattered against the iron glove and then fell silent
- onto the rug.
- Casher saw what he had to see.
- He saw the place of Kaheer, covered with death, with the intimate
- sticky silliness of sudden death the dead men holding little packages
- they had tried to save, the girls, with their throats cut, lying in
- their own blood but with the lipstick still even and the eyebrow-pencil
- still pretty on their dead faces. He saw a dead child, ripped open
- from groin upward to chest, holding a broken doll while the child
- itself, now dead, looked like a broken doll itself. He saw these
- things and he made John Joy Tree see them, too.
- "You're a bad man," said John Joy Tree.
- "I am very bad," said Casher.
- "Will you let me go, if I never enter this room again?"
- Image-Casher snapped off, both the body on the floor and the fighter
- with the iron gloves. Casher did not know how T'ruth had taught him
- the lost art of fighter-replication, but he had certainly done it
- well.
- "The lady told me you could go."
- "But who are you going to use," said John Joy Tree, calm, sad, and
- logical, "for your dreams of blood if you don't use me?"
- "I don't know," said Casher.
- "I follow my fate. Go now, if you do not want my iron gloves to crush
- you."
- John Joy Tree trotted out of the room, beaten.
- Only then did Casher, exhausted, grab a curtain to hold himself upright
- and look around the room freely.
- The evil atmosphere had gone.
- Madigan, old though he was, had locked all the controls on standby.
- He walked over to Casher and spoke.
- "Thank you. She did not invent you. She found you and put you to my
- service."
- Casher coughed out,
- "The girl. Yes."
- "My girl," corrected Madigan.
- "Your girl," said Casher, remembering the sight of that slight feminine
- body, those budding breasts, the sensitive lips, the tender eyes.
- "She could not have thought you up. She is my dead wife over again.
- The citizeness Agatha might have done it. But not T'ruth."
- Casher looked at the man as he talked. The host wore the bottoms of
- some very cheap yellow pajamas and a washable bathrobe which had once
- been stripes of purple, lavender, and white. Now it was faded, like
- its wearer. Casher also saw the white clean plastic surgical implants
- on the man's arms, where the machines and tubes hooked in to keep him
- alive.
- "I sleep a lot," said Murray Madigan, "but I am still the master of
- Beauregard. I am grateful to you."
- The hand was frail, withered, dry, without strength. The old voice
- whispered: "Tell her to reward you. You can have anything on my
- estate. Or you can have anything on Henriada. She manages it all for
- me." Then the old blue eyes opened wide and sharp and Murray Madigan
- was once again the man, just momentarily, that he had been hundreds of
- years ago a Norstrilian trader, sharp, shrewd, wise, and not unkind. He
- added sharply: "Enjoy her company. She is a good child. But do not
- take her. Do not try to take her."
- "Why not?" said Casher, surprised at his own bluntness.
- "Because if you do, she will die. She is mine. Imprinted to me. I
- had her made and she is mine. Without me she would die in a few days.
- Do not take her."
- Casher saw the old man leave the room by a secret door. He left
- himself, the way he had come in. He did not see Madigan again for two
- days, and by that time the old man had gone far back into his
- cataleptic sleep.
- XI
- Two days later T'ruth took Casher to visit the sleeping Madigan.
- "You can't go in there," said Eunice in a shocked voice.
- "Nobody goes in there. That's the master's room."
- "I'm taking him in," said T'ruth calmly.
- She had pulled a cloth-of-gold curtain aside and she was spinning the
- combination locks on a massive steel door. It was set in Daimoni
- material.
- The maid went on protesting.
- "But even you, little ma'am, can't take him in there!"
- "Who says I can't?" said T'ruth calmly and challengingly.
- The awfulness of the situation sank in on Eunice.
- In a small voice she muttered,
- "If you're taking him in, you're taking him in. But it's never been
- done before."
- "Of course it hasn't, Eunice, not in your time. But Casher O'Neill has
- already met the mister and owner. He has fought for the mister and
- owner. Do you think I would take a stray or random guest in to look at
- the master, Just like that?"
- "Oh, not at all, no," said Eunice.
- "Then go away, woman," said the lady-child.
- "You don't want to see this door open, do you?"
- "Oh, no," shrieked Eunice and fled, putting her hands over her ears as
- though that would shut out the sight of the door.
- When the maid had disappeared, T'ruth pulled with her whole weight
- against the handle of the heavy door. Casher expected the mustiness of
- the tomb or the medicinality of a hospital; he was astonished when
- fresh air and warm sunlight poured out from that heavy, mysterious
- door. The actual opening was so narrow, so low, that Casher had to
- step sidewise as he followed T'ruth into the room.
- The master's room was enormous. The windows were flooded with
- perpetual sunlight. The landscape outside must have been the way
- Henriada looked in its prime, when Mottile was a resort for the
- carefree millions of vacationers, and Ambiloxi, a port feeding worlds
- halfway across the galaxy. There was no sign of the ugly snaky storms
- which worried and pestered Henriada in these later years. Everything
- was landscape, order, neatness, the triumph of man, as though Poussin
- had painted it.
- The room itself, like the other great living-rooms of the estate of
- Beauregard, was exuberant neo-baroque in which the architect, himself
- half-mad, had been given wild license to work out his fantasies in
- steel, plastic, plaster, wood, and stone. The ceiling was not flat,
- but vaulted. The four corners of the room were each alcoves, cutting
- deep into the four sides, so that the room was, in effect, an octagon.
- The propriety and prettiness of the room had been a little diminished
- by the shoving of the furniture to one side, sofas, upholstered
- armchairs, marble tables, and knickknack stands all in an indescribable
- melange to the left; while the right hand part of the room facing the
- master window with the illusory landscape was equipped like a surgery
- with an operating table, hydraulic lifts, bottles of clear and colored
- fluid hanging from chrome stands, and two large devices which (Casher
- later surmised) must have been heart-lung and kidney machines.
- The alcoves, in their turn, were wilder. One was an archaic funeral
- parlor with an immense coffin, draped in black velvet, resting on a
- heavy teak stand. The next was a spaceship control cabin of the old
- kind, with the levers, switches, and controls all in plain sight the
- meters actually read the galactic ally-stable location of this very
- place, and to do so they had to whirl mightily as well as a pilot's
- chair with the usual choice of helmets and the straps and shock
- absorbers. The third alcove was a simple bedroom done in very
- old-fashioned taste, the walls a Wedgwood blue with deep wine-colored
- drapes, coverlets and pillowcases marking a sharp but tolerable
- contrast. The fourth alcove was the copy of a fortress: it might even
- be a fortress: the door was heavy and
- the walls looked as though they might be Daimoni material,
- indestructible by any imaginable means. Cases of emergency food and
- water were stacked against the walls. Weapons which looked oiled and
- primed stood in their racks, together with three different calibers of
- wire point each with its own fresh looking battery.
- The alcoves had no people in them.
- The parlor was deserted.
- The Mister and Owner Murray Madigan lay naked on the operating table.
- Two or three wires led to gauges attached to his body. Casher thought
- that he could see a faint motion of the chest, as the cataleptic man
- breathed at a rate one-tenth normal or less.
- The girl-lady, T'ruth, was not the least embarrassed.
- "I check him four or five times a day. I never let people in here. But
- you're special, Casher. He's talked with you and fought beside you and
- he knows that he owes you his life.
- You're the first human person ever to get into this room."
- "I'll wager," said Casher, "that the Administrator of Henriada, the
- Honorable Rankin Meiklejohn, would give up some of his 'honorable' just
- to get in here and have one look around. He wonders what Madigan is
- doing when Madigan is doing nothing...."
- "He's not just doing nothing," said T'ruth sharply.
- "He's sleeping. It's not everybody who can sleep for forty or fifty or
- sixty thousand years and can wake up a few times a month, just to see
- how things are going."
- Casher started to whistle and then stopped himself, as though he feared
- to waken the unconscious, naked old man on the table.
- "So that's why he chose you."
- T'ruth corrected him as she washed her hands vigorously in a
- washbasin.
- "That's why he had me made. Turtle stock, three hundred years.
- Multiply that with intensive stroon treatments, three hundred times.
- Ninety thousand years. Then he had me printed to love him and adore
- him. He's not my master, you know. He's my god."
- "Your what?"
- "You heard me. Don't get upset. I'm not going to give you any illegal
- memories. I worship him. That's what I was printed for, when my
- little turtle eyes opened and they put me back in the tank to enlarge
- my brain and to make a woman out of me.
- That's why they printed every memory of the citizeness Agatha Madigan
- right into my brain. I'm what he wanted. Just what he wanted. I'm
- the most wanted being on any planet. No wife, no sweetheart, no mother
- has ever been wanted as much as he wants me now, when he wakes up and
- knows that I am still here. You're a smart man. Would you trust any
- machine any machine at all for ninety thousand years?"
- "It would be hard," said Casher, "to get batteries of monitors long
- enough for them to repair each other over that long a time.
- But that means you have ninety thousand years of it. Four times, five
- times a day. I can't even multiply the numbers. Don't you ever get
- tired of it?"
- "He's my love, he's my joy, he's my darling little boy," she caroled,
- as she lifted his eyelids and put colorless drops in each eye.
- Absentmindedly, she explained.
- "With this slow metabolism, there's always some danger that his eyelids
- will stick to his eyeballs. This is part of the check-up."
- She tilted the sleeping man's head, looked earnestly into each eye. She
- then stepped a few paces aside and put her face close to the dial of a
- gently-humming machine. There was the sound of a shot. Casher almost
- reached for his gun, which he did not have.
- The child turned back to him with a free mischievous smile.
- "Sorry, I should have warned you. That's my noisemaker. I watch the
- encephalo-graph to make sure his brain keeps a little auditory intake.
- It showed up with the noise. He's asleep, very deeply asleep, but he's
- not drifting downward into death."
- Back at the table she pushed Madigan's chin upward so that the head
- leaned far back on its neck. Deftly holding the forehead, she took a
- retractor, opened his mouth with her fingers, depressed the tongue, and
- looked down into the throat.
- "No accumulation there," she muttered, as if to herself.
- She pushed the head back into a comfortable position. She seemed on
- the edge of another set of operations when it was obvious that an idea
- occurred to her.
- "Go wash your hands, thoroughly, over there, at the basin. Then push
- the timer down and be sure you hold your hands under the sterilizer
- until the timer goes off. You can help me turn him over. I don't have
- help here. You're the first visitor."
- Casher obeyed and while he washed his hands, he saw the girl drench her
- hands with some flower-scented unguent. She began to massage the
- unconscious body with professional expertness, even with a degree of
- roughness. As he stood with his hands under the sterilizer-drier,
- Casher marveled at the strength of those girlish arms and those little
- hands. Indefatigably they stroked, rubbed, pummelled, pulled,
- stretched, and poked the old body.
- The sleeping man seemed to be utterly unaware of it, but Casher thought
- that he could see a better skin color and muscle tone appearing.
- He walked back to the table and stood facing T'ruth.
- A huge peacock walked across the imaginary lawn outside the window, his
- tail shimmering in a paroxysm of colors.
- T'ruth saw the direction of Casher's glance.
- "Oh, I program that, too. He likes it when he wakes up. Don't you
- of Man think he was clever, before he went into catalepsis to have me
- made, to have me created to love him and to care for him? It helps
- that I'm a girl. I can't ever love anybody but him, and it's easy for
- me to remember that this is the man I love. And it's safer for him.
- Any man might get bored with these responsibilities. I don't."
- "Yet " said Casher.
- "Shh," she said, "wait a bit. This takes care." Her strong little
- fingers were now plowing deep into the abdomen of the naked old man.
- She closed her eyes so that she could concentrate all her senses on the
- one act of tactile impression. She took her hands away and stood
- erect.
- "All clear," she said.
- "I've got to find out what's going on inside him. But I don't dare use
- X-rays on him.
- Think of the radiation he'd build up in a hundred years or so. He
- defecates about twice a month while he's sleeping. I've got to be
- ready for that. I also have to prime his bladder every week or so.
- Otherwise he would poison himself just with his own body wastes. Here,
- now, you can help me turn him over. But watch the wires. Those are
- the monitor controls. They report his physiological processes, radio a
- message to me if anything goes wrong, and meanwhile supply the missing
- neuro physical impulses if any part of the automatic nervous system
- began to fade out or just simply went off."
- "Has that ever happened?"
- "Never," she said, "not yet. But I'm ready. Watch that wire.
- You're turning him too fast. There now, that's right. You can stand
- back while I massage him on the back."
- She went back to her job of being a masseuse. Starting at the muscles
- joining the skull to the neck, she worked her way down the body,
- pouring ointment on her hands from time to time. When she got to his
- legs, she seemed to work particularly hard. She lifted the feet, bent
- the knees, slapped the calves.
- Then she put on a rubber glove, dipped her hand into another jar one
- which opened automatically as her hand approached and came out with her
- hand greasy. She thrust her fingers into his rectum, probing,
- thrusting, groping, her brow furrowed.
- Her face cleared as she dropped the rubber glove in a disposal can and
- wiped the sleeping man with a soft linen towel, which also went into a
- disposal can.
- "He's all right. He'll get along well for the next two hours. I'll
- have to give him a little sugar then. All he's getting now is normal
- saline."
- She stood facing him. There was a faint glow in her cheeks from the
- violent exercise in which she had been indulging, but she still looked
- both the child and the lady the child irrecoverably remote, hidden in
- her own wisdom from the muddled world of adults, and the lady. mistress
- in her
- own home, her own estates, her own planet, serving her master with
- almost-immortal love and zeal.
- "I was going to ask you, back there " said Casher and then stopped.
- "You were going to ask me?"
- He spoke heavily.
- "I was going to ask you, what happens to you when he dies? Either at
- the right time or possibly before his time. What happens to you?"
- "I couldn't care less," her voice sang out. He could see by the open,
- honest smile on her face that she meant it.
- "I'm his. I belong to him. That's what I'm for. They may have
- programmed something into me, in case he dies. Or they may have
- forgotten.
- What matters is his life, not mine. He's going to get every possible
- hour of life that I can help him get. Don't you think I'm doing a good
- job?"
- "A good job, yes," said Casher.
- "A strange one, too."
- "We can go now," she said.
- "What are those alcoves for?"
- "Oh, those they're his make-believes. He picks one of them to go to
- sleep in his coffin, his fort, his ship, or his bedroom. It doesn't
- matter which. I always get him up with the hoist and put him back on
- his table, where the machines and I can take proper care of him. He
- doesn't really mind waking up on the table. He has usually forgotten
- which room he went to sleep in. We can go now."
- They walked toward the door.
- Suddenly she stopped.
- "I forgot something. I never forget things, but this is the first time
- I ever let anybody come in here with me. You were such a good friend
- to him. He'll talk about you for thousands of years. Long, long after
- you're dead," she added somewhat unnecessarily. Casher looked at her
- sharply to see if she might be mocking or deprecating him. There was
- nothing but the little-girl solemnity, the womanly devotion to an
- established domestic routine.
- "Turn your back," she commanded peremptorily.
- "Why?" he asked.
- "Why when you have trusted me with all the other secrets."
- "He wouldn't want you to see this."
- "See what?"
- "What I'm going to do. When I was the citizeness Agatha or when I
- seemed to be her I found that men are awfully fussy about some things.
- This is one of them."
- Casher obeyed and stood facing the door.
- A different odor filled the room a strong wild scent, like a geranium
- pomade. He could hear T'ruth breathing heavily as she worked beside
- the sleeping man.
- of Man She called to him: "You can turn around now."
- She was putting away a tube of ointment, standing high to get it into
- its exact position on a tile shelf.
- Casher looked quickly at the body of Madigan. It was still asleep,
- still breathing very lightly and very slowly.
- "What on earth did you do?"
- T'ruth stopped in mid-step: "You're going to get nosy."
- Casher stammered mere sounds.
- "You can't help it," she said.
- "People are inquisitive."
- "I suppose they are," he said, flushing at the accusation.
- "I gave him his bit of fun. He never remembers it when he wakes up,
- but the cardiograph sometimes shows increased activity. Nothing
- happened this time. That was my own idea. I read books and decided
- that it would be good for his body tone.
- Sometimes he sleeps through a whole Earth-year, but usually he wakes up
- several times a month."
- She passed Casher, almost pulled herself clear of the floor tugging on
- the great inside levers of the main door.
- She gestured him past. He stooped and stepped through.
- "Turn away again," she said.
- "All I'm going to do is to spin the dials, but they're cued to give any
- viewer a bad headache so he will forget the combination. Even robots.
- I'm the only person tuned to these doors."
- He heard the dials spinning but did not look around.
- She murmured, almost under her breath,
- "I'm the only one.
- The only one."
- "The only one for what?" asked Casher.
- "To love my master, to care for him, to support his planet, to guard
- his weather. But isn't he beautiful? Isn't he wise? Doesn't his
- smile win your heart?"
- Casher thought of the faded old wreck of a man with the yellow pajama
- bottoms. Tactfully, he said nothing.
- T'ruth babbled on, quite cheerfully,
- "He is my father, my husband, my baby son, my master, my owner. Think
- of that, Casher, he owns me! Isn't he lucky to have me? And aren't I
- lucky to belong to him?"
- "But what for?" asked Casher, a little crossly, thinking that he was
- falling in and out of love with this remarkable girl himself.
- "For life!" she cried.
- "In any form, in any way. I am made for ninety thousand years and he
- will sleep and wake and dream and sleep again, a large part of that."
- "What's the use of it?" insisted Casher.
- "The use," she said, "the use? What's the use of the little turtle-egg
- they took and modified in its memory chains, right down to the
- molecular level? What's the use of turning me into an under girl so
- that even you
- have to love me off and on? What's the use of little me, meeting my
- master for the first time, when I had been manufactured to love him? I
- can tell you, man, what the use is. Love."
- "What did you say?" said Casher.
- "I said the use was love. Love is the only end of things. Love on the
- one side, and death on the other. If you are strong enough to use a
- real weapon, I can give you a weapon which will put all Mizzer at your
- mercy. Your cruiser and your laser would just be toys against the
- weapon of love. You can't fight love. You can't fight me."
- They had proceeded down a corridor, forgotten pictures hanging on the
- walls, unremembered luxuries left untouched by centuries of neglect.
- The bright yellow light of Henriada poured in through an open doorway
- on their right.
- From the room came snatches of a man singing while playing a stringed
- instrument. Later, Casher found that this was a verse of the Henriada
- Song, the one which went: Don't put your ship in the Boom Lagoon, Look
- up North for the raving wave. Henriada's boiled away But Ambiloxi's a
- saving grave.
- They entered the room.
- A gentleman stood up to greet them.
- It was the great go-pilot, John Joy Tree. His ruddy face smiled, his
- bright blue eyes lit up, a little condescendingly, as he greeted his
- small hostess, but then his glance took in Casher O'Neill.
- The effect was sudden, and evil.
- John Joy Tree looked away from both of them. The phrase which he had
- started to use stuck in his throat.
- He said, in a different voice, very "away" and deeply troubled, "There
- is blood all over this place. There is a man of blood right here.
- Excuse me. I am going to be sick."
- He trotted past them and out the door which they had entered.
- "You have passed a test," said T'ruth.
- "Your help to my master has solved the problem of the captain and
- honorable John Joy Tree. He will not go near that control room if he
- thinks that you are there."
- "Do you have more tests for me? Still more? By now, you ought to know
- me well enough not to need tests."
- "I am not a person," she said, "but just a built-up copy of one.
- I am getting ready to give you your weapon. This is a communications
- room as well as a music room. Would you like something to eat or
- drink?"
- of Man "Just water," he said.
- "At your hand," said T'ruth.
- A rock-crystal carafe had been standing on the table beside him,
- unnoticed. Or had she transported it into the room with one of the
- tricks of the Hechizera, the dreaded Agatha herself? It didn't matter.
- He drank. Trouble was coming.
- XII
- T'ruth had swung open a polished cabinet panel. The communicator was
- the kind they mount in plano forming ships right beside the pilot. The
- rental on one of them was enough to make any planetary government
- reconsider its annual budget.
- "That's yours?" cried Casher.
- "Why not?" said the little-girl lady.
- "I have four or five of them."
- "But you're rich!"
- "I'm not. My master is. I belong to my master, too."
- "But things like this. He can't handle them. How does he manage?"
- "You mean money and things?" The girlish part of her came out. She
- looked pleased, happy, and mischievous.
- "I manage them for him. He was the richest man on Henriada when I came
- here. He had credits of stroon. Now he is about forty times
- richer."
- "He's a Rod McBan!" exclaimed Casher.
- "Not even near. Mister McBan had a lot more money than we. But he's
- rich. Where do you think all the people from Henriada went?"
- "I don't know," said Casher.
- "To four new planets. They belong to my master and he charges the new
- settlers a very small land-rent."
- "You bought them?" Casher asked.
- "For him." T'ruth smiled.
- "Haven't you heard of planet brokers
- "But that's a gambler's business " said Casher.
- "I gambled," she said, "and I won. Now keep quiet and watch me."
- She pressed a button.
- "Instant message."
- "Instant message," repeated the machine.
- "What priority?"
- "War news, double A one, subspace penalty."
- "Confirmed," said the machine.
- "The planet Mizzer. Now. War and peace information. Will fighting
- end soon?"
- The machine clucked to itself.
- Casher, knowing the prices of this kind of communication, almost felt
- that he could see the arterial spurt of money go out of Henriada's
- budget as
- the machines reached across the galaxy, found Mizzer, and came back
- with the answer.
- "Skirmishing. Seventh Nile. Ends three local days."
- "Close message," said T'ruth.
- The machine went off.
- T'ruth turned to him.
- "You're going home soon, Casher, if you can pass a few little tests."
- He stared at her.
- He blurted,
- "I need my weapons, my cruiser, and my laser."
- "You'll have weapons. Better ones than those. Right now, I want you
- to go to the front door. When you have opened the door, you will not
- let anybody in. Close the door. Then please come back to me here,
- dear Casher, and if you are still alive, I will have some other things
- for you to do."
- Casher turned in bewilderment. It did not occur to him to contradict
- her. He could end up a for getty like the maidservant Eunice or the
- Administrator's brown man, Gosigo.
- Down the halls, he walked. He met no one except for a few shy
- cleaning-robots, who bowed their heads politely as he passed.
- He found the front door. It stopped him. It looked like wood on the
- outside, but it was actually a Daimoni door, made of near
- indestructible material. There was no sign of a key or dials or
- controls. Acting like a man in a dream, he took a chance that the door
- might be keyed to himself. He put his right palm firmly against it, at
- the left or opening edge.
- The door swung in.
- Meiklejohn was there. Gosigo held the Administrator upright.
- It must have been a rough trip. The Administrator's face was bruised
- and blood trickled from the corner of his mouth. His eyes focused on
- Casher.
- "You're alive. She caught you, too?"
- Quite formally, Casher asked,
- "What do you want in this house?"
- "I have come," said the Administrator, "to see her."
- "To see whom?" insisted Casher.
- The Administrator hung almost slack in Gosigo's arms. By his own
- standard and in his own way, he was a very brave man, indeed. His eyes
- looked clear, even though his body was collapsing.
- "To see T'ruth, if she will see me," said Rankin Meiklejohn.
- "She cannot," said Casher, "see you now. Gosigo!"
- The for getty turned to Casher and gave him a bow.
- "You will forget me. You have not seen me."
- "I have not seen you, lord. Give my greetings to your lady.
- Anything else?"
- "Yes. Take your master home, as safely and swiftly as you can."
- of Man "My lord!" cried Gosigo, though this was an improper title for
- Casher. Casher turned around.
- "My lord, tell her to extend the weather machines for just a few more
- kilometers and I will have him home safe in ten minutes. At top
- speed."
- "I can tell her," said Casher, "but I cannot promise she will do it."
- "Of course," said Gosigo. He picked up the Administrator and began
- putting him into the ground car Rankin Meiklejohn bawled once, like a
- man crying in pain. It sounded like a blurred version of the name
- Murray Madigan. No one heard it but Gosigo and Casher; Gosigo busy
- closing the ground car Casher pushing on the big house door.
- The door clicked.
- There was silence.
- The opening of the door was remembered only by the warm sweet salty
- stink of seaweed, which had disturbed the odor-pattern of the
- changeless, musty old house.
- Casher hurried back with the message about the weather machines.
- T'ruth received the message gravely. Without looking at the console,
- she reached out and controlled it with her extended right hand, not
- taking her eyes off Casher for a moment. The machine clicked its
- agreement. T'ruth exhaled.
- "Thank you, Casher. Now the Instrumentality and the for getty are
- gone."
- She stared at him, almost sadly and inquiringly. He wanted to pick her
- up, to crush her to his chest, to rain his kisses on her face. But he
- stood stock still. He did not move. This was not just the
- forever-loving turtle-child; this was the real mistress of Henriada.
- This was the Hechizera of Gonfalon, whom he had formerly thought about
- only in terms of a wild, melodic grand opera.
- "I think you are seeing me, Casher. It is hard to see people, even
- when you look at them every day. I think I can see you, too, Casher.
- It is almost time for us both to do the things which we have to do."
- "Which we have to do?" he whispered, hoping she might say something
- else.
- "For me, my work here on Henriada. For you, your fate on your homeland
- of Mizzer. That's what life is, isn't it? Doing what you have to do
- in the first place. We're lucky people if we find it out. You are
- ready, Casher. I am about to give you weapons which will make bombs
- and cruisers and lasers and bombs seem like nothing at all."
- "By the Bell, girl! Can't you tell me what those weapons are?"
- T'ruth stood in her innocently revealing sheath, the yellow light of
- the old music room pouring like a halo around her.
- "Yes," she said,
- "I can tell you now. Me."
- "You?"
- Casher felt a wild surge of erotic attraction for the innocently
- voluptuous child. He remembered his first insane impulse to crush her
- with kisses, to sweep her up with hugs, to exhaust her with all the
- excitement which his masculinity could bring to both of them.
- He stared at her.
- She stood there, calm.
- That sort of an idea did not ring right.
- He was going to get her, but he was going to get something far from fun
- or folly something, indeed, which he might not even like.
- When at last he spoke, it was out of the deep bewilderment of his own
- thoughts,
- "What do you mean, you're going to give me yourself? It doesn't sound
- very romantic to me, nor the tone in which you said it."
- The child stepped close to him, reaching up and patting his forehead.
- "You're not going to get me for a night's romance, and if you did, you
- would be sorry. I am the property of my master and of no other man.
- But I can do something with you which I have never done to anyone else.
- I can get myself imprinted on you. The technicians are already coming.
- You will be the turtle-child. You will be the citizeness Agatha
- Madigan, the Hechizera of Gonfalon herself. You will be many other
- people. And yourself. You will then win. Accidents may kill you,
- Casher, but no one will be able to kill you on purpose. Not when
- you're me. Poor man! Do you know what you will be giving up?"
- "What?" he croaked, at the edge of a great fright. He had seen danger
- before, but never before had danger loomed up from within himself.
- "You will not fear death, ever again, Casher. You will have to lead
- your life minute by minute, second by second, and you will not have the
- alibi that you are going to die anyhow. You will know that's not
- special."
- He nodded, understanding her words and scrabbling around his mind for a
- meaning.
- "I'm a girl, Casher. . . ."
- He looked at her and his eyes widened. She was a girl a beautiful,
- wonderful girl. But she was something more. She was the mistress of
- Henriada. She was the first of the under people really and truly to
- surpass humanity. To think that he had wanted to grab her poor little
- body. The body ah, that was sweet! but the power within it was the
- kind of thing that empires and religions are made of.
- ". . . and if you take the print of me, Casher, you will never lie with
- a woman without realizing that you know more about her than she does.
- You will be a seeing man among blind multitudes, a hearing person in
- the world of the deaf. I don't know how much fun romantic love is
- going to be to you after this."
- of Man Gloomily he said,
- "If I can free my home planet of Mizzer, it will be worth it. Whatever
- it is."
- "You're not going to turn into a woman!" She laughed.
- "Nothing that easy. But you are going to get wisdom. And I will tell
- you the whole story of the Sign of the Fish before you leave here."
- "Not that, please," he begged.
- "That's a religion and the Instrumentality would never let me travel
- again."
- "I'm going to have you scrambled, Casher, so that nobody can read you
- for a year or two. And the Instrumentality is not going to send you
- back. I am. Through space-three."
- "It'll cost you a fine, big ship to do it."
- "My master will approve when I tell him, Casher. Now give me that kiss
- you have been wanting to give me. Perhaps you will remember something
- of it when you come out of scramble."
- She stood there. He did nothing.
- "Kiss me!" she commanded.
- He put his arm around her. She felt like a big little girl. She
- lifted her face. She thrust her lips up toward his. She stood on
- tiptoe.
- He kissed her the way a man might kiss a picture or a religious object.
- The heat and fierceness had gone out of his hopes. He had not kissed a
- girl, but power tremendous power and wisdom put into a single slight
- form.
- "Is that the way your master kisses you?"
- She gave him a quick smile.
- "How clever of you! Yes, sometimes. Come along now. We have to shoot
- some children before the technicians are ready. It will give you a
- good last chance of seeing what you can do, when you have become what I
- am. Come along, the guns are in the hall."
- XIII
- They went down an enormous light-oak staircase to a floor which Casher
- had never seen before. It must have been the entertainment and
- hospitality center of Beauregard long ago, when the mister and owner
- Murray Madigan was himself young.
- The robots did a good job of keeping away the dust and the mildew.
- Casher saw inconspicuous little air-driers placed at strategic places,
- so that the rich tooled leather on the walls would not spoil, so that
- the velvet bar-stools would not become slimy with mold, so that the
- pool tables would not warp nor the golf clubs go out of shape with age
- and damp. By the Bell, he thought, that man Madigan could have
- entertained a thousand people at one time in a place this size.
- The gun-cabinet, now, that was functional. The glass shone.
- The velvet of
- oil showed on the steel and walnut of the guns. They were old Earth
- models, very rare and very special. For actual fighting, people used
- the cheap artillery of the present time or wire points for close work.
- Only the richest and rarest of connoisseurs had the old Earth weapons
- or could use them.
- T'ruth touched the guard-robot and waked him. The robot saluted,
- looked at her face, and without further inquiry, opened the cabinet.
- "Do you know guns?" said T'ruth to Casher.
- "Wirepoints," he said.
- "Never touched a gun in my life."
- "Do you mind using a learning-helmet, then? I could teach you
- hypnotically with the special rules of the Hechizera, but they might
- give you a headache or upset you emotionally. The helmet is
- neuro-electric and it has filters."
- Casher nodded and saw his reflection nodding in the polished glass
- doors of the gun-cabinet. He was surprised to see how helpless and
- lugubrious he looked.
- But it was true. Never before in his life had he felt that a situation
- swept over him, washed him along like a great wave, left him with no
- choice and no responsibility. Things were her choice now, not his, and
- yet he felt that her power was benign, self-limited, restricted by
- factors at which he could no more than guess. He had come for one
- weapon the cruiser which he had hoped to get from the Administrator
- Rankin Meiklejohn. She was offering him something else psychological
- weapons in which he had neither experience nor confidence.
- She watched him attentively for a long moment and then turned to the
- gun-watching robot.
- "You're little Harry Hadrian, aren't you? The gun-watcher."
- "Yes, ma'am," said the silver robot brightly, "and I'm owl brained too.
- That makes me very bright."
- "Watch this," she said, extending her arms the width of the gun-cabinet
- and then dropping them after a queer flutter of her hands.
- "Do you know what that means?"
- "Yes, ma'am," said the little robot quickly, the emotion showing in his
- toneless voice by the speed with which he spoke, not by the intonation,
- "it-means-you-have-taken-over-and-I-am off-duty!
- Can-I-go-sit-in-the-gard n-and-look-at-the-live-things?"
- "Not quite yet, little Harry Hadrian. There are some wind people out
- there now and they might hurt you. I have another errand for you
- first. Do you remember where the teaching helmets are?"
- "Silver hats on the third floor in an open closet with a wire running
- to each hat. Yes."
- "Bring one of those as fast as you can. Pull it loose very carefully
- from its electrical connection."
- of Man The little robot disappeared in a sudden, fast, gentle clatter
- up the stairs.
- T'ruth turned back to Casher.
- "I have decided what to do with you. I am helping you. You don't have
- to look so gloomy about it."
- "I'm not gloomy. The Administrator sent me here on a crazy errand,
- killing an unknown under person I find out that the person is really a
- little girl. Then I find out that she is not an under person but a
- frightening old dead woman, still walking around alive. My life gets
- turned upside down. All my plans are set aside. You propose to send
- me home to fulfill my life's work on Mizzer. I've struggled for this,
- so many years! Now you're making it all come through, even though you
- are going to cook me through space-three to do it, and throw in a lot
- of illegal religion and hypnotic tricks, that I'm not sure I can
- handle. Now you tell me to come along to shoot children with guns.
- I've never done anything like that in my life and yet I find myself
- obeying you. I'm tired out, girl, tired out. If you have put me in
- your power, I don't even know it. I don't even want to know it."
- "Here you are, Casher, on the ruined wet world of Henriada.
- In less than a week you will be recovering among the military
- casualties of Colonel Wedder's army. You will be under the clear sky
- of Mizzer, and the Seventh Nile will be near you, and you will be ready
- at long last to do what you have to do. You will have bits and pieces
- of memories of me not enough to make you find your way back here or to
- tell people all the secrets of Beauregard, but enough for you to
- remember that you have been loved. You may even" and she smiled very
- gently, with a tender wry humor on her face "marry some Mizzer girl
- because her body or her face or her manner reminds you to me."
- "In a week ?" he gasped.
- "Less than that."
- "Who are you," he cried out, "that you, an under person should run real
- people and should manipulate their lives?"
- "I didn't look for power, Casher. Power doesn't usually work if you
- look for it. I have eighty-nine thousand years to live, Casher, and as
- long as my master lives, I shall love him and take care of him. Isn't
- he handsome? Isn't he wise? Isn't he the most perfect master you ever
- saw?"
- Casher thought of the old ruined-looking body with the plastic knobs
- set into it; he thought of the faded pajama bottoms; he said nothing.
- "You don't have to agree," said T'ruth.
- "I know I have a special way of looking at him. But they took my
- turtle brain and raised the IQ to above normal human level. They took
- me when I was a happy little girl, enchanted by the voice and the
- glance and the touch of my master they took me to where this real woman
- lay dying and they put me into a machine and they put her into one,
- too. When they were through, they
- picked me up. I had on a pink dress with pastel blue socks and pink
- shoes. They carried me out into the corridor, on a rug. They had
- finished with me. They knew that I wouldn't die. I was healthy. Can't
- you see it, Casher? I cried myself to sleep, nine hundred years
- ago."
- Casher could not really answer. He nodded sympathetically.
- "I was a girl, Casher. Maybe I was a turtle once, but I don't remember
- that, any more than you remember your mother's womb or your laboratory
- bottle. In that one hour I was never to be a girl again. I did not
- need to go to school. I had her education, and it was a good one. She
- spoke twenty or more languages. She was a psychologist and a hypnotist
- and a strategist. She was also the tyrannical mistress of this house.
- I cried because my childhood was finished, because I knew what I would
- have to do. I cried because I knew that I could do it. I loved my
- master so, but I was no longer to be the pretty little servant who
- brought him his tablets or his sweetmeats or his beer. Now I saw the
- truth as she died I had myself become Henriada. The planet was mine to
- care for, to manage to protect my master. If I come along and I
- protect and help you, is that so much for a woman who will just be
- growing up when your grandchildren will all be dead of old age?"
- "No, no," stammered Casher O'Neill.
- "But your own life? A family, perhaps?"
- Anger lashed across her pretty face. Her features were the features of
- the delicious girl-child T'ruth, but her expression was that of the
- citizeness Agatha Madigan, perhaps, a worldly woman reborn to the
- endless worldliness of her own wisdom.
- "Should I order a husband from the turtle bank, perhaps?
- Should I hire out a piece of my master's estate, to be sold to somebody
- because I'm an under person or perhaps put to work somewhere in an
- industrial ship? I'm me. I may be an animal, but I have more
- civilization in me than all the wind-people on this planet. Poor
- things! What kind of people are they, if they are only happy when they
- catch a big mutated duck and tear it to pieces, eating it raw? I'm not
- going to lose, Casher. I'm going to win. My master will live longer
- than any person has ever lived before. He gave me that mission when he
- was strong and wise and well in the prime of his life. I'm going to do
- what I was made for, Casher, and you're going to go back to Mizzer and
- make it free, whether you like it or not!"
- They both heard a happy scurrying on the staircase.
- The small silver robot, little Harry Hadrian, burst upon them; he
- carried a teaching helmet.
- T'ruth said,
- "Resume your post. You are a good boy, little Harry, and you can have
- time to sit in the garden later on, when it is safe."
- "Can I sit in a tree?" the little robot asked.
- "Yes, if it is safe."
- Little Harry Hadrian resumed his post by the gun-cabinet.
- He kept the key in his hand. It was a very strange key, sharp at the
- end and as long as an awl. Casher supposed that it must be one of the
- straight magnetic keys, cued to its lock by a series of magnetized
- patterns.
- "Sit on the floor for a minute," said T'ruth to Casher; "you're too
- tall for me." She slipped the helmet on his head, adjusted the levers
- on each side so that the helmet sat tight and true upon his skull.
- With a touching gesture of intimacy, for which she gave him a
- sympathetic apologetic little smile, she moistened the two small
- electrodes with her own spit, touching her finger to her tongue and
- then to the electrode. These went to his temples.
- She adjusted the verniered dials on the helmet itself, lifted the rear
- wire, and applied it to her forehead.
- Casher heard the click of a switch.
- "That did it," he heard T'ruth's voice saying, very far away.
- He was too busy looking into the gun-cabinet. He knew them all and
- loved some of them. He knew the feel of their stocks on his shoulder,
- the glimpse of their barrels in front of his eyes, the dance of the
- target on their various sights, the welcome heavy weight of the gun on
- his supporting arm, the rewarding thrust of the stock against his
- shoulder when he fired. He knew all this, and did not know how he knew
- it.
- "The Hechizera, Agatha herself, was a very accomplished sportswoman,"
- murmured T'ruth to him.
- "I thought her knowledge would take a second printing when I passed it
- along to you. Let's take these."
- She gestured to little Harry Hadrian, who unlocked the cabinet and took
- out two enormous guns, which looked like the long muskets mankind had
- had on Earth even before the age of space began.
- "If you're going to shoot children," said Casher with his new-found
- expertness, "these won't do. They'll tear the bodies completely to
- pieces."
- T'ruth reached into the little bag which hung from her belt.
- She took out three shotgun shells.
- "I have three more," she said.
- "Six children is all we need."
- Casher looked at the slug projecting slightly from the shotgun casing.
- It did not look like any shell he had ever seen before. The
- workmanship was unbelievably fine and precise.
- "What are they? I never saw these before."
- "Proximity stunners," she said.
- "Shoot ten centimeters above the head of any living thing and the
- stunner knocks it out."
- "You want the children alive?"
- "Alive, of course. And unconscious. They are a part of your final
- test."
- Two hours later, after an exciting hike to the edge of the weather
- controls, they had the six children stretched out on the floor of the
- great
- hall. Four were little boys, two girls; they were fine-boned, soft
- haired people, very thin, but they did not look too far from
- Earthnormal.
- T'ruth called up a doctor-under man from among her servants.
- There must have been a crowd of fifty or sixty under men and robots
- standing around. Far up the staircase, John Joy Tree stood hidden,
- half in shadow. Casher suspected that he was as inquisitive as the
- others but afraid of himself, Casher, "the man of blood."
- T'ruth spoke quietly but firmly to the doctor.
- "Can you give them a strong euphoric before you waken them? We don't
- want to have to pluck them out of all the curtains in the house, if
- they go wild when they wake up."
- "Nothing simpler," said the doctor-under man He seemed to be of dog
- origin, but Casher could not tell.
- He took a glass tube and touched it to the nape of each little neck.
- The necks were all streaked with dirt. These children had never been
- washed in their lives, except by the rain.
- "Wake them," said T'ruth.
- The doctor stepped back to a rolling table. It gleamed with equipment.
- He must have pre-set his devices, because all he did was to press a
- button and the children stirred into life.
- The first reaction was wildness. They got ready to bolt. The biggest
- of the boys, who by Earth-standards would have been about ten, got
- three steps before he stopped and began laughing.
- T'ruth spoke the Old Common Tongue to them, very slowly and with long
- spaces between the words: "Wind-children do you know where you are?"
- The biggest girl twittered back to her so fast that Casher could not
- understand it.
- T'ruth turned to Casher and said,
- "The girl said that she is in the Dead Place, where the air never moves
- and where the Old Dead Ones more around on their own business. She
- means us."
- To the wind-children she spoke again.
- "What would you like most?"
- The biggest girl went from child to child. They nodded agreement
- vigorously. They formed a circle and began a little chant. By the
- second repetition around, Casher could make it out.
- Shig shag sh uggery', shuck shuck shuck! What all of us need is an all
- around duck.
- Shig shag shuggery, shuck shuck shuck!
- At the fourth or fifth repetition they all stopped and looked at
- T'ruth, who was so plainly the mistress of the house.
- She in turn spoke to Casher O'Neill: "They think that they want a
- tribal feast of raw duck. What they are going to get is inoculations
- against the worst diseases of this planet, several duck meals, and
- their freedom again. But they need something else beyond all measure.
- You know what that is, Casher, if you can only find it."
- The whole crowd turned its eyes on Casher, the human eyes of the people
- and under people the milky lenses of the robots.
- Casher stood aghast.
- "Is this a test?" he asked, softly.
- "You could call it that," said T'ruth, looking away from him.
- Casher thought furiously and rapidly. It wouldn't do any good to make
- them into forget ties The household had enough of them. T'ruth had
- announced a plan to let them loose again.
- Mister and owner Murray Madigan must have told her, sometime or other,
- to "do something" about the wind-people.
- She was trying to do it. The whole crowd watched him. What might
- T'ruth expect?
- The answer came to him in a flash.
- If she were asking him, it must be something to do with himself,
- something which he uniquely among these people, under people and robots
- had brought to the storm-sieged mansion of Beauregard.
- Suddenly he saw it.
- "Use me, my Lady Ruth," said he, deliberately giving her the wrong
- title, "to print on them nothing from my intellectual knowledge, but
- everything from my emotional makeup. It wouldn't do them any good to
- know about Mizzer, where the Twelve Niles work their way down across
- the Intervening Sands. Nor about Pontoppidan, the Gem Planet. Nor
- about Olympia, where the blind brokers promenade under numbered clouds.
- Knowing things would not help these children. But wanting " He was
- unique. He had wanted to return to Mizzer. He had wanted to return
- beyond all dreams of blood and revenge. He had wanted things fiercely,
- wildly, so that even if he could not get them, he zigzagged the galaxy
- in search of them.
- T'ruth was speaking to him again, urgently and softly, but not in so
- low a voice that the others in the room could not hear.
- "And what, Casher O'Neill, should I give them from you?"
- "My emotional structure. My determination. My desire.
- Nothing else. Give them that and throw them back into the winds.
- Perhaps if they want something fiercely enough, they will grow up to
- find out what it is."
- There was a soft murmur of approval around the room.
- T'ruth hesitated a moment and then nodded.
- "You answered, Casher.
- You answered quickly and perceptively. Bring seven helmets, Eunice.
- Stay here, doctor."
- Eunice, the for getty left, taking two robots with her.
- "A chair," said T'ruth to no one in particular.
- "For him."
- A large powerful under man pushed his way through the crowd and dragged
- a chair to the end of the room.
- T'ruth gestured that Casher should sit in it.
- She stood in front of him. Strange, thought Casher, that she should be
- a great lady and still a little girl. How would he ever find a girl
- like her? He was not even afraid of the mystery of the Fish, or the
- image of the man on two pieces of wood. He no longer dreaded
- space-three, where so many travelers had gone in and so few had come
- out. He felt safe, comforted by her wisdom and authority. He felt
- that he would never see the likes of this again a child running a
- planet and doing it well; a half-dead man surviving through the endless
- devotion of his maidservant; a fierce woman hypnotist living on with
- all the anxieties and angers of humanity gone, but with the skill and
- obstinacy of turtle genes to sustain her in her re-imprinted form.
- "I can guess what you are thinking," said T'ruth, "but we have already
- said the things that we had to say. I've peeped your mind a dozen
- times and I know that you want to go back to Mizzer so bad that
- space-three will spit you out right at the ruined fort where the big
- turn of the Seventh Nile begins. In my own way I love you, Casher, but
- I could not keep you here without turning you into a for getty and
- making you a servant to my master. You know what always comes first
- with me, and always will."
- "Madigan."
- "Madigan," she answered, and with her voice the name itself was a
- prayer.
- Eunice came back with the helmets.
- "When we are through with these, Casher, I'll have them take you to the
- conditioning room. Good-bye, my might-have-been!"
- In front of everyone, she kissed him full on the lips.
- He sat in the chair, full of patience and contentment. Even as his
- vision blacked out, he could see the thin light sheath of a smock on
- the girlish figure, he could remember the tender laughter lurking in
- her smile.
- In the last instant of his consciousness, he saw that another figure
- had joined the crowd the tall old man with the worn bathrobe, the faded
- blue eyes, the thin yellow hair. Murray Madigan had risen from his
- private-life-in-death and had come to see the last of Casher O'Neill.
- He did not look weak, nor foolish.
- He looked like a great man, wise and strange in ways beyond Casher's
- understanding.
- There was the touch of T'ruth's little hand on his arm and everything
- became a velvety cluttered dark quiet inside his own mind.
- XIV
- When he awoke, he lay naked and sunburned under the hot sky of Mizzer.
- Two soldiers with medical patches were rolling him onto a canvas
- litter.
- "Mizzer!" he cried to himself. His throat was too dry to make a
- sound.
- "I'm home."
- Suddenly the memories came to him and he scrabbled and snatched at
- them, seeing them dissolve within his mind before he could get paper to
- write them down.
- Memory: there was the front hall, himself getting ready to sleep in the
- chair, with the old giant of Murray Madigan at the edge of the crowd
- and the tender light touch of T'ruth his girl, his girl, now
- uncountable light-years away putting her hand on his arm.
- Memory: there was another room, with stained glass pictures and
- incense, and the weep worthy scenes of a great life shown in frescoes
- around the wall. There were the two pieces of wood and man in pain
- nailed to them. But Casher knew that scattered and coded through his
- mind, there was the ultimate and undefeatable wisdom of the Sign of the
- Fish. He knew he could never fear fear again.
- Memory: there was a gaming table in a bright room, with the wealth of a
- thousand worlds being raked toward him. He was a woman, strong,
- big-busted, bejewelled, and proud. He was Agatha Madigan, winning at
- the games. (That must have come, he thought, when they printed me with
- T'ruth.} And in that mind of the Hechizera, which was now his own mind,
- too, there was clear sure knowledge of how he could win men and women,
- officers and soldiers, even under people and robots, to his cause
- without a drop of blood or word of anger.
- The man, lifting him on the litter, made red waves of heat and pain
- roll over him.
- He heard one of them say,
- "Bad case of burn. Wonder how he lost his clothes."
- The words were matter-of-fact; the comment was nothing special; but the
- cadence, that special cadence, was the true speech of Mizzer.
- As they carried him away, he remembered the face of Rankin Meiklejohn,
- enormous eyes staring with inward despair over the brim of a big glass.
- That was the Administrator. On Henriada.
- That was the man who sent me past Ambiloxi to Beauregard at two
- seventy-five in the morning. The litter jolted a little.
- He thought of the wet marshes of Henriada and knew that soon he would
- never remember them again. The worms of the tornadoes creeping up to
- the edge of the estate. The mad wise face of John Joy Tree.
- Space-three? Space-three? Already, even now, he could not remember
- how they had put him into space-three.
- And space-three itself All the nightmares which mankind has ever had
- pushed into Casher's mind. He twisted once in agony, just as the
- litter reached a medical military cart. He saw a girl's face what was
- her name? and then he slept.
- XV
- Fourteen Mizzer days later, the first test came.
- A doctor colonel and an intelligence colonel, both in the workaday
- uniform of Colonel Wedder's Special Forces, stood by his bed.
- "Your name is Casher O'Neill and we do not know how your body fell
- among the skirmishers," the doctor was saying, roughly and
- emphatically. Casher O'Neill turned his head on the pillow and looked
- at the man.
- "Say something more!" he whispered to the doctor.
- The doctor said,
- "You are a political intruder and we do not know how you got mixed up
- among our troops. We do not even know how you got back among the
- people of this planet. We found you on the Seventh Nile."
- The intelligence colonel, standing beside him, nodded agreement.
- "Do you think the same thing. Colonel?" whispered Casher O'Neill to
- the intelligence colonel.
- "I ask questions. I don't answer them," said the man gruffly.
- Casher felt himself reaching for their minds with a kind of fingertip
- which he did not know he had. It was hard to put into ordinary words,
- but it felt as though someone had said to him, Casher: "That one is
- vulnerable at the left forefront area of his consciousness, but the
- other one is well armored and must be reached through the mid-brain."
- Casher was not afraid of revealing anything by his expression. He was
- too badly burned and in too much pain to show nuances of meaning on his
- face.
- (Somewhere he had heard of the wild story of the Hechizera of Gonfalon!
- Somewhere endless storms boiled across ruined marshes under a cloudy
- yellow sky! But where, when, what was that. . . ? He could not take
- time off for memory. He had to fight for his life.) "Peace be with
- you," he whispered to both of them.
- "Peace be with you," they responded in unison, with some surprise.
- "Lean over me, please," said Casher, "so that I do not have to
- shout."
- They stood stock straight.
- Somewhere in the resources of his own memory and intelligence, Casher
- found the right note of pleading which could ride his voice like a
- carrier wave and make them do as he wished.
- "This is Mizzer," he whispered.
- "Of course this is Mizzer," snapped the intelligence colonel, "and you
- are Casher O'Neill. What are you doing here?"
- "Lean over, gentlemen," he said softly, lowering his voice so that they
- could barely hear him.
- This time, they did lean over.
- His burned hands reached for their hands. The officers noticed it, but
- since he was sick and unarmed, they let him touch them.
- Suddenly he felt their minds glowing in his as brightly as if he had
- swallowed their gleaming, thinking brains at a single gulp.
- He spoke no longer.
- He thought at them torrential, irresistible thought.
- I am not Casher O
- "Neill. You will find his body in a room, four doors down. I am the
- civilian Bindaoud.
- The two colonels stared, breathing heavily.
- Neither said a word.
- Casher went on: "Our fingerprints and records have gotten mixed. Give
- me the fingerprints and papers of the dead Casher O'Neill. Bury him
- then, quietly, but with honor. Once he loved your leader and there is
- no point in stirring up wild rumors about returns from out of space. I
- am Bindaoud. You will find my records in your front office. I am not
- a soldier. I am a civilian technician doing studies on the salt in
- blood chemistry under field conditions. You have heard me, gentlemen.
- You hear me now. You will hear me always. But you will not remember
- this, gentlemen, when you awaken. I am sick. You can give me water
- and a sedative."
- They still stood, enraptured by the touch of his tight burned hands.
- Casher O'Neill said,
- "Awaken."
- Casher O'Neill let go their hands.
- The medical colonel blinked and said amiably,
- "You'll be better, mister and doctor Bindaoud. I'll have the orderly
- bring you water and a sedative."
- To the other officer he said,
- "I have an interesting corpse four doors down. I think you had better
- see it."
- Casher O'Neill tried to think of the recent past, but the blue light of
- Mizzer was all around him, the sand-smell, the sound of horses
- galloping. For a moment, he thought of a big child's blue dress and he
- did not know why he almost wept.
- On the Sand Planet This is the story of the sand planet itself,
- Mizzer, which had lost all hope when the tyrant Wedder imposed the
- reign of terror and virtue. And its liberator, Casher O'Neill of whom
- strange things were told, from the day of blood in which he fled from
- his native city of Kaheer, until he came back to end the shedding of
- blood for all the rest of his years.
- Everywhere that Casher had gone, he had had only one thought in his
- mind deliverance of his home country from the tyrants whom he himself
- had let slip into power when they had conspired against his uncle, the
- unspeakable Kuraf. He never forgot, whether waking or sleeping. He
- never forgot Kaheer itself along the First Nile, where the horses raced
- on the turf with the sand nearby. He never forgot the blue skies of
- his home and the great dunes of the desert between one Nile and the
- others. He remembered the freedom of a planet built and dedicated to
- freedom. He never forgot that the price of blood is blood, that the
- price of freedom is fighting, that the risk of fighting is death. But
- he was not a fool. He was willing, if he had to, to risk his own
- death, but he wanted odds on the battle which would not merely snare
- him home, like a rabbit to be caught in a steel trap, by the police of
- the dictator Wedder.
- And then, he met the solution of his crusade without knowing it at
- first. He had come to the end of all things, all problems, all
- worries. He had also come to the end of all ordinary hope. He met
- T'ruth. Now her subtle powers belonged to Casher O'Neill, to do with
- as he pleased.
- It pleased him to return to Mizzer, to enter Kaheer itself, and to
- confront Wedder.
- Why should he not come? It was his home and he thirsted for revenge.
- More than revenge he hungered for justice. He had lived many years for
- this hour and this hour came.
- He entered the north gate of Kaheer.
- Casher walked into Mizzer wearing the uniform of a medical technician
- in Wedder's own military service. He had assumed the appearance and
- the name of a dead man named Bindaoud. Casher walked with nothing more
- than his hands as weapons, and his hands swung freely at the end of his
- arms.
- Only the steadfastness of his feet, the resolute grace with which he
- took each step, betrayed his purpose. The crowds in the street saw him
- pass but they did not see him. They looked at a man and they did not
- realize that they saw their own history going step by step through
- their various streets. Casher O'Neill had entered the city of Kaheer;
- he knew that he was being followed. He could feel it.
- He glanced around.
- He had learned in his many years of fighting and struggle, on strange
- planets, countless rules of unremembered hazards.
- To be alert, he knew what this was. It was a suchesache. The
- suchesache at the moment had taken the shape of a small witless boy,
- some eight years old, who had two trails of stained mucus pouring down
- from his nostrils, who had forever-open lips ready to call with the
- harsh bark of idiocy, who had eyes that did not focus right. Casher
- O'Neill knew that this was a boy and not a boy. It was a hunting and
- searching device often employed by police lords when they presumed to
- make themselves into kings or tyrants, a device which flitted from
- shape to shape, from child to butterfly or bird, which moved with the
- suchesache and watched the victim; watching, saying nothing, following.
- He hated the suchesache and was tempted to throw all the powers of his
- strange mind at it so that the boy might die and the machine hidden
- within it might perish. But he knew that this would lead to a cascade
- of fire and splashing of blood. He had already seen blood in Kaheer
- long ago; he had no wish to see it in the city again.
- Instead he stopped the pacing which had been following his cadenced
- walk through the street. He turned calmly and kindly and looked at the
- boy, and he said to the boy and to the hideous machine within the
- boy,
- "Come along with me; I'm going straightway to the palace and you would
- like to see that."
- The machine, confronted, had no further choice.
- The idiot boy put his hand in Casher's hand and somehow or other Casher
- O'Neill managed to resume the rolling deliberate march which had marked
- so many of his years, while keeping a grip on the hand of the demented
- child who skipped beside him. Casher could still feel the machine
- watching him from within the eyes of the boy. He did not care; he was
- not afraid of guns; he could stop them. He was not afraid of poison;
- he could resist it. He was not afraid of hypnotism; he could take it
- in and spit
- it back. He was not afraid of fear; he had been on Henriada. He had
- come home through space-three. There was nothing left to fear.
- Straightway went he to the palace. The midday gleamed in the bright
- yellow sun which rode the skies of Kaheer. The whitewashed walls in
- the arabesque design stayed as they had been for thousands of years.
- Only at the door was he challenged, but the sentry hesitated as Casher
- spoke: "I am Bindaoud, loyal servant to Colonel Wedder, and this is a
- child of the streets whom I propose to heal in order to show our good
- Colonel Wedder a fair demonstration of my powers."
- The sentry said something into a little box which sat in the wall.
- Casher passed freely. The suchesache trotted beside him. As he went
- through the corridors, laid with rich rugs, military and civilians
- moving back and forth, he felt happy. This was not the palace of
- Wedder, though Wedder lived in it. It was his own palace. He, Casher,
- had been born in it. He knew it. He knew every corridor.
- The changes of the years were very few. Casher turned left into an
- open courtyard. He smelled the smell of salt water and the sand and
- the horses nearby. He sighed a little at the familiarity of it, the
- good and kind welcome. He turned right again and ascended long, long
- stairs. Each step was carpeted in a different design.
- His uncle Kuraf had stood at the head of these very stairs while men
- and women, boys and girls were brought to him to become toys of his
- evil pleasures. Kuraf had been too fat to walk down these stairs to
- greet them. He always let the captives come up to himself and to his
- den of pleasures. Casher reached the top of the stairs and turned
- left.
- This was no den of pleasures now.
- It was the office of Colonel Wedder. He, Casher, had reached it.
- How strange it was to reach this office, this target of all his hopes,
- this one fevered pinpoint in all the universe for which his revenge had
- thirsted until he thought himself mad. He had thought of bombing this
- office from outer space, or of cutting it with the thin arc of a laser
- beam, or of poisoning it with chemicals, or of assaulting it with
- troops. He had thought of pouring fire on this building, or water. He
- had dreamed of making Mizzer free even at the price of the lovely city
- of Kaheer itself by finding a small asteroid somewhere and crashing it,
- in an interplanetary tragedy, directly into the city itself. And the
- city, under the roar of that impact, would have blazed into
- thermonuclear incandescence and would have become a poison lake at the
- end of the Twelve Niles. He had thought of a thousand ways of entering
- the city and of destroying the city, merely in order to destroy
- Wedder.
- Now he was here. So too was Wedder.
- Wedder did not know that he, Casher O'Neill, had come back.
- Even less did Wedder know who Casher O'Neill had become, the master of
- space, the traveler who traveled without ships, the vehicle for devices
- stranger than any mind on Mizzer had ever conceived.
- Very calm, very relaxed, very quiet, very assured, the doom which was
- Casher O'Neill walked into the antechamber of Wedder. Very modestly,
- he asked for Wedder.
- The dictator happened to be free.
- He had changed little since Casher last saw him, a little older, a
- little fatter, a little wiser all these perhaps. Casher was not sure.
- Every cell and filament in his living body had risen to the alert. He
- was ready to do the work for which the light-years had ached, for which
- the worlds had turned, and he knew that within an instant it would be
- done. He confronted Wedder, gave Wedder a modest assured smile.
- "Your servant, the technician Bindaoud, sir and colonel,"
- said Casher O'Neill. Wedder looked at him strangely. He reached out
- his hand, and, even as their hands touched, Wedder said the last words
- he would ever say on his own.
- Within that handclasp, Wedder spoke again and his voice was strange:
- "Who are you?"
- Casher had dreamed that he would say,
- "I am Casher O'Neill come back from unimaginable distances to punish
- you," or that he would say,
- "I am Casher O'Neill and I have ridden star lanes for years upon years
- to find your destruction." Or he had even thought that he might say,
- "Surrender or die, Wedder, your time has come." Sometimes he had
- dreamed he would say,
- "Here, Wedder," and then show him the knife with which to take his
- blood.
- Yet this was the climax and none of these things occurred.
- The idiot boy with the machine within it stood at ease.
- Casher O'Neill merely held Wedder's hand and said quite simply,
- "Your friend."
- As he said that, he searched back and forth. He could feel inner eyes
- within his own head, eyes which did not move within the sockets of his
- face, eyes which he did not have and with which he could nevertheless
- see. These were the eyes of his perception.
- Quickly, he adjusted the anatomy of Wedder, working kin esthetically
- squeezing an artery there, pinching off a gland here. Here, harden the
- tissue, through which the secretions of a given endocrine material had
- to come. In less time than it would take an ordinary doctor to
- describe the process, he had changed Wedder. Wedder had been tuned
- down like a radio with dials realigned, like a spaceship with its lock
- sheets reset.
- The work which Casher had done was less than any pilot does in the
- course of an ordinary landing; but the piloting he had done was within
- the
- biochemical system of Wedder himself. And the changes which he had
- effected were irreversible.
- The new Wedder was the old Wedder. The same mind. The same will, the
- same personality. Yet its permutations were different. And its method
- of expression already slightly different.
- More benign. More tolerant. More calm, more human. Even a little
- corrupt, as he smiled and said,
- "I remember you, now, Bindaoud. Can you help that boy?"
- The supposed Bindaoud ran his hands over the boy. The boy wept with
- pain and shock for a moment. He wiped his dirty nose and upper lip on
- his sleeves. His eyes came into focus. His lips compressed. His mind
- burned brightly as its old worn channels became human instead of idiot.
- The suchesache machine knew it was out of place and fled for another
- refuge. The boy, given his brains, but no words, no education yet,
- stood there and hiccupped with joy.
- Wedder said very pleasantly,
- "That is remarkable. Is it all that you have to show me?"
- "All," said Casher O'Neill.
- "You were not he."
- He turned his back on Wedder and did so in perfect safety.
- He knew Wedder would never kill another man.
- Casher stopped at the door and looked back. He could tell from the
- posture of Wedder that that which had to be done, had been done: the
- changes within the man were larger than the man himself. The planet
- was free and Casher's own work was indeed done. The suddenly
- frightened child, which had lost the suchesache, followed him out of
- blind instinct.
- The colonels and the staff officers did not know whether to salute or
- nod when they saw their chief stand at the doorway, and waved with
- unexpected friendliness at Casher O'Neill as Casher descended the broad
- carpeted steps, the child stumbling behind him. At the furthest steps,
- Casher looked one last time at the enemy who had become almost a part
- of himself. There stood Wedder, the man of blood. And now, he
- himself, Casher O'Neill, had expunged the blood, had redone the past,
- and reshaped the future. All Mizzer was heading back to the openness
- and freedom which it had enjoyed in the time of the old Republic of the
- Twelve Niles. He walked on, shifting from one corridor to the other
- and using short-cuts to the courtyards, until he came to the doorway of
- the palace. The sentry presented arms.
- "At ease," said Casher. The man put down his gun.
- Casher stood outside the palace, that palace which had been his
- uncle's, which had been his own, which had really been himself. He
- felt the clear air of Mizzer. He looked at the clear blue skies which
- he had always loved. He looked at the world to which he had promised
- he would return, with justice, with vengeance, with thunder, with
- power. Thanks to the strange
- of Man and subtle capacities which he had learned from the
- turtle-girl, T'ruth, hidden in her own world amid the storm-churned
- atmosphere of Henriada, he had not needed to fight.
- Casher turned to the boy and said,
- "I am a sword which has been put into its scabbard. I am a pistol with
- the cartridges dropped out. I am a wire point with no battery behind
- it. I am a man, but I am very empty."
- The boy made strangled, confused sounds as though he were trying to
- think, to become himself, to make up for all the lost time he had spent
- in idiocy.
- Casher acted on impulse. Curiously, he gave to the boy his own native
- speech of Kaheer. He felt his muscles go tight, shoulders, neck,
- fingertips, as he concentrated with the arts he had learned in the
- palace of Beauregard where the girl T'ruth governed almost-forever in
- the name of Mister and Owner Murray Madigan. He took the arts and
- memories he sought. He seized the boy roughly but tightly by the
- shoulders. He peered into frightened crying eyes and then, in a single
- blast of thought, he gave the boy speech, words, memory, ambition,
- skills. The boy stood there dazed.
- At last the boy spoke and he asked,
- "Who am I?"
- Casher could not answer that one. He patted the child on the shoulder.
- He said,
- "Go back to the city and find out. I have other needs. I have to find
- out who I myself may be. Good-bye and peace be with you."
- Casher remembered that his mother still lived here. He had often
- forgotten her. It would have been easier to forget her. Her name was
- Trihaep, and she had been sister to Kuraf. Where Kuraf had been
- vicious, she had been virtuous. Where Kuraf had sometimes been
- grateful, she had been thrifty and shifty. Where Kuraf, with all his
- evils, had acquired a toleration for men and things and ideas, she
- remained set on the pattern of thought which her parents had long ago
- taught her.
- Casher O'Neill did something he thought he would never do.
- He had never really even thought about doing it. It was too simple. He
- went home.
- At the gate of the house, his mother's old servant knew him, despite
- the change in his face, and she said, with a terrible awe in her
- voice,
- "It seems to me that I am looking at Casher O'Neill."
- "I use the name Bindaoud," said Casher, "but I am Casher O'Neill. Let
- me in and tell my mother that I am here."
- He went into the private apartment of his mother. The old furniture
- was still there. The polished bricabrac of a hundred ages, the old
- paintings and the old mirrors, and the dead people whom he had never
- known,
- represented by their pictures and their mementos. He felt just as ill
- at ease as he felt when he was a small boy, when he had visited the
- same room, before his uncle came to take him to the palace.
- His mother came in. She had not changed.
- He half-thought that she would reach out her arms to him, and cry in a
- deliberately modern passion,
- "My baby! My precious!
- Come back to me!"
- She did no such thing.
- She looked at him coldly as though he were a complete stranger.
- She said to him,
- "You don't look like my son, but I suppose that you are. You have made
- trouble enough in your time. Are you making trouble now?"
- "I make no malicious trouble. Mother, and I never have," said Casher,
- "no matter what you may think of me. I did what I had to do. I did
- what was right."
- "Betraying your uncle was right? Letting down our family was right?
- Disgracing us all was right? You must be a fool to talk like this. I
- heard that you were a wanderer, that you had great adventures, and had
- seen many worlds. You don't sound any different to me. You're an old
- man. You almost seem as old as I do. I had a baby once, but how could
- that be you? You are an enemy of the house of Kuraf O'Neill. You're
- one of the people who brought it down in blood. But they came from
- outside with their principles and their thoughts and their dreams of
- power. And you stole from inside like a cur. You opened the door and
- you let in ruin. Who are you that I should forgive you?"
- "I do not ask your forgiveness. Mother," said Casher.
- "I do not even ask your understanding. I have other places to go and
- other things yet to do. May peace be upon you."
- She stared at him, said nothing.
- He went on,
- "You will find Mizzer a more pleasant place to live in, since I talked
- to Wedder this morning."
- "You talked to Wedder?" cried she.
- "And he did not kill you?"
- "He did not know me."
- "Wedder did not know you?"
- "I assure you, Mother, he did not know me."
- "You must be a very powerful man, my son. Perhaps you can repair the
- fortune of the house of Kuraf O'Neill after all the harm you have done,
- and all the heartbreak you brought to my brother.
- I suppose you know your wife's dead?"
- "I had heard that," said Casher.
- "I hope she died instantly in an accident and without pain."
- "Of course it was an accident. How else do people die these days? She
- and her husband tried out one of those new boats, and it overturned."
- "I'm sorry, I wasn't there."
- "I know that. I know that perfectly well, my son. You were outside
- there, so that I had to look up at the stars with fear. I could look
- up in the sky and stare for the man who was my son lurking up there
- with blood and ruin. With vengeance upon vengeance heaped upon all of
- us, just because he thought he knew what was right. I've been afraid
- of you for a long long time, and I thought if I ever met you again I
- would fear you with my whole heart. You don't quite seem to be what I
- expected, Casher. Perhaps I can like you. Perhaps I can even love you
- as a mother should. Not that it matters. You and I are too old
- now."
- "I'm not working on that kind of mission any longer, Mother. I have
- been in this old room long enough and I wish you well. But I wish many
- other people well, too. I have done what I had to do. Perhaps I had
- better say good-bye, and much later perhaps, I will come back and see
- you again. When both of us know more about what we have to do."
- "Don't you even want to see your daughter?"
- "Daughter?" said Casher O'Neill.
- "Do I have a daughter?"
- "Oh, poor fool, you. Didn't you even find that out after you left? She
- bore your child, all right. She even went through the old-fashioned
- business of a natural birth. The child even looks something like the
- way you used to look. Matter of fact, she's rather arrogant, like you.
- You can call on her if you want to.
- She lives in the house which is just outside the square in Golden Laut
- in the leather workers' area. Her husband's name is Ali Ali. Look her
- up if you want to."
- She extended a hand. Casher took the hand as though she had been a
- queen. And he kissed the cool fingers. As he looked her in the face,
- here, too, he brought his skills from Henriada in place. He surveyed
- and felt her personally as though he were a surgeon of the soul, but in
- this case there was nothing for him to do. This was not a dynamic
- personality struggling and fighting and moving against the forces of
- life and hope and disappointment. This was something else, a person
- set in life, immobile, determined, rigid even for a man with healing
- arts who could destroy a fleet with his thoughts or who could bring an
- idiot to normality by mere command. He could see that this was a case
- beyond his powers.
- He patted the old hand affectionately and she smiled warmly at him, not
- knowing what it meant.
- "If anyone asks,"
- said Casher, "the name I have been using is that of the Doctor
- Bindaoud. Bindaoud the technician. Can you remember that, Mother?"
- "Bindaoud the technician," she echoed, as she led him out the door to
- walk in the street.
- Within twenty minutes he was knocking at his daughter's door.
- II
- The daughter herself answered the door. She flung it open.
- She looked at the strange man, surveyed him from head to heels.
- She noted the medical insignia on his uniform. She noted his mark of
- rank. She appraised him shrewdly, quickly, and she knew he had no
- business there in the quarters of the leather workers.
- "Who are you?" she sang out, quickly and clearly.
- "In these hours and at this time, I pass under the name of the expert
- Bindaoud, a technician and medical man back from the special forces of
- Colonel Wedder. I'm just on leave, you see, but sometime later, madam,
- you might find out who I really am, and I thought you better hear it
- from my lips. I'm your father."
- She did not move. The significant thing is that she did not move at
- all. Casher studied her and could see the cast of his own bones in the
- shape of her face, could see the length of his own fingers repeated in
- her hands. He had sensed that the storms of duty which had blown him
- from sorrow to sorrow, the wind of conscience which had kept alive his
- dreams of vengeance, had turned into something very different in her.
- It, too, was a force, but not the kind of force he understood.
- "I have children now and I would just as soon you not meet them. As a
- matter of fact, you have never done me a good deed except to beget me.
- You have never done me an ill deed except to threaten my life from
- beyond the stars. I am tired of you and I am tired of everything you
- were or might have been. Let's forget it.
- Can't you go your way and let me be? I may be your daughter, but I
- can't help that."
- "As you wish, madam. I have had many adventures, and I do not propose
- to tell them to you. I can see quickly enough that you have what is
- seemingly a good life, and I hope that my deeds this morning in the
- palace will have made it better. You'll find out soon enough.
- Good-bye."
- The door closed upon him and he walked back through the sun-drenched
- market of the leather workers. There were golden hides there. Hides
- of animals which had then been artfully engraved with very fine strips
- of beaten gold so that they gleamed in the sunlight. Casher looked
- upward and around.
- Where do I go now? thought he. Where do I go when I've done
- everything I had to do? When I've loved everyone I have wanted to
- love, when I have been everything I have had to be? What does a man
- with a mission do when the mission is fulfilled? Who can be more
- hollow than a victor? If I had lost, I could still want revenge. But
- I haven't. I've won. And I've won nothing. I've wanted nothing for
- myself from this dear city. I want nothing from this dear world. It's
- not in my power to give it or to take it.
- Where do
- of Man I go when I have nowhere to go? What do I become when I am not
- ready for death and I have no reason whatsoever for life?
- There sprang into his mind the memory of the world of Henriada with the
- twisting snakes of the little tornadoes. He could see the slender,
- pale, hushed face of the girl T'ruth and he remembered at last that
- which it was which she had held in her hand. It was the magic. It was
- the secret sign of the Old Strong Religion. There was the man forever
- dying nailed to two pieces of wood. It was the mystery behind the
- civilization of all these stars. It was the thrill of the First
- Forbidden One, the Second Forbidden One, the Third Forbidden One. It
- was the mystery on which the robot, rat, and Copt agreed when they came
- back from space-three. He knew what he had to do.
- He could not find himself because there was no himself to be found. He
- was a used tool. A discarded vessel. He was a shard tossed on the
- ruins of time, and yet he was a man with eyes and brains to think and
- with many unaccustomed powers.
- He reached into the sky with his mind, calling for a public flying
- machine.
- "Come and get me," he said, and the great winged birdlike machine came
- soaring over the rooftops and dropped gently into the square.
- "I thought I heard you call, sir."
- Casher reached into his pocket and took out his imaginary pass signed
- by Wedder, authorizing him to use all the vehicles of the republic in
- the secret service of the regime of Colonel Wedder. The sergeant
- recognized the pass and almost popped out his eyes in respect.
- "The Ninth Nile, can you reach it with this machine?"
- "Easily," said the sergeant.
- "But you better get some shoes first. Iron shoes because the ground
- there is mostly volcanic glass."
- "Wait here for me," said Casher.
- "Where can I get the shoes?"
- "Two streets over and better get two water bottles, too."
- IV
- Within a matter of minutes he was back. The sergeant watched him fill
- the bottles in the fountain. He looked at his medical insignia without
- doubt and showed him how to sit on the cramped emergency seat inside
- the great machine bird. They snapped their seat belts and the sergeant
- said,
- "Ready?" and the ornithopter spread out its wings, and flew into the
- air.
- The huge wings were like oars digging into a big sea. They rose
- rapidly and soon Kaheer was below them, the fragile minarets and the
- white sand with the racing turf along the river, and the green fields,
- and even the pyramids copied from something on Ancient Earth.
- The operator did something and the machine flew harder. The wings,
- although far slower than any jet aircraft, were steady, and they moved
- with respectable speed across the broad dry desert.
- Casher still wore his decimal watch from Henriada, and it was two whole
- decimal hours before the sergeant turned around, pinched him gently
- awake from the drowse into which he had fallen, shouted something, and
- pointed down. A strip of silver matched by two strips of green
- wandering through a wilderness of black, gleaming glittering black,
- with the beige sands of the everlasting desert stretching everywhere in
- the distance.
- "The Ninth Nile?" shouted Casher. The sergeant smiled the smile of a
- man who had heard nothing but wanted to be agreeable, and the
- ornithopter dived with a lurching suddenness toward the twist in the
- river. A few buildings became visible.
- They were modest and small. Verandas, perhaps, for the use of a
- visitor. Nothing more.
- It was not the sergeant's business to query anyone on secret orders
- from Colonel Wedder. He showed the cramped Casher O'Neill how to get
- out of the ornithopter, and then, standing in his seat, saluted, and
- said,
- "Anything else, sir?"
- Casher said,
- "No. I'll make my own way. If they ask you who I was, I am the Doctor
- Bindaoud and you have left me here under orders."
- "Right, sir," said the sergeant, and the great machine reached out its
- gleaming wings, flapped, spiraled, climbed, became a dot, and
- vanished.
- Casher stood there alone. Utterly alone. For many years he had been
- supported by a sense of purpose, by a drive to do something, and now
- the drives and the purpose were gone, and his life was gone, and the
- use of his future was gone, and he had nothing. All he had was the
- ultimate imagination, health, and great skills. These were not what he
- wanted. He wanted the liberation of all Mizzer. But he had gotten
- that, so what was it?
- He almost stumbled towards one of the nearby buildings.
- A voice spoke up. A woman's voice. The friendly voice of an old
- woman.
- Very unexpectedly, she said,
- "I've been waiting for you, Casher; come on in.
- V
- He stared at her.
- "I've seen you," he said.
- "I've seen you somewhere. I know you well. You've affected my fate.
- You did something to me and yet I don't know who you are. How could
- you be here to meet me when I didn't know I was coming?"
- "Everything in its time," said the woman.
- "With a time for everything
- of Man and what you need now is rest. I'm D'alma, the dog-woman from
- Pontoppidan. The one who washed the dishes."
- "Her," cried he.
- "Me," she said.
- "But you but you how did you get here?"
- "I got here," she said.
- "Isn't that obvious?"
- "Who sent you?"
- "You're part of the way to the truth," she said.
- "You might as well hear a little more of it. I was sent here by a lord
- whose name I will never mention. A lord of the under people Acting
- from Earth. He sent out another dog-woman to take my place. And he
- had me shipped here as simple baggage. I worked in the hospital where
- you recovered and I read your mind as you got well. I knew what you
- would do to Wedder and I was pretty sure that you would come up here to
- the Ninth Nile, because that is the road that all searchers must
- take."
- "Do you mean," he said, "that you know the road to " He hesitated and
- then plunged into his question, " the Holy of Unholies, the Thirteenth
- Nile?"
- "I don't see that it means anything, Casher. Except that you'd better
- take off those iron shoes; you don't need them yet. You'd better come
- in here. Come on in."
- He pushed the beaded curtains aside and entered the bungalow. It was a
- simple frontier official dwelling. There were cots hither and yon, a
- room to the rear which seemed to be hers; a dining room to the right
- and there were papers, a viewing machine, cards, and games on the
- table. The room itself was astonishingly cool.
- She said,
- "Casher, you've got to relax. And that is the hardest of all things to
- do. To relax, when you had a mission for many many years."
- "I know it," said he.
- "I know it. But knowing it and doing it aren't the same things."
- "Now you can do it," said D'alma.
- "Do what?" he snapped.
- "Relax, as we were talking about. All you have to do here is to have
- some good meals. Just sleep a few times, swim in the river if you want
- to. I have sent everyone away except myself, and you and I shall have
- this house. And I am an old woman, not even a human being. You're a
- man, a true man, who's conquered a thousand worlds. And who has
- finally triumphed over Wedder. I think we'll get along. And when
- you're ready for the trip, I'll take you."
- The days did pass as she said they would. With insistent but firm
- kindness, she made him play games with her: simple, childish games
- with
- dice and cards. Once or twice he tried to hypnotize her. To throw
- the dice his own way. He changed the cards in her hand. He found that
- she had very little telepathic offensive power, but that her defenses
- were superb. She smiled at him whenever she caught him playing tricks.
- And his tricks failed.
- With this kind of atmosphere he really began to relax. She was the
- woman who had spelled happiness for him on Pontoppidan when he didn't
- know what happiness was. When he had abandoned the lovely Genevieve to
- go on with his quest for vengeance.
- Once he said to her,
- "Is that old horse still alive?"
- "Of course he is," she said.
- "That horse will probably outlive you and me. He thinks he's on Mizzer
- by galloping around a patrol capsule. Come on back; it's your turn to
- play."
- He put down the cards, and slowly the peace, the simplicity, the
- reassuring, calm sweetness of it all stole over him and he began to
- perceive the nature of her therapy. It was to do nothing but slow him
- down. He was to meet himself again.
- It may have been the tenth day, perhaps it was the fourteenth, that he
- said to her,
- "When do we go?"
- She said,
- "I've been waiting for that question and we're ready now. We go."
- "When?"
- "Right now. Put on your shoes. You won't need them very much," she
- said, "but you might need them where we land. I am taking you part way
- there."
- Within a few minutes, they went out into the yard. The river in which
- he had swum lay below. A shed, which he did not remember having
- noticed before, lay at the far end of the yard.
- She did something to the door, removing a lock, and the door flung
- open. And she pulled out a skeletonized ornithopter motor, wings,
- tails. The body was just a bracket of metal. The source of power was
- as usual an ultra-miniaturized, nuclear-powered battery. Instead of
- seats, there were two tiny saddles, like the saddles used in the
- bicycles of old, old Earth which he had seen in museums.
- "You can fly that?" he asked.
- "Of course I can fly it. It's better than going 200 miles over broken
- glass. We are leaving civilization now. We are leaving everything
- that was on any map. We are flying directly to the Thirteenth Nile, as
- you well knew it should be that."
- "I knew that," he said.
- "I never expected to reach it so soon.
- Does this have anything to do with that Sign of the Fish you were
- talking about?"
- "Everything, Casher. Everything. But everything in its place.
- Climb in behind me." He sat on top of the ornithopter, and this one
- ran down the
- of Man yard on its tall, graceful mechanical legs before the flaps of
- its wings put it in the air. She was a better pilot than the sergeant
- had been; she soared more and beat the wings less. She flew over
- country that he, a native of Mizzer, had never dreamed about.
- They came to a city gaudy in color. He could see large fires burning
- alongside the river, and brightly painted people with their hands
- lifted in prayer. He saw temples and strange gods in them.
- He saw markets with goods, which he never thought to see marketed.
- "Where are we?" he asked.
- D'alma said,
- "This is the City of Hopeless Hope." She put the ornithopter down and,
- as they climbed out of the saddles, it lifted itself into the air and
- flew back, in the direction from whence they had come.
- "You are staying with me?" asked Casher.
- "Of course I am. I was sent to be with you."
- "What for?"
- "You are important to all the worlds, Casher, not just Mizzer.
- By the authority of the friends I have, they have sent me here to help
- you."
- "But what do you get out of it?"
- "I get nothing, Casher. I find my own destruction, perhaps, but I will
- accept that. Even the loss of my own hope if it only moves you further
- on in your voyage. Come, let us enter the City of Hopeless Hope."
- VI
- They walked through the strange streets. Almost everyone in the
- streets seemed to be engaged in the practice of religion. The stench
- of the burning dead was all round them. Talismans, luck charms, and
- funeral supplies were in universal abundance.
- Casher said, speaking rather quietly to D'alma,
- "I never knew there was anything like this on any civilized planet."
- "Obviously," she replied, "there must be many people who believe in
- worry about death; there are many who do know about this place.
- Otherwise there would not be the throngs here. These are the people
- who have the wrong hope and who go to no place at all, who find under
- this earth and under the stars their final fulfillment. These are the
- ones who are so sure that they are right that they never will be right.
- We must pass through them quickly, Casher, lest we, too, start
- believing."
- No one impeded their passage in the streets, although many people
- paused to see that a soldier, even a medical soldier, in uniform, had
- the audacity to come there.
- They were even more surprised that an old hospital attendant who
- seemed to be an off-world dog walked along beside him.
- "We cross the bridge now, Casher, and this bridge is the most terrible
- thing I've ever seen, whereas now we are going to come to the Jwindz,
- and the Jwindz oppose you and me and everything you stand for."
- "Who are the Jwindz?" asked Casher.
- "The Jwindz are the perfect ones. They are perfect in this earth. You
- will see soon enough."
- VII
- As they crossed the bridge, a tall, blithe police official, clad in a
- neat black uniform, stepped up to them and said,
- "Go back.
- People from your city are not welcome here."
- "We are not from that city," said D'alma.
- "We are travelers."
- "Where are you bound?" asked the police official.
- "We are bound for the source of the Thirteenth Nile."
- "Nobody goes there," said the guard.
- "We are going there," said D'alma.
- "By what authority?"
- Casher reached into his pocket and took out a genuine card.
- He had remade one, from the memories he had retained in his mind. It
- was an all-world pass, authorized by the Instrumentality.
- The police official looked at it and his eyes widened.
- "Sir and master, I thought you were merely one of Wedder's men. You
- must be someone of great importance. I will notify the scholars in the
- Hall of Learning at the middle of the city. They will want to see you.
- Wait here. A vehicle will come."
- D'alma and Casher O'Neill did not have long to wait. She said nothing
- at all in this time. Her air of good humor and competence ebbed
- perceptibly. She was distressed by the cleanliness and perfection
- around her, by the silence, by the dignity of the people.
- When the vehicle came, it had a driver, as correct, as smooth, and as
- courteous as the guard at the bridge. He opened the door and waved
- them in. They climbed in and they sped noiselessly through the
- well-groomed streets: houses, each one in immaculate taste; trees,
- planted the way in which trees should be planted.
- In the center square of the city, they stopped. The driver got out,
- walked around the vehicle, opened their door.
- He pointed at the archway of the large building and he said, "They are
- expecting you."
- of Man Casher and D'alma walked up the steps reluctantly. She was
- reluctant because she had some sense of what this place was, a special
- dwelling for quiet doom and arrogant finality. He was reluctant
- because he could feel that in every bone of her body she resented this
- place. And he resented it, too.
- They were led through the archway and across a patio to a large,
- elegant conference room.
- Within the room a circular table had already been set in preparation of
- a meal.
- Ten handsome men rose to greet them.
- The first one said,
- "You are Casher O'Neill. You are the wanderer. You are the man
- dedicated to this planet and we appreciate what you have done for us,
- even though the power of Colonel Wedder never reached here."
- "Thank you," said Casher.
- "I am surprised to hear that you know of me."
- "That's nothing," said the man.
- "We know of everyone. And you, woman," said the same man to D'alma,
- "you know full well that we never entertain women here. And you are
- the only under person in this city. A dog at that. But in honor of
- our guest we shall let you pass. Sit down if you wish. We want to
- talk to you."
- A meal was served. Little squares of sweet unknown meat, fresh fruits,
- bits of melon, chased with harmonious drinks which cleared the mind and
- stimulated it, without intoxicating or drugging.
- The language of their conversations was clear and elevated.
- All questions were answered swiftly, smoothly, and with positive
- clarity.
- Finally, Casher was moved to ask,
- "I do not seem to have heard of you, Jwindz; who are you?"
- "We are the perfect ones," said the oldest Jwindz.
- "We have all the answers; there is nothing else left to find."
- "How do you get here?" said Casher.
- "We are selected from many worlds."
- "Where are your families?"
- "We don't bring them with us."
- "How do you keep out intruders?"
- "If they are good, they wish to stay. If they are not good, we destroy
- them."
- Casher still shocked by his experience of fulfilling all his life's
- work in the confrontation with Wedder though his life might be at
- stake, asked casually,
- "Have you decided yet whether I am perfect enough to join you? Or am I
- not perfect and to be destroyed?"
- The heaviest of all the Jwindz, a tall, portly man, with a great bushy
- shock of black hair, replied ponderously.
- "Sir, you are forcing our decision, but I think that you may be some-
- thing exceptional. We cannot accept you. There is too much force in
- you. You may be perfect, but you are more than perfect. We are men,
- sir, and I do not think that you are any longer a mere man.
- You are almost a machine. You are yourself dead people. You are the
- magic of ancient battles coming to strike among us. We are all of us a
- little afraid of you, and yet we do not know what to do with you. If
- you were to stay here a while, if you calmed down, we might give you
- hope. We know perfectly well what that dog woman of yours calls our
- city. She calls it the City of the Perfect Ones. We just call it
- Jwindz Jo, in memory of the ancient Rule of the Jwindz, which somewhere
- once obtained upon old Earth. And therefore, we think that we will
- neither kill you nor accept you.
- We think do we not, gentlemen? that we will speed you on your way, as
- we have sped no other traveler. And that we will send you, then, to a
- place which few people pass. But you have the strength and if you are
- going to the source of the Thirteenth Nile, you will need it."
- "I will need strength?" Casher asked.
- The first Jwindz who had met them at the door said,
- "Indeed you will need strength, if you go to Mortoval. We may be
- dangerous to the uninitiated. Mortoval is worse than dangerous.
- It is a trap many times worse than death. But go there if you must."
- VIII
- Casher O'Neill and D'alma reached Mortoval on a one wheeled cart, which
- ran on a high wire past picturesque mountain gorges, soaring over two
- serrated series of peaks and finally dropping down to another bend in
- the same river, the illegal and forgotten Thirteenth Nile.
- When the vehicle stopped, they got out. No one had accompanied them.
- The vehicle, held in place by gyroscopes and compasses, felt itself
- relieved of their weight and hurried home.
- This time there was no city: just one great arch. D'alma clung close
- to him. She even took his arm and pulled it over her shoulder as
- though she needed protection. She whined a little as they walked up a
- low hill and finally reached the arch. They walked into the arch and a
- voice not made of sound cried out to them.
- "I am youth and am everything that you have been or ever will be. Know
- this now before I show you more."
- Casher was brave, and this time he was cheerfully hopeless, so he
- said,
- "I know who I am. Who are you?"
- "I am the force of the Gunung Banga. I am the power of this planet
- which keeps everyone in this planet and which assures the order which
- of Man persists among the stars, and promises that the dead shall not
- walk among the men. And I serve of the fate and the hope of the
- future. Pass if you think you can."
- Casher searched with his own mind and he found what he wanted. He
- found the memory of a young child, T'ruth, who had been almost a
- thousand years on the planet of Henriada. A child, soft and gentle on
- the outside, but wise and formidable and terrible beyond belief, in the
- powers which she had carried, which had been imprinted upon her.
- As he walked through the arch he cast the images of truth here and
- there. Therefore he was not one person but a multitude. And the
- machine and the living being which hid behind the machine, the Gunung
- Banga, obviously could see him and could see D'alma walking through,
- but the machine was not prepared to recognize whole multitudes of
- crying throngs.
- "Who are you thousands that you should come here now? Who are you
- multitudes that you should be two people? I sense all of you. The
- fighters and the ships and the men of blood, the searchers and the for
- getters there's even an Old North Australian renunciant here. And the
- great Go-Captain Tree, and there are even a couple of men of Old Earth.
- You are all walking through me. How can I cope with you?"
- "Make us, us," said Casher firmly.
- "Make you, you," replied the machine.
- "Make you, you. How can I make you, you, when I do not know who you
- are, when you flit like ghosts and you confuse my computers? There are
- too many, I say. There are too many of you. It is ordained that you
- should pass."
- "If it is so ordained, then let us pass." D'alma suddenly stood proud
- and erect.
- They walked on through.
- She said,
- "You got us through." They had indeed passed beyond the arch, and
- there, beyond the arch, lay a gentle riverside with skiffs pulled up
- along the beach.
- "This seems to be next," said Casher O'Neill.
- D'alma nodded.
- "I'm your dog, master. We go where you think."
- They climbed into a skiff. Echoes of tumult followed from the arch.
- "Good-bye to troubles," the echoes said.
- "Had they been people they would have been stopped. But she was a dog
- and a servant, who had lived many years in the happiness of the Sign of
- the Fish. And he was a combat-ready man who had incorporated within
- himself the memories of adversaries and friends, too tumultuous for any
- scanner to measure, too complex for any computer to assess." The
- echoes resounded across the river.
- There was even a dock on the other side. Casher tied the skiff to the
- dock and he helped the dog-woman go toward the buildings that they saw
- beyond some trees.
- IX
- D'Alma said,
- "I have seen pictures of this place; this is the Kermesse Dorgiieil,
- and here we may lose our way, because this is the place where all the
- happy things of this world come together, but where the man and the two
- pieces of wood never filter through. We shall see no one unhappy, no
- one sick, no one unbalanced; everyone will be enjoying the good things
- of life; perhaps I will enjoy it, too. May the Sign of the Fish help
- me that I not become perfect too soon."
- "You won't be," Casher promised.
- At the gate of this city, there was no guard at all. They walked on
- past a few people who seemed to be promenading outside the town. Within
- the city they approached what seemed to be a hotel and an inn or a
- hospital. At any rate it was a place where many people were fed.
- A man came out and said,
- "Well, this is a strange sight; I never knew that the Colonel Wedder
- let his officers get this far from home, and as for you, woman, you're
- not even a human being. You're an odd couple and you're not in love
- with each other. Can we do anything for you?"
- Casher reached into his pocket and tossed several credit pieces of five
- denominations in front of the man.
- "Don't these mean anything?" asked Casher.
- Catching them in his fingers, the man said,
- "Oh, we can use money! We use it occasionally for important things; we
- don't need yours. We live well here, and we have a nice life, not like
- those two places across the river, which stay away from life. All men
- who are perfect are nothing but talk Jwindz they call themselves, the
- perfect ones well, we're not that perfect. We've got families and good
- food and good clothes, and we get the latest news from all the
- worlds."
- "News," said Casher.
- "I thought that was illegal."
- "We get anything. You would be surprised at what we have here. It's a
- very civilized place. Come on in; this is the hotel of the Singing
- Swans and you can live here as long as you wish. When I say that, I
- mean it. Our treasure has unusual resources, and I can see that you
- are unusual people. You are not a medical technician, despite that
- uniform, and your follower is not a mere dogunderperson or you wouldn't
- have gotten this far."
- They entered a promenade two stories high; little shops lined each side
- of the corridor with the treasures of all the worlds on exhibit. The
- prices were marked explaining them, but there was no one in the
- stalls.
- The smell of good food came from a cool dining room in the inn.
- "Come into my office and have a drink. My name is Howard."
- "That's an old Earth name," said Casher.
- "Why shouldn't it be?" asked Howard.
- "I came here from old Earth. I
- looked for the best of all places, and it took me a long time to find
- it. This is it the Kermesse Dorgiieil. We have nothing here but
- simple and clean pleasures; we have only those vices which help and
- support. We accomplish the possible; we reject the impossible. We
- live life, not death. Our talk is about things and not about ideas. We
- have nothing but scorn for that city behind you, the City of the
- Perfect Ones. And we have nothing but pity for the holier than holies
- far back where they claim to have Hopeless Hope, and practice nothing
- but evil religion. I passed through those places too, although I had
- to go around the City of the Perfect Ones. I know what they are and
- I've come all the way from Earth, and if I have come all the way from
- old old Earth I should know what this is. You should take my word for
- it."
- "I've been on Earth myself," said Casher, rather dryly.
- "It's not that unusual."
- The man stopped with surprise.
- "My name," said Casher, "is Casher O'Neill."
- The man halted and then gave him a deep bow.
- "If you are Casher O'Neill, you have changed this world; you have come
- back, my lord and master. Welcome. We are no longer your host. This
- is your city. What do you wish of us?"
- "To look a while, to rest a while, to ask directions for the voyage."
- "Directions? Why should anyone want directions away from here? People
- come here and ask directions from a thousand places to get to Kermesse
- Dorgiieil."
- "Let's not argue this now," said Casher.
- "Show us the rooms, let us clean ourselves up. Two separate rooms."
- Howard walked upstairs. With an intricate twist of his hand he
- unlocked two rooms.
- "At your service," he said.
- "Call me with your voice; I can hear you anywhere in the building."
- Casher called once for sleeping gear, toothbrushes, shaving equipment.
- He insisted that they send the shampooer, a woman of apparent Earth
- origin, in to attend to D'alma; and D'alma actually knocked at his door
- and begged that he not shower her with these attentions.
- He said,
- "You with your deep kindness have helped me so far.
- I am helping you very little."
- They ate a light repast together in the garden just below their two
- rooms, and then they went to their rooms and slept.
- It was only on the morning of the second day that they went with Howard
- into the city to see what could be found.
- Everywhere the city was strong with happiness. The population could
- not have been very large, twenty or thirty thousand persons at most.
- At one point, Casher stopped; he could smell the scorch of ozone in
- the air. He knew the atmosphere itself had been burned and that meant
- only one thing, spaceships coming in or going out.
- He asked,
- "Where is the spaceport for Earth?"
- Howard looked at him quickly and keenly.
- "If you were not the lord Casher O'Neill, I'd never tell you. We have
- a small spaceport there. That is the way that we avoid our traffic
- with most of Mizzer. Do you need it, sir?"
- "Not now," said Casher.
- "I just wondered where it was." They came to a woman who danced as she
- sang to the accompaniment of two men with wild archaic guitars. Her
- feet did not have the laughter of ordinary dance, but they had the
- positiveness, the compulsion of a meaning. Howard looked at her
- appreciatively; he even ran the tip of his tongue across his upper
- lip.
- "She is not yet spoken for," said Howard.
- "And yet she is a very unusual thing. A resigned ex-lady of the
- Instrumentality."
- "I find that unusual, indeed. What is her name?"
- "Celalta," said Howard.
- "Celalta, the other one. She has been in many worlds, perhaps as many
- worlds as you have, sir. She's faced dangers like the ones you've
- faced. And oh, my lord and master, forgive me for saying it, but when
- I look at her dancing, and I see you looking at her, I can see a little
- bit into the future; and I can see you both dead together, the winds
- slowly blowing the flesh off your bones. And your bones anonymous and
- white, lying two valleys over from this very place."
- "That's an odd enough prophecy," said Casher.
- "Especially from someone who seems not to be poetic. What is that?"
- "I seem to see you in the Deep Dry Lake of the Damned Irene. There's a
- road out of here that goes there and some people, not many, go there,
- and when they go there, they die. I don't know why," said Howard.
- "Don't ask me."
- D'alma whispered,
- "That is the road to the Shrine of Shrines.
- That's the place to the Quel itself. Find out where it starts."
- "Where does that road start?" asked Casher.
- "Oh, you'll find out; there's nothing you won't find out. Sorry, my
- lord and master. The road starts just beyond that bright orange roof."
- He pointed to a roof and then turned back.
- Without saying anything more, he clapped his hands at the dancer and
- she gave him a scornful look. Howard clapped his hands again; she
- stopped dancing and walked over.
- "And what is it you want now, Howard?"
- He gave her a deep bow.
- "My former lady, my mistress, here is the lord and master of this
- planet, Casher O'Neill."
- "I am not really the lord and master," said Casher O'Neill.
- "I
- merely would have been if Wedder had not taken the rule away from my
- uncle."
- "Should I care about that?" asked the woman.
- Casher smiled back.
- "I don't see why you should."
- "Do you have anything you want to say to me?"
- "Yes," said Casher. He reached over and seized her wrist. Her wrist
- was almost as strong as his.
- "You have danced your last dance, madam, at least for the time. You
- and I are going to a place that this man knows about, and he says that
- we are going to die there, and our bones will be blown with the
- wind."
- "You give me commands," she cried.
- "I give you commands," he said.
- "What is your authority?" she asked scornfully.
- "Me," he said.
- She looked at him, he looked back at her, still holding her wrist.
- She said,
- "I have powers. Don't make me use them."
- He said,
- "I have powers, too; nobody can make me use mine."
- "I'm not afraid of you; go ahead."
- Fire shot at him as he felt the lunge of her mind toward his, her
- attack, her flight for freedom, but he kept her wrist and she said
- nothing.
- But with his mind responding to hers he unfolded the many worlds, the
- old Earth itself, the gem planet, Olympia of the blind brokers, the
- storm planet, Henriada, and a thousand other places that most people
- only knew in stories and dreams. And then, just for a little bit, he
- showed her who he was, a native of Mizzer who had become a citizen of
- the Universe. A fighter who had been transformed into a doer. He let
- her know that in his own mind he carried the powers of Truth the
- turtle-girl, and behind T'ruth herself, he carried the personalities of
- the Hechizera of Gonfalon.
- He let her see the ships in the sky turning and twisting as they fought
- nothing at all, because his mind, or another mind which had become his,
- had commanded them to.
- And then with the shock of a sudden vision, he projected to her the two
- pieces of wood, the image of a man in pain. And gently, but with the
- simple rhetoric of profound faith, he pronounced: "This is the call of
- the First Forbidden One, and the Second Forbidden One, and the Third
- Forbidden One. This is the symbol of the Sign of the Fish. For this
- you are going to leave this town, and you are going with me, and it may
- be that you and I shall become lovers."
- Behind him a voice spoke.
- "And I," said D'alma, "will stay here."
- He turned around to her.
- "D'alma, you've come this far; you've got to come further."
- "I can't, my lord. I read my duty as I see it. If the authorities who
- sent me want me enough, they will send me back to my dishwasher on
- Pontoppidan, otherwise they will leave me here. I am temporarily
- beautiful and I'm rich and I'm happy and I don't know what to do with
- myself, but I know I have seen you as far as I can. May the Sign of
- the Fish be with you."
- Howard merely stood aside, making no attempt to hinder them or to help
- them.
- Celalta walked beside Casher like a wild animal which had never been
- captured before.
- Casher O'Neill never let go of her wrist.
- "Do we need food for this trip?" he asked of Howard.
- "No one knows what you need."
- "Should we take food?"
- "I don't see why," said Howard.
- "You have water. You can always walk back here if you have
- disappointments. It's really not very far."
- "Will you rescue me?"
- "If you insist on it," said Howard.
- "I suppose somewhere people will come out and bring you back, but I
- don't think you will insist because that is the Deep Dry Lake of the
- Damned Irene, and the people who go in there do not want to come out,
- and do not want to eat, and they do not want to go forward. We have
- never seen anyone vanish to the other side, but you might make it."
- "I am looking," said Casher, "for something which is more than power
- between the worlds. I am looking for a sphinx that is bigger than the
- sphinx on old Earth. For weapons which cut sharper than lasers, for
- forces that move faster than bullets. I am looking for something which
- will take the power away from me and put the simple humanity back into
- me. I am looking for something which will be nothing, but a nothing I
- can serve and can believe in."
- "You sound like the right kind of man," said Howard, "for that kind of
- trip. Go in peace, both of you."
- Celalta said,
- "I do not really know who you are, my lord, master, but I have danced
- my last dance. I see what you mean.
- This is the road that leads away from happiness. This is the path
- which leaves good clothes and warm shops behind. There are no
- restaurants where we are going, no hotels, no river anymore.
- There are neither believers nor unbelievers; but there is something
- that comes out of the soil which makes people die. But if you think,
- Casher O'Neill, that you can triumph over it, I will go with you. And
- if you do not think it, I will die with you."
- "We are going, Celalta, I didn't know that it was just going to be the
- two of us, but we are going and we are going now."
- X
- It was actually less than two kilometers to get over the ridge away
- from the trees, away from the moisture-laden air along the river, and
- into a dry, calm valley which had a clean blessed quietness which
- Casher had never seen before. Celalta was almost gay.
- "This, this is the Deep Dry Lake of the Damned Irene?"
- "I suppose it is," said Casher, "but I propose to keep on walking. It
- isn't very big."
- As they walked their bodies became burdensome; they carried not only
- their own weight but the weight of every month of their lives. The
- decision seemed good to them that they should lie down in the valley
- and rest amid the skeletons, rest as the others had rested. Celalta
- became disoriented. She stumbled, and her eyes became unfocused.
- Not for nothing had Casher O'Neill learned all the arts of battle of a
- thousand worlds. Not for nothing had he come through space-three. This
- valley might have been tempting if already he had not ridden the cosmos
- on his eyes alone.
- He had. He knew the way out. It was merely through. Celalta seemed
- to come more to life as they reached the top of the ridge.
- The whole world was suddenly transformed by not more than ten steps.
- Far behind them, several kilometers, perhaps, there were still visible
- the last rooftops of the Kermesse Dorgtiieil. Behind them lay the
- bleaching skeletons, in front In front of them was the final source and
- the mystery, the Quel of the Thirteenth Nile.
- XI
- There was no sign of a house, but there were fruits and melons and
- grain growing, and there were deep trees at the edges of caves, and
- there were here and there signs of people that had been there long ago.
- There were no signs of present occupancy.
- "My lord," said the once-lady Celalta, "my lord," she repeated, "I
- think this is it."
- "But this is nothing," said Casher.
- "Exactly. Nothing is victory, nothing is arrival, nowhere is getting
- there. Don't you see now why she left us?"
- "She?" asked Casher.
- "Yes, your faithful companion, the dog-woman D'alma."
- "No, I don't see it. Why did she leave this to us?"
- Celalta laughed.
- "We're Adam and Eve in a way. It's not up to us to be
- given a god or to be given a faith. It's up to us to find the power
- and this is the quietest and last of the searching places. The others
- were just phantoms, hazards on our route. The best way to find freedom
- is not to look for it, just as you obtained your utter revenge on
- Wedder by doing him a little bit of good. Can't you see it, Casher?
- You have won at last the immense victory that makes all battles seem
- vain. There is food around us; we can even walk back to the Kermesse
- Dorgiieil, if we want clothing or company or if we want to hear the
- news. But, most of all, this is the place in which I feel the presence
- of the First Forbidden One, the Second Forbidden One, and the Third
- Forbidden One. We don't need a church for this, though I suppose there
- are still churches on some planets. What we need is a place to find
- ourselves and be ourselves and I'm not sure that this chance exists in
- many other places than this one spot."
- "You mean," said Casher, "that everywhere is nowhere?"
- "Not quite that," said Celalta.
- "We have some work to do getting this place in shape, feeding
- ourselves. Do you know how to cook? Well, I can cook better. We can
- catch a few things to eat; we can shut ourselves in that cave and then"
- and then Celalta smiled, her face more beautiful than he ever expected
- he would find a face to be "we have each other."
- Casher stood battle-ready, facing the most beautiful dancer he had ever
- met. He realized that she had once been a part of the Instrumentality,
- a governor of worlds, a genuine advisor in the destination of mankind.
- He did not know what strange motives had caused her to quit authority
- and to come up to this hard-to find river, unmarked on maps. He didn't
- even know why the man Howard should have paired them so quickly:
- perhaps there was another force. A force behind that dog-woman which
- had sent him to his final destination.
- He looked down at Celalta and then he looked up at the sky, and he
- said,
- "Day is ending; I will catch a few of those birds if you know how to
- cook them. We seem to be a sort of Adam and Eve, and I do not know
- whether this is paradise or hell. But I know that you are in it with
- me, and that I can think about you because you ask nothing of me."
- "That is true, my lord, I ask nothing of you. I, too, am looking for
- both of us, not myself alone. I can make a sacrifice for you, but I
- look for those things which only we two, acting together, can find in
- this valley."
- He nodded in serious agreement.
- "Look," she said, "that is the Quel itself, there the Thirteenth Nile
- comes out of the rocks, and here are the woods below. I seem to have
- heard of it. Well, we'll have plenty of time. I'll start the fire,
- but you go catch two of those chickens. I don't even think they're
- wild birds. I think they are just left over people-chickens that have
- grown wild since their previous owners left. . . ."
- "Or died," said Casher.
- "Or died," repeated Celalta.
- "Isn't that a risk anybody has to take? Let us live, my lord, you and
- me, and let us find the magic, the deliverance which strange fates have
- thrown in front of you and me. You have liberated Mizzer, is that not
- enough?
- Simply by touching Wedder, you have done what otherwise could have been
- accomplished at the price of battle and great suffering."
- "Thank you," said Casher.
- "I was once Instrumentality, my lord, and I know that the
- Instrumentality likes to do things suddenly and victoriously.
- When I was there we never accepted defeat, but we never paid anything
- extra. The shortest route between two points might look like the long
- way around; it isn't. It's merely the cheapest human way of getting
- there. Has it ever occurred to you, that the Instrumentality might be
- rewarding you for what you have done for this planet?"
- "I hadn't thought of it," said Casher.
- "You hadn't thought of it?" She smiled.
- "Well. . ." said Casher, embarrassed and at a loss for words.
- "I am a very special kind of woman," said Celalta.
- "You will be finding that out in the next few weeks. Why else do you
- think that I would be given to you?"
- He did not go to hunt the chickens, not just then. He reached his arms
- out to her and, with more trust and less fear than he had felt in many
- years, he held her in his arms, and kissed her on the lips. This time
- there was no secret reserve in his mind, no promise that after this he
- would get on with his journey to Mizzer. He had won, his victory was
- behind him, and in front of him there lay nothing, but this beautiful
- and powerful place and . . . Celalta.
- Three to a Given Star "Stick your left arm straight forward, Samm,"
- said Folly.
- He stretched his arm out.
- "I can sense it!" cried Folly.
- "Now wiggle your fingers!"
- Samm wiggled them.
- Finsternis said nothing, but both of them caught from his mind, riding
- clear and wise beside them, a "sense of the situation." His "sense of
- the situation" could be summed up in the one-word comment, which he did
- not need to utter: "Foolishness!"
- "It is not foolishness, Finsternis," cried Folly.
- "Here are the three of us, riding empty space millions of kilometers
- from nowhere. We were people once, Earth people from Old Earth itself.
- It is foolish to remember what we used to be? I was a woman once. A
- beautiful woman. Now I'm this this thing, bent on a mission of murder
- and destruction. I used to have hands myself, real hands. Is it wrong
- for me to enjoy looking at Samm's hands now and then? To think of the
- past which all three of us have left behind."
- Finsternis did not answer; his mind was blank to both of them. There
- was nothing but space around them, not even much space dust, and the
- bluish light ofLinschoten XV straight ahead.
- From the third planet of that star they could occasionally hear the
- cackle and gabble of the man-eaters.
- Once again Folly cried to Finsternis,
- "Is that so wrong, that I should enjoy looking at a hand? Samm has
- well-shaped hands. I was a person once, and so were you. Did I ever
- tell you that I was a beautiful woman once?"
- She had been a beautiful woman once and now she was the control of a
- small spaceship which fled across emptiness with two grotesque
- companions.
- She was now a ship only eleven meters long and shaped roughly like an
- ancient dirigible. Finsternis was a perfect cube, fifty meters to the
- side,
- packed with machinery which could blank out a sun and contain its
- planets until they froze to icy, perpetual death. Samm was a man, but
- he was a man of flexible steel, two hundred meters high.
- He was designed to walk on any kind of planet, with any kind of
- inhabitant, with any kind of chemistry or any kind of gravity. He was
- designed to bring antagonists, whomever they might be, the message of
- the power of man. The power of man . . . followed by terror, followed
- if necessary by death. If Samm failed, Finsternis had the further
- power of blocking out the sun, Linschoten XV. If either or both
- failed. Folly had the job of adjusting them so that they could win. If
- they had no chance of winning, she then had the task of destroying
- Finsternis and Samm, and then herself.
- Their instructions were clear: "You will not, you will not under any
- circumstances return.
- You will not under any conditions turn back toward Earth. You are too
- dangerous to come anywhere near Earth, ever again. You may live if you
- wish. If you can. But you must not repeat not come back. You have
- your duty. You asked for it. Now you have it. Do not come back. Your
- forms fit your duty. You will do your duty."
- Folly had become a tiny ship, crammed with miniaturized equipment.
- Finsternis had become a cube blacker than darkness itself.
- Samm had become a man, but a man different from any which had ever been
- seen on Earth. He had a metal body, copied from the human form down to
- the last detail. That way the enemies, whoever they might be, would be
- given a terrible glimpse of the human shape, the human voice. Two
- hundred meters high he stood, strong and solid enough to fly through
- space with nothing but the jets on his belt.
- The Instrumentality had designed all three of them. Designed them
- well.
- Designed them to meet the crazy menace out beyond the stars, a menace
- which gave no clue to its technology or origin, but which responded to
- the signal "man" with the counter-signal, "gabble cackle! eat, eat!
- man, man! good to eat! cackle gabble!
- eat, eat!"
- That was enough.
- The Instrumentality took steps. And the three of them the ship, the
- cube, and the metal giant sped between the stars to conquer, to
- terrorize, or to destroy the menace which lived on the third planet of
- Linschoten XV. Or, if needful, to put out that particular sun.
- Folly, who had become a ship, was the most volatile of the three.
- She had been a beautiful woman once.
- II
- "You were a beautiful woman once," Samm had said, some years before.
- "How did you end up becoming a ship?"
- "I killed myself," said Folly.
- "That's why I took this name Folly. I had a long life ahead of me, but
- I killed myself and they brought me back at the last minute. When I
- found out I was still alive, I volunteered for something adventurous,
- dangerous. They gave me this. Well, I asked for it, didn't I?"
- "You asked for it," said Samm gravely. Out in the middle of nothing,
- surrounded by a tremendous lot of nowhere, courtesy was still the
- lubricant which governed human relationships. The two of them observed
- courtesy and kindness toward one another.
- Sometimes they threw in a bit of humor, too.
- Finsternis did not take part in their talk or their companionship. He
- did not even verbalize his answers. He merely let them know his sense
- of the situation and this time, as in all other times, his response
- was
- "Negative. No operation needed. Communication nonfunctional. Not
- needed here. Silence, please. I kill suns. That is all I do. My
- part is my business. All mine." This was communicated in a single
- terrible thought, so that Folly and Samm stopped trying to bring
- Finsternis into the conversations which they started up, every
- subjective century or so, and continued for years at a time.
- Finsternis merely moved along with them, several kilometers away, but
- well within their range of awareness. But as far as company was
- concerned, Finsternis might as well not have been there at all.
- Samm went on with the conversation, the conversation which they had had
- so many hundreds of times since the plano form ship had discharged them
- "near" Linschoten XV and left them to make the rest of their way alone.
- (If the menace were really a menace, and if it were intelligent, the
- Instrumentality had no intention of letting an actual plano form ship
- fall within the powers of a strange form of life which might well be
- hypnotic in its combat capacities. Hence the ship, the cube, and the
- giant were launched into normal space at high velocity, equipped with
- jets to correct their courses, and left to make their own way to the
- danger.) Samm said, as he always did,
- "You were a beautiful woman.
- Folly, but you wanted to die. Why?"
- "Why do people ever want to die, Samm? It's the power in us, the
- vitality which makes us want so much. Life always trembles on the edge
- of disappointment. If we hadn't been vital and greedy and lustful and
- yearning, if we hadn't had big thoughts and wanted bigger ones, we
- would have stayed animals, like all the little things back on Earth.
- It's strong life that
- brings us so close to death. We can't stand the beauty of it, the
- nearness of the things we want, the remoteness of the things that we
- can have. You and me and Finsternis, now, we're monsters riding out
- between the stars. And yet we're happier now than we were when we were
- back among people. I was a beautiful woman, but there were specific
- things which I wanted. I wanted them myself. I alone. For me. Only
- for me.
- When I couldn't have them, I wanted to die. If I had been stupider or
- happier I might have lived on. But I didn't. I was me intensely me.
- So here I am. I don't even know whether I have a body or not, inside
- this ship. They've got me all hooked up to the sensors and the viewers
- and the computers.
- Sometimes I think that I may be a lovely woman still, with a real body
- hidden somewhere inside this ship, waiting to step out and to be a
- person again. And you, Samm, don't you want to tell me about yourself?
- Samm. SAMM. That's no name for an actual person Superordinated Alien
- Measuring and Mastery device. What were you before they gave you that
- big body? At least you still look like a person. You're not a ship,
- like me."
- "My name doesn't matter, Folly, and if I told it to you, you wouldn't
- know it. You never knew it."
- "How wouldn't I know?" she cried.
- "I've never told you my name either, so perhaps we did know each other
- back on Old Earth when we were still people."
- "I can tell something," said Samm, "from the shape of words, from the
- ring of thoughts, even when we're not out here in nothing. You were a
- lady, perhaps high-born. You were truly beautiful. You were really
- important. And I I was a technician. A good one. I did my work and I
- loved my family, and my wife and I were happy with every child which
- the Lords gave us for adoption. But my wife died first. And after a
- while my children, my wonderful boy and my two beautiful, intelligent
- girls my own children, they couldn't stand me anymore. They didn't
- like me. Perhaps I talked too much.
- Perhaps I gave them too much advice. Perhaps I reminded them of their
- mother, who was dead. I don't know. I won't ever know.
- They didn't want to see me. Out of manners, they sent me cards on my
- birthday. Out of sheer formal courtesy, they called on me sometimes.
- Now and then one of them wanted something. Then they came to me, but
- it was always just to get something. It took me a long time to figure
- out, but I hadn't done anything. It wasn't what I had done or hadn't
- done. They just plain didn't like me. You know the songs and the
- operas and the stories, Folly, you know them all."
- "Not all of them," thought Folly gently, "not all of them.
- Just a few thousand."
- "Did you ever see one," cried Samm, his thoughts ringing fiercely
- against her mind, "did you ever see a single one about a rejected
- father?
- They're all about men and women, love and sex, but I can tell you that
- rejection hurts even when you don't ask anything of your loved ones but
- their company and their happiness and their simple genuine smiles. When
- I knew that my children had no use for me, I had no use for me either.
- The Instrumentality came along with this warning, and I volunteered."
- "But you're all right now, Samm," said Folly gently.
- "I'm a ship and you are a metal giant, but we're off doing work which
- is important for all mankind. We'll have adventures together. Even
- black and grumbly here," she added, meaning Finsternis, "can't keep us
- from the excitement of companionship or the hope of danger. We're
- doing something wonderful and important and exciting. Do you know what
- I would do if I had my life again, my ordinary life with skin and
- toenails and hair and things like that?"
- "What?" asked Samm, knowing the answer perfectly well from the
- hundreds of times they had touched on this point.
- "I'd take baths. Hundreds and hundreds of them, over again.
- Showers and dips in cold pools and soaks in hot bathtubs and rinses and
- more showers. And I would do my hair, over and over again, thousands
- of different ways. And I would put on lipstick, in the most outrageous
- colors, even if nobody saw me, except for my own self looking in the
- mirror. Now I can hardly remember what it used to be to be dry or wet.
- I'm in this ship and I see the ship and I do not really know if I am a
- person or not any more."
- Samm stayed quiet, knowing what she would say next.
- "Samm, what would you do?" Folly asked.
- "Swim," he said.
- "Then swim, Samm, swim! Swim for me in the space between the stars.
- You still have a body and I don't, but I can watch you and I can sense
- you swimming out here in the nothing at-all."
- Samm began to swim a huge Australian crawl, dipping his face to the
- edge of the water as if there were water there. The gestures made no
- difference in his real motion, since they were all of them in the fast
- trajectory computed for them from the point where they left the
- Instrumentality's ship and started out in normal space for the star
- listed as Linschoten XV.
- This time, something very sudden happened, and it happened strangely.
- From the dark gloomy silence of the cube, Finsternis, there came an
- articulate cry, called forth in clear human speech: Stop it! Stop
- moving right now. I attack.
- Both Samm and Folly had instruments built into them, so they could read
- space around them. The instruments, quickly scanned, showed nothing.
- Yet Folly felt odd, as though something had gone very wrong in her
- ship-self, which had seemed so metal, so reliable, so inalterable.
- She threw a thought of inquiry at Samm and instead got another command
- from Finsternis. Don't think.
- III
- Samm floated like a dead man in his gargantuan body.
- Folly drifted like a fruit beside his hand.
- At last there came words from Finsternis: "You can think now, if you
- want to. You can chatter at each other again. I'm through."
- Samm thought at him, and the thought-pattern was troubled and
- confused.
- "What happened? I felt as though the immaculate grid of space had been
- pinched together in a tight fold. I felt you do something, and then
- there was silence around us again."
- "Talking," said Finsternis, "is not operational and it is not required
- of me. But there are only three of us here, so I might as well tell
- you what happened. Can you hear me, Folly?"
- "Yes," she said, weakly.
- "Are we on course," asked Finsternis, "for the third planet
- ofLinschoten XV?"
- Folly paused while checking all her instruments, which were more
- complicated and refined than those carried by the other two, since she
- was the maintenance unit.
- "Yes," said she at last.
- "We are exactly on course. I don't know what happened, if anything did
- happen."
- "Something happened, all right," said Finsternis, with the gratified
- savagery of a person whose quick-and-cruel nature is rewarded only by
- meeting and overcoming hostility in real life.
- "Was it a space dragon, like they used to meet on the old, old
- ships?"
- "No, nothing like that," said Finsternis, communicative for once, since
- this was something operational to talk about.
- "It doesn't even seem to be in this space at all. Something just rises
- up among us, like a volcano coming out of solid space. Something
- violent and wild and alive. Do you two still have eyes?"
- "Seeing devices for the ordinary light band?" asked Samm.
- "Of course we do!" said Finsternis.
- "I will try to fix it so that you will have a visible input."
- There was a sharp pause from Finsternis.
- The voice came again, with much strain.
- "Do not do anything. Do not try to help me. Just watch. If it wins,
- destroy me quickly. It might try to capture us and get back to Earth.
- " Folly felt like telling Finsternis that this was unnecessary, since
- the
- first motion toward return would trigger destruction devices which had
- been built into each of the three of them, beyond reach, beyond
- detection, beyond awareness. When the Instrumentality said,
- "Do not come back," the Instrumentality meant it.
- She said nothing.
- She watched Finsternis instead.
- Something began to happen.
- It was very odd.
- Space itself seemed to rip and leak.
- In the visible band, the intruder looked like a fountain of water being
- thrown randomly to and fro.
- But the intruder was not water.
- In the visible light-band, it glowed like wild fire rising from a
- shimmering column of blue ice. Here in space there was nothing to
- burn, nothing to make light: she knew that Finsternis was translating
- un resolvable phenomena into light.
- She sensed Samm moving one of his giant fists uncontrollably, in a
- helpless, childish gesture of protest.
- She herself did nothing but watch, as alertly and passively as she
- could.
- Nevertheless, she felt wrenched. This was no material phenomenon. It
- was wild unformed life, intruding out of some other proportion of
- space, seeking material on which to impose its vitality, its frenzy,
- its identity. She could see Finsternis as a solid black cube, darker
- than mere darkness, drifting right into the column. She watched the
- sides of Finsternis.
- On the earlier part of the trip, since they had left the people and the
- plano form ship and had been discharged in a fast trajectory toward
- Linschoten XV, Finsternis' side had seemed like dull metal, slightly
- burnished, so that Folly had to brush him lightly with radar to get a
- clear image of him.
- Now his sides had changed.
- They had become as soft and thick as velvet.
- The strange volcano-fountain did not seem to have much in the way of
- sensing devices. It paid no attention to Samm or to herself. The dark
- cube attracted it, as a shaft of sunlight might attract a baby or as
- the rustle of paper might draw the attention of a kitten.
- With a slight twist of its vitality and direction, the whole column of
- burning, living brightness plunged upon Finsternis, plunged and burned
- out and went in and was seen no more.
- Finsternis' voice, clear and cheerful, sounded out to both of them.
- "It's gone now."
- "What happened to it?" asked Samm.
- "I ate it," said Finsternis.
- "You what?" cried Folly.
- "I ate it," said Finsternis. He was talking more than he ever had
- before.
- "At least, that's the only way I can describe it. This machine they
- gave me or made me into or whatever they did, it's really rather good.
- It's powerful. I can feel it absorbing things, taking them in, taking
- them apart, putting them away.
- It's something like eating used to be when I was a person. That wild
- thing attacked me, wrapped me up, devoured me. All I did was to take
- it in, and now it's gone. I feel sort of full. I suppose my machines
- are sorting out samples of it to send away to rendezvous points in
- little rockets. I know that I have sixteen small rockets inside me,
- and I can feel two of them getting ready to move. Neither one of you
- could have done what I do. I was built to absorb whole suns if
- necessary, break them down, freeze them down, change their molecular
- structure, and shoot their vitality off in one big useless blast on the
- radio spectrum. You couldn't do anything like that, Samm, even if you
- do have arms and legs and a head and a voice if we ever get into an
- atmosphere for you to use it in. You couldn't do what I have just
- done. Folly."
- "You're good," said Folly, with emphasis. But she added: "I can repair
- you."
- Obviously offended, Finsternis withdrew into his silence.
- Samm said to Folly,
- "How much further to destination?"
- Said Folly promptly,
- "Seventy-nine earth years, four months and three days, six hours and
- two minutes, but you know how little that means out here. It could
- seem like a single afternoon or it could feel to us like a thousand
- lifetimes.
- Time doesn't work very well for us."
- "How did Earth ever find this place, anyhow?" asked Samm.
- "All I know is that it was two very strong tele paths working together
- on the planet Mizzer. An ex-dictator named Casher O'Neill and an
- ex-Lady named Celalta. They were doing a bit of ps ionic astronomy and
- suddenly this signal came in strong and clear. You know that tele
- paths can catch directions very accurately. Even over immense
- distances. And they can get emotions, too. But they are not very good
- at actual images or things. Somebody else checked it out for them."
- "M-m-m," said Samm. He had heard all this before. Out of sheer
- boredom, he went back to swimming vigorously. The body might not
- really be his, but it made him feel good to exercise it.
- Besides, he knew that Folly watched him with pleasure great pleasure,
- and a little bit of envy.
- Casher O'Neill and the Lady Celalta had finished with making love. They
- had lain with their bodies tired and their minds clear, relaxed. They
- had stretched out on a blanket just above the big gushing spring
- Three to a Given Star which was the source of the Ninth Nile. Both
- tele paths they could hear a bird-couple quarreling inside a tree, the
- male bird commanding the female to get out and get to work and the
- female answering by dropping deeper and deeper into a fretful and
- irritable sleep.
- The Lady Celalta had whispered a thought to her lover and master,
- Casher O
- "Neill.
- "To the stars?"
- "The stars?" thought he with a grumble. They were both strong tele
- paths He had been imprinted, in some mysterious way, with the greatest
- tele path-hypnotist of all time, the Honorable Agatha Madigan. In the
- Lady Celalta he had a companion worthy of his final talents, a natural
- tele path who could herself reach not only all of Miner but some of the
- nearer stars. When they teamed up together, as she now proposed, they
- could plunge into dusty infinities of depth and bring back feelings or
- images which no Go-Captain had ever found with his ship.
- He sat up with a grunt of assent.
- She looked at him fondly, possessively, her dark eyes alight with
- alertness, happiness, and adventure.
- "Can I lift?" she asked, almost timidly.
- When two tele paths worked together, one cleared the vision for both of
- them as far as their combined minds could reach and then the other
- sprang, with enormous effort, as far and as fast as possible toward any
- target which presented itself. They had found strange things,
- sometimes beautiful or dramatic ones, by this method.
- Casher was already drinking enormous gulps of air, filling his lungs,
- holding his breath, letting go with a gasp, and then inhaling deeply
- and slowly again. In this way he re oxygenated his brain very
- thoroughly for the huge effort of a telepathic dive into the remote
- depth of space. He did not even speak to her, nor did he tele path a
- word to her; he was conserving his strength for a good jump.
- He merely nodded to her.
- The Lady Celalta, too, began the deep breathing, but she seemed to need
- it less than did Casher.
- They were both sitting up, side by side, breathing deeply.
- The cool night sands of Miner were around them, the harmless gurgle of
- the Ninth Nile was beside them, the bright star-cluttered sky of Miner
- was above them.
- Her hand reached out and took hold of his. She squeezed his hand. He
- looked at her and nodded to her again.
- Within his mind. Miner and its entire solar system seemed to burst
- into flame with a new kind of light. The radiance of Celalta's mind
- trailed off unevenly in different directions, but there, almost 2 off
- the pole of
- Miner's ecliptic, he felt something wild and strange, a kind of being
- which he had never sensed before. Using Celalta 's mind as a base, he
- let his mind dive for it.
- The distance of the plunge left them both dizzy, sitting on the quiet
- night sands of Miner. It seemed to both of them that the mind of man
- had never reached so far before.
- The reality of the phenomenon was un doubtable
- There were animals all around them, the usual categories: runners,
- hunters, jumpers, climbers, swimmers, hiders, and handlers. It was
- some of the handlers who were intensely telepathic themselves.
- The image of man created an immediate, murderous response.
- "Cackle gabble, gabble cackle, man, man, man, eat them, eat them!"
- Casher and Celalta were both so surprised that they let the contact go,
- after making sure that they had touched a whole world full of beings,
- some of them telepathic and probably civilized.
- How had the beings known "man"? Why had their response been immediate?
- Why anthropophagous and homicidal?
- They took time, before coming completely out of the trance, to make a
- careful, exact note of the direction from which the danger-brains had
- shrieked their warning.
- This they submitted to the Instrumentality, shortly after the
- incident.
- And that was how, unknown to Folly, Samm, and Finsternis, the
- inhabitants on the third planet of Linschoten XV had come to the
- attention of mankind.
- IV
- As a matter of fact, the three wanderers later on felt a vague, remote
- telepathic contact which they sensed as being warmhearted and human,
- and therefore did not try to track down, with their minds or their
- weapons. It was O'NeiIl and Celalta, many years later by Mizzer time,
- reaching to see what the Instrumentality had done about Linschoten
- XV.
- Folly, Samm, and Finsternis had no suspicion that the two most powerful
- tele paths in the human area of the galaxy had stroked them, searched
- them, felt them through, and seen things about them which the three of
- them did not know about themselves or about each other.
- Casher O'Neill said to the Lady Celalta,
- "You got it, too?"
- "A beautiful woman, encased in a little ship?"
- Casher nodded.
- "A redhead with skin as soft and transparent as living ivory? A woman
- who was beautiful and will be beautiful again?"
- "That's what I got," said the Lady Celalta.
- "And the tired old man, weary of his children and weary of his own life
- because his children were weary of him."
- "Not so old," said Casher O'Neill.
- "And isn't that a spectacular piece of machinery they put him into? A
- metal giant.
- It felt like something about a quarter of a kilometer high. Acidproof.
- Cold-proof. Won't he be surprised when he finds that the
- Instrumentality has rejuvenated his own body inside that monster?"
- "He certainly will be," said the Lady Celalta happily, thinking of the
- pleasant surprise which lay ahead of a man whom she would never know or
- see with her own bodily eyes.
- They both fell silent.
- Then said the Lady Celalta,
- "But the third person . . ." There was a shiver in her voice as
- though she dared not ask the question.
- "The third person, the one in the cube." She stopped, as though she
- could neither ask nor say more.
- "It was not a robot or a personality cube," said Casher O'Neill.
- "It was a human being all right. But it's crazy. Could you make out,
- Celalta, as to whether it was male or female?"
- "No," said she,
- "I couldn't tell. The other two seemed to think that it was male."
- "But did you feel sure?" asked Casher.
- "With that being, I felt sure of nothing. It was human, all right, but
- it was stranger than any lost hominid we have ever felt around the
- forgotten stars. Could you tell, Casher, whether it was young or
- old?"
- "No," said he.
- "I felt nothing only a desperate human mind with all its guards up,
- living only because of the terrible powers of the black cube, the
- sun-killer in which it rode. I never sensed someone before who was a
- person without characteristics. It's frightening."
- "The Instrumentality are cruel sometimes," said Celalta.
- "Sometimes they have to be," Casher agreed.
- "But I never thought that they would do that."
- "Do what?" asked Casher.
- Her dark eyes looked at him. It was a different night, and a different
- Nile, but the eyes were only a very little bit older and they loved him
- just as much as ever. The Lady Celalta trembled as though she herself
- might think that the all-powerful Instrumentality could have hidden a
- microphone in the random sands. She whispered to her lover,
- "You said it yourself, Casher, just a moment ago."
- "Said what?" He spoke tenderly but fearlessly, his voice ringing out
- over the cool night sands.
- The Lady Celalta went on whispering, which was very unlike her usual
- self.
- "You said that the third person was 'crazy." Do you realize that you
- may have spoken the actual literal truth?" Her whisper darted at him
- like a snake.
- At last, he whispered back,
- "What did you sense? What could you guess?"
- "They have sent a madman to the stars. Or a mad woman. A real
- psychotic."
- "Lots of pilots," said Casher, speaking more normally, "are cushioned
- against loneliness with real but artificially activated psychoses. It
- gets them through the real or imagined horrors of the sufferings of
- space."
- "I don't mean that," said Celalta, still whispering urgently and
- secretly.
- "I mean a real psychotic."
- "But there aren't any. Not loose, that is," said Casher, stammering
- with surprise at last.
- "They either get cured or they are bottled up in thought-proof
- satellites somewhere."
- Celalta raised her voice a little, just a little, so that she no longer
- whispered but spoke urgently.
- "But don't you see, that's what they must have done. The
- Instrumentality made a star-killer too strong for any normal mind to
- guide. So the Lords got a psychotic somewhere, a real psychotic, and
- sent a madman out among the stars. Otherwise we could have felt its
- gender or its age."
- Casher nodded in silent agreement. The air did not feel colder, but he
- got gooseflesh sitting beside his beloved Celalta on the familiar
- desert sands.
- "You're right. You must be right. It almost makes me feel sorry for
- the enemies out near Linschoten XV. Do you see nothing of them this
- time? I couldn't perceive them at all."
- "I did, a little," said the Lady Celalta.
- "Their tele paths have caught the strange minds coming at them with a
- high rate of speed. The telepathic ones are wild with excitement but
- the others are just going cackle-gabble, cackle-gabble with each other,
- filled with anger, hunger, and the thought of man."
- "You got that much?" he said in wonder.
- "My lord and my lover, I dived this time. Is it so strange that I
- sensed more than you did? Your strength lifted me."
- "Did you hear what the weapons called each other?"
- "Something silly." He could see her knitting her brows in the bright
- star shine which illuminated the desert almost the way that the Old
- Original Moon lit up the nights sometimes on Manhome itself.
- "It was Folly, and something like
- "Superordinated Alien Measuring and Mastery machine' and something like
- 'darkness' in the Ancient Doyches Language."
- "That's what I got, too," said Casher.
- "It sounds like a weird team."
- "But a powerful one, a terribly powerful one," said the Lady Celalta.
- "You and I, my lover and master, have seen strange things and dangers
- between the stars, even before we met each other, but we never saw
- anything like this before, did we?"
- "No," said he.
- "Well, then," said she, "let us sleep and forget the matter as much as
- we can. The Instrumentality is certainly taking care of Linschoten XV,
- and we two need not bother about it."
- And all that Samm, Folly, and Finsternis knew was that a light touch,
- unexplained but friendly, had gone over them from the far star region
- near home. Thought they, if they thought anything about it at all,
- "The Instrumentality, which made us and sent us, has checked up on us
- one more time."
- V
- A few years later, Samm and Folly were talking again while Finsternis
- guarded, impenetrable, un communicating detectable only by the fierce
- glow of human life which shone telepathically out of the immense cube
- rode space beside them and said nothing.
- Suddenly Folly cried out to Samm loudly, "I can smell them."
- "Smell who?" asked Samm mildly.
- "There isn't any smell out here in the nothingness of space."
- "Silly," thought Folly back,
- "I don't mean really smell. I mean that I can pick up their sense of
- odor telepathically."
- "Whose?" said Samm, being dense.
- "Our enemies', of course," cried Folly.
- "The man-rememberers who are not man. The cackle-gabble creatures. The
- beings who remember man and hate him. They smell thick and warm and
- alive to each other. Their whole world is full of smells. Their tele
- paths are getting frantic now. They have even figured out that there
- are three of us and they are trying to get our smells."
- "And we have no smell. Not when we do not even know whether we have
- human bodies or not, inside these things. Imagine this metal body of
- mine smelling. If it did have a smell,"
- said Samm, "it would probably be the very soft smell of working steel
- and a little bit of lubricants, plus whatever odors my jets might
- activate inside an atmosphere. If I know the Instrumentality, they
- have made my jets smell awful to almost any kind of being. Most forms
- of life think first through their noses and then figure out the rest of
- experience later. After all, I was built to intimidate, to frighten,
- to destroy.
- The Instrumentality did not make this giant to be friendly with
- anybody. You and I can be friends. Folly, because you are a little
- ship
- which I could hold like a cigar between my fingers, and because the
- ship holds the memory of a very lovely woman. I can sense what you
- once were. What you may still be, if your actual body is still inside
- that boat."
- "Oh, Samm!" she cried.
- "Do you think I might still be alive, really alive, with a real me in a
- real me, and a chance to be myself somewhere again, out here between
- the stars?"
- "I can't sense it plainly," said Samm.
- "I've reached as much as I can through your ship with my sensors, but I
- can't tell whether there's a whole woman there or not. It might be
- just a memory of you dissected and laminated between a lot of plastic
- sheets. I really can't tell, but sometimes I have the strangest hunch
- that you are still alive, in the old ordinary way, and that I am alive
- too."
- "Wouldn't that be wonderful!" She almost shouted at him.
- "Samm, imagine being us again, if we fulfill our mission and conquer
- this planet and stay alive and settle there! I might even meet you and
- " They both fell silent at the implications of being ordinary alive
- again. They knew that they loved each other. Out here, in the immense
- blackness of space, there was nothing they could do but streak along in
- their fast trajectories and talk to each other a little bit by
- telepathy.
- "Samm," said Folly, and the tone of her thought showed that she was
- changing a difficult subject.
- "Do you think that we are the furthest out that people have ever gone?
- You used to be a technician. You might know. Do you?"
- "Of course I know," thought Samm promptly.
- "We're not.
- After all, we're still deep inside our own galaxy."
- "I didn't know," said Folly contritely.
- "With all those instruments, don't you know where you are?"
- "Of course I know where I am, Samm. In relation to the third planet of
- Linschoten XV. I even have a faint idea of the general direction in
- which Old Earth must lie, and how many thousands of ages it would take
- us to get home, traveling through ordinary space, if we did try to turn
- around." She thought to herself but didn't add in her thought to
- Samm,
- "Which we can't." She thought again to him,
- "But I've never studied astronomy or navigation, so I couldn't tell
- whether we were at the edge of the galaxy or not."
- "Nowhere near the edge," said Samm.
- "We're not John Joy Tree and we're nowhere near the two-headed
- elephants which weep forever in intergalactic space."
- "John Joy Tree?" sang Folly; there was joy and memory in her thoughts
- as she sounded the name.
- "He was my idol when I was a girl. My father was a Subchief of the
- Instrumentality and always promised to bring John Joy Tree to our
- house. We had a country house and it was unusual and
- very fine for this day and age. But Mister and Go-Captain Tree never
- got around to visiting us, so there I was, a big girl with
- picture-cubes of him all over my room. I liked him because he was so
- much older than me, and so resolute-looking and so tender too. I had
- all sorts of romantic day-dreams about him, but he never showed up and
- I married the wrong man several times, and my children got given to the
- wrong people, so here I am. But what's this stuff about two-headed
- elephants?"
- "Really?" said Samm.
- "I don't see how you could hear about John Joy Tree and not know what
- he did."
- "I knew he flew far, far out, but I didn't know exactly what he did.
- After all, I was just a child when I fell in love with his picture.
- What did he do? He's dead now, I suppose, so I don't suppose it
- matters."
- Finsternis cut in, grimly and unexpectedly,
- "John Joy Tree is not dead. He's creeping around a monstrous place on
- an abandoned planet, and he is immortal and insane."
- "How did you know that?" cried Samm, turning his enormous metal head
- to look at the dark burnished cube which had said nothing for so many
- years.
- There was no further thought from Finsternis, not a ghost, not an echo
- of a word.
- Folly prodded him.
- "It's no use trying to make that thing talk if it doesn't want to.
- We've both tried, thousands of times. Tell me about the two headed
- elephants. Those are the big animals with large floppy ears and the
- noses that pick things up, aren't they? And they make very wise,
- dependable under people out of them?"
- "I don't know about the under people part, but the animals are the kind
- you mention, very big indeed. When John Joy Tree got far outside our
- cosmos by flying through Space3 he found an enormous procession of open
- ships flying in columns where there was nothing at all. The ships were
- made by nothing which man has ever even seen. We still don't know
- where they came from or what made them. Each open ship had a sort of
- animal, something like an elephant with four front legs and a head at
- each end, and as he passed the unimaginable ships, these animals howled
- at him. Howled grief and mourning. Our best guess was that the ships
- were the tombs of some great race of beings and the howling elephants,
- the immortal half-living mourners who guarded them."
- "But how did John Joy Tree ever get back?"
- "Ah, that was beautiful. If you go into Space3, you take nothing more
- than your own body with you. That was the finest engineering the human
- race has ever done. They designed and built a whole plano form ship
- out of John Joy Tree's skin, fingernails, and hair. They had to change
- his body
- of Man chemistry a bit to get enough metal in him to carry the coils
- and the electric circuits, but it worked. He came back. That was a
- man who could skip through space like a little boy hopping on familiar
- rocks. He's the only pilot who ever piloted himself back home from
- outside our galaxy. I don't know whether it will be worth the time and
- treasure to use space-three for intergalactic trips. After all, some
- very gifted people may have already fallen through by accident. Folly.
- You and Finsternis and I are people who have been built into machines.
- We are not ourselves the machines. But with Tree they did it the other
- way around. They made a machine out of him. And it worked. In that
- one deep flight he went billions of times further than we will ever
- go."
- "You think you know," said Finsternis unexpectedly.
- "That's what you always do. You think you know."
- Folly and Samm tried to get Finsternis to talk some more, but nothing
- happened. After a few more rests and talks they were ready for landing
- on the third planet of Linschoten XV.
- They landed.
- They fought.
- Blood ran on the ground. Fire scorched the valleys and boiled the
- lakes. The telepathic world was full of the cackle-gabble of fright,
- hatred throwing itself into suicide, fury turning into surrender, into
- deep despair, into hopelessness, and at last into a strange kind of
- quiet and love.
- Let us not tell that story.
- It can be written some other time, told by some other voice.
- The beings died by thousands and tens of thousands while Finsternis sat
- on a mountain-top, doing nothing. Folly wove death and destruction,
- uncoded languages, drew maps, showed Samm the strong-points and the
- weapons which had to be destroyed.
- Part of the technology was very advanced, other parts were still
- tribal. The dominant race was that of the beings who had evolved into
- handlers and thinkers; it was they who were the tele paths
- All hatred ceased as the haters died. Only the submissive ones lived
- on.
- Samm tore cities about with his bare metal hands, ripped heavy guns to
- pieces while they were firing at him, picking the gunners off the gun
- carriages as though they were lice, swimming oceans when he had to,
- with Folly darting and hovering around or ahead of him.
- Final surrender was brought by their strongest tele path a very wise
- old male who had been hidden inside a deep mountain.
- "You have come, people. We surrender. Some of us have always known
- the truth. We are Earth-born, too. A cargo of chickens settled here
- unimaginable times ago. A time-twist tore us out of our convoy and
- threw us here. That's why, when we sensed you far across space, we
- caught the relationship of eat-and-eaten. Only, our brave ones had it
- wrong. You eat us: we don't eat you. You are the masters now. We
- will serve you forever. Do you seek our death?"
- "No, no," said Folly.
- "We came only to avert a danger, and we have done that. Live on, and
- on, but plan no war and make no weapons. Leave that to the
- Instrumentality."
- "Blessed is the Instrumentality, whoever that may be. We accept your
- terms. We belong to you."
- When this was done, the war was over.
- Strange things began to happen.
- Wild voices sang from within Folly and Samm, voices not their own.
- Mission gone. Work finished. Go to hill with cube. Go and rejoice!
- Samm and Folly hesitated. They had left Finsternis where they landed,
- halfway around the planet.
- The singing voices became more urgent. Go. Go. Go now. Go back to
- the cube. Tell the chicken-people to plant a lawn and a grove of
- trees. Go, go, go now to the good reward!
- They told the tele paths what had been said to them and voyaged wearily
- up out of the atmosphere and back down for a landing at the original
- point of contact, a long low hill which had been planted with huge
- patches of green turf and freshly transplanted trees even in the hours
- in which they flew off the world and back on it again. The bird-tele
- paths must have had strong and quick commands.
- The singing became pure music as they landed, chorales of reward and
- rejoicing, with the hint of martial marches and victory fugues woven
- in.
- Man, stand up, said the voices to Samm.
- Samm stood on the ridge of the hill. He stood like a colossus against
- the red-dawning sky. A friendly, quiet crowd of the chicken-people
- fell back.
- Man, put your hand to your right forehead, sang the voices.
- Samm obeyed. He did not know why the voices called him "Alan."
- Ellen, land, sang the rejoicing voices to Folly. Folly, herself a
- little ship, landed at Samm's feet. She was bewildered with happy
- confusion and a great deal of pain which did not seem to matter much.
- Alan, come forth, sang the voices. Samm felt a sharp pain as his
- forehead his huge metal forehead, two hundred meters above the ground
- burst open and closed again. There was something pink and helpless in
- his hand.
- The voices commanded, Alan, put your hand gently on the ground.
- of Man Samm obeyed and put his hand on the ground. The little pink
- toy fell on the fresh turf. It was a tiny miniature of a man.
- Ellen, stand forth, sang the voices again. The ship named Folly opened
- a door and a naked young woman fell out.
- Alma, wake up. The cube named Finsternis turned darker than charcoal.
- Out of the dark side, there stumbled a black-haired girl.
- She ran across the hill-slope to the figure named Ellen. The man body
- named Alan was struggling to his feet.
- The three of them stood up.
- The voices spoke to them: This is our last message. You have done your
- work. You are well. The boat named Folly contains tools, medicine,
- and the other equipment for a human colony. The giant named Samm will
- stand forever as a monument to human victory. The cube named
- Finsternis will now dissolve. Alan!
- Ellen! Treat Alma lovingly and well. She is now a for getty
- The three naked people stood bewildered in the dawn.
- Good-bye and a great high thanks from the Instrumentality.
- This is a pre-coded message, effective only if you won. You have won.
- Be happy. Live on!
- Ellen took Alma who had been Finsternis and held her tight. The great
- cube dissolved into a shapeless slag-heap. Alan, who had been Samm,
- looked up at his former body dominating the skyline.
- For reasons which the travelers did not understand until many years had
- passed, the bird-people around them broke into ululant hymns of peace,
- welcome, and joy.
- "My house," said Ellen, pointing at the little ship which had spat
- forth her body just minutes ago, "is now a home for all of us."
- They climbed into the successful little ship which had been called
- Folly. They knew, somehow, that they would find clothes and food. And
- wisdom, too. They did.
- VI
- Ten years later, they had the proof of happiness playing in the yard
- before their house a substantial building, made of stone and brick,
- which the local people had built under Alan's directions. (They had
- changed their whole technology in the process of learning from him, and
- thanks to the efficiency and power of the telepathic priestly caste
- things learned at any one spot on the planet were swiftly disseminated
- to the whole group of races on the planet.) The proof of happiness
- consisted of the thirty-five human children playing in the yard. Ellen
- had had nine, four sets of twins
- and a single. Alma had had twelve, two sets of quintuplets and a pair
- of twins. The other fourteen had been bottle-grown from ova and sperm
- which they found in the ship, the frozen donations of complete
- strangers who had done their bit for the off world settling of the
- human race. Thanks to the careful genetic coding of both the
- womb-children and the bottle-children, there was a variety of types,
- suitable for natural breeding over many generations to come.
- Alan came to the door. He measured the time by the place where the
- great shadow fell. It was hard to realize that the gigantic,
- indestructible statue which loomed above them all had once been his own
- self. A small glacier was beginning to form around the feet of Samm
- and the night was getting cold.
- "I'm bringing the children in already," said Ch-tikkik, one of the
- local nurses they had hired to help with the huge brood of human
- babies. She, in return, got the privilege of hatching her eggs on the
- warm shelf behind the electric stove; she turned them every hour,
- eagerly awaiting the time that sharp little mouths would break the
- shell and human like little hands would tear an opening from which a
- human like baby would emerge, oddly pretty-ugly like a gnome, and
- unusual only in that it could stand upright from the moment of birth.
- One little boy was arguing with Ch-tikkik. He wore a warm robe of
- vegetable-fiber veins knitted to serve as a base for a feather cloak.
- He was pointing out that with such a robe he could survive a blizzard
- and claiming, quite justly, that he did not have to be in the house in
- order to stay warm. Was that Rupert?
- thought Alan.
- He was about to call the child when his two wives came to the door, arm
- in arm, flushed with the heat of the kitchen where they had been
- cooking the two dinners together one dinner for the humans, now
- numbering thirty-eight, and the other for the bird people who were
- tremendously appreciative of getting cooked food, but who had odd
- requirements in the recipes, such as "one quart of finely ground
- granite gravel to each gallon of oatmeal, sugared to taste and served
- with soybean milk."
- Alan stood behind his wives and put a hand on the shoulder of each.
- "It's hard to think," he said, "that a little over ten years ago, we
- didn't even know that we were still people. Now look at us, a family,
- and a good one.
- Alma turned her face up to be kissed, and Ellen, who was less
- sentimental, lifted her face to be kissed, too, so that her co-wife
- would not be embarrassed at being babied separately. The two liked
- each other very much. Alma came out of the cube Finsternis as a for
- getty conditioned to remember nothing of her long sad psychotic life
- before the Instrumentality had sent her on a wild mission among the
- stars. When she had joined Alan
- of Man and Ellen, she knew the words of the Old Common Tongue, but
- very little else.
- Ellen had had some time to teach her, to love her, and to mother her
- before any of the babies were born, and the relationship between the
- two of them was warm and good.
- The three parents stood aside as the bird-women, wearing their
- comfortable and pretty feather cloaks, herded the children into the
- house. The smallest children had already been brought in from their
- sunning and were being given their bottles by bird-girls who never got
- tired of watching the cuteness and helplessness of the human infant.
- "It'shard to think of that time at all, "said Ellen, who had been
- "Folly." "I wanted beauty and fame and a perfect marriage and nobody
- even told me that they didn't go together. I have had to come to the
- end of the stars to get what I wanted, to be what I might become."
- "And me," said Alma, who had been
- "Finsternis," "I had a worse problem. I was crazy. I was afraid of
- life. I didn't even know how to be a woman, a sweetheart, a female, a
- mother. How could I ever guess that I needed a sister and wife, like
- the one you have been, to make my life whole? Without you to show me,
- Ellen, I could never have married our husband. I thought I was
- carrying murder among the stars, but I was carrying my own solution as
- well. Where else could I turn out to be me?"
- "And I," said Alan, who had been
- "Samm," "became a metal giant between the stars because my first wife
- was dead and my own children forgot me and neglected me. Nobody can
- say I'm not a father now. Thirty-five, and more than half of them
- mine. I'll be more of a father than any other man of the human race
- has ever been."
- There was a change in the shadow as the enormous right arm swung
- heavily toward the sky as a prelude to the sharp robotic call that
- nightfall, calculated with astronomical precision, had indeed come to
- the place where he stood.
- The arm reached its height, pointing straight up.
- "I used to do that," said Alan.
- The cry came, something like a silent pistol-shot which all of them
- heard, but a shot without echoes, without reverberations.
- Alan looked around.
- "All the children are in. Even Rupert.
- Come in, my darlings, and let us have dinner together." Alma and Ellen
- went ahead of him and he barred the heavy doors behind them.
- This was peace and happiness; that at last was goodness. They had no
- obligation but to live and to be happy. The threat and the promise of
- victory were far, far behind.
- Down to a Sunless Sea High, oh, high, oh, they jingle in the sky oh!
- Bright how bright the light of those twin moons of Xanadu, Xanadu the
- lost, Xanadu the lovely, Xanadu the seat of pleasure. Pleasure of the
- senses, body, mind, soul. Soul? Who said anything about soul?
- Where they were standing the wind whispered softly. From time to time
- Madu in an ageless feminine gesture tugged at her tiny silver skirt or
- adjusted her equally nominal open sleeveless jacket. Not that she was
- cold. Her abbreviated costume was appropriate to Xanadu's equable
- climate.
- She thought: "I wonder what he will be like, this Lord of the
- Instrumentality? Will he be old or young, fair or dark, wise or
- foolish?" She did not think "handsome or ugly." Xanadu was noted for
- the physical perfection of its inhabitants, and Madu was too young to
- expect anything less.
- Lari, waiting beside her, was not thinking of the Space Lord.
- His mind was seeing again the video tapes of the dancing, the intricate
- steps and beautiful frenzy of movement of the group from ancient days
- of Manhome, the group labeled
- "Bawl-shoy."
- "Someday," he thought, "oh, perhaps someday I too can dance like that.
- .."
- Kuat thought: "Who do they think they're fooling? In all the years
- I've been governor of Xanadu this is the first time a Lord has been
- here. War hero of the battle of Styron IV indeed! Why, that's been
- over substantive months ago. . . . He's had plenty of time to recover
- if it's really true he was wounded. No, there's something more . . .
- they know or suspect something . . . Well, we'll keep him busy.
- Shouldn't be hard to do here with all the pleasures Xanadu has to offer
- . . . and there's Madu. No, he can't complain or he'll blow his cover.
- . . ."
- And all the while, as the ornithopter
- neared, their destiny was approaching. He did not know that he was to
- be their destiny; he did not intend to be their destiny, and their
- destiny had not been predetermined.
- The passenger in the descending ornithopter reached out with his mind
- to try to perceive the place, to sense it. It was hard, terribly hard
- . . . there seemed to be a thick cloud-like cover a mist between his
- mind and the minds he tried to feel. Was it himself, his mind damage
- from the war? Or was it something more, the atmosphere of the planet
- something to deter or prevent telepathy?
- Lord bin Permaiswari shook his head. He was so full of self-doubt, so
- confused. Ever since the battle . . . the mind scarring probes of the
- fear machines... how much permanent damage had they done? Perhaps here
- on Xanadu he could rest and forget.
- As he stepped from the ornithopter Lord bin Permaiswari felt an even
- greater sense of bewilderment. He had known that Xanadu had no sun,
- but he was unprepared for the soft shadowless light which greeted him.
- The twin moons hung, seemingly, side by side, while their light was
- reflected by millions of mirrors. In the near distance li after li of
- white sand beaches stretched, while farther on stood chalk cliffs with
- the jet-black sea foaming on their bases. Black, white, silver, the
- colors of Xanadu.
- Kuat approached him without delay. Kuat's sense of apprehension had
- diminished appreciably at the first glimpse of the Space Lord. The
- visitor did indeed look ill and confused; correspondingly, Kuat's
- amiability increased without conscious effort on his part.
- "Xanadu extends you welcome, oh Lord bin Permaiswari.
- Xanadu and all that Xanadu contains is yours." The traditional
- greeting sounded strange in his rough tones. The Space Lord saw before
- him a huge man, tall and correspondingly heavy, muscles gleaming, his
- longish reddish hair and beard showing magenta in the light of the
- moons and mirrors.
- "It gives me pleasure. Governor Kuat, merely to be in Xanadu, and I
- return the planet and its contents to you," replied Lord Kemal bin
- Permaiswari.
- Kuat turned and gestured toward his two companions.
- "This is Madu, a distant relative, and so my ward. And this is Lari,
- my brother, son of my father's fourth wife she who drowned herself in
- the Sunless Sea." The Space Lord winced at Kuat's laugh, but the young
- people appeared not to notice it.
- Gentle Madu hid her disappointment and greeted the Lord with becoming
- modesty. She had expected (hoped for?) a shining figure, a blazing
- armor, or perhaps simply an aura which proclaimed
- "I am a hero." Instead she saw an intellectual-looking man, tired,
- looking somehow older than his substantive thirty years. She wondered
- what he had done, how this
- man could be the talk of the Instrumentality as the savior of human
- culture in the battle of Styron IV.
- Lari, because he was a male, knew more of the facts of the battle than
- Madu, and he greeted Lord bin Permaiswari with grave respect. In his
- dream world, second only to dancers and runners of easy grace, Lari
- looked up to intelligence. This was the man who had dared to pit
- himself, his living mind, his intellect against the dread fear machines
- ... and won! The price was evident in his face, but he had WON. Lari
- placed his hands together and held them to his forehead in a gesture of
- homage.
- The Lord reached out in a gesture which won Lari's heart forever. He
- touched Lari's hand and said,
- "My friends call me Kemal." Then he turned to include Madu and, almost
- as an afterthought, Kuat.
- Kuat did not notice the near omission. He had turned and was walking
- toward what appeared to be a huge lump of yellow and black striped fur.
- He made a peculiar hissing sound, and at once the lump separated into
- four enormous cats.
- Each cat was saddled, and each saddle was equipped with a holding ring,
- but there was no apparent means of guiding the cats.
- Kuat answered Kemal's question.
- "No, of course there's no way to guide them. They're pure cat, you
- know, unmodified except for size. No under people here! I think we're
- the only planet in the Instrumentality that doesn't have under people
- except for Norstrilia, of course. But the reasons for Norstrilia and
- Xanadu are at the opposite ends of the spectrum. We enjoy our senses .
- . . none of that nonsense about hard work building character like the
- Norstrilians believe. We don't believe in austerity and all that
- malarkey. We just get more sensual pleasure out of our unmodified
- animals. We have robots to do the dirty work."
- Kemal nodded. After all, wasn't that what he was here for?
- To allow his senses to repair his damaged mind?
- Nonetheless, the man who had faced the fear machines with scarcely a
- tremble did not know how to approach the cat which was designated as
- his.
- Madu saw his hesitation.
- "Griselda is perfectly friendly,"
- she said.
- "Just wait a minute till I scratch her ears; she'll lie down and you
- can mount."
- Kemal glanced up and caught an expression of disgust in Kuat's eyes. It
- did not help in his search for self-mending.
- Madu, oblivious to Kuat's displeasure, had coaxed the great cat to
- kneeling position and smiled up at Kemal.
- Kemal felt something like pain stab him at her glance. She was so
- beautiful and so innocent; her vulnerability wrenched at his heart. He
- remembered the Lady Ru's quotation of an ancient sage: "Innocence
- within is armor without," but a web of fear settled on his mind. He
- brushed it aside and mounted the cat.
- The As he lay dying nearly three centuries later, he remembered that
- ride. It was as thrilling as his first space jump. The leap into
- nothingness and then the sudden realization that he was traveling,
- traveling, traveling without volition, with no personal control over
- the direction his body might take. Before fear had the opportunity to
- assert itself it was converted into a visceral, almost orgasmic
- excitement, a gush of pleasure almost too strong to bear.
- Lank dark hair flying in his face, the Lord bin Permaiswari would have
- been unrecognizable to the Lords and Ladies who gathered at the Bell on
- Old Earth in time of crisis. They would not have recognized the boyish
- glee in a face which they were accustomed to seeing as grave and
- preoccupied. He laughed in the wind and tightened his knees against
- Griselda's flanks, holding the saddle ring with one hand as he turned
- back to wave at the others who were somewhat behind.
- Griselda seemed to sense his pleasure at her long effortless bounds.
- Suddenly the ride took on a new proportion. Overhead the ornithopter
- which had brought the Space Lord to Xanadu passed by on its way back to
- the spaceport. At once Griselda left the pride and leapt futilely
- after the ascending ornithopter.
- As she attempted to bat at it, Kemal was forced to use both hands on
- the holding ring in order not to fall off ignominiously.
- She continued to leap and bat hopelessly in its direction until it
- disappeared from sight. Then she sat down to lick herself and,
- inadvertently, her passenger.
- Lord Kemal found her sandpaper tongue not unpleasant, but he winced as
- her fang brushed his leg. At some distance Kuat sat laughing. Madu's
- face, even in the distance, showed concern, however, which cleared as
- the Lord waved to her.
- Lari, confident in the powers of the hero of Styron IV, was gazing
- dreamily at the distant city.
- Slowly now, Griselda joined the rest of the pride, her attitude
- apparently one of some embarrassment at having performed such a
- kittenish prank when she had been entrusted with the welfare of the
- distinguished visitor.
- In the distance the domes and towers of the city gleamed nacreous in
- the soft shadowless light of the moons and mirrors.
- Lord Kemal had his sense of unreality reinforced. The city looked so
- beautiful and so unreal that he had the feeling it might vanish as they
- approached. He was to learn that the city and all it stood for were
- all too real.
- As they neared the city walls, Kemal could see that the stark whiteness
- of the city from afar was an illusion. The shimmering white walls of
- the buildings were set with gemstones in intricate patterns, flowers,
- leaves, and geometric designs all heightening the beauty of the
- incredible architecture. In all the worlds he had visited Lord Kemal
- had seen nothing to equal this city; Philip's palace on the Gem Planet
- was a hovel compared to these buildings.
- Formal gardens with fountains and artificial pools separated the
- buildings. Shrubbery in an artful plan which gave the appearance of
- being natural was planted here and there.
- Suddenly the Space Lord realized another strange aspect of the planet:
- he had seen no trees.
- Dogs yipped at them from safe distances as they entered the city, but
- this time Griselda refused to be tempted. Now that she was in the city
- she had assumed a certain dignity; it was if she wanted to forget her
- previous dereliction. She headed straight for the palace steps.
- Lord Kemal could feel the muscles of Griselda's haunches tighten as she
- prepared to hurdle up the steps and through the open door. It would be
- a tight squeeze for the two of them.
- Fortunately Kuat reached the steps first and hissed his command to her.
- Kemal could feel her reluctance. She would much have preferred
- bounding up the steps, but she obeyed.
- She lay belly down, back feet crouched, front feet stretched forward;
- the Lord Kemal dismounted easily but with reluctance, a regret almost
- as great as Griselda's that the ride was over. He reached over to
- scratch the cat's ears.
- Madu smiled approvingly.
- "That's right. When you make friends with your cat, she'll obey you
- much more readily."
- Kuat grunted.
- "I have my own way for making them obey if they get too many ideas of
- their own." For the first time the Space Lord noticed a small barbed
- whip tucked into Kuat's belt, to which Kuat pointed now.
- "Kuat, you wouldn't," Madu protested.
- "You never have . .
- ."
- "You haven't seen me," he said. Then as her face clouded he added as
- if reassuringly "Up to now I haven't needed to. But don't think I
- wouldn't."
- Kemal noticed that Kuat's reassurance was not quite adequate. A gauze
- of doubt or wonder seemed to obscure the open brightness of Madu's
- face. Once more the Lord Kemal felt a stab of fear for her and once
- more dismissed it.
- It was her innocence he feared for. He found that her eyes reminded
- him of D'irena from the ancient days of his true youth before he had
- been made wise in the ways of mankind, before he had been made to know
- that under persons and true men could not mix as equals. D'irena with
- the fawn like grace, the soft gentle mouth, the innocent eyes of the
- doe she was derived from. What had happened to her after he left? Did
- her eyes still hold that candid ingenuousness which he saw mirrored in
- Madu's eyes? Or had she mated with some gross stag and had some of his
- grossness transferred itself to her?
- He hoped, remembering her fondly, that she had mated with a fine
- 592 The buck who had given her does as gentle and as graceful as she
- was in his memory. He shook his head. The fear machines had stirred
- up all kinds of strange memories and feelings. Absently, he petted the
- cat.
- Servants came forward to unsaddle the cats. With a renewed start the
- Space Lord realized that these were true men, not under persons doing
- work, and he remembered Kuat's statement about enjoying the sensuality
- of animals. There was something else, something he had almost thought
- of, but he could not quite think... it was as if he tried to catch the
- tail of an elusive animal as it disappeared around the corner.
- Led by Kuat and trailed by Madu and Lari, the Lord Kemal threaded his
- way through a maze of rooms and corridors. Each seemed more amazing
- than the last. The only time the Space Lord had seen anything similar
- had been on videotapes a reconstruction of old Manhome as it had been
- before Radiation III. The walls were hung with tapestries and
- paintings based on reproductions of those from Earth; couches, statues,
- rugs of color and warmth brought here by Xanadu's founder, the original
- Kahn. Yes, Xanadu was a return to pleasure of the senses, to luxury
- and beauty, to the unnecessary.
- Kemal felt himself beginning to relax in this atmosphere of
- enchantment, but the spell was broken when, upon reaching the main
- salon, Kuat unceremoniously flung himself into the nearest couch. As
- he stretched full length, he vaguely waved a hand to the rest of the
- party.
- "Sit down, sit down," he said. Candles flickered and glowed; low
- tables and couches stood about invitingly.
- For the first time since the introduction on the Space Lord's arrival
- Lari spoke spontaneously.
- "We welcome you to our home," he said, "and hope that we can do all
- possible to make your visit enjoyable."
- Kemal realized that he had paid little attention to the youth because
- he had been so absorbed in new impressions, and (he had to admit it to
- himself) the girl Madu had fascinated him.
- Lari, in his own way, was as physically perfect as Madu. Tall,
- slender, lightly muscled, a golden boy. And, like Madu, he had a
- curious air of openness, of vulnerability. It seemed strange to the
- Lord Kemal that these two should grow up so innocent under the
- guardianship of a man as coarse and boorish as Kuat seemed.
- Kuat interrupted his reverie.
- "Come! The djudi!"
- Madu immediately moved toward a table on which rested a copper-colored
- tray with silvery highlights. On the tray sat a dual-spouted pitcher
- of the same material and eight small matching goblets. A lid covered
- the top of the pitcher. As Madu picked up the pitcher, Kuat gave one
- of the grunts which the Space Lord was finding increasingly
- distasteful.
- "Just be sure you put your thumb over the right hole."
- Her answering tone was indulgent but as nearly scornful as Kemal could
- imagine her being.
- "I've been doing this since childhood. Is it likely I'd forget now?"
- In after years it seemed to Kemal bin Permaiswari that this night was
- one of the important turns that his life took in its convoluted passage
- through time. He seemed removed from events as they occurred; he
- seemed a spectator, watching the actions, not only of the others but of
- himself, as if he had no control over them, as if in a dream .. .
- Madu knelt gracefully and placed a thumb over one of the two holes at
- the top of the pitcher. Candlelight played over the light silvery
- dusting of powder which covered the entire area of her bare skin. As
- she poured the reddish liquid into four of the little goblets, Kemal
- noticed that even the nails of her small hands were painted silver.
- Kuat raised his goblet. The first toast by the rules of politeness
- should have been to the guest of honor, or at the very least to the
- Instrumentality, but Kuat went by his own rules.
- "To pleasure," he said, and drank the contents with one gulp.
- While the rest of the party slowly sipped their drinks, Kuat roused
- himself to pour another cupful. He had swallowed the second cupful
- before the others had finished their first.
- The Lord Kemal savored the taste of the djudi. Unlike anything he had
- ever tasted before, neither sweet nor sour, it was more like the juice
- of pomegranate than any other flavor he had tasted, and yet it was
- unique.
- As he sipped he felt a pleasant tingling sensation pervade his body. By
- the time he had finished the cup he had decided that djudi was the most
- delicious thing he had ever tasted.
- Instead of muddling his wits like alcohol or conferring nothing but
- sensual pleasure like the electrode, djudi seemed to heighten all his
- senses, his awareness. All colors were brighter, background music of
- which he had been only dimly aware was suddenly piercingly lovely, the
- texture of the brocaded couch was a thing of joy, perfumes of flowers
- he had never known overwhelmed him. His scarred mind rejected Styron
- IV and all its implications. He felt a glow of comradeship,
- momentarily even toward Kuat, and suddenly felt he had come against a
- Daimoni wall.
- Then he knew. His inability to sense or to read the other minds on
- this planet did not lie within himself or any defect incurred through
- the fear machines but was directly connected to Kuat, to some non
- authorized barrier which Kuat had erected.
- The barrier was imperfect, however. Kuat had not been able merely to
- keep his own thoughts from being read; he had had to set up a universal
- barrier. This was obvious from the fact that Kuat showed no indication
- that he could sense the Space Lord.
- "And what," thought Kemal, "do you have to hide? What is so much
- 594 The against the laws of the Instrumentality that you have had to
- set up a universal mind barrier?"
- Kuat, relaxed, smiled pleasantly.
- For the first time since Styron IV the Lord Kemal bin Permaiswari felt
- that he might in truth recover completely. It was the first time he
- had felt really interested in anything.
- Madu brought him back to his present situation.
- "You like our djudi?" It was hardly a question.
- Kemal nodded, blissful and still absorbed in the puzzle he had
- encountered.
- "You may have one more," she said, "but that is all that is good for
- you. After that, one begins to lose one's senses, and that, after all,
- is not pleasurable, is it?"
- She poured the second cup for Kemal, for Lari and herself.
- Kuat reached for the pitcher, and she slapped playfully at his hand.
- "One more and you might pour yourself pi sang by accident."
- He laughed.
- "I am bigger than most men and can drink more than they."
- "At least let me pour it then," she said, and proceeded to do so.
- She turned again to the Space Lord with a playful gaiety which did not
- ring quite true.
- "He is one whom we must all indulge; but, really, it is dangerous to
- have too much. You see how this pitcher is made?"
- She took off the lid to demonstrate the division of the pitcher.
- "In one half is djudi; in the other there is pi sang which is identical
- in taste to djudi, but it is deadly. One cup kills anyone drinking it
- within eefunjung." Involuntarily Kemal shuddered. The unit of time
- she mentioned was so small as to be almost instantaneous.
- "No antidote?"
- "None."
- Lari, who had been sitting quietly, now spoke.
- "It is the same thing, really. Djudi is the distilled pi sang They
- come from a fruit which grows here, only on Xanadu. Galaxy knows how
- many people must have died eating the fruit or drinking the fermented
- but undistilled pi sang before the secret of djudi was discovered."
- "Worth every one of them," Kuat laughed. Any remaining warmth
- engendered by the djudi which the Space Lord might have felt toward the
- Governor of Xanadu was dissipated. His curiosity regarding the duality
- of the pitcher, however, was aroused.
- "But if you know that pi sang is poison, why do you keep it in the same
- container with djudi? For that matter, why do you keep it in its
- undistilled state at all?"
- Madu nodded agreement.
- "I have often asked the same question, and the answers I get make no
- sense."
- "It's the excitement of danger," Lari said.
- "Don't you enjoy the djudi more knowing there's the element of chance
- you'll get pi sang
- "That's what I said," Madu repeated.
- "The answers make no sense."
- At this point Kuat broke in. His speech was slightly slurred, but he
- spoke intelligently enough.
- "In the first place, there is tradition. In the old days, under the
- first Kahn and before Xanadu came under the jurisdiction of the Lords
- of the Instrumentality, there was a great deal of lawlessness on
- Xanadu. There were power struggles for leadership. People came here
- from other planets to plunder our richness. There had to be some
- simple way of eliminating them before they knew they were being
- eliminated. The double pitcher is copied, so they say, from a
- Chinesian one brought by the first Kahn. I don't know about that, but
- it has become traditional here. You won't find a djudi holder on
- Xanadu without its corresponding pi sang holder." He nodded wisely, as
- if he had explained everything, but the Space Lord was not satisfied.
- "All right," he said, "you make the pitchers in the traditional way,
- but why, by Venus's clouds, must you continue to put pi sang in
- them?"
- Kuat's answer, when it came, was in even more slurred tones than his
- previous speech; the effects of too much djudi began to make him sound
- intoxicated, and the Space Lord made mental note to heed Madu's
- injunctions not to exceed two cupfuls of the drink. Kuat gave a rather
- leering smile and wagged a finger admonishingly at Lord Kemal.
- "Strangers mustn't ask too many questions. Might still be enemies
- around and we're all prepared. Anyway, that's the way we execute
- criminals on Xanadu." His laugh was uninhibited.
- "They don't know what they're getting. It's like a lottery.
- Sometimes I tease them a little. Give them djudi first, and they start
- to think they're going to be freed. Then I give them another cup, and
- they don't suspect a thing. Drink it happily because nothing happened
- with the first cup. Then when the paralysis hits them ha! you should
- see their faces!"
- For an instant the latent dislike which the Space Lord had conceived
- for Kuat sprang full grown. But the man's intoxicated, in effect, he
- thought. And then: But is this the real man speaking?
- "No, no, Kuat, you don't mean that!"
- Realization seemed to return to Kuat. He gave his brother's knee a
- reassuring pat.
- "No, no, course don't. Think I'll go to bed. You'll take care of
- guest, won't you?"
- He staggered slightly as he stood up but managed to walk fairly
- steadily from the room.
- Suddenly the barrier was down slightly. He could not read Kuat's mind,
- but the Space Lord could sense, somewhere on the planet, something
- evil, strange, unlawful. A coldness seemed to replace the warmth of
- the djudi in his veins.
- 596 The Across the white dunes the wind was beginning to rise. Far
- from the city, protected by the ancient crater lake of the sunless sea,
- the laboratory had a deceptive exterior placidity. Within, the illegal
- die hr-dead, not yet quite sentient, stirred in their am biotic fluid;
- outside, trees bearing their deadly fruit seemed to quiver as if in
- dread anticipation.
- Madu sighed.
- "I knew he shouldn't have had that last one, but he would do it." She
- turned toward Lari, oblivious of the Space Lord, and said reassuringly:
- "Of course he didn't mean what he said about teasing the prisoners.
- He's been so good to us all these years ... nobody could be so kind to
- us and cruel in other ways, could he?"
- Once more the Space Lord glanced in Lari's direction. The handsome
- young face, vital but young, so young, held a look of uneasiness.
- "No, I suppose not, and still I've heard tales...." He broke off,
- remembering the presence of the Space Lord.
- "Of course it's all nonsense," he concluded, but Lord Kemal had the
- feeling that he was trying as much to reassure himself as to erase the
- bad impression his brother had made.
- "We will eat now," Madu said brightly, and stood up to go into the
- dining salon. Again the Space Lord felt as if the subject were being
- changed.
- II
- In after years the Space Lord remembered. Thoughts raced through his
- mind. Oh, Xanadu, there is nothing with which to liken you in all the
- galaxies. The shadowless days and nights, the treeless plains, the
- sudden rainless blasts of thunder and lightning which somehow add to
- your charm. Griselda. The only pure animal I ever knew. The great
- rumbling purr, the soft pink nose with the black spot on one side, the
- eyes which seemed to look beyond the features of my face into my very
- being. Oh, Griselda, I hope that somewhere you still bound and leap .
- . .
- But now: the first few days of the Lord Kemal bin Permaiswari on Xanadu
- passed quickly as he was introduced to the infinite pleasures of
- Xanadu.
- On the day following Kemal's arrival a footrace had been scheduled in
- which Lari was to run. The element of competition which had been
- brought back to Xanadu was part of a deliberate return to the simpler
- joys which mankind in its mechanization had forgotten.
- Crowds at the stadium were gay and bright. Most of the young girls
- wore their hair loose and flowing; the women, old and young alike, wore
- the typical costume of Xanadu: tiny short skirt and open sleeveless
- jacket. On most worlds the older women would have looked grotesque or
- at least
- ludicrous in this costume, and the younger women would have seemed
- lewd. But on Xanadu there was a basic innocence and acceptance of the
- body, and almost without exception the women of Xanadu, irrespective of
- age, seemed to have retained their lovely lithe figures, and there was
- no false modesty to call attention to their seminudity.
- Most of the young people, male and female alike, wore the shimmering
- body powder which the Space Lord had first noted on Madu; some matched
- the powder to their clothes, others to their hair or eyes. A few wore
- a colorless luminescent dusting. Of them all, the Space Lord thought
- Madu the loveliest.
- She radiated excitement, a portion of which communicated itself to Lord
- Kemal. Kuat seemed unemotional.
- "How can you sit there so calmly?" she asked.
- "The boy'll win, you know. Anyway horse racing is more exciting."
- "For you, maybe. Not for me."
- Lord Kemal was interested.
- "I have never seen this racing," he said.
- "What is it? The horses all run together to see which is the
- fastest?"
- Madu nodded agreement.
- "They all start at a given signal and run a predetermined path. The
- one who reaches the goal first is the winner. He," she nodded her head
- playfully in Kuat's direction, "likes to bet, that is to wager, that
- his horse will win.
- That is why he likes horse races better than human races."
- "And you have no wager on the human races?"
- "Oh, no. It would be degrading to human beings to wager on their
- abilities or accomplishments!"
- There were three races that day, each one narrowing the field of
- contestants. It became evident that there was no real competition;
- Lari so far outdistanced the others that it was almost embarrassing. If
- he had not been so obviously a superb runner, it would have been easy
- to assume that the others had held back in order to allow the brother
- of the governor of Xanadu to win.
- Kuat went off to the center of the stadium to participate in a copy of
- an ancient ritual from old Manhome in which a crown of golden leaves
- was set on Lari's hair.
- In his absence, Lord Kemal heard various whisperings behind him in
- which he caught the words "dance with the aroi," "old governor will not
- be pleased," "too bad his mother. .." Madu seemed not to be
- listening.
- After the celebrations, when the Governor and his party had returned to
- the palace, Lord Kemal remembered the curious phrases; in particular he
- was puzzled by the present or future tense of "old governor will be
- (not would have been) pleased." It stuck in his mind and fretted
- there, like a splinter in a sore finger.
- His mind was only just recovering from the
- wounds of the fear machines, and he decided he could not risk a
- further infection.
- While Kuat was having his second goblet of djudi. Lord Kemal said,
- most casually,
- "How long have you been governor of Xanadu, Kuat?"
- The latter glanced up, sensing something beneath the casualness of the
- immediate question.
- Lari interrupted.
- "I was a small baby " Kuat's gesture silenced him.
- "For many years," he said.
- "Does it matter how many?"
- "No, I was curious," said the Space Lord, deciding on modified
- candor.
- "I thought that the governorship of Xanadu was hereditary, but I heard
- something today which made me believe that the governor your father was
- still alive."
- Again Lari, before Kuat could silence him, rushed to answer.
- "But he is. He's with the aroi... that's why my mother " Kuat's frown
- silenced him.
- "These are not matters for the Instrumentality. These are matters of
- Xanadu's local customs, protected by Article #376984, sub-article a,
- paragraph 34c of the instrument under which Xanadu agreed to come under
- the protection of the Instrumentality. I can assure the Lord that only
- domestic matters of purely autochthonous origin are concerned."
- Lord Kemal nodded in ostensible agreement. He felt that he had somehow
- uncovered another small portion of the mystery which intrigued him,
- interested him as nothing else had done since Styron IV.
- III
- On the fourth "day" of his stay on Xanadu, Lord Kemal went out with
- Madu and Lari for his first experience beyond the walls of the city
- since his arrival. By this time, the Space Lord had become quite fond
- of the cat Griselda. It pleased him inordinately when she gave a great
- purr of pleasure and lay down for him to mount without awaiting a
- command.
- He saw animals in a new light. With poignancy he knew that under
- persons modified animals in the shape of human beings, were truly
- neither one thing nor the other. Oh, there were under persons of great
- intelligence and power but... he let the thought trail off.
- They raced across the plains with a singular joy. Windswept, treeless,
- the small planet had a wild beauty of its own. The black sea lashed at
- the foot of the chalk cliffs. Kemal, watching the li of sand, felt the
- strangeness of the place once more. In the distance he saw a great
- bird rise, falter, then fall.
- Later, much later, the song the computer wrote when he fed it the
- facts of time and place became known throughout the galaxies: On a dark
- mountain Alone in the cloud The eagle paused And the wind shrieked
- aloud The thunder rolled And the mist of the cloud Formed the eagle's
- shroud As it fell to the ground Wings battered and torn.
- And the surf At the foot Of the cliff Was white That night , And bright
- The wing s Of the fallin g Bird.
- I heard The cry.
- Perhaps it was testimony to the depth of his feeling that the Lord
- Kemal fed these facts to the computer in such a way that some of his
- agony was expressed.
- Madu and Lari watched also as the bird fell, their bright joy overcast
- by something they could not quite comprehend.
- "But why?" Madu whispered.
- "It flew along as freely as we were riding, we bounded as it soared,
- all free and happy. And now . .."
- "And now we must forget it," said the Space Lord, of a wisdom born of
- endless endurance and a wariness he wished he did not feel. But he
- himself could not forget it. Hence the computer.
- "On a dark mountain . . ."
- More slowly now, chilled by the death of beauty, of life, they
- proceeded, each involved in thought.
- "What waste!" the Space Lord thought. What waste of beauty.
- The bird had soared free as a dream. Why? A strange current of air?
- Or something more deadly?
- "What did my mother feel?" thought Lari.
- "What were her feelings and thoughts when she walked into the warm deep
- dark sea and knew she would never return?"
- Madu felt confused and lonely. It was the first time that she
- personally had ever confronted death in any form. Her parents were
- unreal to her; she had never known them. But this bird she had seen it
- alive and free, flying, concerned with nothing more important than its
- graceful glides and soaring; and now, suddenly, it was dead. She could
- not reconcile the two thoughts in her mind.
- It was Lord Kemal who, because of his age and experience, recovered
- first.
- "You haven't told me," he said, "where we are going."
- Madu's smile was a feeble echo of her usual glow, but she made the
- effort.
- "We're going to ride around the edge of the crater up there by the
- peak. It's a beautiful view, and when you stand there you can almost
- get the idea that you can see the whole planet."
- Lari nodded, determined to participate in the conversation despite the
- dark thoughts which had clouded his mind.
- "It's true,"
- he said.
- "You can even see the grove of buah trees from there. It's from the
- fruit of the buah trees that we get pi sang and djudi."
- "I was curious about that," the Space Lord said.
- "I haven't seen a tree since I landed on the planet."
- "No," said Madu and Lari simultaneously. It created a small diversion,
- and they both laughed spontaneously, acting more naturally than they
- had since the death of the bird. Unconsciously they communicated their
- more cheerful attitude to the cats, which now began to bound forward
- once more at increased speed.
- The Space Lord's happiness at the upswing in spirits of his young
- companions was tempered with chagrin that the conversation, which had
- started to be interesting, could not continue while their steeds were
- proceeding at this breakneck speed.
- As they continued uphill, however, the cats gradually began to slow.
- The change was imperceptible at first, but as the long climb continued,
- Lord Kemal could feel Griselda's increasing effort. He had begun to
- think that nothing could tire her, but the climb to the edge of the
- crater was considerably longer than it looked from below.
- That the other cats were also feeling the strain was evident from their
- decreased pace.
- The Space Lord reopened the conversation.
- "You were going to tell me about the trees," he said.
- It was Lari who answered first.
- "You are quite right about not having seen any trees," he said.
- "The only trees which grow on Xanadu except the buah trees are the
- Kelapa trees, and they grow down in the craters of the
- smaller volcanoes. You can see some of them too when we get to the
- crater rim. But the buah trees always grow in groves there must be
- both male and female to bear fruit, and the fruit can only be
- approached at certain times. Otherwise, even to inhale the scent is
- deadly."
- Madu gravely concurred.
- "We must always keep at a distance from the buah grove until Kuat has
- consulted with the aroi, and when he tells us the time is right, then
- everyone on Xanadu participates in the harvest. The aroi dance, and it
- is the best time of all... ."
- Lari shook his head, disapprovingly.
- "Madu, there are things we don't talk about to outsiders."
- Her face suffused, eyes suddenly welling, she stammered, "But a Lord of
- the Instrumentality ..."
- Both men realized her unhappiness, and each in his own way hastened to
- remedy it. The Space Lord said,
- "I'm good at not remembering things I shouldn't."
- Lari smiled at her and put his right hand hard on her shoulder.
- "It's all right. He understands, and you didn't mean any harm. We
- won't either of us say anything to Kuat."
- As he lay in his room after dinner, the Space Lord tried to reconstruct
- the afternoon. They had reached the rim of the crater and it had been
- as Madu said: one could feel as if the horizon were infinite. The
- Space Lord had felt an overwhelming sense of the magnitude of infinity,
- something he had never quite experienced to this degree before in all
- of his trips through space or time. And yet there had been a small
- nagging feeling that something was not quite right.
- Pan of the feeling was associated with the grove of buah trees. He was
- sure that he had glimpsed a building as the uncertain, sometimes
- gusting, sometimes gentle wind blew the buah branches. He had not
- mentioned this observation to the young people. It was probably
- something else autochthonous and therefore forbidden to discussion, or
- surely one of them would have mentioned it.
- He searched his memory (yes, he felt, his mind was definitely
- recovering) for a person among the servants at the palace who might be
- willing to talk to a Lord of the Instrumentality.
- Suddenly he remembered something of which he must have made subliminal
- note at the time without being consciously aware. One of the men in
- the cat stable. What was it now? He had drawn a fish in the cat sand
- and then, glancing at the face of the Space Lord, had casually brushed
- it over. Later he had caught the gleam of metal at the man's neck.
- Could it have been a cross of the God Nailed High? Was there a member
- of the Old Strong Religion here on Xanadu? If so, he had a subject for
- blackmail.
- Or did he? The man had been trying to communicate to him.
- Now that
- he thought of it, he was sure. Well, at least he had a possible
- colleague. Now all he had to do was remember the man's name.
- He gave his mind free association; the face came to him; the man's hand
- fumbling at the chain at his neck... yes, certainly the cross, he could
- see it now . . . why hadn't he noticed it before? ... but there it
- was, recorded on his mind . . .
- and, yes, the man's name: Mr.-Stokely-from-Boston. The unlikely
- suspicion that there was, after all, an under person on Xanadu crossed
- his mind, Mr.-Stokely-from-Boston did not look as if he were
- animal-derived, but the name indicated something odd in his
- background.
- Lord Kemal bin Permaiswari felt he could not wait until "morning" to
- try to further his acquaintance with Mr.-Stokelyfrom-Boston. What
- excuse could he have to go down to the cat stables at this hour? The
- gates of Xanadu were closed for the next eight hours. Then he realized
- that he had been thinking as an ordinary human being. He was a Lord of
- the Instrumentality.
- Why should he have to have an excuse for anything he chose to do? Kuat
- might be Governor of Xanadu, but in the schema of the Instrumentality
- he was a very small speck.
- Nevertheless, the Space Lord felt it best to be circumspect in his
- movements. Kuat had demonstrated his ruthlessness, and certain of
- these "autochthonous" practices seemed very peculiar. A Space Lord who
- "accidentally" drank pi sang while of a disordered mind might be
- written off. And there was the well-being of Mr.-Stokely-from-Boston
- to be considered.
- Griselda. That was the answer. He had noticed that she was sneezing
- this afternoon ... he had even mentioned it to Madu and Lari... and
- they had passed it off as dust or pollen. But it would serve as an
- excuse. He had become so obviously fond of Griselda as to be the
- subject of teasing of a mild sort on her behalf. Certainly no one
- would find his concern for her out of the ordinary.
- The corridors seemed strangely deserted as he strode through on his way
- to the cat stable. He realized that he had not ventured from his
- living area after the final meal of the day since his arrival on
- Xanadu. Apparently everyone retired after this meal, servants and
- masters alike. He wondered if the stables would also be deserted.
- It was his incredible good fortune to find Mr.-Stokely-from Boston
- alone. At least, at the time, he assumed that the meeting was
- fortuitous. Later he questioned the bird-man. Mr.-Stokelyfrom-Boston
- had proved to be, as the Space Lord had wildly surmised, an under
- person
- Mr.-Stokely-from-Boston's smile was wise and kindly.
- "You see, Governor Kuat has no suspicion at all that I am an under
- person And, of course, the universal mind barrier has no operative
- effect on me. It was a
- little difficult, but I see I did manage to get through to you. I was
- somewhat worried when my mind probe showed all the leftover scar tissue
- from Styron IV, but I've been using the latest methods to try healing
- your mind, and I'm sure we're succeeding very nicely."
- The Space Lord felt an odd momentary resentment that this
- animal-derived person had such an intimate acquaintance with his mind,
- but the anger was short-lived because he quickly equated the empathy he
- had built up with Griselda to the mental communication he was having
- with the bird-man.
- Mr.-Stokely-from-Boston smiled even more broadly.
- "I was quite right about you, Lord bin Permaiswari. You are the ally
- we have been needing here on Xanadu. You look surprised?"
- Lord bin Permaiswari nodded.
- "The governor was so firm that there were no under persons on Xanadu "
- "Getting through has not been without its difficulties," Mr.-
- Stokely-from-Boston acknowledged, "but I am not alone. And we have
- other human families, of course, but none so powerful as a Space Lord
- up to now.
- Lord Kemal found that he did not resent the assumption that he was an
- ally. Again the bird-man read his thoughts and smiled at him. He had
- a curiously winning smile, assured but kindly. He looked trustworthy,
- and Lord Kemal felt himself ready to accept whatever the bird-man might
- say.
- Their thoughts locked.
- "Let me introduce myself properly,"
- spieked the bird-man.
- "My real name is E'duard, and my progenitor was the great E'telekeli,
- of whom you may have heard."
- Lord Kemal found the false modesty of this statement rather touching.
- He bowed his head momentarily in respect; the legendary bird-man, the
- E'telekeli, was known throughout the Instrumentality as the
- acknowledged leader and spiritual advisor of the under persons This
- egg-derived under person could be a most helpful ally in carrying out
- the work of the Instrumentality or an opposition of fearful
- proportions. The Lords and Ladies who ruled the Instrumentality were
- anxious for his cooperation.
- Many under persons were known to have extraordinary medical and psychic
- powers, and it comforted the Space Lord to know that the animal-derived
- person who had been manipulating his mind was a descendant of the
- E'telekeli. He found that he was spieking his thoughts because E'duard
- could obviously hier them.
- It would certainly make the process of solving Xanadu's mystery simpler
- for the Space Lord if they cooperated, but first he wanted to know if
- their peculiar alliance violated any of the laws of the
- Instrumentality.
- "No." E'duard was emphatic.
- "In fact, it is a correction of matters
- which are in direct conflict with he laws of the Instrumentality, with
- which we have to deal."
- "Something 'autochthonous'?" asked the Space Lord shrewdly.
- "Native culture is involved," E'duard agreed, "but it's really being
- used as a screen for something far more evil and I use the word 'evil'
- not only in this sense" (he held up the cross of the God Nailed High)
- "but in its sense of the basic violation of the rights of the living. I
- mean the right of an entity to exist, to exist on its own terms
- provided they do not violate the rights of others, to come to its own
- terms with life, and to make its own decisions."
- For a second time Lord Kemal bin Permaiswari nodded in respect and
- agreement.
- "These are inalienable rights."
- E'duard shook his head.
- "They should be," he spieked, "but on Xanadu, Kuat has found a way
- around that inalienability. You are, of course, familiar with the die
- hr-dead?"
- "Of course.
- "And the'er a life of their own . . ." " he quoted from an ancient
- song.
- "But what does that have to do with the rights of the living? The die
- hr-dead are grown from the frozen bits of flesh of remarkable achievers
- long dead. It's true that in regenerating the physical person of the
- dead one we have sometimes had extraordinary results with the die
- hr-dead in their second lives; but sometimes not their achievements
- seem to have been a combination of circumstances and genes, not of
- genes alone...."
- Again E'duard shook his head.
- "It's not of the legal, scientifically controlled die hr-dead I speak,
- although I sometimes feel very sorry for them. But what would you
- think of die hr-dead grown from the living?"
- The Space Lord looked his wonder and horror as E'duard continued.
- "Diehr-dead who are controlled like puppets by Kuat, die hr-dead who
- are substituted for the originals, so that in truth neither the die
- hr-dead nor the original has a life of its own. . . ."
- With quick realization the Space Lord knew what was in the building he
- had glimpsed in the grove of buah trees.
- "That's the laboratory, isn't it?"
- E'duard nodded.
- "It's a perfect location. Kuat has spread the rumor that the scent of
- the buah tree is deadly except when, after consultation with the aroi,
- he pronounces it safe to harvest the fruit. So nobody dares approach
- the laboratory. All nonsense.
- There is only a very short period, just before harvest, when the scent
- of the buah fruit is deadly ... in other words, just enough truth to
- the rumor to give it currency. You saw our scout killed this morning "
- Lord Kemal looked uncomprehending.
- "The unmodified eagle you saw fall from the skies this morning on your
- ride. He was scouting the
- laboratory for us. He was shot with a pi sang dart. It's things like
- that which make people believe they must stay away from the grove."
- "You could communicate?"
- For the first time the Space Lord thought that the smile of the
- bird-man was a little smug.
- "Of course." Then his face fell and his eyes became old and sad.
- "He was a brother of mine; we were hatched in the same nest, but I was
- chosen for genetic coding as an under person and he was not. Our
- feelings are somewhat different from those of true persons, but we are
- capable of love and loyalty, and sadness as well...."
- Lord Kemal saw again in memory the handsome soaring bird of his
- morning's ride, and he felt E'duard's sadness. Yes, he could believe
- in the feelings of the under persons E'duard touched his hand with a
- tentative finger.
- "I could tell that you grieved for him without knowing any of the
- circumstances. It is one of the reasons I willed you to come
- tonight.
- "There was a quick change in his mood.
- "We must deal first with the aroi."
- "I have heard the word, but I don't know its meaning," the Space Lord
- acknowledged.
- "I'm not surprised. The aroi lead a life of pleasure: they sing, they
- dance, they entertain, and they serve as a kind of priesthood.
- Both men and women make up the aroi, and they are respected and
- honored. But there's a singularly ghastly requirement for joining the
- aroi."
- The Space Lord looked his question.
- "All living descendants of the current mate of the person joining the
- aroi must be sacrificed. Or the mate must die, and if there is more
- than one offspring of that union, an equivalent number of other
- volunteers must also die."
- Lord Kemal comprehended.
- "So that is the reason that Lari's mother drowned herself in the
- sunless sea to save her infant son. But why did the old Governor join
- the aroi?"
- "Don't you see? With Kuat as governor and the old Governor with the
- aroi, that pair of conspirators wields a power over this planet so
- absolute " "So it was a conspiracy from the beginning."
- "Of course. Kuat was the son of the first wife, when the governor was
- in his first youth. In his old age he wanted to continue the power but
- with the help of a viceroy, as it were."
- "And the die hr-dead in the laboratory?"
- "That is the reason that the matter is urgent. They are fullgrown and
- almost sentient. They must be destroyed before they are substituted
- for the originals and the originals killed."
- "I suppose there is no other way, but it seems almost like murder."
- of Man E'duard disagreed.
- "The substitution is both physical and spiritual murder. These die
- hr-dead are like robots without soul " He saw the Space Lord's faint
- smile. " I know you do not believe in the Old Strong Religion, but I
- think you know what I mean."
- "Yes. They are not, in the sense you mean, living beings. They have
- no will of their own."
- "The aroi are two villages away, about one hundred li. After they have
- performed their entertainment in those villages, they will proceed
- here. That will be the signal for the harvest of the buah fruit and
- the substitution of the die hr-dead for their living counterparts.
- Then there will be no opposition to Kuat on the planet, and he can give
- his cruelty full rein . . . and plan for the conquest of other worlds.
- His brother Lari is one of the planned victims because he fears the
- boy's popularity with the crowds."
- The Space Lord was almost incredulous.
- "But the two persons he has seemed to be truly fond of are Lari and the
- girl Madu."
- "Nevertheless one of the die hr-dead in the laboratory is a replica of
- the boy Lari."
- "Won't the old Governor, the father, object?"
- "Possibly, although the mere fact that he joined the aroi when he knew
- what the cost would be in human terms argues against his
- interference."
- "And Madu?"
- "He will keep her as she is, for the time being, and try to mold her to
- his will. He so little respects individuality that if he cannot, he
- will obtain some bit of her flesh and eventually she too will be
- replaced by a die hr-dead. He could be satisfied with a physical
- replica without caring that the person was missing."
- The Space Lord felt his tired mind attempting to ingest more than was
- possible at one time. Immediately E'duard was sympathetic.
- "I have kept you too long. You must rest. We will be in touch.
- And don't worry; Kuat's mind barrier applies to him too; only under
- persons and animals are exempt, and we are all in league."
- As he made his way back to his living quarters. Lord bin Permaiswari
- was again aware of the silence, the absence of any human activity
- anywhere in the palace. He wondered how long it had been since he had
- left his room to seek Mr.-Stokely-from Boston in the cat stables. He
- wished he had remembered to ask E'duard how he had acquired that
- unlikely name. Immediately he was aware of E'duard's voice spieking in
- his mind: "It was bestowed upon me for some small service I rendered
- the Instrumentality on old Manhome." The Space Lord started with
- surprise. He had forgotten that there were no space barriers to
- spieking if he left his mind open. He spieked
- "Thank you," then closed his mind.
- IV
- When he awoke from a dream-tormented sleep, the Space Lord felt a
- weariness which he knew E'duard would have termed a tiredness of the
- soul. There was no way in which he could communicate with the
- Instrumentality. The next scheduled spaceship for the spaceport above
- Xanadu was too far in the future to be of any use in the matter of the
- illegal die hr-dead.
- E'duard was right. The substitution must be stopped before it began.
- But how? He felt it somehow belittling to his position for a Space
- Lord to have to rely on an under person the only consolation was that
- the under person involved was a descendant of the great E'telekeli.
- As they ate their first meal of the day, Madu seemed subdued; Lari was
- not present. Lord Kemal, making his voice as pleasant as he could,
- queried Kuat about the boy.
- "He's gone down to Raraku to dance with the aroi," Kuat said.
- Then, apparently, he realized that the Space Lord would not know the
- word "aroi." "It's a group of dancers and entertainers we have here on
- Xanadu," he explained kindly. Kemal felt a coldness about his heart.
- He could hardly wait to communicate with E'duard.
- "Lari is missing," he spieked, as soon as he was sure that Kuat would
- not notice his expression.
- "All the die hr-dead are still in place, our scouts report,"
- E'duard spieked back.
- "We will try to locate him and communicate with you."
- But time passed; the only things the under persons were able to assure
- Lord Kemal were that Lari was not with the aroi at Raraku and that the
- die hr-dead replica of him was still in place in the laboratory. He
- seemed to have vanished from the planet.
- Madu had taken Kuat's statement at its face value; she was much quieter
- now, but she apparently believed that Lari was dancing with the aroi.
- The Space Lord tried a gentle probing: "I had gathered from what I
- heard that the aroi was a closed group which one had to join in order
- to participate."
- "Oh, yes, to participate fully," Madu said, "but near harvest time the
- best dancers are allowed to dance with the aroi whether they are
- members or not. It will not be so long now. The aroi have moved from
- Raraku to Poike. Then they will come here. I will be so glad to see
- Lari again; I always miss him when he goes off to run or to dance."
- "He has gone away before to dance?" the Space Lord asked.
- "Well, no. Not to dance. To run, but not to dance before. But he is
- very good. He really hasn't been quite old enough before."
- "And do you have other entertainment at the harvest besides the
- dancing?" the Space Lord asked, still seeking a clue as to the
- whereabouts of the vanished Lari.
- Her smile had some of its old radiance.
- "Oh, yes. That is when we have the horse racing I told you about. It
- is Kuat's favorite sport. Only," her face clouded, "this time I'm
- afraid his horse doesn't have much chance of winning. Gogle has really
- been raced too long and too hard; his back legs are wearing out.
- The vet was talking about doing a muscle transplant if they had a
- suitable donor, but I don't think they've found one."
- At the prospect of seeing Lari soon again, however, she seemed happier
- with some of the joy the Space Lord associated with her. They went for
- a cat ride, and Lord Kemal felt again the overwhelming sense of wonder
- and pleasure as he and the cat Griselda became as one being. Their
- feelings were in such close communication that he did not have to
- tighten his knees or hiss at her to obey his slightest wish. For the
- first time in days Lord bin Permaiswari was able to forget about
- E'duard and the die hr-dead, about his concern for Lari and his worry
- as to whether the Instrumentality would approve his cooperation with
- the bird-man.
- For the first time, also, the Space Lord began to wonder to what extent
- Madu and Lari were committed to each other. Now that he had Madu to
- himself, he felt more than ever the strong attraction she held for him.
- He had never, in all the worlds he had known, felt such an attraction
- for a woman before. And, such was his honor, he began to feel it all
- the more imperative to restore Lari safely before he could express his
- feelings to her. He tried spieking to E'duard.
- "Nothing," said the bird-man.
- "We have found no trace of him. The last time he was seen by one of
- our people was on the outskirts of the palace, headed in the direction
- of the stables.
- That is all."
- On the day of the festival before the harvest the Space Lord, using
- Griselda as a pretext, once more went to the cat stables.
- E'duard as Mr.-Stokely-from-Boston was hard at work. He looked gravely
- at the Space Lord, but his mind remained closed. He did not speak.
- Lord bin Permaiswari found himself annoyed. He opened his mind and
- spieked,
- "Animals!"
- E'duard winced slightly but did not speak.
- The Space Lord, apologetic, spieked,
- "I'm sorry. I didn't mean that."
- This time E'duard spieked back.
- "Yes, you did. And we are, but why so much contempt? We are each what
- we are."
- "I was annoyed that your mind was closed to me, a Space Lord. You have
- the right to close your mind to anyone. I apologize."
- E'duard accepted the statement graciously. He said,
- "There was a reason that my mind was closed to you. I was trying to
- decide how to tell
- you something. And I needed to know your full feelings about the girl
- Madu and the boy Lari before I can speak freely."
- Lord bin Permaiswari felt a sense of shame; he had behaved, not as a
- Space Lord, but as a child. He tried to speak with complete
- frankness.
- "I am truly worried about the boy Lari. As to Madu, you must know that
- there is a strong attraction, but I must first find out about the boy
- and see what her feelings are."
- E'duard nodded.
- "You speak as I hoped you would. We have found Lari. He is crippled
- for life."
- Lord Kemal's intake of air hurt his throat.
- "What do you mean?"
- "Kuat had his vet take the boy's calf muscles and transplant them to
- his favorite horse, Gogle. The horse will be able to run one more race
- at top speed, thus fooling all those who bet against Kuat. It's
- improbable that any surgery will enable the boy to walk again, much
- less to run or dance."
- The Space Lord found his mind a blank. He realized that E'duard was
- still spieking.
- "We will have the boy in his wheelchair at the horse race tomorrow. You
- will need Madu's help. Then you can decide what to do."
- Until the time of the race next day Lord Kemal found himself moving as
- if in a dream, dispassionately observing his movements. E'duard
- spieked to him only once.
- "We must kill off the die hr-dead at once," he said.
- "After the race tomorrow, when everybody is celebrating, will be the
- time. Keep Kuat busy and I will take care of the matter."
- Fearful, unhappy, feeling weaker than he had since Styron IV, Lord
- Kemal bin Permaiswari accompanied Madu and Governor Kuat to the horse
- race. At their box sat Lari, white-faced, thin, much older, in a
- wheel-chair.
- "Why?" speak-shrieked the Space Lord.
- E'duard's voice came through much more calmly.
- "Kuat actually thought he was being kind. With the boy crippled, he
- can't be the racer-hero he has been to the people of Xanadu. Kuat
- thought that way he wouldn't need to substitute the die hr-dead. He
- didn't realize he's taken the boy's chief reason for wanting to live;
- he might almost as well have substituted the die hr-dead."
- Madu was sobbing. Kuat, in what he intended as rough kindness, stroked
- her hair.
- "We'll take care of him. And, Venus!
- Will we fool the bettors today! They think Gogle can't run anymore.
- Will they be fooled! Of course, it's only for this one race, but it'll
- be worth it!"
- "Be worth it," the Space Lord thought. Be worth the rest of Lari's
- life, spent crippled, unable to do what he loved most.
- "Be worth it," Madu thought. Never to dance again, never to run, to
- feel the wind in his hair as the crowds cheered.
- "Be worth it," Lari thought. What does anything matter anymore.
- Gogle won by half a track.Kuat, his mood expansive, said to the
- others,
- "See you in the main salon of the palace. Have to collect my wagers.
- "Madu's face was carved of marble as she wheeled Lari toward a special
- two-cat cart brought up beside the stadium. Lord Kemal, without a
- word, mounted Griselda. He felt the need, for a little while, at
- least, for solitude. They loped, in silent communication, away from
- the walls of the city. Lord Kemal heard a cry from the city gate, but
- he paid no attention. His mind was on Lari. Again the cry.
- Another lope. Suddenly Griselda faltered, stumbled, fell. At once the
- Space Lord was down, beside her face. Her eyes were glazing. He saw,
- then, the dart piercing her neck. Pisang. She tried to lick his hand;
- he petted her, his eyes filled with tears. She gave one great
- wrenching sigh, looked into her being, shuddered, and died. Part of
- him died with her. When he reached the gate he queried the guard. No
- one was supposed to leave the city between the end of the races and the
- harvesting of the buah fruit. Griselda was the victim of an error of
- administrative oversight. No one had remembered to tell the Space
- Lord. Silently he walked back through the pathways of the city. How
- beautiful it had seemed to him a short while ago. How empty and how
- sad it seemed now. He reached the main salon shortly after Madu and
- Lari in his wheel-chair arrived. It was strange how all the budding
- desire for Madu had withered like a flower in the frost.Kuat entered,
- laughing. Lord Kemal would be tortured for more than two centuries by
- a question. When did the end justify the means? When was the law
- absolute? He saw in his mind's eye Griselda bounding over dunes and
- plains a Madu innocent as dawn Lari dancing under a sunless moon.
- "Djudi!" demanded Kuat.Madu moved gracefully toward the low table. She
- picked up the two-holed pitcher. Lord Kemal saw, through E'duard's
- spiech, that the pi sang flow was being let into the am biotic fluid of
- the die hr-dead. Soon they would be truly dead.Kuat laughed.
- "I won every bet I made today.
- "He looked away from Madu toward the Lord Kemal.Almost imperceptibly
- Madu's thumb moved from one hole to the other. Lord Kemal did nothing
- in the endless night.
- Other Stories
- War No. 81-Q^ (Original Version) It came to war.
- Tibet and America, each claiming the Radiant Heat Monopoly, applied for
- a War Permit for 2127 ad.
- The Universal War Board granted it, stating, of course, the conditions.
- It was, after a few compromises and amendments had been effected,
- accepted by the belligerent nations.
- The conditions were: a. Five 22,000-ton aero-ships, combinations of
- aero and dirigible, were to be the only combatants.
- b. They were to be armed with machine-guns firing nonexplosive bullets
- only.
- c. The War Territory of Kerguelen was to be rented by the two nations,
- the United American Nations and the Mongolian Alliance, for the two
- hours of the war, which was to begin on January 5, 2127, at noon.
- d. The nation vanquished was to pay all the expenses of the war,
- excepting the War Territory Rent.
- e. No human beings should be on the battlefield. The Mongolian
- controllers must be in Lhasa; the American ones, in the City of
- Franklin.
- The belligerent nations had no difficulty in renting the War Territory
- of Kerguelen. The rent charged by the Austral League was, as usual,
- forty million dollars an hour.
- Spectators from all over the world rushed to the borders of the
- Territory, eager to obtain good places. Q-ray telescopes came into
- tremendous demand.
- Mechanics carefully worked over the giant war-machines.
- The radio-controls, delicate as watches, were brought to perfection,
- both at the control stations in Lhasa and in the City of Franklin, and
- on the war-flyers.
- The planes arrived on the minute decided.
- Controlled by their pilots thousands of miles away, the great planes
- swooped and curved, neither fleet daring to make the first move.
- There were five American ships, the Prospero, Ariel, Oberon, Caliban,
- and Titania. and five Chinese ships, rented by the Mongolians, the
- Han, Yuen, Tsing, Tsin, and Sung.
- The Mongolian fleet incurred the displeasure of the spectators by
- casting a smoke screen, which greatly interfered with the seeing. The
- Prospero, every gun throbbing, hurled itself into the smoke screen and
- came out on the other side, out of control, quivering with in
- coordinating machinery. As it neared the boundary, it was blown up by
- its pilot, safe and sound, thousands of miles away. But the sacrifice
- was not in vain. The Han and Sung, both severely crippled, swung
- slowly out of the mist. The Han, with a list that clearly showed it
- was doomed, was struck by a lucky shot from the Caliban and fell
- several hundred feet, its left wing ablaze. But for a second or two,
- the pilot regained control, and, with a single shot, disabled the
- Caliban, and then the Han fell to its doom on the rocky islands
- below.
- The Caliban and Sung continued to drift, firing at each other.
- As soon as it was seen that neither would be of any further use in the
- battle, they were, by common consent, taken from the field.
- There now remained three ships on each side, darting in and out of the
- smoke screen, occasionally ascending to cool the engines.
- Among the spectators, excitement prevailed, for it was announced from
- the City of Franklin that a new and virtually unknown pilot, Jack
- Bearden, was going to take command of three ships at once! And never
- before had one pilot commanded, by radio, more than two ships! Besides,
- two of the most famous Mongolian aces, Baartek and Soong, were on the
- field, while an even more famous person, the Chinese mercenary T'ang,
- commanded the Yuen.
- The Americans among the spectators protested that a pilot so young and
- inexperienced should not be allowed to endanger the ships.
- The Government replied that it had a thorough confidence in Bearden's
- abilities.
- But when the young pilot stepped before the television screen, on which
- was pictured the battle, and the maze of controls, he realized that his
- ability had been overestimated, by himself and by everyone else.
- He climbed up on the high stool and reached for the speed control
- levers, which were directly behind him. He leaned back, and fell! His
- head struck against two buttons: and he saw the Oberon and Titania blow
- themselves up.
- The three enemy ships cooperated in an attack on the Ariel.
- Bearden swung his ship around and rushed it into the smoke screen.
- He saw the huge bulk of the Tsing bear down upon him. He fired
- instinctively and hit the control center.
- Dodging aside as the Tsing fell past him, he missed the Tsin by
- inches.
- War No. 81-Q The pilot of the Tsin shot at the reinforcements of the
- Ariel's right wing, loosening it.
- For a few moments, he was alone, or, rather, the Ariel was alone. For
- he was at the control board in the War Building in the City of
- Franklin.
- The Yuen, controlled by the master-pilot T'ang, rose up from beneath
- him, shot off the end of his left wing, and vanished into the mists of
- the smoke screen before the astonished Bearden was able to register a
- single hit.
- He had better luck with the Tsin. When this swooped down on the Ariel,
- he disabled its firing control. Then, when this plane rose from
- beneath, intending to ram itself into the Ariel, Bearden dropped half
- his machine-guns overboard. They struck the Tsin, which exploded
- immediately.
- Now only the Ariel and the Yuen remained! Master-pilot faced
- master-pilot.
- Bearden placed a lucky shot in the Yuen's rudder, but only partially
- disabled it.
- Yuen threw more smoke-screen bombs overboard.
- Bearden rose upward; no, he was still safe and sound in America, but
- the Ariel rose upward.
- The spectators in their helicopters blew whistles, shot off pistols,
- went mad in applause.
- T'ang lowered the Yuen to within several hundred feet of the water.
- He was applauded, too.
- Bearden inspected his ship with the autotelevisation. It would
- collapse at the slightest strain.
- He wheeled his ship to the right, preparatory to descending.
- His left wing broke under the strain: and the Ariel began hurtling
- downward. He turned his autotelevisation on the Yuen, not daring to
- see the ship, which carried his reputation, his future, crash.
- The Yuen was struck by his left wing, which was falling like a stone.
- The Yuen exploded forty-six seconds later.
- And, by international law, Bearden had won the war for America, with it
- the honors of war and the possession of the enormous Radiant Heat
- revenue.
- All the world hiiiled this Lindbergh of the twenty-second century.
- Western Science Is So Wonderful The Martian was sitting at the top of
- a granite cliff. In order to enjoy the breeze better he had taken on
- the shape of a small fir tree. The wind always felt very pleasant
- through non-deciduous needles.
- At the bottom of the cliff stood an American, the first the Martian had
- ever seen.
- The American extracted from his pocket a fantastically ingenious
- device. It was a small metal box with a nozzle which lifted up and
- produced an immediate flame. From this miraculous device the American
- readily lit a tube of bliss-giving herbs. The Martian understood that
- these were called cigarettes by the Americans. As the American
- finished lighting his cigarette, the Martian changed his shape to that
- of a fifteen-foot, red-faced, black-whiskered Chinese demagogue, and
- shouted to the American in English,
- "Hello, friend!"
- The American looked up and almost dropped his teeth.
- The Martian stepped off the cliff and floated gently down toward the
- American, approaching slowly so as not to affright him too much.
- Nevertheless, the American did seem to be concerned, because he said,
- "You're not real, are you? You can't be. Or can you?"
- Modestly the Martian looked into the mind of the American and realized
- that fifteen-foot Chinese demagogues were not reassuring visual images
- in an everyday American psychology. He peeked modestly into the mind
- of the American, seeking a reassuring image. The first image he saw
- was that of the American's mother, so the Martian promptly changed into
- the form of the American's mother and answered,
- "What is real, darling?"
- With this the American turned slightly green and put his hand over his
- eyes. The Martian looked once again into the mind of the American and
- saw a slightly confused image.
- When the American opened his eyes, the Martian had taken on the form of
- a Red Cross girl halfway through a strip-tease act.
- Although the maneuver was designed to be pleasant, the American was not
- reassured. His fear began to change into anger and he said,
- "What the hell are you?"
- The Martian gave up trying to be obliging. He changed himself into a
- Chinese Nationalist major general with an Oxford education and said in
- a distinct British accent,
- "I'm by way of being one of the local characters, a bit on the
- Supernatural side, you know. I do hope you do not mind. Western
- science is so wonderful that I had to examine that fantastic machine
- you have in your hand. Would you like to chat a bit before you go
- on?"
- The Martian caught a confused glimpse of images in the American's mind.
- They seemed to be concerned with something called prohibition,
- something else called "on the wagon," and the reiterated question,
- "How the hell did I get here?"
- Meanwhile the Martian examined the lighter.
- He handed it back to the American, who looked stunned.
- "Very fine magic," said the Martian.
- "We do not do anything of that sort in these hills. I am a fairly
- low-class Demon. I see that you are a captain in the illustrious army
- of the United States.
- Allow me to introduce myself. I am the 1,387,229th Eastern Subordinate
- Incarnation of aLohan. Do you have time for a chat?"
- The American looked at the Chinese Nationalist uniform.
- Then he looked behind him. His Chinese porters and interpreter lay
- like bundles of rags on the meadowy floor of the valley; they had all
- fainted dead away. The American held himself together long enough to
- say,
- "What is a Lohan?"
- "A Lohan is an Arhat," said the Martian.
- The American did not take in this information either and the Martian
- concluded that something must have been missing from the usual
- amenities of getting acquainted with American officers.
- Regretfully the Martian erased all memory of himself from the mind of
- the American and from the minds of the swooned Chinese. He planted
- himself back on the cliff top, resumed the shape of a fir tree, and
- woke the entire gathering. He saw the Chinese interpreter
- gesticulating at the American and he knew that the Chinese was
- saying,
- "There are Demons in these hills .
- . ."
- The Martian rather liked the hearty laugh with which the American
- greeted this piece of superstitious Chinese nonsense.
- He watched the party disappear as they went around the miraculously
- beautiful little Lake of the Eight-Mouthed River.
- That was in 1945.
- The Martian spent many thoughtful hours trying to materialize a
- lighter, but he never managed to create one which did not dissolve back
- into some unpleasant primordial effluvium within hours.
- Then it was 1955. The Martian heard that a Soviet officer was coming,
- and he looked forward with genuine pleasure to making the acquaintance
- of another person from the miraculously up-to date Western world.
- Peter Fairer was a Volga German.
- The Volga Germans are about as much Russian as the Pennsylvania Dutch
- are Americans.
- They have lived in Russia for more than two hundred years, but the
- terrible bitterness of the Second World War led to the breakup of most
- of their communities.
- Fairer himself had fared well in this. After holding the
- noncommissioned rank of yefreitor in the Red Army for some years he had
- become a sub lieutenant In a technikum he had studied geology and
- survey.
- The chief of the Soviet military mission to the province of Yiinnan in
- the People's Republic of China had said to him, "Farrer, you are
- getting a real holiday. There is no danger in this trip, but we do
- want to get an estimate on the feasibility of building a secondary
- mountain highway along the rock cliffs west of Lake Pakou. I think
- well of you, Farrer. You have lived down your German name and you're a
- good Soviet citizen and officer.
- I know that you will not cause any trouble with our Chinese allies or
- with the mountain people among whom you must travel. Go easy with
- them, Farrer. They are very superstitious. We need their full
- support, but we can take our time to get it. The liberation of India
- is still a long way off, but when we must move to help the Indians
- throw off American imperialism we do not want to have any soft areas in
- our rear. Do not push things too hard, Farrer. Be sure that you get a
- good technical job done, but that you make friends with everyone other
- than imperialist reactionary elements."
- Farrer nodded very seriously.
- "You mean, comrade Colonel, that I must make friends with
- everything?"
- "Everything," said the colonel firmly.
- Farrer was young and he liked doing a bit of crusading on his own.
- "I'm a militant atheist, Colonel. Do I have to be pleasant to
- priests?"
- "Priests, too," said the colonel, "especially priests."
- The colonel looked sharply at Farrer.
- "You make friends with everything, everything except women. You hear
- me, comrade?
- Stay out of trouble."
- Farrer saluted and went back to his desk to make preparations for the
- trip.
- Three weeks later Farrer was climbing up past the small cascades which
- led to the River of the Golden Sands, the Chinshachiang, as the Long
- River or Yangtze was known locally.
- Beside him there trotted Party Secretary Kungsun. Kungsun was a Peking
- aristocrat who had joined the Communist Party in his youth.
- Sharp-faced, sharp-voiced, he made up for his aristocracy by being the
- most violent Communist in all of northwestern Yiinnan. Though they had
- only a
- squad of troops and a lot of local bearers for their supplies, they
- did have an officer of the old People's Liberation Army to assure their
- military well-being and to keep an eye on Farrer's technical
- competence. Comrade Captain Li, roly-poly and jolly, sweated wearily
- behind them as they climbed the steep cliffs.
- Li called after them,
- "If you want to be heroes of labor let's keep climbing, but if you are
- following sound military logistics let's all sit down and drink some
- tea. We can't possibly get to Pakouhu before nightfall anyhow."
- Kungsun looked back contemptuously. The ribbon of soldiers and bearers
- reached back two hundred yards, making a snake of dust clutched to the
- rocky slope of the mountain. From this perspective he saw the caps of
- the soldiers and the barrels of their rifles pointing upward toward him
- as they climbed. He saw the towel-wrapped heads of the liberated
- porters and he knew without speaking to them that they were cursing him
- in language just as violent as the language with which they had cursed
- their capitalist oppressors in days gone past. Far below them all the
- thread of the Chinshachiang was woven like a single strand of gold into
- the gray-green of the twilight valley floor.
- He spat at the army captain,
- "If you had your way about it, we'd still be sitting there in an inn
- drinking the hot tea while the men slept."
- The captain did not take offense. He had seen many party secretaries
- in his day. In the New China it was much safer to be a captain. A few
- of the party secretaries he had known had got to be very important men.
- One of them had even got to Peking and had been assigned a whole Buick
- to himself together with three Parker 51 pens. In the minds of the
- Communist bureaucracy this represented a state close to absolute
- bliss.
- Captain Li wanted none of that. Two square meals a day and an endless
- succession of patriotic farm girls, preferably chubby ones, represented
- his view of a wholly liberated China.
- Farrer's Chinese was poor, but he got the intent of the argument. In
- thick but understandable Mandarin he called, half laughing at them,
- "Come along, comrades. We may not make it to the lake by nightfall,
- but we certainly can't bivouac on this cliff either." He whistled Ich
- halt' ein Kameraden through his teeth as he pulled ahead of Kungsun and
- led the climb on up the mountain.
- Thus it was Farrer who first came over the lip of the cliff and met the
- Martian face to face.
- This time the Martian was ready. He remembered his disappointing
- experience with the American, and he did not want to affright his guest
- so as to spoil the social nature of the occasion. While Farrer had
- been climbing the cliff, the Martian had been climbing Farrer's mind,
- chasing in and
- out of Farrer's memories as happily as a squirrel chases around inside
- an immense oak tree. From Farrer's own mind he had extracted a great
- many pleasant memories. He had then hastened back to the top of the
- cliff and had incorporated these in very substantial-looking
- phantoms.
- Farrer got halfway across the lip of the cliff before he realized what
- he was looking at. Two Soviet military trucks were parked in a tiny
- glade. Each of them had tables in front of it. One of the tables was
- set with a very elaborate Russian wkouska (the Soviet equivalent of a
- smorgasbord). The Martian hoped he would be able to keep these objects
- materialized while Farrer ate them, but he was afraid they might
- disappear each time Farrer swallowed them because the Martian was not
- very well acquainted with digestive processes of human beings and did
- not want to give his guest a violent stomach ache by allowing him to
- deposit through his esophagus and into his stomach objects of extremely
- improvised and uncertain chemical makeup.
- The first truck had a big red flag on it with white Russian letters
- reading "welcome to the heroes of bryansk."
- The second truck was even better. The Martian could see that Fairer
- was very fond of women, so he had materialized four very pretty Soviet
- girls, a blonde, a brunette, a redhead, and an albino just to make it
- interesting. The Martian did not trust himself to make them all speak
- the correctly feminine and appealing forms of the Russian language, so
- having materialized them he set them all in lounge chairs and put them
- to sleep. He had wondered what form he himself should take and decided
- that it would be very hospitable to assume the appearance of Mao
- Tze-tung.
- Fairer did not come on over the cliff. He stayed where he was. He
- looked at the Martian and the Martian said, very oilily, "Come on up.
- We are waiting for you."
- "Who the hell are you?" barked Farrer.
- "I am a pro-Soviet Demon," said the apparent Mr. Mao Tzetung, "and
- these are materialized Communist hospitality arrangements. I hope you
- like them."
- At this point both Kungsun and Li appeared. Li climbed up the left
- side of Farrer, Kungsun on the right. All three stopped, gaping.
- Kungsun recovered his wits first. He recognized Mao Tzetung. He never
- passed up a chance to get acquainted with the higher command of the
- Communist Party. He said in a very weak, strained, incredulous
- voice,
- "Mr. Party Chairman Mao, I never thought that we would see you here in
- these hills, or are you you, and if you aren't you, who are you?"
- "I am not your party chairman," said the Martian.
- "I am merely a local Demon who has strong pro-Communist sentiments and
- would like to meet companionable people like yourselves."
- At this point Li fainted and would have rolled back down the cliff
- knocking over soldiers and porters if the Martian had not reached out
- his left arm, concurrently changing the left arm into the shape of a
- python, picking up the unconscious Li, and resting his body gently
- against the side of the picnic trucks. The Soviet sleeping beauties
- slept on. The python turned back into an arm.
- Kungsun's face had turned completely white; since he was a pale and
- pleasant ivory color to start with, his whiteness had a very marked
- tinge.
- "I think this wang-pa is a counter-revolutionary impostor,"
- he said weakly, "but I don't know what to do about him. I am glad that
- the Chinese People's Republic has a representative from the Soviet
- Union to instruct us in difficult party procedure."
- Farrer snapped,
- "If he is a goose, he is a Chinese goose. He is not a Russian goose.
- You'd better not call him that dirty name. He seems to have some
- powers that do work. Look at what he did to Li."
- The Martian decided to show off his education and said very con
- cilia-torily,
- "If I am a wang-pa you are a wang-pen."
- He added brightly, in the Russian language,
- "That's an ingrate, you know. Much worse than an illegitimate one. Do
- you like my shape, comrade Farrer? Do you have a cigarette lighter
- with you? Western science is so wonderful, I can never make very solid
- things, and you people make airplanes, atom bombs, and all sorts of
- refreshing entertainments of that kind."
- Farrer reached into his pocket, groping for his lighter.
- A scream sounded behind him. One of the Chinese enlisted men had left
- the stopped column behind and had stuck his head over the edge of the
- cliff to see what was happening. When he saw the trucks and the figure
- of Mao Tze-tung he began shrieking,
- "There are devils here! There are devils here!"
- From centuries of experience, the Martian knew there was no use trying
- to get along with the local people unless they were very, very young or
- very, very old. He walked to the edge of the cliff so that all the men
- could see him. He expanded the shape of Mao Tze-tung until it was
- thirty-five feet high. Then he changed himself into the embodiment of
- an ancient Chinese god of war with whiskers, ribbons, and sword tassels
- blowing in the breeze. They all fainted dead away as he had
- intended.
- He packed them snugly against the rocks so that none of them would fall
- back down the slope. Then he took on the shape of a Soviet WAC a
- rather pretty little blonde with sergeant's insignia and rematerialized
- himself beside Farrer.
- By this point Farrer had his lighter out.
- The pretty little blonde said to Farrer,
- "Do you like this shape better?"
- Farrer said,
- "I don't believe this at all. I am a militant atheist. I have fought
- against superstition all my life." Farrer was twenty-four.
- The Martian said,
- "I don't think you like me being a girl. It bothers you, doesn't
- it?"
- "Since you do not exist you cannot bother me. But if you don't mind
- could you please change your shape again?"
- The Martian took on the appearance of a chubby little Buddha. He knew
- this was a little impious, but he felt Farrer give a sigh of relief.
- Even Li seemed cheered up, now that the Martian had taken on a proper
- religious form.
- "Listen, you obscene demonic monstrosity," snarled Kungsun, "this is
- the Chinese People's Republic. You have absolutely no business taking
- on supernatural images or conducting un atheistic activities. Please
- abolish yourself and those illusions yonder.
- What do you want, anyhow?"
- "I would like," said the Martian mildly, "to become a member of the
- Chinese Communist Party."
- Farrer and Kungsun stared at each other. Then they both spoke at once,
- Farrer in Russian and Kungsun in Chinese.
- "But we can't let you in the Party."
- Kungsun said,
- "If you're a demon you don't exist, and if you do exist you're
- illegal."
- The Martian smiled.
- "Take some refreshments. You may change your minds. Would you like a
- girl?" he said, pointing at the assorted Russian beauties who still
- slept in their lounge chairs.
- But Kungsun and Farrer shook their heads.
- With a sigh the Martian de materialized the girls and replaced them
- with three striped Siberian tigers. The tigers approached.
- One tiger stopped cozily behind the Martian and sat down.
- The Martian sat on him. Said the Martian brightly,
- "I like tigers to sit on. They're so comfortable. Have a tiger."
- Farrer and Kungsun were staring open-mouthed at their respective
- tigers. The tigers yawned at them and stretched out.
- With a tremendous effort of will the two young men sat down on the
- ground in front of their tigers. Farrer sighed.
- "What do you want? I suppose you won this trick ..."
- Said the Martian,
- "Have a jug of wine."
- He materialized a jug of wine and a porcelain cup in front of each,
- including himself. He poured himself a drink and looked at them
- through shrewd, narrowed eyes.
- "I would like to learn all about Western science. You see, I am a
- Martian student who was exiled here to become the 1,387,229th Eastern
- Subordinate Incarnation of a Lohan and I have been here more than two
- thousand years, and I can only perceive in a radius of ten leagues.
- Western science is very interesting. If I could, I would like to be an
- engineering student, but since I cannot leave this
- place I would like to join the Communist Party and have many visitors
- come to see me."
- By this time Kungsun made up his mind. He was a Communist, but he was
- also a Chinese an aristocratic Chinese and a man well versed in the
- folklore of his own country. Kungsun used a politely archaic form of
- the Peking court dialect when he spoke again in much milder terms.
- "Honored, esteemed Demon, sir, it's just no use at all your trying to
- get into the Communist Party. I admit it is very patriotic of you as a
- Chinese Demon to want to join the progressive group which leads the
- Chinese people in their endless struggle against the vicious American
- imperialists.
- Even if you convinced me I don't think you can convince the party
- authorities, esteemed sir. The only thing for you to do in our new
- Communist world of the New China is to become a counter-revolutionary
- refugee and migrate to capitalist territory."
- The Martian looked hurt and sullen. He frowned at them as he sipped
- his wine. Behind him Li began snoring where he slept against the wheel
- of a truck.
- Very persuasively the Martian began to speak.
- "I see, young man, that you're beginning to believe in me. You don't
- have to recognize me. Just believe in me a little bit. I am happy to
- see that you. Party Secretary Kungsun, are prepared to be polite. I
- am not a Chinese Demon, since I was originally a Martian who was
- elected to the Lesser Assembly of Concord, but who made an inopportune
- remark and who must live on as the 1,3 87,229th Eastern Subordinate
- Incarnation of a Lohan for three hundred thousand springs and autumns
- before I can return. I expect to be around a very long time indeed. On
- the other hand, I would like to study engineering and I think it would
- be much better for me to become a member of the Communist Party than to
- go to a strange place."
- Farrer had an inspiration. Said he to the Martian,
- "I have an idea. Before I explain it, though, would you please take
- those damned trucks away and remove that wkouska? It makes my mouth
- water and I'm very sorry, but I just can't accept your hospitality."
- The Martian complied with a wave of his hand. The trucks and the
- tables disappeared. Li had been leaning against a truck.
- His head went thump against the grass. He muttered something in his
- sleep and then resumed his snoring. The Martian turned back to his
- guests.
- Farrer picked up the thread of his own thoughts.
- "Leaving aside the question of whether you exist or not, I can assure
- you that I know the Russian Communist Party and my colleague, Comrade
- Kungsun here, knows the Chinese Communist Party.
- Communist parties are very wonderful things. They lead the masses in
- the fight against wicked Americans. Do you realize that if we didn't
- fight on with the revolutionary struggle all of us would have to drink
- Coca-Cola every day?"
- "What is Coca-Cola?" asked the Demon.
- "I don't know," replied Farrer.
- "Then why be afraid to drink any?"
- "Don't be irrelevant. I hear that the capitalists make everybody drink
- it. The Communist Party cannot take time to open up supernatural
- secretariats. It would spoil irreligious campaigns for us to have a
- demonic secretary. I can tell you the Russian Communist Party won't
- put up with it and our friend here will tell you there is no place in
- the Chinese Communist Party. We want you to be happy. You seem to be
- a very friendly demon. Why don't you just go away? The capitalists
- will welcome you. They are very reactionary and very religious. You
- might even find people there who would believe in you."
- The Martian changed his shape from that of a roly-poly Buddha and
- assumed the appearance and dress of a young Chinese man, a student of
- engineering at the University of the Revolution in Peking. In the
- shape of the student he continued, "I don't want to be believed in. I
- want to study engineering, and I want to learn all about Western
- science."
- Kungsun came to Farrer's support. He said,
- "It's just no use trying to be a Communist engineer. You look like a
- very absentminded demon to me and I think that even if you tried to
- pass yourself off as a human being you would keep forgetting and
- changing shapes. That would ruin the morale of any class."
- The Martian thought to himself that the young man had a point there. He
- hated keeping any one particular shape for more than half an hour.
- Staying in one bodily form made him itch. He also liked to change
- sexes every few times; it seemed sort of refreshing. He did not admit
- to the young man that Kungsun had scored a point with that remark about
- shape-changing, but he nodded amiably at them and asked,
- "But how could I get abroad?"
- "Just go," said Kungsun, wearily.
- "Just go. You're a Demon.
- You can do anything."
- "I can't do that," snapped the student-Martian.
- "I have to have something to go by."
- He turned to Farrer.
- "It won't do any good, your giving me something. If you gave me
- something Russian and I would end up in Russia, from what you say they
- won't want to have a Communist Martian any more than these Chinese
- people do. I won't like to leave my beautiful lake anyhow, but I
- suppose I will have to if I am to get acquainted with Western
- science."
- Farrer said,
- "I have an idea." He took off his wrist-watch and handed it to the
- Martian.
- The Martian inspected it. Many years before, the watch had been
- manufactured in the United States of America. It had been traded by a
- G.I. to a fraulein, by the fraulein's grandmother to a Red Army man for
- three sacks of potatoes, and by the Red Army man for five hundred
- rubles to Fairer when the two of them met in Kuibyshev. The numbers
- were painted with radium, as were the hands. The second hand was
- missing, so the Martian materialized a new one. He changed the shape
- of it several times before it fitted. On the watch there was written
- in English "marvin watch company." At the bottom of the face of the
- watch there was the name of a town: "WATERBURY, CONN."
- The Martian read it. Said he to Farrer,
- "Where is this place Waterbury, Kahn?"
- "The Conn. is the short form of the name of one of the American
- states. If you are going to be a reactionary capitalist that is a very
- good place to be a capitalist in."
- Still white-faced, but in a sickly ingratiating way, Kungsun added his
- bit.
- "I think you would like Coca-Cola. It's very reactionary."
- The student-Martian frowned. He still held the watch in his hand. Said
- he,
- "I don't care whether it's reactionary or not. I want to be in a very
- scientific place."
- Farrer said,
- "You couldn't go any place more scientific than Water-bury, Conn."
- especially Conn. that's the most scientific place they have in America
- and I'm sure they are very pro-Martian and you can join one of the
- capitalist parties. They won't mind.
- But the Communist parties would make a lot of trouble for you."
- Farrer smiled and his eyes lit up.
- "Furthermore," he added, as a winning point, "you can keep my watch for
- yourself, for always."
- The Martian frowned. Speaking to himself the student Martian said,
- "I can see that Chinese Communism is going to collapse in eight years,
- eight hundred years, or eighty thousand years. Perhaps I'd better go
- to this Waterbury, Conn."
- The two young Communists nodded their heads vigorously and grinned.
- They both smiled at the Martian.
- "Honored, esteemed Martian, sir, please hurry along because I want to
- get my men over the edge of the cliff before darkness falls. Go with
- our blessing."
- The Martian changed shape. He took on the image of an Arhat, a
- subordinate disciple of Buddha. Eight feet tall, he loomed above them.
- His face radiated unearthly calm. The watch, miraculously provided
- with a new strap, was firmly strapped to his left wrist.
- "Bless you, my boys," said he.
- "I go to Waterbury." And he did.
- Farrer stared at Kungsun.
- "What's happened to Li?"
- Kungsun shook his head dazedly.
- "I don't know. I feel funny."
- (In departing for that marvelous strange place, Waterbury, Conn." the
- Martian had taken with him all their memories of himself.) Kungsun
- walked to the edge of the cliff. Looking over, he saw the men
- sleeping.
- "Look at that," he muttered. He stepped to the edge of the cliff and
- began shouting.
- "Wake up, you fools, you turtles. Haven't you any more sense than to
- sleep on a cliff as nightfall approaches?"
- The Martian concentrated all his powers on the location of Waterbury,
- Conn.
- He was the 1,387,229th Eastern Subordinate Incarnation of a Lohan (or
- an Arhat), and his powers were limited, impressive though they might
- seem to outsiders.
- With a shock, a thrill, a something of breaking, a sense of things done
- and undone, he found himself in flat country. Strange darkness
- surrounded him. Air, which he had never smelled before, flowed quietly
- around him. Farrer and Li, hanging on a cliff high above the
- Chinshachiang, lay far behind him in the world from which he had
- broken. He remembered that he had left his shape behind.
- Absentmindedly he glanced down at himself to see what form he had taken
- for the trip.
- He discovered that he had arrived in the form of a small, laughing
- Buddha seven inches high, carved in yellowed ivory.
- "This will never do!" muttered the Martian to himself.
- "I
- must take on one of the local forms..."
- He sensed around in his environment, groping telepathically for
- interesting objects near him.
- "Aha, a milk truck."
- Thought he. Western science is indeed very wonderful.
- Imagine a machine made purely for the purpose of transporting milk!
- Swiftly he transferred himself into a milk truck.
- In the darkness, his telepathic senses had not distinguished the metal
- of which the milk truck was made nor the color of the paint.
- In order to remain inconspicuous, he turned himself into a milk truck
- made of solid gold. Then, without a driver, he started up his own
- engine and began driving himself down one of the main highways leading
- into Waterbury, Connecticut ... So if you happen to be passing through
- Waterbury, Conn." and see a solid gold milk truck driving itself
- through the streets, you'll know it's the Martian, otherwise the
- 1,387,229th Eastern Subordinate Incarnation of a Lohan, and that he
- still thinks Western science is wonderful.
- Nancy Two men faced Gordon Greene as he came into the room. The
- young aide was a nonentity. The general was not. The commanding
- general sat where he should, at his own desk. It was placed squarely
- in the room, and yet the infinite courtesy of the general was shown by
- the fact that the blinds were so drawn that the light did not fall
- directly into the eyes of the person interviewed.
- At that time the colonel general was Wenzel Wallenstein, the first man
- ever to venture into the very deep remoteness of space.
- He had not reached a star. Nobody had, at that time, but he had gone
- farther than any man had ever gone before.
- Wallenstein was an old man and yet the count of his years was not high.
- He was less than ninety in a period in which many men lived to one
- hundred and fifty. The thing that made Wallenstein look old was the
- suffering which came from mental strain, not the kind which came from
- anxiety and competition, not the kind which came from ill health.
- It was a subtler kind a sensitivity which created its own painful
- ness
- Yet it was real.
- Wallenstein was as stable as men came, and the young lieutenant was
- astonished to find that at his first meeting with the commander in
- chief his instinctive emotional reaction should be one of quick
- sympathy for the man who commanded the entire organization.
- "Your name?"
- The lieutenant answered,
- "Gordon Greene."
- "Born that way?"
- "No, sir."
- "What was your name originally?"
- "Giordano Verdi."
- "Why did you change? Verdi is a great name too."
- "People just found it hard to pronounce, sir. I followed along the
- best I could."
- "I kept my name," said the old general.
- "I suppose it is a matter of taste."
- of Man The young lieutenant lifted his hand, left hand, palm outward,
- in the new salute which had been devised by the psychologists.
- He knew that this meant military courtesy could be passed by for the
- moment and that the subordinate officer was requesting permission to
- speak as man to man. He knew the salute and yet in these surroundings
- he did not altogether trust it.
- The general's response was quick. He countersigned, left hand, palm
- outward.
- The heavy, tired, wise, strained old face showed no change of
- expression. The general was alert. Mechanically friendly, his eyes
- followed the lieutenant. The lieutenant was sure that there was
- nothing behind those eyes, except world upon world of inward
- troubles.
- The lieutenant spoke again, this time on confident ground.
- "Is this a special interview. General? Do you have something in mind
- for me? If it is, sir, let me warn you, I have been declared to be
- psychologically unstable. Personnel doesn't often make a mistake but
- they may have sent me in here under error."
- The general smiled. The smile itself was mechanical. It was a control
- of muscles, not a quick spring of human emotion.
- "You will know well enough what I have in mind when we talk together,
- Lieutenant. I am going to have another man sit with me and it will
- give you some idea of what your life is leading you toward. You know
- perfectly well that you have asked for deep space and that so far as
- I'm concerned you've gotten it. The question is now,
- "Do you really want it?" Do you want to take it?
- Is that all that you wanted to abridge courtesy for?"
- "Yes, sir," said the lieutenant.
- "You didn't have to call for the courtesy sign for that kind of a
- question. You could have asked me even within the limits of service.
- Let's not get too psychological. We don't need to, do we?"
- Again the general gave the lieutenant a heavy smile.
- Wallenstein gestured to the aide, who sprang to attention.
- Wallenstein said,
- "Send him in."
- The aide said,
- "Yes, sir."
- The two men waited expectantly. With a springy, lively, quick, happy
- step a strange lieutenant entered the room.
- Gordon Greene had never seen anybody quite like this lieutenant. The
- lieutenant was old, almost as old as the general.
- His face was cheerful and unlined. The muscles of his cheeks and
- forehead bespoke happiness, relaxation, an assured view of life.
- The lieutenant wore the three highest decorations of his service.
- There weren't any others higher and yet there he was, an old man and
- still a lieutenant.
- Lieutenant Greene couldn't understand it. He didn't know who this man
- was. It was easy enough for a young man to be a lieutenant but not
- for
- a man in his seventies or eighties. People that age were colonels, or
- retired, or out.
- Or they had gone back to civilian life.
- Space was a young man's game.
- The general himself arose in courtesy to his contemporary.
- Lieutenant Greene's eyes widened. This too was odd. The general was
- not known to violate courtesy at all irregularly.
- "Sit down, sir," said the strange old lieutenant.
- The general sat.
- "What do you want with me now? Do you want to talk about the Nancy
- routine one more time?"
- "The Nancy routine?" asked the general blindly.
- "Yes, sir. It's the same story I've told these youngsters before.
- You've heard it and I've heard it, there's no use of pretending."
- The strange lieutenant said,
- "My name's Karl Vonderleyen.
- Have you ever heard of me?"
- "No, sir," said the young lieutenant The old lieutenant said,
- "You will."
- "Don't get bitter about it, Karl," said the general.
- "A lot of other people have had troubles, besides you. I went and did
- the same things you did, and I'm a general. You might at least pay me
- the courtesy of envying me."
- "I don't envy you, General. You've had your life, and I've had mine.
- You know what you've missed, or you think you do, and I know what I've
- had, and I'm sure I do."
- The old lieutenant paid no more attention to the commander in chief. He
- turned to the young man and said, "You're going to go out into space
- and we are putting on a little act, a vaudeville act. The general
- didn't get any Nancy. He didn't ask for Nancy. He didn't turn for
- help. He got out into the Up-and-Out, he pulled through it. Three
- years of it. Three years that are closer to three million years, I
- suppose. He went through hell and he came back. Look at his face.
- He's a success. He's an utter, blasted success, sitting there worn
- out, tired, and, it would seem, hurt. Look at me. Look at me
- carefully. Lieutenant. I'm a failure. I'm a lieutenant and the Space
- Service keeps me that way."
- The commander in chief said nothing, so Vonderleyen talked on.
- "Oh, they will retire me as a general, I suppose, when the time comes.
- I'm not ready to retire. I'd just as soon stay in the Space Service as
- anything else. There is not much to do in this world.
- I've had it."
- "Had what, sir?" Lieutenant Greene dared to ask.
- "I found Nancy. He didn't," he said.
- "That's as simple as it is."
- The general cut back into the conversation.
- "It's not that bad and it's
- not that simple, Lieutenant Greene. There seems to be something a
- little wrong with Lieutenant Vonderleyen today.
- The story is one we have to tell you and it is something you have to
- make up your own mind on. There is no regulation way of handling
- it."
- The general looked very sharply at Lieutenant Greene.
- "Do you know what we have done to your brain?"
- "No, sir." Greene felt uneasiness rising in him.
- "Have you heard of the sokta virus?"
- "The what, sir?"
- "The sokta virus. Sokta is an ancient word, gets its name from
- Chosen-real, the language of Old Korea. That was a country west of
- where Japan used to be. It means 'maybe' and it is a 'maybe' that we
- put inside your head. It is a tiny crystal, more than microscopic.
- It's there. There is actually a machine on the ship, not a big one
- because we can't waste space; it has resonance to detonate the virus.
- If you detonate sokta, you will be like him. If you don't, you will be
- like me assuming, in either case, that you live. You may not live and
- you may not get back, in which case what we are talking about is
- academic."
- The young man nerved himself to ask,
- "What does this do to me? Why do you make this big fuss over it?"
- "We can't tell you too much. One reason is it is not worth talking
- about."
- "You mean you really can't, sir?"
- The general shook his head sadly and wisely.
- "No, I missed it, he got it, and yet it somehow gets out beyond the
- limits of talking."
- At this point while he was telling the story, many years later, I asked
- my cousin,
- "Well, Gordon, if they said you can't talk about it, how can you ? "
- "Drunk, man, drunk, " said the cousin.
- "How long do you think it took me to wind myself up to this point? I'll
- never tell it again never again. Anyhow, you 're my cousin, you don't
- count. And I promised Nancy I wouldn't tell anybody. " "Who's
- Nancy?" I asked him.
- "Nancy's what it's all about. That is what the story is.
- That's what those poor old goo ps were trying to tell me in the office.
- They didn't know. One of them, he had Nancy; the other one, he
- hadn't. " "Is Nancy a real person ? " With that he told me the rest
- of the story.
- The interview was harsh. It was clean, stark, simple, direct.
- The alter-
- natives were flat. It was perfectly plain that Wallenstein wanted
- Greene to come back alive. It was actual space command policy to bring
- the man back as a live failure instead of letting him become a dead
- hero. Pilots were not that common. Furthermore, morale would be
- worsened if men were told to go out on suicide operations.
- The whole thing was psychological and before Greene got out of the room
- he was more confused than when he went in.
- They kept telling them, both of them in their different ways the
- general happily, the old lieutenant unhappily that this was serious.
- The grim old general was very cheerful about telling him. The happy
- lieutenant kept being very sympathetic.
- Greene himself wondered why he could be so sympathetic toward the
- commanding general and be so perfectly carefree about a failed old
- lieutenant. His sympathies should have been the other way around.
- Fifteen hundred million miles later, four months later in ordinary
- time, four lifetimes later by the time which he'd gone through, Greene
- found out what they were talking about. It was an old psychological
- teaching. The men died if they were left utterly alone. The ships
- were designed to be protected against that. There were two men on each
- ship. Each ship had a lot of tapes, even a few quite unnecessary
- animals; in this case a pair of hamsters had been included on the ship.
- They had been sterilized, of course, to avoid the problem of feeding
- the young, but nevertheless they made a little family of their own in a
- miniature of life's happiness on Earth.
- Earth was very far away.
- At that point, his copilot died.
- Everything that had threatened Greene then came true.
- Greene suddenly realized what they were talking about.
- The hamsters were his one hope. He thrust his face close to their cage
- and talked to them. He attributed moods to them. He tried to live
- their lives with them, all as if they were people.
- As if he, himself, were a part of people still alive and not out there
- with the screaming silence beyond the thin wall of metal.
- There was nothing to do except to roam like a caged animal in machinery
- which he would never understand.
- Time lost its perspectives. He knew he was crazy and he knew that by
- training he could survive the partial craziness. He even realized that
- the instability in his own personality which had made him think that he
- wouldn't fit the Space Service probably contributed to the hope that
- went in with service to this point.
- His mind kept coming back to Nancy and to the sokta virus.
- of Man What was it they had said?
- They had told him that he could waken Nancy, whoever Nancy was. Nancy
- was no pet name of his. And yet somehow or other the virus always
- worked. He only needed to move his head toward a certain point, press
- the resonating stud on the wall, one pressure, his mission would fall,
- he would be happy, he would come home alive.
- He couldn't understand it. Why such a choice?
- It seemed three thousand years later that he dictated his last message
- back to Space Service. He didn't know what would happen. Obviously,
- that old lieutenant, Vonderleyen, or whatever his name was, was still
- alive. Equally obviously the general was alive. The general had
- pulled through. The lieutenant hadn't.
- And now, Lieutenant Greene, fifteen hundred million miles out in space,
- had to make his choice. He made it. He decided to fail.
- But he wanted, as a matter of discipline, to speak up for the man who
- was failing and he dictated, for the records of the ship when it got
- back to Earth, a very simple message concluding with an appeal for
- justice.
- ". . . and so, gentlemen, I have decided to activate the stud. I do
- not know what the reference to Nancy signifies. I have no concept of
- what the sokta virus will do except that it will make me fail. For
- this I am heartily ashamed. I regret the human weakness that has
- driven me to this. The weakness is human and you, gentlemen, have
- allowed for it. In this respect, it is not I who is failing, but the
- Space Service itself in giving me an authorization to fail. Gentlemen,
- forgive the bitterness with which I say good-bye to you in these
- seconds, but now I do say goodbye."
- He stopped dictating, blinked his eyes, took one last look at the
- hamsters what might they be by the time the sokta virus went to work?
- pressed the stud and leaned forward.
- Nothing happened. He pressed the stud again.
- The ship suddenly filled with a strange odor. He couldn't identify the
- odor. He didn't know what it was.
- It suddenly came to him that this was new-mown hay with a slight tinge
- of geraniums, possibly of roses, too, on the far side.
- It was a smell that was common on the farm a few years ago where he had
- gone for a summer. It was the smell of his mother being on the porch
- and calling him back to a meal, and of himself, enough of a man to be
- indulgent even toward the woman in his own mother, enough of a child to
- turn happily back to a familiar voice.
- He said to himself,
- "If this is all there is to that virus, I can take it and work on with
- continued efficiency."
- He added,
- "At fifteen hundred million miles out, and nothing but two hamsters for
- years of loneliness, a few hallucinations won't hurt me any."
- The door opened.
- It couldn't open.
- The door opened nevertheless.
- At this point, Greene knew a fear more terrible than anything else he
- had ever encountered. He said to himself,
- "I'm crazy, I'm crazy," and stared at the opening door.
- A girl stepped in. She said,
- "Hello, you there. You know me, don't you?"
- Greene said,
- "No, no, miss, who are you?"
- The girl didn't answer. She just stood there and she gave him a
- smile.
- She wore a blue serge skirt cut so that it had broad, vertical stripes,
- a neat little waist, a belt of the same material, a very simple blouse.
- She was not a strange girl and she was by no means a creature of outer
- space.
- She was somebody he had known and known well. Perhaps loved. He just
- couldn't place her not at that moment, not in that place.
- She still stood staring at him. That was all.
- It all came to him. Of course. She was Nancy. She was not just that
- Nancy they were talking about, she was his Nancy, his own Nancy he had
- always known and never met before.
- He managed to pull himself together and say it to her,
- "How do I know you if I don't know you? You're Nancy and I've known
- you all my life and I have always wanted to marry you. You are the
- girl I have always been in love with and I never saw you before. That's
- funny. Nancy. It's terribly funny. I don't understand it, do you?"
- Nancy came over and put her hand on his forehead. It was a real little
- hand and her presence was dear and precious and very welcome to him.
- She said,
- "It's going to take a bit of thinking.
- You see, I am not real, not to anybody except you. And yet I am more
- real to you than anything else will ever be. That is what the sokta
- virus is, darling. It's me. I'm you."
- He stared at her. He could have been unhappy but he didn't feel
- unhappy, he was so glad to have her there.
- He said,
- "What do you mean? The sokta virus has made you?
- Am I crazy? Is this just a hallucination?"
- Nancy shook her head and her pretty curls spun.
- "It's not that. I'm simply every girl that you ever wanted. I am the
- illusion that you always wanted but I am you because I am in the depths
- of you. I am everything that your mind might not have encountered in
- life. Everything that you might have been afraid to dig up. Here I am
- and I'm going to stay. And as long as we are here in this ship with
- the resonance we will get along well."
- My cousin at this point began weeping. He picked up a wine flask and
- of Man poured down a big glass of heavy Dago Red. Fora while he
- cried.
- Putting his head on the table, he looked up at me and said,
- "It's been a long, long time. It's been a very long time and I still
- remember how she talked with me. And I see now why they say you can't
- talk about it. A man has got to be fearfully drunk to tell about a
- real life that he had and a good one, and a beautiful one and let it
- go, doesn't he?" "That's right," I said, to be encouraging.
- Nancy changed the ship right away. She moved the hamsters.
- She changed the decorations. She checked the records. The work went
- on more efficiently than ever before.
- But the home they made for themselves, that was something different. It
- had baking smells, and it had wind smells, and sometimes he would hear
- the rain although the nearest rain by now was one thousand six hundred
- million miles away, and there was nothing but the grating of cold
- silence on the cold, cold metal at the outside of the ship.
- They lived together. It didn't take long for them to get thoroughly
- used to each other.
- He had been born Giordano Verdi. He had limitations.
- And the time came for them to get even more close than lover and lover.
- He said,
- "I just can't take you, darling. That is not the way we can do it,
- even in space and not the way, even if you are not real. You are real
- enough to me. Will you marry me out of the prayer book?"
- Her eyes lit up and her incomparable lips gleamed in a smile that was
- all peculiarly her own. She said,
- "Of course."
- She flung her arms around him. He ran his fingers over the bones of
- her shoulder. He felt her ribs. He felt the individual strands of her
- hair brushing his cheeks. This was real. This was more real than life
- itself, yet some fool had told him that it was a virus that Nancy
- didn't exist. If this wasn't Nancy, what was it? he thought.
- He put her down and, alive with love and happiness, he read the prayer
- book. He asked her to make the responses. He said,
- "I
- suppose I'm captain, and I suppose I have married you and me, haven't
- I, Nancy?"
- The marriage went well. The ship followed an immense perimeter like
- that of a comet. It went far out. So far that the sun became a remote
- dot. The interference of the solar system had virtually no effect on
- the instruments.
- Nancy came to him one day and said,
- "I suppose you know why you are a failure now."
- "No," he said.
- She looked at him gravely. She said,
- "I think with your mind.
- I live in your body. If you die while on this ship, I die too. Yet as
- long as you live, I am alive and separate. That's funny, isn't it?"
- "Funny," he said, an old new pain growing in his heart.
- "And yet I can tell you something which I know with that part of your
- mind I use. I know without you that I am. I suppose I recognize your
- technical training and feel it somehow even though I don't feel the
- lack of it. I had the education you thought I had and you wanted me to
- have. But do you see what's happening? We are working with our brain
- at almost half-power instead of one-tenth power. All your imagination
- is going into making me. All your extra thoughts are of me. I want
- them just as I want you to love me but there are none left over for
- emergencies and there is nothing left over for the Space Service.
- You are doing the minimum, that's all. Am I worth it?"
- "Of course you are worth it, darling. You're worth anything that any
- man could ask of the sweetheart, and of love, and of a wife and a true
- companion."
- "But don't you see? I am taking all the best of you. You are putting
- it into me and when the ship comes home there won't be any me."
- In a strange way he realized that the drug was working. He could see
- what was happening to himself as he looked at his well-beloved Nancy
- with her shimmering hair and he realized the hair needed no prettying
- or hairdos. He looked at her clothes and he realized that she wore
- clothes for which there was no space on the ship. And yet she changed
- them, delightfully, winsomely, attractively, day in and day out. He
- ate the food that he knew couldn't be on the ship. None of this
- worried him. And now he couldn't even be worried at the thought of
- losing Nancy herself.
- Any other thought he could have rejected from his subconscious mind and
- could have surrendered to the idea that it was not a hallucination
- after all This was too much. He ran his fingers through her hair. He
- said,
- "I know I'm crazy, darling, and I know that you don't exist " "But I do
- exist. I am you. I am a part of Gordon Greene as surely as if I'd
- married you. I'll never die until you do because when you get home,
- darling, I'll drop back, back into your deeper mind but I'll live in
- your mind as long as you live. You can't lose me and I can't leave you
- and you can't forget me. And I can't escape to anyone except through
- your lips. That's why they talk about it. That's why it is such a
- strange thing."
- "And that's where I know I'm wrong," stubbornly insisted Gordon.
- "I love you and I know you are a phantom and I know you are going away
- and I know we are coming to an end and it doesn't worry me. I'll be
- happy just being with you. I don't need a drink. I wouldn't touch a
- drug. Yet the happiness is here."
- Note: In the version published in Satellite Science Fiction, the story
- ended at this point. Editor.
- They went about their little domestic chores. They checked his graph
- paper, they stored the records, they put a few silly things into the
- permanent ship's record. They then toasted marshmallows before a large
- fire. The fire was in a handsome fireplace which did not exist. The
- flames couldn't have burned but they did. There weren't any
- marshmallows on the ship but they toasted them and enjoyed them
- anyhow.
- That's the way their life went full of magic, and yet the magic had no
- sting or provocation to it, no anger, no hopelessness, no despair.
- They were a very happy couple.
- Even the hamsters felt it. They stayed clean and plump.
- They ate their food willingly. They got over space nausea. They
- peered at him.
- He let one of them, the one with the brown nose, out and let it run
- around the room. He said,
- "You're a real army character.
- You poor thing. Born for space and serving out here in it."
- Only one other time did Nancy take up the question of their future. She
- said, "We can't have children, you know. The sokta drug doesn't allow
- for that. And you may have children yourself but it is going to be
- funny having them if you marry somebody else with me always there just
- in the background. And I will be there."
- They made it back to Earth. They returned.
- As he stepped out of the gate, a harsh, weary medical colonel gave him
- one sharp glance. He said, "Oh, we thought that had happened."
- "What, sir?" said a plump and radiant Lieutenant Greene.
- "You got Nancy," said the colonel.
- "Yes, sir. I'll bring her right out."
- "Go get her," said the colonel.
- Greene went back into the rocket and he looked. There was no sign of
- Nancy. He came to the door astonished. He was still not upset. He
- said, "Colonel, I don't seem to see her there but I'm sure that she's
- somewhere around."
- The colonel gave him a strange, sympathetic, fatigued smile.
- "She always will be somewhere around, Lieutenant.
- You've done the minimum job. I don't know whether we ought to
- discourage people like you. I suppose you realize that you are frozen
- in your present grade. You'll get a decoration. Mission Accomplished.
- Mission successful, farther than anybody has gone before. Incidentally,
- Vonderleyen says he knows you and will be waiting over yonder. We have
- to take you into the hospital to make sure that you don't go into
- shock."
- "At the hospital," said my cousin, "there was no shock."
- He didn't even miss Nancy. How could he miss her when she hadn 't
- left? She was always just around the corner, just behind the door,
- just a few minutes away.
- At breakfast time he knew he'd see her for lunch. At lunch, he knew
- she'd drop by in the afternoon. At the end of the afternoon, he knew
- he'd have dinner with her.
- He knew he was crazy. Crazy as he could be.
- He knew perfectly well that there was no Nancy and never had been. He
- supposed that he ought to hate the sokta drug for doing that to him,
- but it brought its own relief.
- The effect of Nancy was an immolation in perpetual hope, the promise of
- something that could never be lost, and a promise of something that
- cannot be lost is often better than a reality which can be lost.
- That's all there was to it. They asked him to testify against the use
- of the sokta drug and he said, "Me? Give up Nancy? Don't be silly."
- "You haven't got her," said somebody.
- "That's what you think," said my cousin. Lieutenant Greene.
- The life of Bodidharma Music (said Confucius) awakens the mind,
- propriety finishes it, melody completes it.
- The Lun Yu, Book VIII, Chapter 8 It was perhaps in the second period of
- the proto-Indian Harappa culture, perhaps earlier in the very dawn of
- metal, that a goldsmith accidentally found a formula to make a
- magical
- LIFE.
- To him, the LIFE became death or bliss, an avenue to choosable
- salvations or dooms. Among later men, the LIFE might be recognized as
- a chancy pre discovery of ps ionic powers with sonic triggering.
- Whatever it was, it worked! Long before the Buddha, longhaired
- Dravidian priests learned that it worked.
- Cast mostly in gold despite the goldsmith's care with the speculum
- alloy, the LIFE emitted shrill whistlings but it also transmitted
- supersonic vibrations in a narrow range narrow and intense enough a
- range to rearrange synapses in the brain and to modify the basic
- emotions of the hearer.
- The goldsmith did not long survive his instrument. They found him
- dead.
- The LIFE became the property of priests; after a short, terrible period
- of use and abuse, it was buried in the tomb of a great king.
- II
- Robbers found the LIFE, tried it and died. Some died amid bliss, some
- amid hate, others in a frenzy of fear and delusion. A strong survivor,
- trembling after the ordeal of inexpressibly awakened sensations and
- emotions, wrapped the LIFE in a page of holy writing and presented it
- to Bodidharma the Blessed One just before Bodidharma began his
- unbelievably arduous voyage from India across the ranges of the spines
- of the world over to far Cathay.
- Bodidharma the Blessed One, the man who had seen Persia, the aged one
- bringing wisdom, came across the highest of all mountains in the year
- that the Northern Wei dynasty of China moved their capital out of
- divine Loyang. (Elsewhere in the world where men reckoned the years
- from the birth of their Lord Jesus Christ, the year was counted as Anno
- Domini 554, but in the high land between India and China the message of
- Christianity had not yet arrived and the word of the Lord Gautama
- Buddha was still the sweetest gospel to reach the ears of men.)
- Bodidharma, clad by only a thin robe, climbed across the glaciers. For
- food he drank the air, spicing it with prayer. Cold winds cut his old
- skin, his tired bones; for a cloak he drew his sanctity about him and
- bore within his indomitable heart the knowledge that the pure,
- unspoiled message of the Lord Gautama Buddha had, by the will of time
- and chance themselves, to be carried from the Indian world to the
- Chinese.
- Once beyond the peaks and passes he descended into the cold frigidity
- of high desert. Sand cut his feet but the skin did not bleed because
- he was shod in sacred spells and magical charms.
- At last animals approached. They came in the ugliness of their sin,
- ignorance, and shame. Beasts they were, but more than beasts they were
- the souls of the wicked condemned to endless rebirth, now incorporated
- in vile forms because of the wickedness with which they had once
- rejected the teachings of eternity and the wisdom which lay before them
- as plainly as the trees or the nighttime heavens. The more vicious the
- man, the more ugly the beast: this was the rule. Here in the desert
- the beasts were very ugly.
- Bodidharma the Blessed One shrank back.
- He did not desire to use the weapon. "0 Forever Blessed One, seated n
- the Lotus Flower, Buddha, help me!"
- Within his heart he felt no response. The sinfulness and wickedness of
- these beasts was such that even the Buddha had turned his face gently
- aside and would offer no protection to his messenger, the missionary
- Bodidharma.
- Reluctantly Bodidharma took out his LIFE.
- The LIFE was a dainty weapon, twice the length of a man's finger.
- Golden in strange, almost ugly forms, it hinted at a civilization which
- no one living in India now remembered. The LIFE had come out of the
- early beginnings of mankind, had ridden across a mass of ages, a legion
- of years, and survived as a testimony to the power of early men.
- At the end of the LIFE was a little whistle. Four touch holes gave the
- LIFE pitches and a wide variety of combinations of notes.
- Blown once the LIFE called to holiness. This occurred if all stops
- were closed.
- Blown twice with all stops opened the LIFE carried its own power. This
- power was strange indeed. It magnified every chance emotion of each
- living thing within range of its sound.
- Bodidharma the Blessed One had carried the LIFE because it comforted
- him. Closed, its notes reminded him of the sacred message of the Three
- Treasures of the Buddha which he carried from India to China. Opened,
- its notes brought bliss to the innocent and their own punishment to the
- wicked. Innocence and wickedness were not determined by the LIFE but
- by the hearers themselves, whoever they might be. The trees which
- heard these notes in their own tree like way struck even more mightily
- into the earth and up to the sky reaching for nourishment with new but
- dim and tree like hope. Tigers became more tigerish, frogs more
- froggy, men more good or bad, as their characters might dispose them.
- "Stop!" called Bodidharma the Blessed One to the beasts.
- Tiger and wolf, fox and jackal, snake and spider, they advanced.
- "Stop!" he called again.
- Hoof and claw, sting and tooth, eyes alive, they advanced.
- "Stop!" he called for the third time.
- Still they advanced. He blew the LIFE wide open, twice, clear and
- loud.
- Twice, clear and loud.
- The animals stopped. At the second note, they began to thresh about,
- imprisoned even more deeply by the bestiality of their own natures. The
- tiger snarled at his own front paws, the wolf snapped at his own tail,
- the jackal ran fearfully from his own shadow, the spider hid beneath
- the darkness of rocks, and the other vile beasts who had threatened the
- Blessed One let him pass.
- Bodidharma the Blessed One went on. In the streets of the new capital
- at Anyang the gentle gospel of Buddhism was received with curiosity,
- with calm, and with delight. Those voluptuous barbarians, the Toba
- Tartars, who had made themselves masters of North China, now filled
- their hearts and souls with the hope of death instead of the fear of
- destruction.
- Mothers wept with pleasure to know that their children, dying, had been
- received into blessedness. The Emperor himself laid aside his sword in
- order to listen to the gentle message that had come so bravely over
- illimitable mountains.
- When Bodidharma the Blessed One died he was buried in the outskirts of
- Anyang, his LIFE in a sacred onyx case beside his right hand. There he
- and it both slept for thirteen hundred and forty years.
- III
- In the year 1894 a German explorer so he fancied himself to be looted
- the tomb of the Blessed One in the name of science.
- Villagers caught him in the act and drove him from the hillside.
- He escaped with only one piece of loot, an onyx case with a strange
- copper like LIFE. Copper it seemed to be, although the metal was not
- as corroded as actual copper should have been after so long a burial in
- intermittently moist country. The LIFE was filthy. He cleaned it
- enough to see that it was fragile and to reveal the un-Chinese
- character of the declarations along its side.
- He did not clean it enough to try blowing it: he lived because of that.
- The LIFE was presented to a small municipal museum named in honor of a
- German grand duchess. It occupied case No. 34 of the Dorotheum and
- lay there for another fifty-one years.
- IV
- The B-29s had gone. They had roared off in the direction of Rastatt.
- Wolfgang Huene climbed out of the ditch. He hated himself, he hated
- the Allies, and he almost hated Hitler. A Hitler youth, he was
- handsome, blond, tall, craggy. He was also brave, sharp, cruel, and
- clever. He was a Nazi. Only in a Nazi world could he hope to exist.
- His parents, he knew, were soft rubbish. When his father had been
- killed in a bombing, Wolfgang did not mind.
- When his mother, half-starved, died of influenza, he did not worry
- about her. She was old and did not matter. Germany mattered.
- Now the Germany which mattered to him was coming apart, ripped by
- explosions, punctured by shock waves, and fractured by the endless
- assault of Allied air power.
- Wolfgang as a young Nazi did not know fear, but he did know
- bewilderment.
- In an animal, instinctive way, he knew without thinking about it that
- if Hitlerism did not survive he himself would not survive either. He
- even knew that he was doing his best, what little best there was still
- left to do. He was looking for spies while reporting the weak-hearted
- ones who complained against the Fuhrer or the war. He was helping to
- organize the Volkssturm and he had hopes of becoming a Nazi guerrilla
- even if the Allies did cross the Rhine. Like an animal, but like a
- very intelligent animal, he knew he had to fight, while at the same
- time, he realized that the fight might go against him.
- He stood in the street watching the dust settle after the bombing.
- The moonlight was clear on the broken pavement. This was a quiet part
- of the city. He could hear the fires downtown making a crunching
- sound, like the familiar noise of his father eating lettuce. Near
- himself he could hear nothing; he seemed to be all alone, under the
- moon, in a tiny forgotten corner of the world. He looked around.
- His eyes widened in astonishment: the Dorotheum museum had been blasted
- open.
- Idly, he walked over to the ruin. He stood in the dark doorway.
- Looking back at the street and then up at the sky to make sure that it
- was safe to show a light, he then flashed on his pocket electric light
- and cast the beam around the display room. Cases were broken; in most
- of them glass had fallen in on the exhibits.
- Window glass looked like puddles of ice in the cold moonlight as it lay
- broken on the old stone floors. Immediately in front of him a display
- case sagged crazily. He cast his flashlight beam on it.
- The light picked up a short tube which looked something like the barrel
- of an antique pistol. Wolfgang reached for the tube. He had played in
- a band and he knew what it was. It was a FIFE.
- He held it in his hand a moment and then stuck it in his jacket. He
- cast the beam of his light once more around the museum and then went
- out in the street. It was no use letting the police argue.
- He could now hear the laboring engines of trucks as they coughed,
- sputtering with their poor fuel, climbing up the hill toward him. He
- put his light in his pocket. Feeling the LIFE, he took it out.
- Instinctively, the way that any human being would, he put his fingers
- over all four of the touch holes before he began to blow. The LIFE was
- stopped up.
- He applied force e.
- He blew hard.
- The LIFE sound ded.
- A sweet note, golden beyond imagination, softer and wilder than the
- most thrilling notes of the finest symphony in the world, sounded in
- his ears.
- He felt different, relieved, happy.
- His soul, which he did not know he had, achieved a condition of peace
- which he had never before experienced. In that moment a small religion
- was born. It was a small religion because it was confined to the mind
- of a single brutal adolescent, but it was a true religion,
- nevertheless, because it had the complete message of hope, comfort, and
- fulfillment of an order beyond the limits of this life. Love, and the
- tremendous meaning of love, poured through his mind. Love relaxed the
- muscles of his back and even
- let his aching eyelids drop over his eyes in the first honest fatigue
- he had admitted for many weeks.
- The Nazi in him had been drained off. The call to holiness, trapped in
- the forgotten magic of Bodidharma's LIFE, had sounded even to him. Then
- he made his mistake, a mortal one.
- The LIFE had no more malice than a gun before it is fired, no more hate
- than a river before it swallows a human body, no more anger than a
- height from which a man may slip; the LIFE had its own power, partly in
- sound itself, but mostly in the mechano-ps ionic linkage which the
- unusual alloy and shape had given the Harappa goldsmith forgotten
- centuries before.
- Wolfgang Huene blew again, holding the LIFE between two fingers, with
- none of the stops closed. This time the note was wild. In a terrible
- and wholly convincing moment of vision he reincarnated in himself all
- the false resolutions, the venomous patriotism, the poisonous bravery
- of Hitler's Reich. He was once again a Hitler youth, consummately a
- Nordic man. His eyes gleamed with a message he felt pouring out of
- himself.
- He blew again.
- This third note was the perfecting note the note which had protected
- Bodidharma the Blessed One fifteen hundred and fifty years before in
- the frozen desert north of Tibet.
- Huene became even more Nazi. No longer the boy, no longer the human
- being. He was the magnification of himself He became all fighter, but
- he had forgotten who he was or what it was that he was fighting for.
- The blacked-out trucks came up the hill. His blind eyes looked at
- them. life in hand, he snarled at them.
- A crazy thought went through his mind.
- "Allied tanks . . ."
- He ran wildly toward the leading truck. The driver did not see more
- than a shadow and jammed on the brakes too late.
- The front bumper burst a soft obstruction.
- The front wheel covered the body of the boy. When the truck stopped
- the boy was dead and the LIFE, half crushed, was pressed against the
- rock of a German road.
- V
- Hagen von Grtin was one of the German rocket scientists who worked at
- Huntsville, Alabama. He had gone on down to Cape Canaveral to take
- part in the fifth series of American launchings.
- This included in the third shot of the series a radio transmitter
- designed to hit standard wave radios immediately beneath the satellite.
- The purpose was to allow ordinary listeners throughout the world to
- take part in the tracking of the satellite.
- This particular satellite was designed to have a relatively short
- life. With good luck it would last as long as five weeks, not
- longer.
- The miniaturized transmitter was designed to pick up the sounds, minute
- though they might be, produced by the heating and cooling of the shell
- and to transmit a sound pattern reflecting the heat of cosmic rays and
- also to a certain degree to relay the visual images in terms of a sound
- pattern.
- Hagen von Grim was present at the final assembly. A small part of the
- assembly consisted of inserting a tube which would serve the double
- function of a resonating chamber between the outer skin of the
- satellite and a tiny microphone half the size of a sweet pea which
- would then translate the sound made by the outer shell into radio
- signals which amateurs on the Earth surface fifteen hundred miles below
- could follow.
- Von Grim no longer smoked. He had stopped smoking that fearful night
- in which Allied planes bombed the truck convoy carrying his colleagues
- and himself to safety. Though he had managed to scrounge cigarettes
- throughout the war he had even given up carrying his cigarette holder.
- He carried instead an odd old copper LIFE he had found in the highway
- and had put back into shape. Superstitious at his luck in living, and
- grateful that the LIFE reminded him not to smoke, he never bothered to
- clean it out and blow it. He had weighed it, found its specific
- gravity, measured it, like the good German that he was, down to the
- last millimeter and milligram but he kept it in his pocket though it
- was a little clumsy to carry.
- Just as they put the last part of the nose cone together, the strut
- broke.
- It could not break, but it did.
- It would have taken five minutes and a ride down the elevator to find a
- new tube to serve as a strut.
- Acting on an odd impulse, Hagen von Grim remembered that his lucky LIFE
- was within a millimeter of the length required, and was of precisely
- the right diameter. The holes did not matter. He picked up a fie,
- filed the old LIFE, and inserted it.
- They closed the skin of the satellite. They sealed the cone.
- Seven hours later the message rocket took off, the first one capable of
- reaching every standard wave radio on earth. As Hagen von Grim watched
- the great rocket climb he wondered to himself,
- "Does it make any difference whether those stops were opened or
- closed?"
- Angerhelm Funny funny funny. It's sort of funny funny funny to think
- without a brain it is really something like a trick but not a trick to
- think without a brain. Talking is even harder but it can be done.
- I still remember the way that phrase came ringing through when we
- finally got hold of old Nelson Angerhelm and sat him down with the
- buzzing tape.
- The story began a long time before that. I never knew the
- beginnings.
- My job is an assistant to Mr. Spatz, and Spatz has been shooting holes
- in budgets now for eighteen years. He is the man who approves, on
- behalf of the Director of the Budget, all requests for special liaison
- between the Department of the Army and the intelligence community.
- He is very good at his job. More people have shown up asking for money
- and have ended up with about one-tenth of what they asked than you
- could line up in any one corridor of the Pentagon.
- That is saying a lot.
- The case began to break some months ago after the Russians started to
- get back those odd little recording capsules. The capsules came out of
- their Sputniks. We didn't know what was in the capsules as they
- returned from upper space. All we knew was that there was something in
- them.
- The capsules descended in such a way that we could track them by radar.
- Unfortunately they all fell into Russian territory except for a single
- capsule which landed in the Atlantic. At the seven-million-dollar
- point we gave up trying to find it.
- The Commander of the Atlantic fleet had been told by his intelligence
- officer that they might have a chance of finding it if they kept on
- looking. The Commander referred the matter to Washington, and the
- budget people saw the request. That stopped it, for a while.
- The case began to break from about four separate directions at once.
- Khrushchev himself said something very funny to the Secretary of State.
- They had met in London after all.
- Khrushchev said at the end of a meeting,
- "You play jokes sometimes, Mr. Secretary?"
- The Secretary looked very surprised when he heard the translation.
- "Jokes, Mr. Prime Minister?" "Yes."
- "What kind of jokes?"
- "Jokes about apparatus."
- "Jokes about machinery don't sit very well," said the American.
- They went on talking back and forth as to whether it was a good idea to
- play practical jokes when each one had a serious job of espionage to
- do.
- The Russian leader insisted that he had no espionage, never heard of
- espionage, and that his espionage worked well enough so that he knew
- damn well that he didn't have any espionage.
- To this display of heat, the Secretary replied that he didn't have any
- espionage either and that we knew nothing whatever that occurred in
- Russia. Furthermore not only did we not know anything about Russia but
- we knew we didn't know it and we made sure of that. After this
- exchange both leaders parted, each one wondering what the other had
- been talking about.
- The whole matter was referred back to Washington. I was somewhere down
- on the list to see it.
- At that time I had
- "Galactic" clearance. Galactic clearance came a little bit after
- universal clearance. It wasn't very strong but it amounted to
- something. I was supposed to see those special papers in connection
- with my job of assisting Mr. Spatz in liaison.
- Actually it didn't do any good except to fill in the time when I wasn't
- working out budgets for him.
- The second lead came from some of the boys over in the Valley. We
- never called the place by any other name and we don't even like to see
- it in the federal budget. We know as much as we need to about it and
- then we stop thinking.
- It is much safer to stop thinking. It is not our business to think
- about what other people are doing, particularly if they are spending
- several million dollars of Uncle Sam's money every day, trying to find
- out what they think and most of the time ending up with nothing
- conclusive.
- Later we were to find out that the boys in the Valley had practically
- every security agent in the country rushing off to Minneapolis to look
- for a man named Angerhelm. Nelson The name didn't mean anything then
- but before we got through it ended up as the largest story of the
- twentieth century.
- If they ever turn it loose it is going to be the biggest story in two
- thousand years. The third part of the story came along a little later.
- Colonel Plugg was over in G-2. He called up Mr. Spatz and he couldn't
- get Mr. Spatz so he called me.
- He said,
- "What's the matter with your boss? Isn't he ever in his room?"
- "Not if I can help it. I don't run him, he runs me. What do you
- want, Colonel?" I said.
- The colonel snarled.
- "Look, I am supposed to get money out of you for liaison purposes. I
- don't know how far I am going to have to go to liaise or if it is any
- of my business. I asked my old man what I ought to do about it and he
- doesn't know. Perhaps we ought to get out and just let the
- Intelligence boys handle it. Or we ought to send it to State. You
- spend half your life telling me whether I can have liaison or not and
- then giving me the money for it. Why don't you come on over and take a
- little responsibility for a change?" I rushed over to Plugg's office.
- It was an Army problem. These are the facts.
- The Soviet Assistant Military Attache, a certain Lieutenant Colonel
- Potariskov, asked for an interview. When he came over he brought
- nothing with him. This time he didn't even bring a translator. He
- spoke very funny English but it worked.
- The essence of Potariskov's story was that he didn't think it was very
- sporting of the American military to interfere in solemn weather
- reporting by introducing practical jokes in Soviet radar.
- If the American army didn't have anything else better to do would they
- please play jokes on each other but not on the Soviet forces? This
- didn't make much sense.
- Colonel Plugg tried to find out what the man was talking about. The
- Russian sounded crazy and kept talking about jokes.
- It finally turned out that Potariskov had a piece of paper in his
- pocket. He took it out and Plugg looked at it.
- On it there was an address. Nelson Angerhelm, 2322 Ridge Drive,
- Hopkins, Minnesota.
- It turned out that Hopkins, Minnesota, was a suburb of Minneapolis.
- That didn't take long to find out.
- This meant nothing to Colonel Plugg and he asked if there was anything
- that Potariskov really wanted.
- Potariskov asked if the Colonel would confess to the Angerhelm joke.
- Potariskov said that in Intelligence they never tell you about the
- jokes they play with the Signal Corps. Plugg still insisted that he
- didn't know. He said he would try to find out and let Potariskov know
- later on. Potariskov went away.
- Plugg called up the Signal Corps, and by the time he got through
- calling he had a lead back into the Valley. The Valley people heard
- about it and they immediately sent a man over.
- It was about this time that I came in. He couldn't get hold of Mr.
- Spatz and there was real trouble.
- The point is that all three of them led together. The Valley people
- had picked up the name (and it is not up to me to tell you how they got
- hold of it). The name Angerhelm had been running all over the Soviet
- communications system. Practically every Russian official in the world
- had been asked if he knew anything about Nelson Angerhelm and almost
- every official, at least as far as the boys in the Valley could tell,
- had replied that he didn't know what it was all about.
- Some reference back to Mr. Khrushchev's conversation with the
- Secretary of State suggested that the Angerhelm inquiry might have tied
- in with this. We pursued it a little further. Angerhelm was
- apparently the right reference. The Valley people already had
- something about him. They had checked with the F.B.I. The F.B.I, had
- said that Nelson Angerhelm was a 62-year-old retired poultry farmer. He
- had served in World War I. His service had been rather brief. He had
- gotten as far as Plattsburg, New York, broken an ankle, stayed four
- months in a hospital, and the injury had developed complications. He
- had been drawing a Veterans Administration allowance ever since. He
- had never visited outside the United States, never joined a subversive
- organization, never married, and never spent a nickel.
- So far as the F.B.I, could discover, his life was not worth living.
- This left the matter up in the air. There was nothing whatever to
- connect him with the Soviet Union.
- It turned out that I wasn't needed after all. Spatz came into the
- office and said that a conference had been called for the whole
- Intelligence community, people from State were sitting in, and there
- was a special representative from OCBM from the White House to watch
- what they were doing.
- The question arose,
- "Who was Nelson Angerhelm? And what were we to do about him?"
- An additional report had been made out by an agent who specialized in
- pretending to be an Internal Revenue man.
- The
- "Internal Revenue agent" was one of the best people in the F.B.I, for
- checking on subversive activities. He was a real expert on espionage
- and he knew all about bad connections. He could smell a conspirator
- two miles off on a clear day. And by sitting in a room for a little
- while he could tell whether anybody had an illegal meeting there for
- the previous three years. Maybe I am exaggerating a little bit but I
- am not exaggerating much.
- This fellow, who was a real artist at smelling out Commies and anything
- that even faintly resembles a Commie, came back with a completely blank
- ticket on Angerhelm.
- There was only one connection that Angerhelm had with the larger
- world. He had a younger brother, whose name was Tice. Funny name and
- I don't know why he got it. Somebody told us later on that the full
- name tied in with Theiss Ankerhjelm, which was the name of a Swedish
- admiral a couple hundred years ago. Perhaps the family was proud of
- it.
- The younger brother was a West Pointer. He had had a regular career;
- that came easily enough out of the Adjutant General's Office.
- What did develop, though, was that the younger brother had died only
- two months previously. He too was a bachelor. One of the
- psychiatrists who got into the case said,
- "What a mother!"
- Tice Angerhelm had traveled a great deal. He had something to do, as a
- matter of fact, with two or three of the projects that I was liaising
- on. There were all sorts of issues arising from this.
- However, he was dead. He had never worked directly on Soviet matters.
- He had no Soviet friends, had never been in the Soviet Union, and had
- never met Soviet forces. He had never even gone to the Soviet Embassy
- to an official reception.
- The man was no specialist, outside of Ordnance, a little tiny bit of
- French, and the missile program. He was something of a Saturday
- evening Don Juan. It was then time for the fourth stage.
- Colonel Plugg was told to get hold of Lieutenant Colonel Potariskov and
- find out what Potariskov had to give him. This time Potariskov called
- back and said that he would rather have his boss, the Soviet Ambassador
- himself, call on the Secretary or the Undersecretary of State.
- There was some shilly-shallying back and forth. The Secretary was out
- of town, the Undersecretary said he would be very glad to see the
- Soviet Ambassador if there were anything to ask about.
- He said that we had found Angerhelm, and if the Soviet authorities
- wanted to interview Mr. Angerhelm themselves they jolly well could go
- to Hopkins, Minnesota, and interview him.
- This led to a real flash of embarrassment when it was discovered that
- the area of Hopkins, Minnesota, was in the "no travel" zone proscribed
- to Soviet diplomats in retaliation against their "no travel" zones
- imposed on American diplomats in the Soviet Union.
- This was ironed out. The Soviet Ambassador was asked, would he like to
- go see a chicken farmer in Minnesota?
- When the Soviet Ambassador stated that he was not particularly
- interested in chicken farmers, but that he would be willing to see Mr.
- Angerhelm at a later date if the American government didn't mind, the
- whole thing was let go.
- Nothing happened at all. Presumably the Russians were relaying things
- back to Moscow by courier, letter, or whatever mysterious ways the
- Russians use when they are acting very deliberately and very
- solemnly.
- I heard nothing and certainly the people around the Soviet Embassy saw
- no unusual contacts at that time.
- Nelson Angerhelm hadn't come into the story yet. All he knew was that
- several odd characters had asked him about veterans that he scarcely
- knew, saying that they were looking for security clearances.
- And an Internal Revenue man had a long and very exhausting talk with
- him about his brother's estate. That didn't seem to leave much.
- Angerhelm went on feeding his chickens. He had television and
- Minneapolis has a pretty good range of stations. Now and then he
- showed up at the church; more frequently he showed up at the general
- store.
- He almost always went away from town to avoid the new shopping centers.
- He didn't like the way Hopkins had developed and preferred to go to the
- little country centers where they still have general stores. In its
- own funny way this seemed to be the only pleasure the old man had.
- After nineteen days, and I can now count almost every hour of them, the
- answer must have gotten back from Moscow. It was probably carried in
- by the stocky brown-haired courier who made the trip about every
- fortnight. One of the fellows from the Valley told me about that. I
- wasn't supposed to know and it didn't matter then.
- Apparently the Soviet Ambassador had been told to play the matter
- lightly. He called on the Undersecretary of State and ended up
- discussing world butter prices and the effect of American exports of
- ghee to Pakistan on the attempts of the Soviet Union to trade ghee for
- hemp.
- Apparently this was an extraordinary and confidential thing for the
- Soviet Ambassador to discuss. The Undersecretary would have been more
- impressed if he had been able to find out why the Soviet Ambassador
- just out of the top of his head announced that the Soviet Union had
- given about a hundred and twenty million dollars' credit to Pakistan
- for some unnecessary highways and was able to reply, therefore,
- somewhat tartly to the general effect that if the Soviet Union ever
- decided to stabilize world markets with the cooperation of the United
- States we would be very happy to cooperate. But this was no time to
- discuss money or fair business deals when they were dumping every piece
- of export rubbish they could in our general direction.
- It was characteristic of this Soviet Ambassador that he took the rebuff
- calmly. Apparently his mission was to have no mission. He left and
- that was all there was from him.
- Potariskov came back to the Pentagon, this time accompanied by a
- Russian civilian. The new man's English was a little more than
- perfect. The English was so good that it was desperately irritating.
- Potariskov himself looked like a rather horsey, brown-faced school-
- boy, with chestnut hair and brown eyes. I got to see him because they
- had me sitting in the back of Plugg's office pretending just to wait
- for somebody else.
- The conversation was very simple. Potariskov brought out a recording
- tape. It was standard American tape.
- Plugg looked at it and said,
- "Do you want to play it right now?" Potariskov agreed.
- The stenographer got a tape recorder in. By that time three or four
- other officers wandered in and none of them happened to leave. As a
- matter of fact one of them wasn't even an officer but he happened to
- have a uniform on that very day.
- They played the tape and I listened to it. It was buzz, buzz, buzz.
- And there was some hissing, then it went clickety, clickety, clickety.
- Then it was buzz, buzz, buzz again. It was the kind of sound in which
- you turn on a radio and you don't even get static.
- You just get funny buzzing sounds which indicate that somebody has some
- sort of radio transmission somewhere but it is not consistent enough to
- be the loud whee, wheeeee kind of static which one often hears.
- All of us stood there rather solemnly. Plugg, thoroughly a soldier,
- listened at rigid attention, moving his eyes back and forth from the
- tape recorder to Potariskov's face. Potariskov looked at Plugg and
- then ran his eyes around the group.
- The little Russian civilian, who was as poisonous as a snake, glanced
- at every single one of us. He was obviously taking our measure and he
- was anxious to find out if any of us could hear anything he couldn't
- hear. None of us heard anything.
- At the end of the tape Plugg reached out to turn off the machine.
- "Don't stop it," Potariskov said. The other Russian interjected,
- "Didn't you hear it?" All of us shook our heads. We had heard
- nothing. With that, Potariskov said with singular politeness, "Please
- play it again."
- We played it again. Nothing happened, except for the buzzing and
- clicking.
- After the fifteen-minute point it was beginning to get pretty stale for
- some of us. One or two of the men actually wandered out. They
- happened to be the bona fide visitors. The non-bona fide visitors
- slouched down in the room.
- Colonel Plugg offered Potariskov a cigarette, which Potariskov took.
- They both smoked and we played it a third time. Then the third time
- Potariskov said,
- "Turn it off."
- "Didn't you hear it?" said Potariskov.
- "Hear what?" said Plugg.
- "Hear the name and the address."
- At that the funniest feeling came over me. I knew that I had heard
- something and I turned to the Colonel and said, "Funny, I don't know
- where I heard it or how I heard it but I do know something that I
- didn't know."
- "What is that?" said the little Russian civilian, his face lighting
- up.
- "Nelson," said I, intending to say,
- "Nelson Angerhelm, 2322 Ridge Drive, Hopkins, Minnesota." Just as I
- had seen it in the "galactic" secret documents. Of course I didn't go
- any further. That was in the document and was very secret indeed.
- How should I know it?
- The Russian civilian looked at me. There was a funny, wicked,
- friendly, crooked sort of smile on his face. He said, "Didn't you
- hear
- "Nelson Angerhelm, 2322 Ridge Drive, Hopkins, Minnesota," just now, and
- yet did you not know where you heard it?"
- The question then arose,
- "What had happened?"
- Potariskov spoke with singular candor. Even the Russian with him
- concurred.
- "We believe that this is a case of marginal perception. We have played
- this. This is obviously a copy. We have many such copies. We have
- played it to all our people. Nobody can even specify at what point he
- has heard it. We have had our best experts on it. Some put it at
- minute three. Others put it at minute twelve. Some put it at minute
- thirteen and a half and at different places. But different people
- under different controls all come out with the idea that they have
- heard
- "Nelson Angerhelm, 2322 Ridge Drive, Hopkins, Minnesota." We have
- tried it on Chinese people."
- At that the Russian civilian interrupted.
- "Yes, indeed, they tried it on Chinese persons and even they heard the
- same thing, Nelson Angerhelm. Even when they do not know the language
- they hear
- "Nelson Angerhelm." Even when they know nothing else they hear that
- and they hear the street numbers. The numbers are always in English.
- They cannot make a recording.
- The recording is only of this noise and yet it comes out. What do you
- make of that?"
- What they said turned out to be true. We tried it also, after they
- went away.
- We tried it on college students, foreigners, psychiatrists.
- White House staff members, and passers-by. We even thought of running
- it on a municipal radio somewhere as a quiz show and offering prizes
- for anyone that got it. That was a little too heavy, so we accepted a
- much safer suggestion that we try it out on the public address system
- of the SAC base. The SAC was guarded night and day.
- No one happened to be getting much leave anyhow and it was easy enough
- to cut off the leave for an extra week. We played that damn thing
- six times over and almost everybody on that base wanted to write a
- letter to Nelson Angerhelm, 2322 Ridge Drive, Hopkins, Minnesota. They
- were even calling each other Angerhelm and wondering what the hell it
- meant.
- Naturally there were a great many puns on the name and even some jokes
- of a rather smutty order. That didn't help.
- The troublesome thing was that on all these different tests we too were
- unable to find out at what point the subliminal transmission of the
- name and address came.
- It was subliminal, all right. There's not much trick to that.
- Any good psychologist can pass along either a noise message or a sight
- message without the recipient knowing exactly when he got it. It is
- simply a matter of getting down near the threshold, running a little
- tiny bit under the threshold, and then making the message sharp and
- clear enough, just under the level of conscious notice, so that it
- slips on through.
- We therefore knew what we were dealing with. What we didn't know was
- what the Russians were doing with it, how they had gotten it, and why
- they were so upset about it.
- Finally it all went to the White House for a conference. The
- conference, to which my boss Mr. Spatz went along as a sort of
- rapporteur and monitor to safeguard the interests of the Director of
- the Budget and of the American taxpayer, was a rather brief affair.
- All roads led to Nelson Angerhelm. Nelson Angerhelm was already
- guarded by about half of the F.B.I, and a large part of the local
- military district forces. Every room in his house had been wired. The
- microphones were sensitive enough to hear his heart beat. The safety
- precautions we were taking on that man would have justified the program
- we have for taking care of Fort Knox.
- Angerhelm knew that some awful funny things had been happening but he
- didn't know what and he didn't know who was concerned with it.
- Months later he was able to tell somebody that he thought his brother
- had probably done some forgery or counterfeiting and that the
- neighborhood was being thoroughly combed. He didn't realize his
- safeguarding was the biggest American national treasure since the
- discovery of the atomic bomb.
- The President himself gave the word. He reviewed the evidence. The
- Secretary of State said that he didn't think that Khrushchev would have
- brought up the question of a joke if Khrushchev himself had not missed
- out on the facts.
- We had even tried Russians on it, of course Russians on our side. And
- they didn't get any more off the record than the rest of the people.
- Everybody heard the same blessed thing,
- "Nelson Angerhelm, 2322 Ridge Drive, Hopkins, Minnesota."
- of Man But that didn't get anybody anywhere.
- The only thing left was to try it on the man himself.
- When it came to picking inconspicuous people to go along, the
- Intelligence committee were pretty thin-skinned about letting outsiders
- into their show. On the other hand they did not have domestic
- jurisdiction, particularly not when the President had turned it over to
- J. Edgar Hoover and said,
- "Ed, you handle this.
- I don't like the looks of it."
- Somebody over in the Pentagon, presumably deviled on by Air
- Intelligence, got the bright idea that if the Army and the rest of the
- Intelligence committee couldn't fit into the show the best they could
- do would be to get their revenge on liaison by letting liaison itself
- go. This meant Mr. Spatz.
- Mr. Spatz has been on the job for many, many years by always avoiding
- anything interesting or dramatic, always watching for everything that
- mattered which was the budget and the authorization for next year and
- by ditching controversial personalities long before anyone else had any
- idea that they were controversial.
- Therefore, he didn't go. If this Angerhelm fiasco was going to turn
- out to be a mess he wanted to be out of it.
- It was me who got the assignment.
- I was made a sort of honorary member of the F.B.I, and they even let me
- carry the tape in the end. They must have had about six other copies
- of the tape so the honor wasn't as marked as it looked. We were simply
- supposed to go along as people who knew something about the brother.
- It was a dry, reddish Sunday afternoon, looking a little bit as though
- the sunset were coming.
- We drove up to this very nice frame house. It had double windows all
- the way around and looked as tight as the proverbial rug for a bug to
- be snug in in cold winter. This wasn't winter and the old gentleman
- obviously couldn't pay for air conditioning. But the house still
- looked snug.
- There was no waste, no show. It just looked like a thoroughly livable
- house.
- The F.B.I, man was big-hearted and let me ring the doorbell.
- There was no answer so I rang the doorbell some more. Again, nobody
- answered the bell.
- We decided to wait outside and wandered around the yard.
- We looked at the car in the yard; it seemed in running order.
- We rang the doorbell again, then walked around the house and looked
- into the kitchen window. We checked his car to see if the radiator
- felt warm. We looked at our watches. We wondered if he were hiding
- and peeking out at us. Once more we rang the doorbell.
- Just then, the old boy came down the front walk.
- We introduced ourselves and the preliminaries were the usual sort of
- thing. I found my heart beating violently. If something had stumped
- both the Soviet Union and the rest of the world, something salvaged
- possibly out of space itself, something which thousands of men had
- heard and none could identify, something so mysterious that the name of
- Nelson Angerhelm rang over and over again like a pitiable cry beyond
- all limits of understanding, what could this be?
- We didn't know.
- The old man stood there. He was erect, sunburned, red cheeked
- red-nosed, red-eared. Healthy as he could be, Swedish to the bone.
- All we had to do was to tell him that we were concerned with his
- brother, Tice Angerhelm, and he listened to us. We had no trouble, no
- trouble at all.
- As he listened his eyes got wide and he said,
- "I know there has been a lot of snooping around here and you people had
- a lot of trouble and I thought somebody was going to come and talk to
- me about it but I didn't think it would be this soon."
- The F.B.I, man muttered something polite and vague, so Angerhelm went
- on.
- "I suppose you gentlemen are from the F.B.I. I don't think my brother
- was cheating. He wasn't that dishonest."
- Another pause, and he continued.
- "But there is always a kind of a funny sleek mind he looked like the
- kind of man who would play a joke."
- Angerhelm's eyes lit up.
- "If he played a joke, gentlemen, he might even have committed a crime,
- I don't know. All I do is raise chickens and try to have my life."
- Perhaps it was the wrong kind of Intelligence procedure but I broke in
- ahead of the F.B.I, and said,
- "Are you a happy man, Mr. Angerhelm? Do you live a life that you
- think is really satisfying?"
- The old boy gave me a keen look. It was obvious that he thought there
- was something wrong and he didn't have very much confidence in my
- judgment.
- And yet underneath the sharpness of his look he shot me a glance of
- sympathy and I am sure that he suspected I had been under a strain. His
- eyes widened a little. His shoulders went back, and he looked a little
- prouder.
- He looked like the kind of man who might remember that he had Swedish
- admirals for ancestors, and that long before the Angerhelm name ran out
- and ran dry there in this flat country west of Minneapolis there had
- been something great in it and that perhaps sparks of the great name
- still flew somewhere in the universe.
- I don't know. He got the importance of it, I suppose, because he
- looked me very sharply and very clearly in the eye.
- of Man "No, young man, my life hasn't been much of a life and I
- haven't liked it. And I hope nobody has to live a life like mine.
- But that is enough of that. I don't suppose you're guessing and I
- suppose you've got something pretty bad to show me."
- The other fellow then took over.
- "Yes, but it doesn't involve any embarrassment for you, Mr. Angerhelm.
- And even Colonel Angerhelm, your brother, wouldn't mind if he were
- living."
- "Don't be so sure of that," said the old man.
- "My brother minded almost everything. As a matter of fact, my brother
- once said to me,
- "Listen, Nels, I'd come back from Hell itself rather than let somebody
- put something over on me." That's what he said. I think he meant it.
- There was a funny pride to him and if you've got anything here on my
- brother, you'd better just show it to me."
- With that, we got over the small talk and we did what we were told to
- do. We got out the tape and put it on the portable machine, the hi-fi
- one which we brought along with us.
- We played it for the old man.
- I had heard it so often that I think I could almost have reproduced it
- with my vocal cords. The clickety-click and the buzz, buzz. There
- wasn't any whee, whee, but there was some more clickety-click and there
- was some buzz, buzz, and long periods of dull silence, the kind of
- contrived silence which a recording machine makes when it is playing
- but nothing is coming through on it.
- The old gentleman listened to it and it seemed to have no effect on
- him, no effect at all.
- No effect at all? That wasn't true.
- There was an effect. When we got through the first time, he said very
- simply, very directly, almost coldly,
- "Play it again. Play it again for me. There may be something
- there."
- We played it again.
- After that second playing he started to talk.
- "It is the funniest thing, I hear my own name and address there and I
- don't know where I hear it, but I swear to God, gentlemen, that's my
- brother's voice. It is my brother's voice I hear there somewhere in
- those clicks and noises. And yet all I can hear is Nelson Angerhelm,
- 2322 Ridge Drive, Hopkins, Minnesota.
- But I hear that, gentlemen, and it is not only plain, it is my
- brother's voice and I don't know where I heard it. I don't know how it
- came through."
- We played it for him a third time.
- When the tape was halfway through, he threw up his hands and said,
- "Turn it off. Turn it off. I can't stand it. Turn it off."
- We turned it off.
- He sat there in the chair breathing hard. After a while in a very
- funny cracked tone of voice he said,
- "I've got some whisky.
- It's back there on the shelf by the sink. Get me a shot of it, will
- you, gentlemen?"
- The F.B.I, man and I looked at each other. He didn't want to get mixed
- up in accidental poisoning so he sent me. I went back.
- It was good enough whisky, one of the regular brands. I poured the old
- boy a two-ounce slug and took the glass back. I sipped a tiny bit of
- it myself. It seemed like a silly thing to do on duty but I couldn't
- risk any poison getting to him. After all my years in Army
- counterintelligence I wanted to stay in the Civil Service and I didn't
- want to take any chances on losing my good job with Mr. Spatz.
- He drank the whisky and he said,
- "Can you record on this thing at the same time that you play?"
- We said we couldn't. We hadn't thought of that.
- "I think I may be able to tell you what it is saying. But I don't know
- how many times I can tell you, gentlemen. I am a sick man.
- I'm not feeling good. I never have felt very good. My brother had the
- life. I didn't have the life. I never had much of a life and never
- did anything and never went anywhere. My brother had everything. My
- brother got the women, he got the girl he got the only girl I ever
- wanted, and then he didn't marry her. He got the life and he went away
- and then he died. He played jokes and he never let anybody get ahead
- of him. And, gentlemen, my brother's dead. Can you understand that?
- My brother's dead."
- We said we knew his brother was dead. We didn't tell him that he had
- been exhumed and that the coffin had been opened and the bones had been
- X-rayed. We didn't tell him that the bones had been weighed, fresh
- identification had been remade from what was left of the fingers, and
- they were in pretty good shape.
- We didn't tell him that the serial number had been checked and that all
- the circumstances leading to the death had been checked and that
- everybody connected with it had been interviewed.
- We didn't tell him that. We just told him we knew that his brother was
- dead. He knew that too.
- "You know my brother is dead and then this funny thing has his voice in
- it. All it's got is his voice . . ."
- We agreed. We said that we didn't know how his voice got in there and
- we didn't even know that there was a voice.
- We didn't tell him that we had heard that voice ourselves a thousand
- times and yet never knew where we heard it.
- We didn't tell him that we'd played it at the SAC base and that every
- man there had heard the name, Nelson Angerhelm, had heard something
- saying that and yet couldn't tell where.
- of Man We didn't tell him that the entire apparatus of Soviet
- Intelligence had been swearing over this for an unstated period of time
- and that our people had the unpleasant feeling that this came out of a
- Sputnik somewhere out in the sky.
- We didn't tell him all that but we knew it. We knew that if he heard
- his brother's voice and if he wanted to record, it was something very
- serious.
- "Can you get me something to dictate on?" the old man said.
- "I can take notes," the F.B.I, man replied.
- The old man shook his head.
- "That isn't enough," he said.
- "I
- think you probably want to get the whole thing if you ever get it and I
- begin to get pieces of it."
- "Pieces of what?" said the F.B.I, man.
- "Pieces of the stuff behind all that noise. It's my brother's voice
- talking. He's saying things I don't like what he is saying.
- It frightens me and it just makes everything bad and dirty. I'm not
- sure I can take it and I am not going to take it twice. I think I'll
- go to church instead."
- We looked at each other.
- "Can you wait ten minutes? I think I can get a recording machine by
- then."
- The old man nodded his head. The F.B.I, man went out to the car and
- cranked up the radio. A great big aerial shot up out of the car, which
- otherwise was a very inconspicuous Chevrolet sedan.
- He got his office. A recording machine with a police escort was sent
- out from downtown Minneapolis toward Hopkins. I don't know what time
- it took ambulances to make it but the fellow at the other end said,
- "You better allow me twenty to twenty-two minutes."
- We waited. The old man wouldn't talk to us and he didn't want us to
- play the tape. He sat there sipping the whisky.
- "This might kill me and I want to have my friends around. My pastor's
- name is Jensen and if anything happens to me you get a hold of him
- there but I don't think anything will happen to me.
- Just get a hold of him. I may die, gentlemen, I can't take too much of
- this. It is the most shocking thing that ever happened to any man and
- I'm not going to see you or anybody else get in on it.
- You understand that it could kill me, gentlemen."
- We pretended that we knew what he was talking about, although neither
- one of us had the faintest idea, beyond the suspicion that the old man
- might have a heart condition and might actually collapse.
- The office had estimated twenty-two minutes. It took eighteen minutes
- for the F.B.I, assistant to come in. He brought in one of these new,
- tight, clean little jobs, the kind of thing that I'd love to take home.
- You can pack it almost anywhere. And it comes out with concert
- quality.
- The old man brightened when he saw that we meant business.
- "Give me a set of headphones and just let me talk and pick it up. I'
- ll try
- to reproduce it. It won't be my brother's voice. It will be my voice
- you're hearing. Do you follow me?"
- We turned on the tape.
- He dictated, with the headset on his head.
- That's when the message started. And that's the thing I started with
- in the very beginning.
- Funny funny funny. It's sort of funny funny funny to think without a
- brain it is really something like a trick but not a trick to think
- without a brain. Talking is even harder but it can be done.
- Nels, this is Tice. I'm dead.
- Nels, I don't know whether I'm in Heaven or Hell, but I think it's
- Hell, Nels. And I am going to play the biggest joke that anybody's
- ever played. And it's funny, I am an American Army officer and lama
- dead one, and it doesn't matter. Nels, don't you see what it is ? It
- doesn't matter if you 're dead whether you 're American or Russian or
- an officer or not. And even laughter doesn't matter.
- But there's enough left of me, Nels, enough of the old me so that
- perhaps for one last time I'll have a laugh with you and the others.
- I haven't got a body to laugh with, Nels, and I haven't got a mouth to
- laugh with and I haven't got cheeks to smile with and there really isn
- 't any me. Tice Angerhelm is something different now, Nels. I'm
- dead.
- I knew I was dead when I felt so different. It was more comfortable
- being dead, more relaxed. There wasn't anything tight.
- That's the trouble, Nels, there isn't anything tight. There isn't
- anything around you. You can't feel the world, you can't see the
- world, and yet you know all about it. You know all about everything.
- It's awfully lonely, Nels. There are some corners that aren't lonely,
- some funny little corners in which you feel friendship and feel things
- creeping up.
- Nels, it's like kittens or the faces of children or the smell of the
- wind on a nice day. It's any time that you turn away from yourself and
- you don't think about yourself.
- It's the times when you don't want something and you do want
- something.
- It's what you're not resenting, what you're not hating, what you're not
- fearing, and what you're not jeering. That's it, Nels, that's the good
- part inside of death. And I suppose some people could call it Heaven.
- And I guess you get Heaven if you just get into the habit of having
- Heaven every day in your ordinary life.
- That's what it is. Heaven is right there, Nels, in your ordinary life,
- every day, day by day, right around you.
- But that's not what I got. Oh, Nels, I am Tice Angerhelm all right, I
- am
- of Man your brother and I'm dead. You can call where I am Hell since
- it's everything I hated.
- Nels, it smells of everything that I ever wanted. It smells the way
- the hay smelted when I had my old Willys roadster and I made the first
- girl I ever made that August evening. You can go ask her. She's a
- Mrs. Prai Jesselton now. She lives over on the east side of St. Paul.
- You never knew I made her and if you don't think this is so, you can
- listen for yourself.
- And you see, I am somewhere and I don't know what kind of a where it
- is.
- Nels, this is me, Tice Angerhelm, and I'm going to scream this out loud
- with what I've got instead of a mouth. I am going to scream it loud so
- that any human ear that hears it can put it on this silly, silly Soviet
- gadget and take it back. TAKE THIS
- MESSAGE TO NELSON ANGER HELM 2322 RIDGE DRIVE,
- hopkins, minnesota. And I'm going to repeat that a couple more times
- so that you 'll know that it's your brother talking and I'm somewhere
- and it isn't Heaven and it isn't Hell and it isn't even really out
- in space. I am in something different from space, Nels.
- It is just a somewhere with me in it and there isn't anything but me.
- In with me there's everything.
- In with me there is everything I ever thought and everything I ever did
- and everything I ever wanted.
- All the opposites are the same. Everything I hated and everything I
- loved, it's all the same. Everything I feared and everything I yearned
- for that's the same. I tell you it's all the same now and the
- punishment is just as bad if you want something and get it as if you
- want something and don't get it.
- The only thing that matters is those calm, nice moments in life when
- you don't want anything, Nels. You aren't anything.
- When you aren't trying for anything and the world is just around you,
- and you get simple things like water on the skin, when you yourself
- feel innocent and you are not thinking about anything else.
- That's all there is to life, Nels. And I'm Tice and I'm telling you.
- And you know I'm dead, so I wouldn't be telling you a lie.
- And I especially wouldn't be telling you on this Soviet cylinder, this
- Soviet gismo which will go back to them and bother them.
- Nels, I hope it won't bother you too much, if everybody knows about
- that girl. I hope the girl forgives me but the message has got to go
- back.
- And yet that's the message everything I ever feared I feared something
- in the war and you know what the war smells like. It smells sort of
- like a cheap slaughterhouse in July. It smells bad all around. There's
- bits of things burning, the smell of rubber burning and the funny smell
- of gunpowder. I was never in a big war with atomic stuff. Just the old
- sort of explosions. I've told you about it before and I was scared of
- that. And
- right in with that I can smell the perfume that girl had in the hotel
- there in Melbourne, the girl that I thought I might have wanted until
- she said something and then I said something and that was all there was
- between us. And I'm dead now.
- And listen, Nels Listen, Nels. I am talking as though it were a trick.
- I don't know how I know about the rest of us the other ones that are
- dead like me. I never met one and I may never talk to one. I just
- have the feeling that they are here too. They can't talk.
- It's not that they can't talk, really.
- They don't even want to talk.
- They don't feel like talking. Talking is just a trick. It is a trick
- that somebody can pick up and I guess it takes a cheap, meaningless
- man, a man who lived his life in spite of Hell and is now in that Hell.
- That's the kind of silly man it takes to remember the trick of talking.
- Like a trick with coins or a trick with cigarettes when nothing else
- matters.
- So I am talking to you, Nels. And Nels, I suppose you
- "II
- die the way I do. It doesn't matter, Nels. It's too late to change
- that's all.
- Good-bye, Nels, you 're in pretty good shape. You 've lived your life.
- You 've had the wind in your hair. You 've seen the good sunlight and
- you haven't hated and feared and loved too much.
- When the old man got through dictating it, the F.B.I, man and I asked
- him to do it again.
- He refused.
- We all stood up. We brought in the assistant.
- The old man still refused to make a second dictation from the sounds
- out of which only he could hear a voice.
- We could have taken him into custody and forced him but there didn't
- seem to be much sense to it until we took the recording back to
- Washington and had this text appraised.
- He said good-bye to us as we left his house.
- "Perhaps I can do it once again maybe a year from now. But the trouble
- with me, gentlemen, is that I believe it. That was the voice of my
- brother, Tice Angerhelm, and he is dead. And you brought me something
- strange. I don't know where you got a medium or spirit reader to
- record this on a tape and especially in such a way that you can't hear
- it and I could. But I did hear it, gentlemen, and I think I told you
- pretty good what it was.
- And those words I used, they are not mine, they are my brother's. So
- you go along, gentlemen, and do what you can with it and if you don't
- want me to tell anybody that the U.S. government is working on mediums,
- I won't."
- That was the farewell he gave us.
- We closed the local office and hurried to the airport. We took the
- tape back with us but a duplicate was already being teletyped to
- Washington.
- That's the end of the story and that is the end of the joke.
- Potariskov got a copy and the Soviet Ambassador got a copy.
- And Khrushchev probably wondered what sort of insane joke the Americans
- were playing on him. To use a medium or something weird along with
- subliminal perception in order to attack the USSR. for not believing
- in God and not believing in death. Did he figure it that way?
- Here's a case where I hope that Soviet espionage is very good.
- I hope that their spies are so fine that they know we're baffled. I
- hope that they realize that we have come to a dead end, and whatever
- Tice Angerhelm did or somebody did in his name way out there in space
- recording into a Soviet Sputnik, we Americans had no hand in it.
- If the Russians didn't do it and we didn't do it, who did do it?
- I hope their spies find out.
- The Good Friends Fever had given him a boyish look. The nurse,
- standing behind the doctor, watched him attentively. Her half-smile
- blended tenderness with an appreciation of his manly attraction.
- "When can I go, doc?"
- "In a few weeks, perhaps. You have to get well first."
- "I don't mean home, doc. When can I go back into space? I'm captain,
- doc. I'm a good one. You know that, don't you?"
- The doctor nodded gravely.
- "I want to go back, doc. I want to go back right away. I want to be
- well, doc. I want to be well now. I want to get back in my ship and
- take off again. I don't even know why I'm here. What are you doing
- with me, doc?"
- "We're trying to make you well," said the doctor, friendly, serious,
- authoritative.
- "I'm not sick, doc. You've got the wrong man. We brought the ship in,
- didn't we? Everything was all right, wasn't it? Then we started to
- get out and everything went black. Now I'm here in a hospital.
- Something's pretty fishy, doc. Did I get hurt in the port?"
- "No," said the doctor, "you weren't hurt at the port."
- "Then why'd I faint? Why am I sick in a bed? Something must have
- happened to me, doc. It stands to reason. Otherwise I wouldn't be
- here. Some stupid awful thing must have happened, doc. After such a
- nice trip. Where did it happen?" A wild light came into the patient's
- eyes.
- "Did somebody do something to me, doc? I'm not hurt, am I? I'm not
- ruined, am I? I'll be able to go back into space, won't I?"
- "Perhaps," said the doctor.
- The nurse drew in her breath as though she were going to say something.
- The doctor looked around at her and gave her an authoritative frown,
- meaning keep quiet.
- The patient saw it.
- Desperation came into his voice, almost a whine.
- "What's the matter,
- of Man doc? Why won't you talk to me? What's wrong? Something has
- happened to me. Where's Ralph? Where's Pete? Where's Jock?
- The last time I saw him he was having a beer. Where's Larry?
- Where's Went? Where's Betty? Where's my gang, doc? They're not
- killed, are they? I'm not the only one, am I? Talk to me, doc. Tell
- me the truth. I'm a space captain, doc. I've faced queer hells in my
- time, doc. You can tell me anything, doc. I'm not that sick. I can
- take it. Where's my gang, doc my pals from the ship? What a cruise
- that was! Won't you talk, doc?"
- "I'll talk," said the doctor, gravely.
- "Okay," said the patient.
- "Tell me."
- "What in particular?"
- "Don't be a fool, doc! Tell me the straight stuff. Tell me about my
- friends first, and then tell me what has happened to me."
- "Concerning your friends," said the doctor, measuring his words
- carefully,
- "I am in a position to tell you there has been no adverse change in the
- status of any of the persons you mentioned."
- "All right, then, doc, if it wasn't them, it's me. Tell me. What's
- happened to me, doc? Something stinking awful must have happened or
- you wouldn't be standing there with a face like a constipated horse!"
- The doctor smiled wryly, bleakly, briefly at the weird compliment.
- "I won't try to explain my own face, young fellow. I was born with it.
- But you are in a serious condition and we are trying to get you well. I
- will tell you the whole truth."
- "Then do it, doc! Right away. Did somebody jump me at the port? Was
- I hurt badly? Was it an accident? Start talking, man!"
- The nurse stirred behind the doctor. He looked around at her.
- She looked in the direction of the hypodermic on the tray. The doctor
- gave her a brief negative shake of his head. The patient saw the whole
- interplay and understood it correctly.
- "That's right, doc. Don't let her dope me. I don't need sleep. I
- need the truth. If my gang's all right, why aren't they here? Is
- Milly out in the corridor? Milly, that was her name, the little curly
- head Where's Jock? Why isn't Ralph here?"
- "I'm going to tell you everything, young man. It may be tough but I'm
- counting on you to take it like a man. But it would help if you told
- me first."
- "Told you what? Don't you know who I am? Didn't you read about my
- gang and me? Didn't you hear about Larry? What a navigator! We
- wouldn't be here except for Larry."
- The late-morning light poured in through the open window; a soft spring
- breeze touched the young ravaged face of the patient.
- There was mercy and more in the doctor's voice.
- "I'm just a medical doctor. I don't keep up with the news. I know
- your name, age, and medical history. But I don't know the details of
- your cruise. Tell me about it."
- "Doc, you're kidding. It'd take a book. We're famous. I bet Went's
- out there right now, making a fortune out of the pictures he took."
- "Don't tell me the whole thing, young man. Suppose you just tell me
- about the last couple of days before you landed, and how you got into
- port."
- The young man smiled guiltily; there was pleasure and fond memory in
- his face.
- "I guess I can tell you, because you're a doctor and keep things
- confidential."
- The doctor nodded, very earnest and still kind.
- "Do you want," said he softly, "the nurse to leave?"
- "Oh, no," cried the patient.
- "She's a good scout. It's not as though you were going to turn it
- loose on the tapes."
- The doctor nodded. The nurse nodded and smiled, too. She was afraid
- that there were tears forming at the corners of her eyes, but she dared
- not wipe them away. This was an extraordinarily observant patient. He
- might notice it. It would ruin his story.
- The patient almost babbled in his eagerness to tell the story.
- "You know the ship, doc. It's a big one: twelve cabins, a common room,
- simulated gravity, lockers, plenty of room."
- The doctor's eyes flickered at this but he did nothing, except to watch
- the patient in an attentive sympathetic way.
- "When we knew we just had two days to Earth, doc, and we knew
- everything was all right, we had a ball. Jock found the beer in one of
- the lockers. Ralph helped him get it out. Betty was an old pal of
- mine, but I started trying to make time with Milly. Boy, did I make
- it! Yum." He looked at the nurse and blushed all the way down to his
- neck.
- "I'll skip the details. We had a party, doc.
- We were high. Drunk. Happy. Boy, did we have fun! I don't think
- anybody ever had more fun than we did, me and that old gang of mine. We
- docked all right. That Larry, he's a navigator. He was drunk as an
- owl and he had Betty on his lap but he put that ship in like the old
- lady putting a coin in the collection plate.
- Everything came out exactly right. I guess I should have been ashamed
- of landing a ship with the whole crew drunk and happy, but it was the
- best trip and the best gang and the best fun that anybody ever had. And
- we had succeeded in our mission, doc.
- We wouldn't have cut loose at the end of the mission if we hadn't known
- everything was hunky-dory. So we came in and landed, doc. And then
- everything went black, and here I am. Now you tell me your side of it,
- but be sure to tell me when Larry and Jock and Went are going to come
- in and see me. They're characters, doc.
- That little nurse of yours,
- she's going to have to watch them. They might bring me a bottle that
- I shouldn't have. Okay, doc. Shoot."
- "Do you trust me?" said the doctor.
- "Sure. I guess so. Why not?"
- "Do you think I would tell you the truth?"
- "It's something mean, doc. Real mean. Okay, shoot anyhow."
- "I want you to have the shot first," said the doctor, straining to keep
- kindness and authority in his voice.
- The patient looked bewildered. He glanced at the nurse, the tray, the
- hypodermic. Then he smiled at the doctor, but it was a smile in which
- fright lurked.
- "All right, doctor. You're the boss."
- The nurse helped him roll back his sleeves. She started to reach for
- the needle.
- The doctor stopped her. He looked her straight in the face, his eyes
- focused right on hers.
- "No, intravenous. I'll do it. Do you understand?"
- She was a quick girl.
- From the tray she took a short length of rubber tubing, twisted it
- quickly around the upper arm, just below the elbow.
- The doctor watched, very quiet.
- He took the arm, ran his thumb up and down the skin as he felt the
- vein.
- "Now," said he.
- She handed him the needle.
- Patient, nurse, and doctor all watched as the hypodermic emptied itself
- directly into the little ridge of the vein on the inside of the
- elbow.
- The doctor took out the needle. He himself seemed relieved.
- Said he: "Feel anything?"
- "Not yet, doc. Can you tell me now, doc? I can't make trouble with
- this stuff in me. Where's Larry? Where's Jock?"
- "You weren't on a ship, young man. You were alone on a one man craft.
- You didn't have a party for two days. You had it for twenty years.
- Larry didn't bring your ship in. The Earth authorities brought it in
- with telemetry. You were starved, dehydrated, and nine-tenths dead.
- The boat had a freeze unit and you were fed by the emergency kit. You
- had the narrowest escape in the whole history of space travel. The
- boat had one of the new hypo kits.
- You must have had a second or two to slap it to your face before the
- boat took over. You didn't have any friends with you. They came out
- of your own mind."
- "That's all right, doc. I'll be all right. Don't worry about me."
- "There wasn't any Jock or Larry or Ralph or Milly. That was just the
- hypo kit."
- "I get you, doc. It's all right. This dope you gave me, it's good
- stuff. I
- feel happy and dreamy. You can go away now and let me sleep.
- You can explain it all to me in the morning. But be sure to let Ralph
- and Jock in, when visiting hours open up." He turned on his side away
- from them.
- The nurse pulled the cover up over his shoulders.
- Then she and the doctor started to leave the room. At the last moment,
- she ran past the doctor and out of the room ahead of him. She did not
- want him to see her cry.
- This book was produced on a Gateway 2000 PC, using Microsoft Word for
- Windows. Page layout was done using Aldus Page Maker 4.2 and printed
- on an HP LaserJet 4M.
- The book is set in Times New Roman on 60# acid-free paper.
- It was printed by Braun-Brumfield, Inc. NESFA Press has also produced
- the Concordance to Cordwainer Smith by Anthony R. Lewis. For
- information about this and other NESFA Press books, please write for
- our catalog.
|