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26741_OVYFBIST_7 | How does Rupert feel about Paul? | One can't be too cautious about the
people one meets in Tangier. They're all
weirdies of one kind or another.
Me? Oh,
I'm A Stranger
Here Myself
By MACK REYNOLDS
The
Place de France is the
town's hub. It marks the end
of Boulevard Pasteur, the main
drag of the westernized part of
the city, and the beginning of
Rue de la Liberté, which leads
down to the Grand Socco and
the medina. In a three-minute
walk from the Place de France
you can go from an ultra-modern,
California-like resort to the
Baghdad of Harun al-Rashid.
It's quite a town, Tangier.
King-size sidewalk cafes occupy
three of the strategic
corners on the Place de France.
The Cafe de Paris serves the
best draft beer in town, gets all
the better custom, and has three
shoeshine boys attached to the
establishment. You can sit of a
sunny morning and read the
Paris edition of the New York
Herald Tribune
while getting
your shoes done up like mirrors
for thirty Moroccan francs
which comes to about five cents
at current exchange.
You can sit there, after the
paper's read, sip your expresso
and watch the people go by.
Tangier is possibly the most
cosmopolitan city in the world.
In native costume you'll see
Berber and Rif, Arab and Blue
Man, and occasionally a Senegalese
from further south. In
European dress you'll see Japs
and Chinese, Hindus and Turks,
Levantines and Filipinos, North
Americans and South Americans,
and, of course, even Europeans—from
both sides of the
Curtain.
In Tangier you'll find some of
the world's poorest and some of
the richest. The poorest will try
to sell you anything from a
shoeshine to their not very lily-white
bodies, and the richest will
avoid your eyes, afraid
you
might try to sell them something.
In spite of recent changes, the
town still has its unique qualities.
As a result of them the permanent
population includes
smugglers and black-marketeers,
fugitives from justice and international
con men, espionage
and counter-espionage agents,
homosexuals, nymphomaniacs, alcoholics,
drug addicts, displaced
persons, ex-royalty, and subversives
of every flavor. Local law
limits the activities of few of
these.
Like I said, it's quite a town.
I looked up from my
Herald
Tribune
and said, "Hello, Paul.
Anything new cooking?"
He sank into the chair opposite
me and looked around for
the waiter. The tables were all
crowded and since mine was a
face he recognized, he assumed
he was welcome to intrude. It was
more or less standard procedure
at the Cafe de Paris. It wasn't
a place to go if you wanted to
be alone.
Paul said, "How are you,
Rupert? Haven't seen you for
donkey's years."
The waiter came along and
Paul ordered a glass of beer.
Paul was an easy-going, sallow-faced
little man. I vaguely remembered
somebody saying he
was from Liverpool and in
exports.
"What's in the newspaper?"
he said, disinterestedly.
"Pogo and Albert are going
to fight a duel," I told him, "and
Lil Abner is becoming a rock'n'roll
singer."
He grunted.
"Oh," I said, "the intellectual
type." I scanned the front page.
"The Russkies have put up
another manned satellite."
"They have, eh? How big?"
"Several times bigger than
anything we Americans have."
The beer came and looked
good, so I ordered a glass too.
Paul said, "What ever happened
to those poxy flying
saucers?"
"What flying saucers?"
A French girl went by with a
poodle so finely clipped as to look
as though it'd been shaven. The
girl was in the latest from
Paris. Every pore in place. We
both looked after her.
"You know, what everybody
was seeing a few years ago. It's
too bad one of these bloody manned
satellites wasn't up then.
Maybe they would've seen one."
"That's an idea," I said.
We didn't say anything else for
a while and I began to wonder
if I could go back to my paper
without rubbing him the wrong
way. I didn't know Paul very
well, but, for that matter, it's
comparatively seldom you ever
get to know anybody very well
in Tangier. Largely, cards are
played close to the chest.
My beer came and a plate of
tapas for us both. Tapas at the
Cafe de Paris are apt to be
potato salad, a few anchovies,
olives, and possibly some cheese.
Free lunch, they used to call it
in the States.
Just to say something, I said,
"Where do you think they came
from?" And when he looked
blank, I added, "The Flying
Saucers."
He grinned. "From Mars or
Venus, or someplace."
"Ummmm," I said. "Too bad
none of them ever crashed, or
landed on the Yale football field
and said
Take me to your cheerleader
,
or something."
Paul yawned and said, "That
was always the trouble with those
crackpot blokes' explanations of
them. If they were aliens from
space, then why not show themselves?"
I ate one of the potato chips.
It'd been cooked in rancid olive
oil.
I said, "Oh, there are various
answers to that one. We could
probably sit around here and
think of two or three that made
sense."
Paul was mildly interested.
"Like what?"
"Well, hell, suppose for instance
there's this big Galactic League
of civilized planets. But it's restricted,
see. You're not eligible
for membership until you, well,
say until you've developed space
flight. Then you're invited into
the club. Meanwhile, they send
secret missions down from time
to time to keep an eye on your
progress."
Paul grinned at me. "I see you
read the same poxy stuff I do."
A Moorish girl went by dressed
in a neatly tailored gray
jellaba, European style high-heeled
shoes, and a pinkish silk
veil so transparent that you
could see she wore lipstick. Very
provocative, dark eyes can be
over a veil. We both looked
after her.
I said, "Or, here's another
one. Suppose you have a very
advanced civilization on, say,
Mars."
"Not Mars. No air, and too
bloody dry to support life."
"Don't interrupt, please," I
said with mock severity. "This
is a very old civilization and as
the planet began to lose its
water and air, it withdrew underground.
Uses hydroponics and
so forth, husbands its water and
air. Isn't that what we'd do, in
a few million years, if Earth lost
its water and air?"
"I suppose so," he said. "Anyway,
what about them?"
"Well, they observe how man
is going through a scientific
boom, an industrial boom, a
population boom. A boom, period.
Any day now he's going to have
practical space ships. Meanwhile,
he's also got the H-Bomb and
the way he beats the drums on
both sides of the Curtain, he's
not against using it, if he could
get away with it."
Paul said, "I got it. So they're
scared and are keeping an eye on
us. That's an old one. I've read
that a dozen times, dished up
different."
I shifted my shoulders. "Well,
it's one possibility."
"I got a better one. How's
this. There's this alien life form
that's way ahead of us. Their
civilization is so old that they
don't have any records of when
it began and how it was in the
early days. They've gone beyond
things like wars and depressions
and revolutions, and greed for
power or any of these things
giving us a bad time here on
Earth. They're all like scholars,
get it? And some of them are
pretty jolly well taken by Earth,
especially the way we are right
now, with all the problems, get
it? Things developing so fast we
don't know where we're going
or how we're going to get there."
I finished my beer and clapped
my hands for Mouley. "How do
you mean,
where we're going
?"
"Well, take half the countries
in the world today. They're trying
to industrialize, modernize,
catch up with the advanced countries.
Look at Egypt, and Israel,
and India and China, and Yugoslavia
and Brazil, and all the
rest. Trying to drag themselves
up to the level of the advanced
countries, and all using different
methods of doing it. But look
at the so-called advanced countries.
Up to their bottoms in
problems. Juvenile delinquents,
climbing crime and suicide rates,
the loony-bins full of the balmy,
unemployed, threat of war,
spending all their money on armaments
instead of things like
schools. All the bloody mess of
it. Why, a man from Mars would
be fascinated, like."
Mouley came shuffling up in
his babouche slippers and we
both ordered another schooner
of beer.
Paul said seriously, "You
know, there's only one big snag
in this sort of talk. I've sorted
the whole thing out before, and
you always come up against this
brick wall. Where are they, these
observers, or scholars, or spies
or whatever they are? Sooner
or later we'd nab one of them.
You know, Scotland Yard, or
the F.B.I., or Russia's secret
police, or the French Sûreté, or
Interpol. This world is so deep
in police, counter-espionage outfits
and security agents that an
alien would slip up in time, no
matter how much he'd been
trained. Sooner or later, he'd slip
up, and they'd nab him."
I shook my head. "Not necessarily.
The first time I ever considered
this possibility, it seemed
to me that such an alien would
base himself in London or New
York. Somewhere where he could
use the libraries for research,
get the daily newspapers and
the magazines. Be right in the
center of things. But now I don't
think so. I think he'd be right
here in Tangier."
"Why Tangier?"
"It's the one town in the world
where anything goes. Nobody
gives a damn about you or your
affairs. For instance, I've known
you a year or more now, and I
haven't the slightest idea of how
you make your living."
"That's right," Paul admitted.
"In this town you seldom even
ask a man where's he's from. He
can be British, a White Russian,
a Basque or a Sikh and nobody
could care less. Where are
you
from, Rupert?"
"California," I told him.
"No, you're not," he grinned.
I was taken aback. "What do
you mean?"
"I felt your mind probe back
a few minutes ago when I was
talking about Scotland Yard or
the F.B.I. possibly flushing an
alien. Telepathy is a sense not
trained by the humanoids. If
they had it, your job—and mine—would
be considerably more
difficult. Let's face it, in spite of
these human bodies we're disguised
in, neither of us is
humanoid. Where are you really
from, Rupert?"
"Aldebaran," I said. "How
about you?"
"Deneb," he told me, shaking.
We had a laugh and ordered
another beer.
"What're you doing here on
Earth?" I asked him.
"Researching for one of our
meat trusts. We're protein
eaters. Humanoid flesh is considered
quite a delicacy. How
about you?"
"Scouting the place for thrill
tourists. My job is to go around
to these backward cultures and
help stir up inter-tribal, or international,
conflicts—all according
to how advanced they
are. Then our tourists come in—well
shielded, of course—and get
their kicks watching it."
Paul frowned. "That sort of
practice could spoil an awful
lot of good meat."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
December 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Rupert thinks of Paul as a kindred spirit. | Rupert is annoyed that Paul sat down at his table. | Rupert suspects Paul might be a Russian spy. | Paul is easy-going, but Rupert doesn't know him that well. | 3 |
26741_OVYFBIST_8 | Why does Paul think an alien wouldn't be able to hide on Earth? | One can't be too cautious about the
people one meets in Tangier. They're all
weirdies of one kind or another.
Me? Oh,
I'm A Stranger
Here Myself
By MACK REYNOLDS
The
Place de France is the
town's hub. It marks the end
of Boulevard Pasteur, the main
drag of the westernized part of
the city, and the beginning of
Rue de la Liberté, which leads
down to the Grand Socco and
the medina. In a three-minute
walk from the Place de France
you can go from an ultra-modern,
California-like resort to the
Baghdad of Harun al-Rashid.
It's quite a town, Tangier.
King-size sidewalk cafes occupy
three of the strategic
corners on the Place de France.
The Cafe de Paris serves the
best draft beer in town, gets all
the better custom, and has three
shoeshine boys attached to the
establishment. You can sit of a
sunny morning and read the
Paris edition of the New York
Herald Tribune
while getting
your shoes done up like mirrors
for thirty Moroccan francs
which comes to about five cents
at current exchange.
You can sit there, after the
paper's read, sip your expresso
and watch the people go by.
Tangier is possibly the most
cosmopolitan city in the world.
In native costume you'll see
Berber and Rif, Arab and Blue
Man, and occasionally a Senegalese
from further south. In
European dress you'll see Japs
and Chinese, Hindus and Turks,
Levantines and Filipinos, North
Americans and South Americans,
and, of course, even Europeans—from
both sides of the
Curtain.
In Tangier you'll find some of
the world's poorest and some of
the richest. The poorest will try
to sell you anything from a
shoeshine to their not very lily-white
bodies, and the richest will
avoid your eyes, afraid
you
might try to sell them something.
In spite of recent changes, the
town still has its unique qualities.
As a result of them the permanent
population includes
smugglers and black-marketeers,
fugitives from justice and international
con men, espionage
and counter-espionage agents,
homosexuals, nymphomaniacs, alcoholics,
drug addicts, displaced
persons, ex-royalty, and subversives
of every flavor. Local law
limits the activities of few of
these.
Like I said, it's quite a town.
I looked up from my
Herald
Tribune
and said, "Hello, Paul.
Anything new cooking?"
He sank into the chair opposite
me and looked around for
the waiter. The tables were all
crowded and since mine was a
face he recognized, he assumed
he was welcome to intrude. It was
more or less standard procedure
at the Cafe de Paris. It wasn't
a place to go if you wanted to
be alone.
Paul said, "How are you,
Rupert? Haven't seen you for
donkey's years."
The waiter came along and
Paul ordered a glass of beer.
Paul was an easy-going, sallow-faced
little man. I vaguely remembered
somebody saying he
was from Liverpool and in
exports.
"What's in the newspaper?"
he said, disinterestedly.
"Pogo and Albert are going
to fight a duel," I told him, "and
Lil Abner is becoming a rock'n'roll
singer."
He grunted.
"Oh," I said, "the intellectual
type." I scanned the front page.
"The Russkies have put up
another manned satellite."
"They have, eh? How big?"
"Several times bigger than
anything we Americans have."
The beer came and looked
good, so I ordered a glass too.
Paul said, "What ever happened
to those poxy flying
saucers?"
"What flying saucers?"
A French girl went by with a
poodle so finely clipped as to look
as though it'd been shaven. The
girl was in the latest from
Paris. Every pore in place. We
both looked after her.
"You know, what everybody
was seeing a few years ago. It's
too bad one of these bloody manned
satellites wasn't up then.
Maybe they would've seen one."
"That's an idea," I said.
We didn't say anything else for
a while and I began to wonder
if I could go back to my paper
without rubbing him the wrong
way. I didn't know Paul very
well, but, for that matter, it's
comparatively seldom you ever
get to know anybody very well
in Tangier. Largely, cards are
played close to the chest.
My beer came and a plate of
tapas for us both. Tapas at the
Cafe de Paris are apt to be
potato salad, a few anchovies,
olives, and possibly some cheese.
Free lunch, they used to call it
in the States.
Just to say something, I said,
"Where do you think they came
from?" And when he looked
blank, I added, "The Flying
Saucers."
He grinned. "From Mars or
Venus, or someplace."
"Ummmm," I said. "Too bad
none of them ever crashed, or
landed on the Yale football field
and said
Take me to your cheerleader
,
or something."
Paul yawned and said, "That
was always the trouble with those
crackpot blokes' explanations of
them. If they were aliens from
space, then why not show themselves?"
I ate one of the potato chips.
It'd been cooked in rancid olive
oil.
I said, "Oh, there are various
answers to that one. We could
probably sit around here and
think of two or three that made
sense."
Paul was mildly interested.
"Like what?"
"Well, hell, suppose for instance
there's this big Galactic League
of civilized planets. But it's restricted,
see. You're not eligible
for membership until you, well,
say until you've developed space
flight. Then you're invited into
the club. Meanwhile, they send
secret missions down from time
to time to keep an eye on your
progress."
Paul grinned at me. "I see you
read the same poxy stuff I do."
A Moorish girl went by dressed
in a neatly tailored gray
jellaba, European style high-heeled
shoes, and a pinkish silk
veil so transparent that you
could see she wore lipstick. Very
provocative, dark eyes can be
over a veil. We both looked
after her.
I said, "Or, here's another
one. Suppose you have a very
advanced civilization on, say,
Mars."
"Not Mars. No air, and too
bloody dry to support life."
"Don't interrupt, please," I
said with mock severity. "This
is a very old civilization and as
the planet began to lose its
water and air, it withdrew underground.
Uses hydroponics and
so forth, husbands its water and
air. Isn't that what we'd do, in
a few million years, if Earth lost
its water and air?"
"I suppose so," he said. "Anyway,
what about them?"
"Well, they observe how man
is going through a scientific
boom, an industrial boom, a
population boom. A boom, period.
Any day now he's going to have
practical space ships. Meanwhile,
he's also got the H-Bomb and
the way he beats the drums on
both sides of the Curtain, he's
not against using it, if he could
get away with it."
Paul said, "I got it. So they're
scared and are keeping an eye on
us. That's an old one. I've read
that a dozen times, dished up
different."
I shifted my shoulders. "Well,
it's one possibility."
"I got a better one. How's
this. There's this alien life form
that's way ahead of us. Their
civilization is so old that they
don't have any records of when
it began and how it was in the
early days. They've gone beyond
things like wars and depressions
and revolutions, and greed for
power or any of these things
giving us a bad time here on
Earth. They're all like scholars,
get it? And some of them are
pretty jolly well taken by Earth,
especially the way we are right
now, with all the problems, get
it? Things developing so fast we
don't know where we're going
or how we're going to get there."
I finished my beer and clapped
my hands for Mouley. "How do
you mean,
where we're going
?"
"Well, take half the countries
in the world today. They're trying
to industrialize, modernize,
catch up with the advanced countries.
Look at Egypt, and Israel,
and India and China, and Yugoslavia
and Brazil, and all the
rest. Trying to drag themselves
up to the level of the advanced
countries, and all using different
methods of doing it. But look
at the so-called advanced countries.
Up to their bottoms in
problems. Juvenile delinquents,
climbing crime and suicide rates,
the loony-bins full of the balmy,
unemployed, threat of war,
spending all their money on armaments
instead of things like
schools. All the bloody mess of
it. Why, a man from Mars would
be fascinated, like."
Mouley came shuffling up in
his babouche slippers and we
both ordered another schooner
of beer.
Paul said seriously, "You
know, there's only one big snag
in this sort of talk. I've sorted
the whole thing out before, and
you always come up against this
brick wall. Where are they, these
observers, or scholars, or spies
or whatever they are? Sooner
or later we'd nab one of them.
You know, Scotland Yard, or
the F.B.I., or Russia's secret
police, or the French Sûreté, or
Interpol. This world is so deep
in police, counter-espionage outfits
and security agents that an
alien would slip up in time, no
matter how much he'd been
trained. Sooner or later, he'd slip
up, and they'd nab him."
I shook my head. "Not necessarily.
The first time I ever considered
this possibility, it seemed
to me that such an alien would
base himself in London or New
York. Somewhere where he could
use the libraries for research,
get the daily newspapers and
the magazines. Be right in the
center of things. But now I don't
think so. I think he'd be right
here in Tangier."
"Why Tangier?"
"It's the one town in the world
where anything goes. Nobody
gives a damn about you or your
affairs. For instance, I've known
you a year or more now, and I
haven't the slightest idea of how
you make your living."
"That's right," Paul admitted.
"In this town you seldom even
ask a man where's he's from. He
can be British, a White Russian,
a Basque or a Sikh and nobody
could care less. Where are
you
from, Rupert?"
"California," I told him.
"No, you're not," he grinned.
I was taken aback. "What do
you mean?"
"I felt your mind probe back
a few minutes ago when I was
talking about Scotland Yard or
the F.B.I. possibly flushing an
alien. Telepathy is a sense not
trained by the humanoids. If
they had it, your job—and mine—would
be considerably more
difficult. Let's face it, in spite of
these human bodies we're disguised
in, neither of us is
humanoid. Where are you really
from, Rupert?"
"Aldebaran," I said. "How
about you?"
"Deneb," he told me, shaking.
We had a laugh and ordered
another beer.
"What're you doing here on
Earth?" I asked him.
"Researching for one of our
meat trusts. We're protein
eaters. Humanoid flesh is considered
quite a delicacy. How
about you?"
"Scouting the place for thrill
tourists. My job is to go around
to these backward cultures and
help stir up inter-tribal, or international,
conflicts—all according
to how advanced they
are. Then our tourists come in—well
shielded, of course—and get
their kicks watching it."
Paul frowned. "That sort of
practice could spoil an awful
lot of good meat."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
December 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Aliens don't look like Earthlings. | An alien would not be able to mimic a human enough to fit in with society. | An alien wouldn't be able to assimilate into Earth's backward culture. | The Earth has so many intelligence agencies, at least one would be watching when an alien gave itself away. | 3 |
26957_XAVZRBAR_1 | What is a star mother? | STAR MOTHER
By ROBERT F. YOUNG
A touching story of the most
enduring love in all eternity.
That
night her son was the
first star.
She stood motionless in the
garden, one hand pressed against
her heart, watching him rise
above the fields where he had
played as a boy, where he had
worked as a young man; and she
wondered whether he was thinking
of those fields now, whether
he was thinking of her standing
alone in the April night with her
memories; whether he was
thinking of the verandahed
house behind her, with its empty
rooms and silent halls, that once
upon a time had been his birthplace.
Higher still and higher he
rose in the southern sky, and
then, when he had reached his
zenith, he dropped swiftly down
past the dark edge of the Earth
and disappeared from sight. A
boy grown up too soon, riding
round and round the world on
a celestial carousel, encased in
an airtight metal capsule in an
airtight metal chariot ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone?
she thought.
Why don't
they leave the stars to God?
The general's second telegram
came early the next morning:
Explorer XII
doing splendidly.
Expect to bring your son down
sometime tomorrow
.
She went about her work as
usual, collecting the eggs and
allocating them in their cardboard
boxes, then setting off in
the station wagon on her Tuesday
morning run. She had expected
a deluge of questions
from her customers. She was not
disappointed. "Is Terry really
way up there all alone, Martha?"
"Aren't you
scared
, Martha?" "I
do hope they can get him back
down all right, Martha." She
supposed it must have given
them quite a turn to have their
egg woman change into a star
mother overnight.
She hadn't expected the TV interview,
though, and she would
have avoided it if it had been
politely possible. But what could
she do when the line of cars and
trucks pulled into the drive and
the technicians got out and started
setting up their equipment in
the backyard? What could she
say when the suave young man
came up to her and said, "We
want you to know that we're all
very proud of your boy up there,
ma'am, and we hope you'll do us
the honor of answering a few
questions."
Most of the questions concerned
Terry, as was fitting.
From the way the suave young
man asked them, though, she got
the impression that he was trying
to prove that her son was
just like any other average
American boy, and such just
didn't happen to be the case. But
whenever she opened her mouth
to mention, say, how he used to
study till all hours of the night,
or how difficult it had been for
him to make friends because of
his shyness, or the fact that he
had never gone out for football—whenever
she started to mention
any of these things, the
suave young man was in great
haste to interrupt her and to
twist her words, by requestioning,
into a different meaning
altogether, till Terry's behavior
pattern seemed to coincide with
the behavior pattern which the
suave young man apparently considered
the norm, but which, if
followed, Martha was sure,
would produce not young men
bent on exploring space but
young men bent on exploring
trivia.
A few of the questions concerned
herself: Was Terry her
only child? ("Yes.") What had
happened to her husband? ("He
was killed in the Korean War.")
What did she think of the new
law granting star mothers top
priority on any and all information
relating to their sons? ("I
think it's a fine law ... It's too
bad they couldn't have shown
similar humanity toward the
war mothers of World War II.")
It was late in the afternoon
by the time the TV crew got
everything repacked into their
cars and trucks and made their
departure. Martha fixed herself
a light supper, then donned an
old suede jacket of Terry's and
went out into the garden to wait
for the sun to go down. According
to the time table the general
had outlined in his first telegram,
Terry's first Tuesday
night passage wasn't due to occur
till 9:05. But it seemed only
right that she should be outside
when the stars started to come
out. Presently they did, and she
watched them wink on, one by
one, in the deepening darkness
of the sky. She'd never been
much of a one for the stars;
most of her life she'd been much
too busy on Earth to bother with
things celestial. She could remember,
when she was much
younger and Bill was courting
her, looking up at the moon
sometimes; and once in a while,
when a star fell, making a wish.
But this was different. It was
different because now she had
a personal interest in the sky, a
new affinity with its myriad inhabitants.
And how bright they became
when you kept looking at them!
They seemed to come alive, almost,
pulsing brilliantly down
out of the blackness of the night ...
And they were different colors,
too, she noticed with a start.
Some of them were blue and
some were red, others were yellow
... green ... orange ...
It grew cold in the April garden
and she could see her breath.
There was a strange crispness,
a strange clarity about the
night, that she had never known
before ... She glanced at her
watch, was astonished to see that
the hands indicated two minutes
after nine. Where had the time
gone? Tremulously she faced the
southern horizon ... and saw
her Terry appear in his shining
chariot, riding up the star-pebbled
path of his orbit, a star in
his own right, dropping swiftly
now, down, down, and out of
sight beyond the dark wheeling
mass of the Earth ... She took
a deep, proud breath, realized
that she was wildly waving her
hand and let it fall slowly to her
side. Make a wish! she thought,
like a little girl, and she wished
him pleasant dreams and a safe
return and wrapped the wish in
all her love and cast it starward.
Sometime tomorrow, the general's
telegram had said—
That meant sometime today!
She rose with the sun and fed
the chickens, fixed and ate her
breakfast, collected the eggs and
put them in their cardboard
boxes, then started out on her
Wednesday morning run. "My
land, Martha, I don't see how
you stand it with him way up
there! Doesn't it get on your
nerves
?" ("Yes ... Yes, it
does.") "Martha, when are they
bringing him back down?"
("Today ...
Today
!") "It must
be wonderful being a star mother,
Martha." ("Yes, it is—in a
way.")
Wonderful ... and terrible.
If only he can last it out for
a few more hours, she thought.
If only they can bring him down
safe and sound. Then the vigil
will be over, and some other
mother can take over the awesome
responsibility of having a
son become a star—
If only ...
The general's third telegram
arrived that afternoon:
Regret
to inform you that meteorite impact
on satellite hull severely
damaged capsule-detachment
mechanism, making ejection impossible.
Will make every effort
to find another means of accomplishing
your son's return.
Terry!—
See the little boy playing beneath
the maple tree, moving his
tiny cars up and down the tiny
streets of his make-believe village;
the little boy, his fuzz of
hair gold in the sunlight, his
cherub-cheeks pink in the summer
wind—
Terry!—
Up the lane the blue-denimed
young man walks, swinging his
thin tanned arms, his long legs
making near-grownup strides
over the sun-seared grass; the
sky blue and bright behind him,
the song of cicada rising and
falling in the hazy September
air—
Terry ...
—probably won't get a chance
to write you again before take-off,
but don't worry, Ma. The
Explorer XII
is the greatest bird
they ever built. Nothing short of
a direct meteorite hit can hurt
it, and the odds are a million to
one ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone? Why don't they leave the
stars to God?
The afternoon shadows lengthened
on the lawn and the sun
grew red and swollen over the
western hills. Martha fixed supper,
tried to eat, and couldn't.
After a while, when the light
began to fade, she slipped into
Terry's jacket and went outside.
Slowly the sky darkened and
the stars began to appear. At
length
her
star appeared, but its
swift passage blurred before her
eyes. Tires crunched on the
gravel then, and headlights
washed the darkness from the
drive. A car door slammed.
Martha did not move.
Please
God
, she thought,
let it be Terry
,
even though she knew that it
couldn't possibly be Terry. Footsteps
sounded behind her, paused.
Someone coughed softly. She
turned then—
"Good evening, ma'am."
She saw the circlet of stars
on the gray epaulet; she saw the
stern handsome face; she saw
the dark tired eyes. And she
knew. Even before he spoke
again, she knew—
"The same meteorite that
damaged the ejection mechanism,
ma'am. It penetrated the
capsule, too. We didn't find out
till just a while ago—but there
was nothing we could have done
anyway ... Are you all right,
ma'am?"
"Yes. I'm all right."
"I wanted to express my regrets
personally. I know how you
must feel."
"It's all right."
"We will, of course, make
every effort to bring back his ... remains ... so
that he can
have a fitting burial on Earth."
"No," she said.
"I beg your pardon, ma'am?"
She raised her eyes to the
patch of sky where her son had
passed in his shining metal sarcophagus.
Sirius blossomed
there, blue-white and beautiful.
She raised her eyes still higher—and
beheld the vast parterre
of Orion with its central motif
of vivid forget-me-nots, its far-flung
blooms of Betelguese and
Rigel, of Bellatrix and Saiph ...
And higher yet—and there
flamed the exquisite flower beds
of Taurus and Gemini, there
burgeoned the riotous wreath of
the Crab; there lay the pulsing
petals of the Pleiades ... And
down the ecliptic garden path,
wafted by a stellar breeze, drifted
the ocher rose of Mars ...
"No," she said again.
The general had raised his
eyes, too; now, slowly, he lowered
them. "I think I understand,
ma'am. And I'm glad
that's the way you want it ...
The stars
are
beautiful tonight,
aren't they."
"More beautiful than they've
ever been," she said.
After the general had gone,
she looked up once more at the
vast and variegated garden of
the sky where her son lay buried,
then she turned and walked
slowly back to the memoried
house.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
January 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | A star mother is a mother who becomes a celebrity. | A star mother is the mother of an astronaut. | A star mother is the mother of someone in the military. | A star mother is the mother of a celebrity. | 1 |
26957_XAVZRBAR_2 | Why doesn't Martha want the general to bring Terry home? | STAR MOTHER
By ROBERT F. YOUNG
A touching story of the most
enduring love in all eternity.
That
night her son was the
first star.
She stood motionless in the
garden, one hand pressed against
her heart, watching him rise
above the fields where he had
played as a boy, where he had
worked as a young man; and she
wondered whether he was thinking
of those fields now, whether
he was thinking of her standing
alone in the April night with her
memories; whether he was
thinking of the verandahed
house behind her, with its empty
rooms and silent halls, that once
upon a time had been his birthplace.
Higher still and higher he
rose in the southern sky, and
then, when he had reached his
zenith, he dropped swiftly down
past the dark edge of the Earth
and disappeared from sight. A
boy grown up too soon, riding
round and round the world on
a celestial carousel, encased in
an airtight metal capsule in an
airtight metal chariot ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone?
she thought.
Why don't
they leave the stars to God?
The general's second telegram
came early the next morning:
Explorer XII
doing splendidly.
Expect to bring your son down
sometime tomorrow
.
She went about her work as
usual, collecting the eggs and
allocating them in their cardboard
boxes, then setting off in
the station wagon on her Tuesday
morning run. She had expected
a deluge of questions
from her customers. She was not
disappointed. "Is Terry really
way up there all alone, Martha?"
"Aren't you
scared
, Martha?" "I
do hope they can get him back
down all right, Martha." She
supposed it must have given
them quite a turn to have their
egg woman change into a star
mother overnight.
She hadn't expected the TV interview,
though, and she would
have avoided it if it had been
politely possible. But what could
she do when the line of cars and
trucks pulled into the drive and
the technicians got out and started
setting up their equipment in
the backyard? What could she
say when the suave young man
came up to her and said, "We
want you to know that we're all
very proud of your boy up there,
ma'am, and we hope you'll do us
the honor of answering a few
questions."
Most of the questions concerned
Terry, as was fitting.
From the way the suave young
man asked them, though, she got
the impression that he was trying
to prove that her son was
just like any other average
American boy, and such just
didn't happen to be the case. But
whenever she opened her mouth
to mention, say, how he used to
study till all hours of the night,
or how difficult it had been for
him to make friends because of
his shyness, or the fact that he
had never gone out for football—whenever
she started to mention
any of these things, the
suave young man was in great
haste to interrupt her and to
twist her words, by requestioning,
into a different meaning
altogether, till Terry's behavior
pattern seemed to coincide with
the behavior pattern which the
suave young man apparently considered
the norm, but which, if
followed, Martha was sure,
would produce not young men
bent on exploring space but
young men bent on exploring
trivia.
A few of the questions concerned
herself: Was Terry her
only child? ("Yes.") What had
happened to her husband? ("He
was killed in the Korean War.")
What did she think of the new
law granting star mothers top
priority on any and all information
relating to their sons? ("I
think it's a fine law ... It's too
bad they couldn't have shown
similar humanity toward the
war mothers of World War II.")
It was late in the afternoon
by the time the TV crew got
everything repacked into their
cars and trucks and made their
departure. Martha fixed herself
a light supper, then donned an
old suede jacket of Terry's and
went out into the garden to wait
for the sun to go down. According
to the time table the general
had outlined in his first telegram,
Terry's first Tuesday
night passage wasn't due to occur
till 9:05. But it seemed only
right that she should be outside
when the stars started to come
out. Presently they did, and she
watched them wink on, one by
one, in the deepening darkness
of the sky. She'd never been
much of a one for the stars;
most of her life she'd been much
too busy on Earth to bother with
things celestial. She could remember,
when she was much
younger and Bill was courting
her, looking up at the moon
sometimes; and once in a while,
when a star fell, making a wish.
But this was different. It was
different because now she had
a personal interest in the sky, a
new affinity with its myriad inhabitants.
And how bright they became
when you kept looking at them!
They seemed to come alive, almost,
pulsing brilliantly down
out of the blackness of the night ...
And they were different colors,
too, she noticed with a start.
Some of them were blue and
some were red, others were yellow
... green ... orange ...
It grew cold in the April garden
and she could see her breath.
There was a strange crispness,
a strange clarity about the
night, that she had never known
before ... She glanced at her
watch, was astonished to see that
the hands indicated two minutes
after nine. Where had the time
gone? Tremulously she faced the
southern horizon ... and saw
her Terry appear in his shining
chariot, riding up the star-pebbled
path of his orbit, a star in
his own right, dropping swiftly
now, down, down, and out of
sight beyond the dark wheeling
mass of the Earth ... She took
a deep, proud breath, realized
that she was wildly waving her
hand and let it fall slowly to her
side. Make a wish! she thought,
like a little girl, and she wished
him pleasant dreams and a safe
return and wrapped the wish in
all her love and cast it starward.
Sometime tomorrow, the general's
telegram had said—
That meant sometime today!
She rose with the sun and fed
the chickens, fixed and ate her
breakfast, collected the eggs and
put them in their cardboard
boxes, then started out on her
Wednesday morning run. "My
land, Martha, I don't see how
you stand it with him way up
there! Doesn't it get on your
nerves
?" ("Yes ... Yes, it
does.") "Martha, when are they
bringing him back down?"
("Today ...
Today
!") "It must
be wonderful being a star mother,
Martha." ("Yes, it is—in a
way.")
Wonderful ... and terrible.
If only he can last it out for
a few more hours, she thought.
If only they can bring him down
safe and sound. Then the vigil
will be over, and some other
mother can take over the awesome
responsibility of having a
son become a star—
If only ...
The general's third telegram
arrived that afternoon:
Regret
to inform you that meteorite impact
on satellite hull severely
damaged capsule-detachment
mechanism, making ejection impossible.
Will make every effort
to find another means of accomplishing
your son's return.
Terry!—
See the little boy playing beneath
the maple tree, moving his
tiny cars up and down the tiny
streets of his make-believe village;
the little boy, his fuzz of
hair gold in the sunlight, his
cherub-cheeks pink in the summer
wind—
Terry!—
Up the lane the blue-denimed
young man walks, swinging his
thin tanned arms, his long legs
making near-grownup strides
over the sun-seared grass; the
sky blue and bright behind him,
the song of cicada rising and
falling in the hazy September
air—
Terry ...
—probably won't get a chance
to write you again before take-off,
but don't worry, Ma. The
Explorer XII
is the greatest bird
they ever built. Nothing short of
a direct meteorite hit can hurt
it, and the odds are a million to
one ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone? Why don't they leave the
stars to God?
The afternoon shadows lengthened
on the lawn and the sun
grew red and swollen over the
western hills. Martha fixed supper,
tried to eat, and couldn't.
After a while, when the light
began to fade, she slipped into
Terry's jacket and went outside.
Slowly the sky darkened and
the stars began to appear. At
length
her
star appeared, but its
swift passage blurred before her
eyes. Tires crunched on the
gravel then, and headlights
washed the darkness from the
drive. A car door slammed.
Martha did not move.
Please
God
, she thought,
let it be Terry
,
even though she knew that it
couldn't possibly be Terry. Footsteps
sounded behind her, paused.
Someone coughed softly. She
turned then—
"Good evening, ma'am."
She saw the circlet of stars
on the gray epaulet; she saw the
stern handsome face; she saw
the dark tired eyes. And she
knew. Even before he spoke
again, she knew—
"The same meteorite that
damaged the ejection mechanism,
ma'am. It penetrated the
capsule, too. We didn't find out
till just a while ago—but there
was nothing we could have done
anyway ... Are you all right,
ma'am?"
"Yes. I'm all right."
"I wanted to express my regrets
personally. I know how you
must feel."
"It's all right."
"We will, of course, make
every effort to bring back his ... remains ... so
that he can
have a fitting burial on Earth."
"No," she said.
"I beg your pardon, ma'am?"
She raised her eyes to the
patch of sky where her son had
passed in his shining metal sarcophagus.
Sirius blossomed
there, blue-white and beautiful.
She raised her eyes still higher—and
beheld the vast parterre
of Orion with its central motif
of vivid forget-me-nots, its far-flung
blooms of Betelguese and
Rigel, of Bellatrix and Saiph ...
And higher yet—and there
flamed the exquisite flower beds
of Taurus and Gemini, there
burgeoned the riotous wreath of
the Crab; there lay the pulsing
petals of the Pleiades ... And
down the ecliptic garden path,
wafted by a stellar breeze, drifted
the ocher rose of Mars ...
"No," she said again.
The general had raised his
eyes, too; now, slowly, he lowered
them. "I think I understand,
ma'am. And I'm glad
that's the way you want it ...
The stars
are
beautiful tonight,
aren't they."
"More beautiful than they've
ever been," she said.
After the general had gone,
she looked up once more at the
vast and variegated garden of
the sky where her son lay buried,
then she turned and walked
slowly back to the memoried
house.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
January 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Martha does not want to be blamed for spending taxpayers' money on an expensive search and rescue operation. | Martha feels Terry would want to spend eternity amongst the stars. | Martha does not want the media circus to continue. | Martha knows the same kind of accident or worse could happen to the search and rescue team. | 1 |
26957_XAVZRBAR_3 | How has being a star mother changed Martha? | STAR MOTHER
By ROBERT F. YOUNG
A touching story of the most
enduring love in all eternity.
That
night her son was the
first star.
She stood motionless in the
garden, one hand pressed against
her heart, watching him rise
above the fields where he had
played as a boy, where he had
worked as a young man; and she
wondered whether he was thinking
of those fields now, whether
he was thinking of her standing
alone in the April night with her
memories; whether he was
thinking of the verandahed
house behind her, with its empty
rooms and silent halls, that once
upon a time had been his birthplace.
Higher still and higher he
rose in the southern sky, and
then, when he had reached his
zenith, he dropped swiftly down
past the dark edge of the Earth
and disappeared from sight. A
boy grown up too soon, riding
round and round the world on
a celestial carousel, encased in
an airtight metal capsule in an
airtight metal chariot ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone?
she thought.
Why don't
they leave the stars to God?
The general's second telegram
came early the next morning:
Explorer XII
doing splendidly.
Expect to bring your son down
sometime tomorrow
.
She went about her work as
usual, collecting the eggs and
allocating them in their cardboard
boxes, then setting off in
the station wagon on her Tuesday
morning run. She had expected
a deluge of questions
from her customers. She was not
disappointed. "Is Terry really
way up there all alone, Martha?"
"Aren't you
scared
, Martha?" "I
do hope they can get him back
down all right, Martha." She
supposed it must have given
them quite a turn to have their
egg woman change into a star
mother overnight.
She hadn't expected the TV interview,
though, and she would
have avoided it if it had been
politely possible. But what could
she do when the line of cars and
trucks pulled into the drive and
the technicians got out and started
setting up their equipment in
the backyard? What could she
say when the suave young man
came up to her and said, "We
want you to know that we're all
very proud of your boy up there,
ma'am, and we hope you'll do us
the honor of answering a few
questions."
Most of the questions concerned
Terry, as was fitting.
From the way the suave young
man asked them, though, she got
the impression that he was trying
to prove that her son was
just like any other average
American boy, and such just
didn't happen to be the case. But
whenever she opened her mouth
to mention, say, how he used to
study till all hours of the night,
or how difficult it had been for
him to make friends because of
his shyness, or the fact that he
had never gone out for football—whenever
she started to mention
any of these things, the
suave young man was in great
haste to interrupt her and to
twist her words, by requestioning,
into a different meaning
altogether, till Terry's behavior
pattern seemed to coincide with
the behavior pattern which the
suave young man apparently considered
the norm, but which, if
followed, Martha was sure,
would produce not young men
bent on exploring space but
young men bent on exploring
trivia.
A few of the questions concerned
herself: Was Terry her
only child? ("Yes.") What had
happened to her husband? ("He
was killed in the Korean War.")
What did she think of the new
law granting star mothers top
priority on any and all information
relating to their sons? ("I
think it's a fine law ... It's too
bad they couldn't have shown
similar humanity toward the
war mothers of World War II.")
It was late in the afternoon
by the time the TV crew got
everything repacked into their
cars and trucks and made their
departure. Martha fixed herself
a light supper, then donned an
old suede jacket of Terry's and
went out into the garden to wait
for the sun to go down. According
to the time table the general
had outlined in his first telegram,
Terry's first Tuesday
night passage wasn't due to occur
till 9:05. But it seemed only
right that she should be outside
when the stars started to come
out. Presently they did, and she
watched them wink on, one by
one, in the deepening darkness
of the sky. She'd never been
much of a one for the stars;
most of her life she'd been much
too busy on Earth to bother with
things celestial. She could remember,
when she was much
younger and Bill was courting
her, looking up at the moon
sometimes; and once in a while,
when a star fell, making a wish.
But this was different. It was
different because now she had
a personal interest in the sky, a
new affinity with its myriad inhabitants.
And how bright they became
when you kept looking at them!
They seemed to come alive, almost,
pulsing brilliantly down
out of the blackness of the night ...
And they were different colors,
too, she noticed with a start.
Some of them were blue and
some were red, others were yellow
... green ... orange ...
It grew cold in the April garden
and she could see her breath.
There was a strange crispness,
a strange clarity about the
night, that she had never known
before ... She glanced at her
watch, was astonished to see that
the hands indicated two minutes
after nine. Where had the time
gone? Tremulously she faced the
southern horizon ... and saw
her Terry appear in his shining
chariot, riding up the star-pebbled
path of his orbit, a star in
his own right, dropping swiftly
now, down, down, and out of
sight beyond the dark wheeling
mass of the Earth ... She took
a deep, proud breath, realized
that she was wildly waving her
hand and let it fall slowly to her
side. Make a wish! she thought,
like a little girl, and she wished
him pleasant dreams and a safe
return and wrapped the wish in
all her love and cast it starward.
Sometime tomorrow, the general's
telegram had said—
That meant sometime today!
She rose with the sun and fed
the chickens, fixed and ate her
breakfast, collected the eggs and
put them in their cardboard
boxes, then started out on her
Wednesday morning run. "My
land, Martha, I don't see how
you stand it with him way up
there! Doesn't it get on your
nerves
?" ("Yes ... Yes, it
does.") "Martha, when are they
bringing him back down?"
("Today ...
Today
!") "It must
be wonderful being a star mother,
Martha." ("Yes, it is—in a
way.")
Wonderful ... and terrible.
If only he can last it out for
a few more hours, she thought.
If only they can bring him down
safe and sound. Then the vigil
will be over, and some other
mother can take over the awesome
responsibility of having a
son become a star—
If only ...
The general's third telegram
arrived that afternoon:
Regret
to inform you that meteorite impact
on satellite hull severely
damaged capsule-detachment
mechanism, making ejection impossible.
Will make every effort
to find another means of accomplishing
your son's return.
Terry!—
See the little boy playing beneath
the maple tree, moving his
tiny cars up and down the tiny
streets of his make-believe village;
the little boy, his fuzz of
hair gold in the sunlight, his
cherub-cheeks pink in the summer
wind—
Terry!—
Up the lane the blue-denimed
young man walks, swinging his
thin tanned arms, his long legs
making near-grownup strides
over the sun-seared grass; the
sky blue and bright behind him,
the song of cicada rising and
falling in the hazy September
air—
Terry ...
—probably won't get a chance
to write you again before take-off,
but don't worry, Ma. The
Explorer XII
is the greatest bird
they ever built. Nothing short of
a direct meteorite hit can hurt
it, and the odds are a million to
one ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone? Why don't they leave the
stars to God?
The afternoon shadows lengthened
on the lawn and the sun
grew red and swollen over the
western hills. Martha fixed supper,
tried to eat, and couldn't.
After a while, when the light
began to fade, she slipped into
Terry's jacket and went outside.
Slowly the sky darkened and
the stars began to appear. At
length
her
star appeared, but its
swift passage blurred before her
eyes. Tires crunched on the
gravel then, and headlights
washed the darkness from the
drive. A car door slammed.
Martha did not move.
Please
God
, she thought,
let it be Terry
,
even though she knew that it
couldn't possibly be Terry. Footsteps
sounded behind her, paused.
Someone coughed softly. She
turned then—
"Good evening, ma'am."
She saw the circlet of stars
on the gray epaulet; she saw the
stern handsome face; she saw
the dark tired eyes. And she
knew. Even before he spoke
again, she knew—
"The same meteorite that
damaged the ejection mechanism,
ma'am. It penetrated the
capsule, too. We didn't find out
till just a while ago—but there
was nothing we could have done
anyway ... Are you all right,
ma'am?"
"Yes. I'm all right."
"I wanted to express my regrets
personally. I know how you
must feel."
"It's all right."
"We will, of course, make
every effort to bring back his ... remains ... so
that he can
have a fitting burial on Earth."
"No," she said.
"I beg your pardon, ma'am?"
She raised her eyes to the
patch of sky where her son had
passed in his shining metal sarcophagus.
Sirius blossomed
there, blue-white and beautiful.
She raised her eyes still higher—and
beheld the vast parterre
of Orion with its central motif
of vivid forget-me-nots, its far-flung
blooms of Betelguese and
Rigel, of Bellatrix and Saiph ...
And higher yet—and there
flamed the exquisite flower beds
of Taurus and Gemini, there
burgeoned the riotous wreath of
the Crab; there lay the pulsing
petals of the Pleiades ... And
down the ecliptic garden path,
wafted by a stellar breeze, drifted
the ocher rose of Mars ...
"No," she said again.
The general had raised his
eyes, too; now, slowly, he lowered
them. "I think I understand,
ma'am. And I'm glad
that's the way you want it ...
The stars
are
beautiful tonight,
aren't they."
"More beautiful than they've
ever been," she said.
After the general had gone,
she looked up once more at the
vast and variegated garden of
the sky where her son lay buried,
then she turned and walked
slowly back to the memoried
house.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
January 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Martha has become more extroverted | She has a new appreciation for the stars. | She has become conceited thanks to her newfound fame. | Martha's new celebrity status has doubled her egg business. | 1 |
26957_XAVZRBAR_4 | What does Martha think about the TV reporter? | STAR MOTHER
By ROBERT F. YOUNG
A touching story of the most
enduring love in all eternity.
That
night her son was the
first star.
She stood motionless in the
garden, one hand pressed against
her heart, watching him rise
above the fields where he had
played as a boy, where he had
worked as a young man; and she
wondered whether he was thinking
of those fields now, whether
he was thinking of her standing
alone in the April night with her
memories; whether he was
thinking of the verandahed
house behind her, with its empty
rooms and silent halls, that once
upon a time had been his birthplace.
Higher still and higher he
rose in the southern sky, and
then, when he had reached his
zenith, he dropped swiftly down
past the dark edge of the Earth
and disappeared from sight. A
boy grown up too soon, riding
round and round the world on
a celestial carousel, encased in
an airtight metal capsule in an
airtight metal chariot ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone?
she thought.
Why don't
they leave the stars to God?
The general's second telegram
came early the next morning:
Explorer XII
doing splendidly.
Expect to bring your son down
sometime tomorrow
.
She went about her work as
usual, collecting the eggs and
allocating them in their cardboard
boxes, then setting off in
the station wagon on her Tuesday
morning run. She had expected
a deluge of questions
from her customers. She was not
disappointed. "Is Terry really
way up there all alone, Martha?"
"Aren't you
scared
, Martha?" "I
do hope they can get him back
down all right, Martha." She
supposed it must have given
them quite a turn to have their
egg woman change into a star
mother overnight.
She hadn't expected the TV interview,
though, and she would
have avoided it if it had been
politely possible. But what could
she do when the line of cars and
trucks pulled into the drive and
the technicians got out and started
setting up their equipment in
the backyard? What could she
say when the suave young man
came up to her and said, "We
want you to know that we're all
very proud of your boy up there,
ma'am, and we hope you'll do us
the honor of answering a few
questions."
Most of the questions concerned
Terry, as was fitting.
From the way the suave young
man asked them, though, she got
the impression that he was trying
to prove that her son was
just like any other average
American boy, and such just
didn't happen to be the case. But
whenever she opened her mouth
to mention, say, how he used to
study till all hours of the night,
or how difficult it had been for
him to make friends because of
his shyness, or the fact that he
had never gone out for football—whenever
she started to mention
any of these things, the
suave young man was in great
haste to interrupt her and to
twist her words, by requestioning,
into a different meaning
altogether, till Terry's behavior
pattern seemed to coincide with
the behavior pattern which the
suave young man apparently considered
the norm, but which, if
followed, Martha was sure,
would produce not young men
bent on exploring space but
young men bent on exploring
trivia.
A few of the questions concerned
herself: Was Terry her
only child? ("Yes.") What had
happened to her husband? ("He
was killed in the Korean War.")
What did she think of the new
law granting star mothers top
priority on any and all information
relating to their sons? ("I
think it's a fine law ... It's too
bad they couldn't have shown
similar humanity toward the
war mothers of World War II.")
It was late in the afternoon
by the time the TV crew got
everything repacked into their
cars and trucks and made their
departure. Martha fixed herself
a light supper, then donned an
old suede jacket of Terry's and
went out into the garden to wait
for the sun to go down. According
to the time table the general
had outlined in his first telegram,
Terry's first Tuesday
night passage wasn't due to occur
till 9:05. But it seemed only
right that she should be outside
when the stars started to come
out. Presently they did, and she
watched them wink on, one by
one, in the deepening darkness
of the sky. She'd never been
much of a one for the stars;
most of her life she'd been much
too busy on Earth to bother with
things celestial. She could remember,
when she was much
younger and Bill was courting
her, looking up at the moon
sometimes; and once in a while,
when a star fell, making a wish.
But this was different. It was
different because now she had
a personal interest in the sky, a
new affinity with its myriad inhabitants.
And how bright they became
when you kept looking at them!
They seemed to come alive, almost,
pulsing brilliantly down
out of the blackness of the night ...
And they were different colors,
too, she noticed with a start.
Some of them were blue and
some were red, others were yellow
... green ... orange ...
It grew cold in the April garden
and she could see her breath.
There was a strange crispness,
a strange clarity about the
night, that she had never known
before ... She glanced at her
watch, was astonished to see that
the hands indicated two minutes
after nine. Where had the time
gone? Tremulously she faced the
southern horizon ... and saw
her Terry appear in his shining
chariot, riding up the star-pebbled
path of his orbit, a star in
his own right, dropping swiftly
now, down, down, and out of
sight beyond the dark wheeling
mass of the Earth ... She took
a deep, proud breath, realized
that she was wildly waving her
hand and let it fall slowly to her
side. Make a wish! she thought,
like a little girl, and she wished
him pleasant dreams and a safe
return and wrapped the wish in
all her love and cast it starward.
Sometime tomorrow, the general's
telegram had said—
That meant sometime today!
She rose with the sun and fed
the chickens, fixed and ate her
breakfast, collected the eggs and
put them in their cardboard
boxes, then started out on her
Wednesday morning run. "My
land, Martha, I don't see how
you stand it with him way up
there! Doesn't it get on your
nerves
?" ("Yes ... Yes, it
does.") "Martha, when are they
bringing him back down?"
("Today ...
Today
!") "It must
be wonderful being a star mother,
Martha." ("Yes, it is—in a
way.")
Wonderful ... and terrible.
If only he can last it out for
a few more hours, she thought.
If only they can bring him down
safe and sound. Then the vigil
will be over, and some other
mother can take over the awesome
responsibility of having a
son become a star—
If only ...
The general's third telegram
arrived that afternoon:
Regret
to inform you that meteorite impact
on satellite hull severely
damaged capsule-detachment
mechanism, making ejection impossible.
Will make every effort
to find another means of accomplishing
your son's return.
Terry!—
See the little boy playing beneath
the maple tree, moving his
tiny cars up and down the tiny
streets of his make-believe village;
the little boy, his fuzz of
hair gold in the sunlight, his
cherub-cheeks pink in the summer
wind—
Terry!—
Up the lane the blue-denimed
young man walks, swinging his
thin tanned arms, his long legs
making near-grownup strides
over the sun-seared grass; the
sky blue and bright behind him,
the song of cicada rising and
falling in the hazy September
air—
Terry ...
—probably won't get a chance
to write you again before take-off,
but don't worry, Ma. The
Explorer XII
is the greatest bird
they ever built. Nothing short of
a direct meteorite hit can hurt
it, and the odds are a million to
one ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone? Why don't they leave the
stars to God?
The afternoon shadows lengthened
on the lawn and the sun
grew red and swollen over the
western hills. Martha fixed supper,
tried to eat, and couldn't.
After a while, when the light
began to fade, she slipped into
Terry's jacket and went outside.
Slowly the sky darkened and
the stars began to appear. At
length
her
star appeared, but its
swift passage blurred before her
eyes. Tires crunched on the
gravel then, and headlights
washed the darkness from the
drive. A car door slammed.
Martha did not move.
Please
God
, she thought,
let it be Terry
,
even though she knew that it
couldn't possibly be Terry. Footsteps
sounded behind her, paused.
Someone coughed softly. She
turned then—
"Good evening, ma'am."
She saw the circlet of stars
on the gray epaulet; she saw the
stern handsome face; she saw
the dark tired eyes. And she
knew. Even before he spoke
again, she knew—
"The same meteorite that
damaged the ejection mechanism,
ma'am. It penetrated the
capsule, too. We didn't find out
till just a while ago—but there
was nothing we could have done
anyway ... Are you all right,
ma'am?"
"Yes. I'm all right."
"I wanted to express my regrets
personally. I know how you
must feel."
"It's all right."
"We will, of course, make
every effort to bring back his ... remains ... so
that he can
have a fitting burial on Earth."
"No," she said.
"I beg your pardon, ma'am?"
She raised her eyes to the
patch of sky where her son had
passed in his shining metal sarcophagus.
Sirius blossomed
there, blue-white and beautiful.
She raised her eyes still higher—and
beheld the vast parterre
of Orion with its central motif
of vivid forget-me-nots, its far-flung
blooms of Betelguese and
Rigel, of Bellatrix and Saiph ...
And higher yet—and there
flamed the exquisite flower beds
of Taurus and Gemini, there
burgeoned the riotous wreath of
the Crab; there lay the pulsing
petals of the Pleiades ... And
down the ecliptic garden path,
wafted by a stellar breeze, drifted
the ocher rose of Mars ...
"No," she said again.
The general had raised his
eyes, too; now, slowly, he lowered
them. "I think I understand,
ma'am. And I'm glad
that's the way you want it ...
The stars
are
beautiful tonight,
aren't they."
"More beautiful than they've
ever been," she said.
After the general had gone,
she looked up once more at the
vast and variegated garden of
the sky where her son lay buried,
then she turned and walked
slowly back to the memoried
house.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
January 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | She thinks the reporter is terribly polite. | She thinks the reporter is a suave young man. | She thinks the reporter is twisting her words to fit his narrative. | She thinks the reporter is pushy. | 2 |
26957_XAVZRBAR_5 | Why doesn't Martha's description of Terry fit what the reporter considers to be the norm? | STAR MOTHER
By ROBERT F. YOUNG
A touching story of the most
enduring love in all eternity.
That
night her son was the
first star.
She stood motionless in the
garden, one hand pressed against
her heart, watching him rise
above the fields where he had
played as a boy, where he had
worked as a young man; and she
wondered whether he was thinking
of those fields now, whether
he was thinking of her standing
alone in the April night with her
memories; whether he was
thinking of the verandahed
house behind her, with its empty
rooms and silent halls, that once
upon a time had been his birthplace.
Higher still and higher he
rose in the southern sky, and
then, when he had reached his
zenith, he dropped swiftly down
past the dark edge of the Earth
and disappeared from sight. A
boy grown up too soon, riding
round and round the world on
a celestial carousel, encased in
an airtight metal capsule in an
airtight metal chariot ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone?
she thought.
Why don't
they leave the stars to God?
The general's second telegram
came early the next morning:
Explorer XII
doing splendidly.
Expect to bring your son down
sometime tomorrow
.
She went about her work as
usual, collecting the eggs and
allocating them in their cardboard
boxes, then setting off in
the station wagon on her Tuesday
morning run. She had expected
a deluge of questions
from her customers. She was not
disappointed. "Is Terry really
way up there all alone, Martha?"
"Aren't you
scared
, Martha?" "I
do hope they can get him back
down all right, Martha." She
supposed it must have given
them quite a turn to have their
egg woman change into a star
mother overnight.
She hadn't expected the TV interview,
though, and she would
have avoided it if it had been
politely possible. But what could
she do when the line of cars and
trucks pulled into the drive and
the technicians got out and started
setting up their equipment in
the backyard? What could she
say when the suave young man
came up to her and said, "We
want you to know that we're all
very proud of your boy up there,
ma'am, and we hope you'll do us
the honor of answering a few
questions."
Most of the questions concerned
Terry, as was fitting.
From the way the suave young
man asked them, though, she got
the impression that he was trying
to prove that her son was
just like any other average
American boy, and such just
didn't happen to be the case. But
whenever she opened her mouth
to mention, say, how he used to
study till all hours of the night,
or how difficult it had been for
him to make friends because of
his shyness, or the fact that he
had never gone out for football—whenever
she started to mention
any of these things, the
suave young man was in great
haste to interrupt her and to
twist her words, by requestioning,
into a different meaning
altogether, till Terry's behavior
pattern seemed to coincide with
the behavior pattern which the
suave young man apparently considered
the norm, but which, if
followed, Martha was sure,
would produce not young men
bent on exploring space but
young men bent on exploring
trivia.
A few of the questions concerned
herself: Was Terry her
only child? ("Yes.") What had
happened to her husband? ("He
was killed in the Korean War.")
What did she think of the new
law granting star mothers top
priority on any and all information
relating to their sons? ("I
think it's a fine law ... It's too
bad they couldn't have shown
similar humanity toward the
war mothers of World War II.")
It was late in the afternoon
by the time the TV crew got
everything repacked into their
cars and trucks and made their
departure. Martha fixed herself
a light supper, then donned an
old suede jacket of Terry's and
went out into the garden to wait
for the sun to go down. According
to the time table the general
had outlined in his first telegram,
Terry's first Tuesday
night passage wasn't due to occur
till 9:05. But it seemed only
right that she should be outside
when the stars started to come
out. Presently they did, and she
watched them wink on, one by
one, in the deepening darkness
of the sky. She'd never been
much of a one for the stars;
most of her life she'd been much
too busy on Earth to bother with
things celestial. She could remember,
when she was much
younger and Bill was courting
her, looking up at the moon
sometimes; and once in a while,
when a star fell, making a wish.
But this was different. It was
different because now she had
a personal interest in the sky, a
new affinity with its myriad inhabitants.
And how bright they became
when you kept looking at them!
They seemed to come alive, almost,
pulsing brilliantly down
out of the blackness of the night ...
And they were different colors,
too, she noticed with a start.
Some of them were blue and
some were red, others were yellow
... green ... orange ...
It grew cold in the April garden
and she could see her breath.
There was a strange crispness,
a strange clarity about the
night, that she had never known
before ... She glanced at her
watch, was astonished to see that
the hands indicated two minutes
after nine. Where had the time
gone? Tremulously she faced the
southern horizon ... and saw
her Terry appear in his shining
chariot, riding up the star-pebbled
path of his orbit, a star in
his own right, dropping swiftly
now, down, down, and out of
sight beyond the dark wheeling
mass of the Earth ... She took
a deep, proud breath, realized
that she was wildly waving her
hand and let it fall slowly to her
side. Make a wish! she thought,
like a little girl, and she wished
him pleasant dreams and a safe
return and wrapped the wish in
all her love and cast it starward.
Sometime tomorrow, the general's
telegram had said—
That meant sometime today!
She rose with the sun and fed
the chickens, fixed and ate her
breakfast, collected the eggs and
put them in their cardboard
boxes, then started out on her
Wednesday morning run. "My
land, Martha, I don't see how
you stand it with him way up
there! Doesn't it get on your
nerves
?" ("Yes ... Yes, it
does.") "Martha, when are they
bringing him back down?"
("Today ...
Today
!") "It must
be wonderful being a star mother,
Martha." ("Yes, it is—in a
way.")
Wonderful ... and terrible.
If only he can last it out for
a few more hours, she thought.
If only they can bring him down
safe and sound. Then the vigil
will be over, and some other
mother can take over the awesome
responsibility of having a
son become a star—
If only ...
The general's third telegram
arrived that afternoon:
Regret
to inform you that meteorite impact
on satellite hull severely
damaged capsule-detachment
mechanism, making ejection impossible.
Will make every effort
to find another means of accomplishing
your son's return.
Terry!—
See the little boy playing beneath
the maple tree, moving his
tiny cars up and down the tiny
streets of his make-believe village;
the little boy, his fuzz of
hair gold in the sunlight, his
cherub-cheeks pink in the summer
wind—
Terry!—
Up the lane the blue-denimed
young man walks, swinging his
thin tanned arms, his long legs
making near-grownup strides
over the sun-seared grass; the
sky blue and bright behind him,
the song of cicada rising and
falling in the hazy September
air—
Terry ...
—probably won't get a chance
to write you again before take-off,
but don't worry, Ma. The
Explorer XII
is the greatest bird
they ever built. Nothing short of
a direct meteorite hit can hurt
it, and the odds are a million to
one ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone? Why don't they leave the
stars to God?
The afternoon shadows lengthened
on the lawn and the sun
grew red and swollen over the
western hills. Martha fixed supper,
tried to eat, and couldn't.
After a while, when the light
began to fade, she slipped into
Terry's jacket and went outside.
Slowly the sky darkened and
the stars began to appear. At
length
her
star appeared, but its
swift passage blurred before her
eyes. Tires crunched on the
gravel then, and headlights
washed the darkness from the
drive. A car door slammed.
Martha did not move.
Please
God
, she thought,
let it be Terry
,
even though she knew that it
couldn't possibly be Terry. Footsteps
sounded behind her, paused.
Someone coughed softly. She
turned then—
"Good evening, ma'am."
She saw the circlet of stars
on the gray epaulet; she saw the
stern handsome face; she saw
the dark tired eyes. And she
knew. Even before he spoke
again, she knew—
"The same meteorite that
damaged the ejection mechanism,
ma'am. It penetrated the
capsule, too. We didn't find out
till just a while ago—but there
was nothing we could have done
anyway ... Are you all right,
ma'am?"
"Yes. I'm all right."
"I wanted to express my regrets
personally. I know how you
must feel."
"It's all right."
"We will, of course, make
every effort to bring back his ... remains ... so
that he can
have a fitting burial on Earth."
"No," she said.
"I beg your pardon, ma'am?"
She raised her eyes to the
patch of sky where her son had
passed in his shining metal sarcophagus.
Sirius blossomed
there, blue-white and beautiful.
She raised her eyes still higher—and
beheld the vast parterre
of Orion with its central motif
of vivid forget-me-nots, its far-flung
blooms of Betelguese and
Rigel, of Bellatrix and Saiph ...
And higher yet—and there
flamed the exquisite flower beds
of Taurus and Gemini, there
burgeoned the riotous wreath of
the Crab; there lay the pulsing
petals of the Pleiades ... And
down the ecliptic garden path,
wafted by a stellar breeze, drifted
the ocher rose of Mars ...
"No," she said again.
The general had raised his
eyes, too; now, slowly, he lowered
them. "I think I understand,
ma'am. And I'm glad
that's the way you want it ...
The stars
are
beautiful tonight,
aren't they."
"More beautiful than they've
ever been," she said.
After the general had gone,
she looked up once more at the
vast and variegated garden of
the sky where her son lay buried,
then she turned and walked
slowly back to the memoried
house.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
January 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Terry is passionate about space exploration. | Terry didn't like football. | Terry is an only child. | Terry is shy. A bookworm, who doesn't play sports. | 3 |
26957_XAVZRBAR_6 | Why does Martha wear Terry's jacket? | STAR MOTHER
By ROBERT F. YOUNG
A touching story of the most
enduring love in all eternity.
That
night her son was the
first star.
She stood motionless in the
garden, one hand pressed against
her heart, watching him rise
above the fields where he had
played as a boy, where he had
worked as a young man; and she
wondered whether he was thinking
of those fields now, whether
he was thinking of her standing
alone in the April night with her
memories; whether he was
thinking of the verandahed
house behind her, with its empty
rooms and silent halls, that once
upon a time had been his birthplace.
Higher still and higher he
rose in the southern sky, and
then, when he had reached his
zenith, he dropped swiftly down
past the dark edge of the Earth
and disappeared from sight. A
boy grown up too soon, riding
round and round the world on
a celestial carousel, encased in
an airtight metal capsule in an
airtight metal chariot ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone?
she thought.
Why don't
they leave the stars to God?
The general's second telegram
came early the next morning:
Explorer XII
doing splendidly.
Expect to bring your son down
sometime tomorrow
.
She went about her work as
usual, collecting the eggs and
allocating them in their cardboard
boxes, then setting off in
the station wagon on her Tuesday
morning run. She had expected
a deluge of questions
from her customers. She was not
disappointed. "Is Terry really
way up there all alone, Martha?"
"Aren't you
scared
, Martha?" "I
do hope they can get him back
down all right, Martha." She
supposed it must have given
them quite a turn to have their
egg woman change into a star
mother overnight.
She hadn't expected the TV interview,
though, and she would
have avoided it if it had been
politely possible. But what could
she do when the line of cars and
trucks pulled into the drive and
the technicians got out and started
setting up their equipment in
the backyard? What could she
say when the suave young man
came up to her and said, "We
want you to know that we're all
very proud of your boy up there,
ma'am, and we hope you'll do us
the honor of answering a few
questions."
Most of the questions concerned
Terry, as was fitting.
From the way the suave young
man asked them, though, she got
the impression that he was trying
to prove that her son was
just like any other average
American boy, and such just
didn't happen to be the case. But
whenever she opened her mouth
to mention, say, how he used to
study till all hours of the night,
or how difficult it had been for
him to make friends because of
his shyness, or the fact that he
had never gone out for football—whenever
she started to mention
any of these things, the
suave young man was in great
haste to interrupt her and to
twist her words, by requestioning,
into a different meaning
altogether, till Terry's behavior
pattern seemed to coincide with
the behavior pattern which the
suave young man apparently considered
the norm, but which, if
followed, Martha was sure,
would produce not young men
bent on exploring space but
young men bent on exploring
trivia.
A few of the questions concerned
herself: Was Terry her
only child? ("Yes.") What had
happened to her husband? ("He
was killed in the Korean War.")
What did she think of the new
law granting star mothers top
priority on any and all information
relating to their sons? ("I
think it's a fine law ... It's too
bad they couldn't have shown
similar humanity toward the
war mothers of World War II.")
It was late in the afternoon
by the time the TV crew got
everything repacked into their
cars and trucks and made their
departure. Martha fixed herself
a light supper, then donned an
old suede jacket of Terry's and
went out into the garden to wait
for the sun to go down. According
to the time table the general
had outlined in his first telegram,
Terry's first Tuesday
night passage wasn't due to occur
till 9:05. But it seemed only
right that she should be outside
when the stars started to come
out. Presently they did, and she
watched them wink on, one by
one, in the deepening darkness
of the sky. She'd never been
much of a one for the stars;
most of her life she'd been much
too busy on Earth to bother with
things celestial. She could remember,
when she was much
younger and Bill was courting
her, looking up at the moon
sometimes; and once in a while,
when a star fell, making a wish.
But this was different. It was
different because now she had
a personal interest in the sky, a
new affinity with its myriad inhabitants.
And how bright they became
when you kept looking at them!
They seemed to come alive, almost,
pulsing brilliantly down
out of the blackness of the night ...
And they were different colors,
too, she noticed with a start.
Some of them were blue and
some were red, others were yellow
... green ... orange ...
It grew cold in the April garden
and she could see her breath.
There was a strange crispness,
a strange clarity about the
night, that she had never known
before ... She glanced at her
watch, was astonished to see that
the hands indicated two minutes
after nine. Where had the time
gone? Tremulously she faced the
southern horizon ... and saw
her Terry appear in his shining
chariot, riding up the star-pebbled
path of his orbit, a star in
his own right, dropping swiftly
now, down, down, and out of
sight beyond the dark wheeling
mass of the Earth ... She took
a deep, proud breath, realized
that she was wildly waving her
hand and let it fall slowly to her
side. Make a wish! she thought,
like a little girl, and she wished
him pleasant dreams and a safe
return and wrapped the wish in
all her love and cast it starward.
Sometime tomorrow, the general's
telegram had said—
That meant sometime today!
She rose with the sun and fed
the chickens, fixed and ate her
breakfast, collected the eggs and
put them in their cardboard
boxes, then started out on her
Wednesday morning run. "My
land, Martha, I don't see how
you stand it with him way up
there! Doesn't it get on your
nerves
?" ("Yes ... Yes, it
does.") "Martha, when are they
bringing him back down?"
("Today ...
Today
!") "It must
be wonderful being a star mother,
Martha." ("Yes, it is—in a
way.")
Wonderful ... and terrible.
If only he can last it out for
a few more hours, she thought.
If only they can bring him down
safe and sound. Then the vigil
will be over, and some other
mother can take over the awesome
responsibility of having a
son become a star—
If only ...
The general's third telegram
arrived that afternoon:
Regret
to inform you that meteorite impact
on satellite hull severely
damaged capsule-detachment
mechanism, making ejection impossible.
Will make every effort
to find another means of accomplishing
your son's return.
Terry!—
See the little boy playing beneath
the maple tree, moving his
tiny cars up and down the tiny
streets of his make-believe village;
the little boy, his fuzz of
hair gold in the sunlight, his
cherub-cheeks pink in the summer
wind—
Terry!—
Up the lane the blue-denimed
young man walks, swinging his
thin tanned arms, his long legs
making near-grownup strides
over the sun-seared grass; the
sky blue and bright behind him,
the song of cicada rising and
falling in the hazy September
air—
Terry ...
—probably won't get a chance
to write you again before take-off,
but don't worry, Ma. The
Explorer XII
is the greatest bird
they ever built. Nothing short of
a direct meteorite hit can hurt
it, and the odds are a million to
one ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone? Why don't they leave the
stars to God?
The afternoon shadows lengthened
on the lawn and the sun
grew red and swollen over the
western hills. Martha fixed supper,
tried to eat, and couldn't.
After a while, when the light
began to fade, she slipped into
Terry's jacket and went outside.
Slowly the sky darkened and
the stars began to appear. At
length
her
star appeared, but its
swift passage blurred before her
eyes. Tires crunched on the
gravel then, and headlights
washed the darkness from the
drive. A car door slammed.
Martha did not move.
Please
God
, she thought,
let it be Terry
,
even though she knew that it
couldn't possibly be Terry. Footsteps
sounded behind her, paused.
Someone coughed softly. She
turned then—
"Good evening, ma'am."
She saw the circlet of stars
on the gray epaulet; she saw the
stern handsome face; she saw
the dark tired eyes. And she
knew. Even before he spoke
again, she knew—
"The same meteorite that
damaged the ejection mechanism,
ma'am. It penetrated the
capsule, too. We didn't find out
till just a while ago—but there
was nothing we could have done
anyway ... Are you all right,
ma'am?"
"Yes. I'm all right."
"I wanted to express my regrets
personally. I know how you
must feel."
"It's all right."
"We will, of course, make
every effort to bring back his ... remains ... so
that he can
have a fitting burial on Earth."
"No," she said.
"I beg your pardon, ma'am?"
She raised her eyes to the
patch of sky where her son had
passed in his shining metal sarcophagus.
Sirius blossomed
there, blue-white and beautiful.
She raised her eyes still higher—and
beheld the vast parterre
of Orion with its central motif
of vivid forget-me-nots, its far-flung
blooms of Betelguese and
Rigel, of Bellatrix and Saiph ...
And higher yet—and there
flamed the exquisite flower beds
of Taurus and Gemini, there
burgeoned the riotous wreath of
the Crab; there lay the pulsing
petals of the Pleiades ... And
down the ecliptic garden path,
wafted by a stellar breeze, drifted
the ocher rose of Mars ...
"No," she said again.
The general had raised his
eyes, too; now, slowly, he lowered
them. "I think I understand,
ma'am. And I'm glad
that's the way you want it ...
The stars
are
beautiful tonight,
aren't they."
"More beautiful than they've
ever been," she said.
After the general had gone,
she looked up once more at the
vast and variegated garden of
the sky where her son lay buried,
then she turned and walked
slowly back to the memoried
house.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
January 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The reporter asked her to wear Terry's jacket. | She could see her breath in the air. | She wants to feel close to Terry. | Terry's jacket reminds the neighbors that she is a star mother. | 2 |
26957_XAVZRBAR_7 | How long did Martha spend outside looking at the stars waiting for Terry's first pass? | STAR MOTHER
By ROBERT F. YOUNG
A touching story of the most
enduring love in all eternity.
That
night her son was the
first star.
She stood motionless in the
garden, one hand pressed against
her heart, watching him rise
above the fields where he had
played as a boy, where he had
worked as a young man; and she
wondered whether he was thinking
of those fields now, whether
he was thinking of her standing
alone in the April night with her
memories; whether he was
thinking of the verandahed
house behind her, with its empty
rooms and silent halls, that once
upon a time had been his birthplace.
Higher still and higher he
rose in the southern sky, and
then, when he had reached his
zenith, he dropped swiftly down
past the dark edge of the Earth
and disappeared from sight. A
boy grown up too soon, riding
round and round the world on
a celestial carousel, encased in
an airtight metal capsule in an
airtight metal chariot ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone?
she thought.
Why don't
they leave the stars to God?
The general's second telegram
came early the next morning:
Explorer XII
doing splendidly.
Expect to bring your son down
sometime tomorrow
.
She went about her work as
usual, collecting the eggs and
allocating them in their cardboard
boxes, then setting off in
the station wagon on her Tuesday
morning run. She had expected
a deluge of questions
from her customers. She was not
disappointed. "Is Terry really
way up there all alone, Martha?"
"Aren't you
scared
, Martha?" "I
do hope they can get him back
down all right, Martha." She
supposed it must have given
them quite a turn to have their
egg woman change into a star
mother overnight.
She hadn't expected the TV interview,
though, and she would
have avoided it if it had been
politely possible. But what could
she do when the line of cars and
trucks pulled into the drive and
the technicians got out and started
setting up their equipment in
the backyard? What could she
say when the suave young man
came up to her and said, "We
want you to know that we're all
very proud of your boy up there,
ma'am, and we hope you'll do us
the honor of answering a few
questions."
Most of the questions concerned
Terry, as was fitting.
From the way the suave young
man asked them, though, she got
the impression that he was trying
to prove that her son was
just like any other average
American boy, and such just
didn't happen to be the case. But
whenever she opened her mouth
to mention, say, how he used to
study till all hours of the night,
or how difficult it had been for
him to make friends because of
his shyness, or the fact that he
had never gone out for football—whenever
she started to mention
any of these things, the
suave young man was in great
haste to interrupt her and to
twist her words, by requestioning,
into a different meaning
altogether, till Terry's behavior
pattern seemed to coincide with
the behavior pattern which the
suave young man apparently considered
the norm, but which, if
followed, Martha was sure,
would produce not young men
bent on exploring space but
young men bent on exploring
trivia.
A few of the questions concerned
herself: Was Terry her
only child? ("Yes.") What had
happened to her husband? ("He
was killed in the Korean War.")
What did she think of the new
law granting star mothers top
priority on any and all information
relating to their sons? ("I
think it's a fine law ... It's too
bad they couldn't have shown
similar humanity toward the
war mothers of World War II.")
It was late in the afternoon
by the time the TV crew got
everything repacked into their
cars and trucks and made their
departure. Martha fixed herself
a light supper, then donned an
old suede jacket of Terry's and
went out into the garden to wait
for the sun to go down. According
to the time table the general
had outlined in his first telegram,
Terry's first Tuesday
night passage wasn't due to occur
till 9:05. But it seemed only
right that she should be outside
when the stars started to come
out. Presently they did, and she
watched them wink on, one by
one, in the deepening darkness
of the sky. She'd never been
much of a one for the stars;
most of her life she'd been much
too busy on Earth to bother with
things celestial. She could remember,
when she was much
younger and Bill was courting
her, looking up at the moon
sometimes; and once in a while,
when a star fell, making a wish.
But this was different. It was
different because now she had
a personal interest in the sky, a
new affinity with its myriad inhabitants.
And how bright they became
when you kept looking at them!
They seemed to come alive, almost,
pulsing brilliantly down
out of the blackness of the night ...
And they were different colors,
too, she noticed with a start.
Some of them were blue and
some were red, others were yellow
... green ... orange ...
It grew cold in the April garden
and she could see her breath.
There was a strange crispness,
a strange clarity about the
night, that she had never known
before ... She glanced at her
watch, was astonished to see that
the hands indicated two minutes
after nine. Where had the time
gone? Tremulously she faced the
southern horizon ... and saw
her Terry appear in his shining
chariot, riding up the star-pebbled
path of his orbit, a star in
his own right, dropping swiftly
now, down, down, and out of
sight beyond the dark wheeling
mass of the Earth ... She took
a deep, proud breath, realized
that she was wildly waving her
hand and let it fall slowly to her
side. Make a wish! she thought,
like a little girl, and she wished
him pleasant dreams and a safe
return and wrapped the wish in
all her love and cast it starward.
Sometime tomorrow, the general's
telegram had said—
That meant sometime today!
She rose with the sun and fed
the chickens, fixed and ate her
breakfast, collected the eggs and
put them in their cardboard
boxes, then started out on her
Wednesday morning run. "My
land, Martha, I don't see how
you stand it with him way up
there! Doesn't it get on your
nerves
?" ("Yes ... Yes, it
does.") "Martha, when are they
bringing him back down?"
("Today ...
Today
!") "It must
be wonderful being a star mother,
Martha." ("Yes, it is—in a
way.")
Wonderful ... and terrible.
If only he can last it out for
a few more hours, she thought.
If only they can bring him down
safe and sound. Then the vigil
will be over, and some other
mother can take over the awesome
responsibility of having a
son become a star—
If only ...
The general's third telegram
arrived that afternoon:
Regret
to inform you that meteorite impact
on satellite hull severely
damaged capsule-detachment
mechanism, making ejection impossible.
Will make every effort
to find another means of accomplishing
your son's return.
Terry!—
See the little boy playing beneath
the maple tree, moving his
tiny cars up and down the tiny
streets of his make-believe village;
the little boy, his fuzz of
hair gold in the sunlight, his
cherub-cheeks pink in the summer
wind—
Terry!—
Up the lane the blue-denimed
young man walks, swinging his
thin tanned arms, his long legs
making near-grownup strides
over the sun-seared grass; the
sky blue and bright behind him,
the song of cicada rising and
falling in the hazy September
air—
Terry ...
—probably won't get a chance
to write you again before take-off,
but don't worry, Ma. The
Explorer XII
is the greatest bird
they ever built. Nothing short of
a direct meteorite hit can hurt
it, and the odds are a million to
one ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone? Why don't they leave the
stars to God?
The afternoon shadows lengthened
on the lawn and the sun
grew red and swollen over the
western hills. Martha fixed supper,
tried to eat, and couldn't.
After a while, when the light
began to fade, she slipped into
Terry's jacket and went outside.
Slowly the sky darkened and
the stars began to appear. At
length
her
star appeared, but its
swift passage blurred before her
eyes. Tires crunched on the
gravel then, and headlights
washed the darkness from the
drive. A car door slammed.
Martha did not move.
Please
God
, she thought,
let it be Terry
,
even though she knew that it
couldn't possibly be Terry. Footsteps
sounded behind her, paused.
Someone coughed softly. She
turned then—
"Good evening, ma'am."
She saw the circlet of stars
on the gray epaulet; she saw the
stern handsome face; she saw
the dark tired eyes. And she
knew. Even before he spoke
again, she knew—
"The same meteorite that
damaged the ejection mechanism,
ma'am. It penetrated the
capsule, too. We didn't find out
till just a while ago—but there
was nothing we could have done
anyway ... Are you all right,
ma'am?"
"Yes. I'm all right."
"I wanted to express my regrets
personally. I know how you
must feel."
"It's all right."
"We will, of course, make
every effort to bring back his ... remains ... so
that he can
have a fitting burial on Earth."
"No," she said.
"I beg your pardon, ma'am?"
She raised her eyes to the
patch of sky where her son had
passed in his shining metal sarcophagus.
Sirius blossomed
there, blue-white and beautiful.
She raised her eyes still higher—and
beheld the vast parterre
of Orion with its central motif
of vivid forget-me-nots, its far-flung
blooms of Betelguese and
Rigel, of Bellatrix and Saiph ...
And higher yet—and there
flamed the exquisite flower beds
of Taurus and Gemini, there
burgeoned the riotous wreath of
the Crab; there lay the pulsing
petals of the Pleiades ... And
down the ecliptic garden path,
wafted by a stellar breeze, drifted
the ocher rose of Mars ...
"No," she said again.
The general had raised his
eyes, too; now, slowly, he lowered
them. "I think I understand,
ma'am. And I'm glad
that's the way you want it ...
The stars
are
beautiful tonight,
aren't they."
"More beautiful than they've
ever been," she said.
After the general had gone,
she looked up once more at the
vast and variegated garden of
the sky where her son lay buried,
then she turned and walked
slowly back to the memoried
house.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
January 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Two to three hours | Less than an hour | More than three hours | Between one and two hours | 2 |
26957_XAVZRBAR_8 | Why does Martha seem so calm when Terry's death is confirmed? | STAR MOTHER
By ROBERT F. YOUNG
A touching story of the most
enduring love in all eternity.
That
night her son was the
first star.
She stood motionless in the
garden, one hand pressed against
her heart, watching him rise
above the fields where he had
played as a boy, where he had
worked as a young man; and she
wondered whether he was thinking
of those fields now, whether
he was thinking of her standing
alone in the April night with her
memories; whether he was
thinking of the verandahed
house behind her, with its empty
rooms and silent halls, that once
upon a time had been his birthplace.
Higher still and higher he
rose in the southern sky, and
then, when he had reached his
zenith, he dropped swiftly down
past the dark edge of the Earth
and disappeared from sight. A
boy grown up too soon, riding
round and round the world on
a celestial carousel, encased in
an airtight metal capsule in an
airtight metal chariot ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone?
she thought.
Why don't
they leave the stars to God?
The general's second telegram
came early the next morning:
Explorer XII
doing splendidly.
Expect to bring your son down
sometime tomorrow
.
She went about her work as
usual, collecting the eggs and
allocating them in their cardboard
boxes, then setting off in
the station wagon on her Tuesday
morning run. She had expected
a deluge of questions
from her customers. She was not
disappointed. "Is Terry really
way up there all alone, Martha?"
"Aren't you
scared
, Martha?" "I
do hope they can get him back
down all right, Martha." She
supposed it must have given
them quite a turn to have their
egg woman change into a star
mother overnight.
She hadn't expected the TV interview,
though, and she would
have avoided it if it had been
politely possible. But what could
she do when the line of cars and
trucks pulled into the drive and
the technicians got out and started
setting up their equipment in
the backyard? What could she
say when the suave young man
came up to her and said, "We
want you to know that we're all
very proud of your boy up there,
ma'am, and we hope you'll do us
the honor of answering a few
questions."
Most of the questions concerned
Terry, as was fitting.
From the way the suave young
man asked them, though, she got
the impression that he was trying
to prove that her son was
just like any other average
American boy, and such just
didn't happen to be the case. But
whenever she opened her mouth
to mention, say, how he used to
study till all hours of the night,
or how difficult it had been for
him to make friends because of
his shyness, or the fact that he
had never gone out for football—whenever
she started to mention
any of these things, the
suave young man was in great
haste to interrupt her and to
twist her words, by requestioning,
into a different meaning
altogether, till Terry's behavior
pattern seemed to coincide with
the behavior pattern which the
suave young man apparently considered
the norm, but which, if
followed, Martha was sure,
would produce not young men
bent on exploring space but
young men bent on exploring
trivia.
A few of the questions concerned
herself: Was Terry her
only child? ("Yes.") What had
happened to her husband? ("He
was killed in the Korean War.")
What did she think of the new
law granting star mothers top
priority on any and all information
relating to their sons? ("I
think it's a fine law ... It's too
bad they couldn't have shown
similar humanity toward the
war mothers of World War II.")
It was late in the afternoon
by the time the TV crew got
everything repacked into their
cars and trucks and made their
departure. Martha fixed herself
a light supper, then donned an
old suede jacket of Terry's and
went out into the garden to wait
for the sun to go down. According
to the time table the general
had outlined in his first telegram,
Terry's first Tuesday
night passage wasn't due to occur
till 9:05. But it seemed only
right that she should be outside
when the stars started to come
out. Presently they did, and she
watched them wink on, one by
one, in the deepening darkness
of the sky. She'd never been
much of a one for the stars;
most of her life she'd been much
too busy on Earth to bother with
things celestial. She could remember,
when she was much
younger and Bill was courting
her, looking up at the moon
sometimes; and once in a while,
when a star fell, making a wish.
But this was different. It was
different because now she had
a personal interest in the sky, a
new affinity with its myriad inhabitants.
And how bright they became
when you kept looking at them!
They seemed to come alive, almost,
pulsing brilliantly down
out of the blackness of the night ...
And they were different colors,
too, she noticed with a start.
Some of them were blue and
some were red, others were yellow
... green ... orange ...
It grew cold in the April garden
and she could see her breath.
There was a strange crispness,
a strange clarity about the
night, that she had never known
before ... She glanced at her
watch, was astonished to see that
the hands indicated two minutes
after nine. Where had the time
gone? Tremulously she faced the
southern horizon ... and saw
her Terry appear in his shining
chariot, riding up the star-pebbled
path of his orbit, a star in
his own right, dropping swiftly
now, down, down, and out of
sight beyond the dark wheeling
mass of the Earth ... She took
a deep, proud breath, realized
that she was wildly waving her
hand and let it fall slowly to her
side. Make a wish! she thought,
like a little girl, and she wished
him pleasant dreams and a safe
return and wrapped the wish in
all her love and cast it starward.
Sometime tomorrow, the general's
telegram had said—
That meant sometime today!
She rose with the sun and fed
the chickens, fixed and ate her
breakfast, collected the eggs and
put them in their cardboard
boxes, then started out on her
Wednesday morning run. "My
land, Martha, I don't see how
you stand it with him way up
there! Doesn't it get on your
nerves
?" ("Yes ... Yes, it
does.") "Martha, when are they
bringing him back down?"
("Today ...
Today
!") "It must
be wonderful being a star mother,
Martha." ("Yes, it is—in a
way.")
Wonderful ... and terrible.
If only he can last it out for
a few more hours, she thought.
If only they can bring him down
safe and sound. Then the vigil
will be over, and some other
mother can take over the awesome
responsibility of having a
son become a star—
If only ...
The general's third telegram
arrived that afternoon:
Regret
to inform you that meteorite impact
on satellite hull severely
damaged capsule-detachment
mechanism, making ejection impossible.
Will make every effort
to find another means of accomplishing
your son's return.
Terry!—
See the little boy playing beneath
the maple tree, moving his
tiny cars up and down the tiny
streets of his make-believe village;
the little boy, his fuzz of
hair gold in the sunlight, his
cherub-cheeks pink in the summer
wind—
Terry!—
Up the lane the blue-denimed
young man walks, swinging his
thin tanned arms, his long legs
making near-grownup strides
over the sun-seared grass; the
sky blue and bright behind him,
the song of cicada rising and
falling in the hazy September
air—
Terry ...
—probably won't get a chance
to write you again before take-off,
but don't worry, Ma. The
Explorer XII
is the greatest bird
they ever built. Nothing short of
a direct meteorite hit can hurt
it, and the odds are a million to
one ...
Why don't they leave the stars
alone? Why don't they leave the
stars to God?
The afternoon shadows lengthened
on the lawn and the sun
grew red and swollen over the
western hills. Martha fixed supper,
tried to eat, and couldn't.
After a while, when the light
began to fade, she slipped into
Terry's jacket and went outside.
Slowly the sky darkened and
the stars began to appear. At
length
her
star appeared, but its
swift passage blurred before her
eyes. Tires crunched on the
gravel then, and headlights
washed the darkness from the
drive. A car door slammed.
Martha did not move.
Please
God
, she thought,
let it be Terry
,
even though she knew that it
couldn't possibly be Terry. Footsteps
sounded behind her, paused.
Someone coughed softly. She
turned then—
"Good evening, ma'am."
She saw the circlet of stars
on the gray epaulet; she saw the
stern handsome face; she saw
the dark tired eyes. And she
knew. Even before he spoke
again, she knew—
"The same meteorite that
damaged the ejection mechanism,
ma'am. It penetrated the
capsule, too. We didn't find out
till just a while ago—but there
was nothing we could have done
anyway ... Are you all right,
ma'am?"
"Yes. I'm all right."
"I wanted to express my regrets
personally. I know how you
must feel."
"It's all right."
"We will, of course, make
every effort to bring back his ... remains ... so
that he can
have a fitting burial on Earth."
"No," she said.
"I beg your pardon, ma'am?"
She raised her eyes to the
patch of sky where her son had
passed in his shining metal sarcophagus.
Sirius blossomed
there, blue-white and beautiful.
She raised her eyes still higher—and
beheld the vast parterre
of Orion with its central motif
of vivid forget-me-nots, its far-flung
blooms of Betelguese and
Rigel, of Bellatrix and Saiph ...
And higher yet—and there
flamed the exquisite flower beds
of Taurus and Gemini, there
burgeoned the riotous wreath of
the Crab; there lay the pulsing
petals of the Pleiades ... And
down the ecliptic garden path,
wafted by a stellar breeze, drifted
the ocher rose of Mars ...
"No," she said again.
The general had raised his
eyes, too; now, slowly, he lowered
them. "I think I understand,
ma'am. And I'm glad
that's the way you want it ...
The stars
are
beautiful tonight,
aren't they."
"More beautiful than they've
ever been," she said.
After the general had gone,
she looked up once more at the
vast and variegated garden of
the sky where her son lay buried,
then she turned and walked
slowly back to the memoried
house.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
January 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Martha made peace with Terry's death in the hours since the general's last telegram. | After communing with the stars in the afternoon, Martha realizes that this is the way Terry would want to go. | Martha is very angry with the general and is doing everything in her power to not yell at him. | Martha is in shock. The reality of Terry's death has yet to set in. | 0 |
27110_29Z96YG1_1 | Why does Loy Chuk want to bring the mummy back to life? | THE
ETERNAL
WALL
By RAYMOND Z. GALLUN
A scream of brakes, the splash
into icy waters, a long descent
into alkaline depths ... it was
death. But Ned Vince lived
again—a million years later!
"See
you in half an hour,
Betty," said Ned Vince
over the party telephone. "We'll
be out at the Silver Basket before
ten-thirty...."
Ned Vince was eager for the
company of the girl he loved.
That was why he was in a hurry
to get to the neighboring town
of Hurley, where she lived. His
old car rattled and roared as he
swung it recklessly around Pit
Bend.
There was where Death tapped
him on the shoulder. Another car
leaped suddenly into view, its
lights glaring blindingly past a
high, up-jutting mass of Jurassic
rock at the turn of the road.
Dazzled, and befuddled by his
own rash speed, Ned Vince had
only swift young reflexes to rely
on to avoid a fearful, telescoping
collision. He flicked his wheel
smoothly to the right; but the
County Highway Commission
hadn't yet tarred the traffic-loosened
gravel at the Bend.
An incredible science, millions of years old, lay in the minds of these creatures.
Ned could scarcely have chosen
a worse place to start sliding and
spinning. His car hit the white-painted
wooden rail sideways,
crashed through, tumbled down
a steep slope, struck a huge boulder,
bounced up a little, and
arced outward, falling as gracefully
as a swan-diver toward the
inky waters of the Pit, fifty feet
beneath....
Ned Vince was still dimly conscious
when that black, quiet
pool geysered around him in a
mighty splash. He had only a
dazing welt on his forehead, and
a gag of terror in his throat.
Movement was slower now, as
he began to sink, trapped inside
his wrecked car. Nothing that he
could imagine could mean doom
more certainly than this. The Pit
was a tremendously deep pocket
in the ground, spring-fed. The
edges of that almost bottomless
pool were caked with a rim of
white—for the water, on which
dead birds so often floated, was
surcharged with alkali. As that
heavy, natronous liquid rushed
up through the openings and
cracks beneath his feet, Ned
Vince knew that his friends and
his family would never see his
body again, lost beyond recovery
in this abyss.
The car was deeply submerged.
The light had blinked out on the
dash-panel, leaving Ned in absolute
darkness. A flood rushed
in at the shattered window. He
clawed at the door, trying to
open it, but it was jammed in
the crash-bent frame, and he
couldn't fight against the force
of that incoming water. The
welt, left by the blow he had received
on his forehead, put a
thickening mist over his brain,
so that he could not think clearly.
Presently, when he could no
longer hold his breath, bitter
liquid was sucked into his lungs.
His last thoughts were those
of a drowning man. The machine-shop
he and his dad had
had in Harwich. Betty Moore,
with the smiling Irish eyes—like
in the song. Betty and he
had planned to go to the State
University this Fall. They'd
planned to be married sometime....
Goodbye, Betty ...
The ripples that had ruffled
the surface waters in the Pit,
quieted again to glassy smoothness.
The eternal stars shone
calmly. The geologic Dakota
hills, which might have seen the
dinosaurs, still bulked along the
highway. Time, the Brother of
Death, and the Father of
Change, seemed to wait....
"Kaalleee! Tik!... Tik, tik,
tik!... Kaalleee!..."
The excited cry, which no human
throat could quite have duplicated
accurately, arose thinly
from the depths of a powder-dry
gulch, water-scarred from an inconceivable
antiquity. The noon-day
Sun was red and huge. The
air was tenuous, dehydrated,
chill.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik,
tik!..."
At first there was only one
voice uttering those weird, triumphant
sounds. Then other
vocal organs took up that trilling
wail, and those short, sharp
chuckles of eagerness. Other
questioning, wondering notes
mixed with the cadence. Lacking
qualities identifiable as human,
the disturbance was still like the
babble of a group of workmen
who have discovered something
remarkable.
The desolate expanse around
the gulch, was all but without
motion. The icy breeze tore tiny
puffs of dust from grotesque,
angling drifts of soil, nearly
waterless for eons. Patches of
drab lichen grew here and there
on the up-jutting rocks, but in
the desert itself, no other life
was visible. Even the hills had
sagged away, flattened by incalculable
ages of erosion.
At a mile distance, a crumbling
heap of rubble arose. Once
it had been a building. A gigantic,
jagged mass of detritus
slanted upward from its crest—red
debris that had once been
steel. A launching catapult for
the last space ships built by the
gods in exodus, perhaps it was—half
a million years ago. Man
was gone from the Earth. Glacial
ages, war, decadence, disease,
and a final scattering of those
ultimate superhumans to newer
worlds in other solar systems,
had done that.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik, tik!..."
The sounds were not human.
They were more like the chatter
and wail of small desert animals.
But there was a seeming paradox
here in the depths of that
gulch, too. The glint of metal,
sharp and burnished. The flat,
streamlined bulk of a flying machine,
shiny and new. The bell-like
muzzle of a strange excavator-apparatus,
which seemed to
depend on a blast of atoms to
clear away rock and soil. Thus
the gulch had been cleared of the
accumulated rubbish of antiquity.
Man, it seemed, had a successor,
as ruler of the Earth.
Loy Chuk had flown his geological
expedition out from the
far lowlands to the east, out
from the city of Kar-Rah. And
he was very happy now—flushed
with a vast and unlooked-for
success.
He crouched there on his
haunches, at the dry bottom of
the Pit. The breeze rumpled his
long, brown fur. He wasn't very
different in appearance from his
ancestors. A foot tall, perhaps,
as he squatted there in that antique
stance of his kind. His tail
was short and furred, his undersides
creamy. White whiskers
spread around his inquisitive,
pink-tipped snout.
But his cranium bulged up and
forward between shrewd, beady
eyes, betraying the slow heritage
of time, of survival of the fittest,
of evolution. He could think and
dream and invent, and the civilization
of his kind was already
far beyond that of the ancient
Twentieth Century.
Loy Chuk and his fellow workers
were gathered, tense and
gleeful, around the things their
digging had exposed to the daylight.
There was a gob of junk—scarcely
more than an irregular
formation of flaky rust. But imbedded
in it was a huddled form,
brown and hard as old wood. The
dry mud that had encased it
like an airtight coffin, had by
now been chipped away by the
tiny investigators; but soiled
clothing still clung to it, after
perhaps a million years. Metal
had gone into decay—yes. But
not this body. The answer to this
was simple—alkali. A mineral
saturation that had held time
and change in stasis. A perfect
preservative for organic tissue,
aided probably during most of
those passing eras by desert dryness.
The Dakotas had turned
arid very swiftly. This body was
not a mere fossil. It was a
mummy.
"Kaalleee!" Man, that meant.
Not the star-conquering demi-gods,
but the ancestral stock
that had built the first
machines on Earth, and in the
early Twenty-first Century, the
first interplanetary rockets. No
wonder Loy Chuk and his co-workers
were happy in their
paleontological enthusiasm! A
strange accident, happening in a
legendary antiquity, had aided
them in their quest for knowledge.
At last Loy Chuk gave a soft,
chirping signal. The chant of
triumph ended, while instruments
flicked in his tiny hands.
The final instrument he used to
test the mummy, looked like a
miniature stereoscope, with complicated
details. He held it over
his eyes. On the tiny screen
within, through the agency of
focused X-rays, he saw magnified
images of the internal organs
of this ancient human
corpse.
What his probing gaze revealed
to him, made his pleasure
even greater than before. In
twittering, chattering sounds, he
communicated his further knowledge
to his henchmen. Though
devoid of moisture, the mummy
was perfectly preserved, even to
its brain cells! Medical and biological
sciences were far advanced
among Loy Chuk's kind.
Perhaps, by the application of
principles long known to them,
this long-dead body could be
made to live again! It might
move, speak, remember its past!
What a marvelous subject for
study it would make, back there
in the museums of Kar-Rah!
"Tik, tik, tik!..."
But Loy silenced this fresh,
eager chattering with a command.
Work was always more
substantial than cheering.
With infinite care—small,
sharp hand-tools were used, now—the
mummy of Ned Vince was
disengaged from the worthless
rust of his primitive automobile.
With infinite care it was crated
in a metal case, and hauled into
the flying machine.
Flashing flame, the latter
arose, bearing the entire hundred
members of the expedition.
The craft shot eastward at bullet-like
speed. The spreading
continental plateau of North
America seemed to crawl backward,
beneath. A tremendous
sand desert, marked with low,
washed-down mountains, and the
vague, angular, geometric
mounds of human cities that
were gone forever.
Beyond the eastern rim of the
continent, the plain dipped downward
steeply. The white of dried
salt was on the hills, but there
was a little green growth here,
too. The dead sea-bottom of the
vanished Atlantic was not as
dead as the highlands.
Far out in a deep valley, Kar-Rah,
the city of the rodents,
came into view—a crystalline
maze of low, bubble-like structures,
glinting in the red sunshine.
But this was only its surface
aspect. Loy Chuk's people
had built their homes mostly underground,
since the beginning
of their foggy evolution. Besides,
in this latter day, the
nights were very cold, the shelter
of subterranean passages and
rooms was welcome.
The mummy was taken to Loy
Chuk's laboratory, a short distance
below the surface. Here at
once, the scientist began his
work. The body of the ancient
man was put in a large vat.
Fluids submerged it, slowly
soaking from that hardened flesh
the alkali that had preserved it
for so long. The fluid was
changed often, until woody muscles
and other tissues became
pliable once more.
Then the more delicate processes
began. Still submerged in
liquid, the corpse was submitted
to a flow of restorative energy,
passing between complicated
electrodes. The cells of antique
flesh and brain gradually took on
a chemical composition nearer to
that of the life that they had
once known.
At last the final liquid was
drained away, and the mummy
lay there, a mummy no more, but
a pale, silent figure in its tatters
of clothing. Loy Chuk put an odd,
metal-fabric helmet on its head,
and a second, much smaller helmet
on his own. Connected with
this arrangement, was a black
box of many uses. For hours he
worked with his apparatus,
studying, and guiding the recording
instruments. The time
passed swiftly.
At last, eager and ready for
whatever might happen now,
Loy Chuk pushed another switch.
With a cold, rosy flare, energy
blazed around that moveless
form.
For Ned Vince, timeless eternity
ended like a gradual fading
mist. When he could see clearly
again, he experienced that inevitable
shock of vast change
around him. Though it had been
dehydrated, his brain had been
kept perfectly intact through the
ages, and now it was restored.
So his memories were as vivid as
yesterday.
Yet, through that crystalline
vat in which he lay, he could see
a broad, low room, in which he
could barely have stood erect. He
saw instruments and equipment
whose weird shapes suggested
alienness, and knowledge beyond
the era he had known! The walls
were lavender and phosphorescent.
Fossil bone-fragments were
mounted in shallow cases. Dinosaur
bones, some of them
seemed, from their size. But
there was a complete skeleton of
a dog, too, and the skeleton of a
man, and a second man-skeleton
that was not quite human. Its
neck-vertebrae were very thick
and solid, its shoulders were
wide, and its skull was gigantic.
All this weirdness had a violent
effect on Ned Vince—a sudden,
nostalgic panic. Something
was fearfully wrong!
The nervous terror of the unknown
was on him. Feeble and
dizzy after his weird resurrection,
which he could not understand,
remembering as he did
that moment of sinking to certain
death in the pool at Pit
Bend, he caught the edge of the
transparent vat, and pulled himself
to a sitting posture. There
was a muffled murmur around
him, as of some vast, un-Earthly
metropolis.
"Take it easy, Ned Vince...."
The words themselves, and the
way they were assembled, were
old, familiar friends. But the
tone was wrong. It was high,
shrill, parrot-like, and mechanical.
Ned's gaze searched for the
source of the voice—located the
black box just outside of his
crystal vat. From that box the
voice seemed to have originated.
Before it crouched a small,
brownish animal with a bulging
head. The animal's tiny-fingered
paws—hands they were, really—were
touching rows of keys.
To Ned Vince, it was all utterly
insane and incomprehensible.
A rodent, looking like a prairie dog,
a little; but plainly possessing
a high order of intelligence.
And a voice whose soothingly
familiar words were more repugnant
somehow, simply because
they could never belong in a
place as eerie as this.
Ned Vince did not know how
Loy Chuk had probed his brain,
with the aid of a pair of helmets,
and the black box apparatus. He
did not know that in the latter,
his language, taken from his
own revitalized mind, was recorded,
and that Loy Chuk had
only to press certain buttons to
make the instrument express his
thoughts in common, long-dead
English. Loy, whose vocal organs
were not human, would have had
great difficulty speaking English
words, anyway.
Ned's dark hair was wildly
awry. His gaunt, young face
held befuddled terror. He gasped
in the thin atmosphere. "I've
gone nuts," he pronounced with
a curious calm. "Stark—starin'—nuts...."
Loy's box, with its recorded
English words and its sonic detectors,
could translate for its
master, too. As the man spoke,
Loy read the illuminated symbols
in his own language, flashed
on a frosted crystal plate before
him. Thus he knew what Ned
Vince was saying.
Loy Chuk pressed more keys,
and the box reproduced his answer:
"No, Ned, not nuts. Not a
bit of it! There are just a lot of
things that you've got to get
used to, that's all. You drowned
about a million years ago. I discovered
your body. I brought you
back to life. We have science
that can do that. I'm Loy
Chuk...."
It took only a moment for the
box to tell the full story in clear,
bold, friendly terms. Thus Loy
sought, with calm, human logic,
to make his charge feel at home.
Probably, though, he was a fool,
to suppose that he could succeed,
thus.
Vince started to mutter,
struggling desperately to reason
it out. "A prairie dog," he said.
"Speaking to me. One million
years. Evolution. The scientists
say that people grew up from
fishes in the sea. Prairie dogs
are smart. So maybe super-prairie-dogs
could come from
them. A lot easier than men
from fish...."
It was all sound logic. Even
Ned Vince knew that. Still, his
mind, tuned to ordinary, simple
things, couldn't quite realize all
the vast things that had happened
to himself, and to the
world. The scope of it all was too
staggeringly big. One million
years. God!...
Ned Vince made a last effort
to control himself. His knuckles
tightened on the edge of the vat.
"I don't know what you've been
talking about," he grated wildly.
"But I want to get out of here!
I want to go back where I came
from! Do you understand—whoever,
or whatever you are?"
Loy Chuk pressed more keys.
"But you can't go back to the
Twentieth Century," said the
box. "Nor is there any better
place for you to be now, than
Kar-Rah. You are the only man
left on Earth. Those men that
exist in other star systems are
not really your kind anymore,
though their forefathers originated
on this planet. They have
gone far beyond you in evolution.
To them you would be only a
senseless curiosity. You are
much better off with my people—our
minds are much more like
yours. We will take care of you,
and make you comfortable...."
But Ned Vince wasn't listening,
now. "You are the only
man left on Earth." That had
been enough for him to hear. He
didn't more than half believe it.
His mind was too confused for
conviction about anything. Everything
he saw and felt and
heard might be some kind of
nightmare. But then it might all
be real instead, and that was
abysmal horror. Ned was no
coward—death and danger of
any ordinary Earthly kind, he
could have faced bravely. But the
loneliness here, and the utter
strangeness, were hideous like
being stranded alone on another
world!
His heart was pounding heavily,
and his eyes were wide. He
looked across this eerie room.
There was a ramp there at the
other side, leading upward instead
of a stairway. Fierce impulse
to escape this nameless
lair, to try to learn the facts for
himself, possessed him. He
bounded out of the vat, and
with head down, dashed for the
ramp.
He had to go most of the way
on his hands and knees, for the
up-slanting passage was low. Excited
animal chucklings around
him, and the occasional touch of
a furry body, hurried his feverish
scrambling. But he emerged
at last at the surface.
He stood there panting in that
frigid, rarefied air. It was night.
The Moon was a gigantic, pock-marked
bulk. The constellations
were unrecognizable. The rodent
city was a glowing expanse of
shallow, crystalline domes, set
among odd, scrub trees and
bushes. The crags loomed on all
sides, all their jaggedness lost
after a million years of erosion
under an ocean that was gone.
In that ghastly moonlight, the
ground glistened with dry salt.
"Well, I guess it's all true,
huh?" Ned Vince muttered in a
flat tone.
Behind him he heard an excited,
squeaky chattering. Rodents
in pursuit. Looking back,
he saw the pinpoint gleams of
countless little eyes. Yes, he
might as well be an exile on another
planet—so changed had the
Earth become.
A wave of intolerable homesickness
came over him as he
sensed the distances of time that
had passed—those inconceivable
eons, separating himself from
his friends, from Betty, from almost
everything that was familiar.
He started to run, away
from those glittering rodent
eyes. He sensed death in that
cold sea-bottom, but what of it?
What reason did he have left to
live? He'd be only a museum
piece here, a thing to be caged
and studied....
Prison or a madhouse would
be far better. He tried to get
hold of his courage. But what
was there to inspire it? Nothing!
He laughed harshly as he
ran, welcoming that bitter, killing
cold. Nostalgia had him in
its clutch, and there was no answer
in his hell-world, lost beyond
the barrier of the years....
Loy Chuk and his followers
presently came upon Ned Vince's
unconscious form, a mile from
the city of Kar-Rah. In a flying
machine they took him back, and
applied stimulants. He came to,
in the same laboratory room as
before. But he was firmly
strapped to a low platform this
time, so that he could not escape
again. There he lay, helpless,
until presently an idea occurred
to him. It gave him a few crumbs
of hope.
"Hey, somebody!" he called.
"You'd better get some rest,
Ned Vince," came the answer
from the black box. It was Loy
Chuk speaking again.
"But listen!" Ned protested.
"You know a lot more than we
did in the Twentieth Century.
And—well—there's that thing
called time-travel, that I used to
read about. Maybe you know how
to make it work! Maybe you
could send me back to my own
time after all!"
Little Loy Chuk was in a
black, discouraged mood, himself.
He could understand the
utter, sick dejection of this
giant from the past, lost from
his own kind. Probably insanity
looming. In far less extreme circumstances
than this, death from
homesickness had come.
Loy Chuk was a scientist. In
common with all real scientists,
regardless of the species from
which they spring, he loved the
subjects of his researches. He
wanted this ancient man to live
and to be happy. Or this creature
would be of scant value for
study.
So Loy considered carefully
what Ned Vince had suggested.
Time-travel. Almost a legend. An
assault upon an intangible wall
that had baffled far keener wits
than Loy's. But he was bent,
now, on the well-being of this
anachronism he had so miraculously
resurrected—this human,
this Kaalleee....
Loy jabbed buttons on the
black box. "Yes, Ned Vince,"
said the sonic apparatus. "Time-travel.
Perhaps that is the only
thing to do—to send you back
to your own period of history.
For I see that you will never be
yourself, here. It will be hard to
accomplish, but we'll try. Now
I shall put you under an anesthetic...."
Ned felt better immediately,
for there was real hope now,
where there had been none before.
Maybe he'd be back in his
home-town of Harwich again.
Maybe he'd see the old machine-shop,
there. And the trees greening
out in Spring. Maybe he'd
be seeing Betty Moore in Hurley,
soon.... Ned relaxed, as a tiny
hypo-needle bit into his arm....
As soon as Ned Vince passed
into unconsciousness, Loy Chuk
went to work once more, using
that pair of brain-helmets again,
exploring carefully the man's
mind. After hours of research,
he proceeded to prepare his
plans. The government of Kar-Rah
was a scientific oligarchy,
of which Loy was a prime member.
It would be easy to get the
help he needed.
A horde of small, grey-furred
beings and their machines, toiled
for many days.
Ned Vince's mind swam
gradually out of the blur that
had enveloped it. He was wandering
aimlessly about in a familiar
room. The girders of the
roof above were of red-painted
steel. His tool-benches were
there, greasy and littered with
metal filings, just as they had
always been. He had a tractor to
repair, and a seed-drill. Outside
of the machine-shop, the old,
familiar yellow sun was shining.
Across the street was the small
brown house, where he lived.
With a sudden startlement, he
saw Betty Moore in the doorway.
She wore a blue dress, and a mischievous
smile curved her lips.
As though she had succeeded in
creeping up on him, for a surprise.
"Why, Ned," she chuckled.
"You look as though you've been
dreaming, and just woke up!"
He grimaced ruefully as she
approached. With a kind of fierce
gratitude, he took her in his
arms. Yes, she was just like
always.
"I guess I
was
dreaming,
Betty," he whispered, feeling
that mighty sense of relief. "I
must have fallen asleep at the
bench, here, and had a nightmare.
I thought I had an accident
at Pit Bend—and that a
lot of worse things happened....
But it wasn't true ..."
Ned Vince's mind, over which
there was still an elusive fog that
he did not try to shake off, accepted
apparent facts simply.
He did not know anything
about the invisible radiations
beating down upon him, soothing
and dimming his brain, so that
it would never question or doubt,
or observe too closely the incongruous
circumstances that must
often appear. The lack of traffic
in the street without, for instance—and
the lack of people
besides himself and Betty.
He didn't know that this machine-shop
was built from his
own memories of the original.
He didn't know that this Betty
was of the same origin—a miraculous
fabrication of metal
and energy-units and soft plastic.
The trees outside were only
lantern-slide illusions.
It was all built inside a great,
opaque dome. But there were
hidden television systems, too.
Thus Loy Chuk's kind could
study this ancient man—this
Kaalleee. Thus, their motives
were mostly selfish.
Loy, though, was not observing,
now. He had wandered far
out into cold, sad sea-bottom, to
ponder. He squeaked and chatted
to himself, contemplating the
magnificent, inexorable march of
the ages. He remembered the ancient
ruins, left by the final supermen.
"The Kaalleee believes himself
home," Loy was thinking. "He
will survive and be happy. But
there was no other way. Time is
an Eternal Wall. Our archeological
researches among the cities
of the supermen show the truth.
Even they, who once ruled Earth,
never escaped from the present
by so much as an instant...."
THE END
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
April 1956 and
was first published in
Amazing Stories
November 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Loy Chuk wants to experiment on the man. | Loy Chuk wants to study the man. | Loy Chuk thinks, if he can find a female specimen, he can restart the human race. | Loy Chuk just wants to prove it can be done. | 1 |
27110_29Z96YG1_2 | How did Ned become a mummy? | THE
ETERNAL
WALL
By RAYMOND Z. GALLUN
A scream of brakes, the splash
into icy waters, a long descent
into alkaline depths ... it was
death. But Ned Vince lived
again—a million years later!
"See
you in half an hour,
Betty," said Ned Vince
over the party telephone. "We'll
be out at the Silver Basket before
ten-thirty...."
Ned Vince was eager for the
company of the girl he loved.
That was why he was in a hurry
to get to the neighboring town
of Hurley, where she lived. His
old car rattled and roared as he
swung it recklessly around Pit
Bend.
There was where Death tapped
him on the shoulder. Another car
leaped suddenly into view, its
lights glaring blindingly past a
high, up-jutting mass of Jurassic
rock at the turn of the road.
Dazzled, and befuddled by his
own rash speed, Ned Vince had
only swift young reflexes to rely
on to avoid a fearful, telescoping
collision. He flicked his wheel
smoothly to the right; but the
County Highway Commission
hadn't yet tarred the traffic-loosened
gravel at the Bend.
An incredible science, millions of years old, lay in the minds of these creatures.
Ned could scarcely have chosen
a worse place to start sliding and
spinning. His car hit the white-painted
wooden rail sideways,
crashed through, tumbled down
a steep slope, struck a huge boulder,
bounced up a little, and
arced outward, falling as gracefully
as a swan-diver toward the
inky waters of the Pit, fifty feet
beneath....
Ned Vince was still dimly conscious
when that black, quiet
pool geysered around him in a
mighty splash. He had only a
dazing welt on his forehead, and
a gag of terror in his throat.
Movement was slower now, as
he began to sink, trapped inside
his wrecked car. Nothing that he
could imagine could mean doom
more certainly than this. The Pit
was a tremendously deep pocket
in the ground, spring-fed. The
edges of that almost bottomless
pool were caked with a rim of
white—for the water, on which
dead birds so often floated, was
surcharged with alkali. As that
heavy, natronous liquid rushed
up through the openings and
cracks beneath his feet, Ned
Vince knew that his friends and
his family would never see his
body again, lost beyond recovery
in this abyss.
The car was deeply submerged.
The light had blinked out on the
dash-panel, leaving Ned in absolute
darkness. A flood rushed
in at the shattered window. He
clawed at the door, trying to
open it, but it was jammed in
the crash-bent frame, and he
couldn't fight against the force
of that incoming water. The
welt, left by the blow he had received
on his forehead, put a
thickening mist over his brain,
so that he could not think clearly.
Presently, when he could no
longer hold his breath, bitter
liquid was sucked into his lungs.
His last thoughts were those
of a drowning man. The machine-shop
he and his dad had
had in Harwich. Betty Moore,
with the smiling Irish eyes—like
in the song. Betty and he
had planned to go to the State
University this Fall. They'd
planned to be married sometime....
Goodbye, Betty ...
The ripples that had ruffled
the surface waters in the Pit,
quieted again to glassy smoothness.
The eternal stars shone
calmly. The geologic Dakota
hills, which might have seen the
dinosaurs, still bulked along the
highway. Time, the Brother of
Death, and the Father of
Change, seemed to wait....
"Kaalleee! Tik!... Tik, tik,
tik!... Kaalleee!..."
The excited cry, which no human
throat could quite have duplicated
accurately, arose thinly
from the depths of a powder-dry
gulch, water-scarred from an inconceivable
antiquity. The noon-day
Sun was red and huge. The
air was tenuous, dehydrated,
chill.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik,
tik!..."
At first there was only one
voice uttering those weird, triumphant
sounds. Then other
vocal organs took up that trilling
wail, and those short, sharp
chuckles of eagerness. Other
questioning, wondering notes
mixed with the cadence. Lacking
qualities identifiable as human,
the disturbance was still like the
babble of a group of workmen
who have discovered something
remarkable.
The desolate expanse around
the gulch, was all but without
motion. The icy breeze tore tiny
puffs of dust from grotesque,
angling drifts of soil, nearly
waterless for eons. Patches of
drab lichen grew here and there
on the up-jutting rocks, but in
the desert itself, no other life
was visible. Even the hills had
sagged away, flattened by incalculable
ages of erosion.
At a mile distance, a crumbling
heap of rubble arose. Once
it had been a building. A gigantic,
jagged mass of detritus
slanted upward from its crest—red
debris that had once been
steel. A launching catapult for
the last space ships built by the
gods in exodus, perhaps it was—half
a million years ago. Man
was gone from the Earth. Glacial
ages, war, decadence, disease,
and a final scattering of those
ultimate superhumans to newer
worlds in other solar systems,
had done that.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik, tik!..."
The sounds were not human.
They were more like the chatter
and wail of small desert animals.
But there was a seeming paradox
here in the depths of that
gulch, too. The glint of metal,
sharp and burnished. The flat,
streamlined bulk of a flying machine,
shiny and new. The bell-like
muzzle of a strange excavator-apparatus,
which seemed to
depend on a blast of atoms to
clear away rock and soil. Thus
the gulch had been cleared of the
accumulated rubbish of antiquity.
Man, it seemed, had a successor,
as ruler of the Earth.
Loy Chuk had flown his geological
expedition out from the
far lowlands to the east, out
from the city of Kar-Rah. And
he was very happy now—flushed
with a vast and unlooked-for
success.
He crouched there on his
haunches, at the dry bottom of
the Pit. The breeze rumpled his
long, brown fur. He wasn't very
different in appearance from his
ancestors. A foot tall, perhaps,
as he squatted there in that antique
stance of his kind. His tail
was short and furred, his undersides
creamy. White whiskers
spread around his inquisitive,
pink-tipped snout.
But his cranium bulged up and
forward between shrewd, beady
eyes, betraying the slow heritage
of time, of survival of the fittest,
of evolution. He could think and
dream and invent, and the civilization
of his kind was already
far beyond that of the ancient
Twentieth Century.
Loy Chuk and his fellow workers
were gathered, tense and
gleeful, around the things their
digging had exposed to the daylight.
There was a gob of junk—scarcely
more than an irregular
formation of flaky rust. But imbedded
in it was a huddled form,
brown and hard as old wood. The
dry mud that had encased it
like an airtight coffin, had by
now been chipped away by the
tiny investigators; but soiled
clothing still clung to it, after
perhaps a million years. Metal
had gone into decay—yes. But
not this body. The answer to this
was simple—alkali. A mineral
saturation that had held time
and change in stasis. A perfect
preservative for organic tissue,
aided probably during most of
those passing eras by desert dryness.
The Dakotas had turned
arid very swiftly. This body was
not a mere fossil. It was a
mummy.
"Kaalleee!" Man, that meant.
Not the star-conquering demi-gods,
but the ancestral stock
that had built the first
machines on Earth, and in the
early Twenty-first Century, the
first interplanetary rockets. No
wonder Loy Chuk and his co-workers
were happy in their
paleontological enthusiasm! A
strange accident, happening in a
legendary antiquity, had aided
them in their quest for knowledge.
At last Loy Chuk gave a soft,
chirping signal. The chant of
triumph ended, while instruments
flicked in his tiny hands.
The final instrument he used to
test the mummy, looked like a
miniature stereoscope, with complicated
details. He held it over
his eyes. On the tiny screen
within, through the agency of
focused X-rays, he saw magnified
images of the internal organs
of this ancient human
corpse.
What his probing gaze revealed
to him, made his pleasure
even greater than before. In
twittering, chattering sounds, he
communicated his further knowledge
to his henchmen. Though
devoid of moisture, the mummy
was perfectly preserved, even to
its brain cells! Medical and biological
sciences were far advanced
among Loy Chuk's kind.
Perhaps, by the application of
principles long known to them,
this long-dead body could be
made to live again! It might
move, speak, remember its past!
What a marvelous subject for
study it would make, back there
in the museums of Kar-Rah!
"Tik, tik, tik!..."
But Loy silenced this fresh,
eager chattering with a command.
Work was always more
substantial than cheering.
With infinite care—small,
sharp hand-tools were used, now—the
mummy of Ned Vince was
disengaged from the worthless
rust of his primitive automobile.
With infinite care it was crated
in a metal case, and hauled into
the flying machine.
Flashing flame, the latter
arose, bearing the entire hundred
members of the expedition.
The craft shot eastward at bullet-like
speed. The spreading
continental plateau of North
America seemed to crawl backward,
beneath. A tremendous
sand desert, marked with low,
washed-down mountains, and the
vague, angular, geometric
mounds of human cities that
were gone forever.
Beyond the eastern rim of the
continent, the plain dipped downward
steeply. The white of dried
salt was on the hills, but there
was a little green growth here,
too. The dead sea-bottom of the
vanished Atlantic was not as
dead as the highlands.
Far out in a deep valley, Kar-Rah,
the city of the rodents,
came into view—a crystalline
maze of low, bubble-like structures,
glinting in the red sunshine.
But this was only its surface
aspect. Loy Chuk's people
had built their homes mostly underground,
since the beginning
of their foggy evolution. Besides,
in this latter day, the
nights were very cold, the shelter
of subterranean passages and
rooms was welcome.
The mummy was taken to Loy
Chuk's laboratory, a short distance
below the surface. Here at
once, the scientist began his
work. The body of the ancient
man was put in a large vat.
Fluids submerged it, slowly
soaking from that hardened flesh
the alkali that had preserved it
for so long. The fluid was
changed often, until woody muscles
and other tissues became
pliable once more.
Then the more delicate processes
began. Still submerged in
liquid, the corpse was submitted
to a flow of restorative energy,
passing between complicated
electrodes. The cells of antique
flesh and brain gradually took on
a chemical composition nearer to
that of the life that they had
once known.
At last the final liquid was
drained away, and the mummy
lay there, a mummy no more, but
a pale, silent figure in its tatters
of clothing. Loy Chuk put an odd,
metal-fabric helmet on its head,
and a second, much smaller helmet
on his own. Connected with
this arrangement, was a black
box of many uses. For hours he
worked with his apparatus,
studying, and guiding the recording
instruments. The time
passed swiftly.
At last, eager and ready for
whatever might happen now,
Loy Chuk pushed another switch.
With a cold, rosy flare, energy
blazed around that moveless
form.
For Ned Vince, timeless eternity
ended like a gradual fading
mist. When he could see clearly
again, he experienced that inevitable
shock of vast change
around him. Though it had been
dehydrated, his brain had been
kept perfectly intact through the
ages, and now it was restored.
So his memories were as vivid as
yesterday.
Yet, through that crystalline
vat in which he lay, he could see
a broad, low room, in which he
could barely have stood erect. He
saw instruments and equipment
whose weird shapes suggested
alienness, and knowledge beyond
the era he had known! The walls
were lavender and phosphorescent.
Fossil bone-fragments were
mounted in shallow cases. Dinosaur
bones, some of them
seemed, from their size. But
there was a complete skeleton of
a dog, too, and the skeleton of a
man, and a second man-skeleton
that was not quite human. Its
neck-vertebrae were very thick
and solid, its shoulders were
wide, and its skull was gigantic.
All this weirdness had a violent
effect on Ned Vince—a sudden,
nostalgic panic. Something
was fearfully wrong!
The nervous terror of the unknown
was on him. Feeble and
dizzy after his weird resurrection,
which he could not understand,
remembering as he did
that moment of sinking to certain
death in the pool at Pit
Bend, he caught the edge of the
transparent vat, and pulled himself
to a sitting posture. There
was a muffled murmur around
him, as of some vast, un-Earthly
metropolis.
"Take it easy, Ned Vince...."
The words themselves, and the
way they were assembled, were
old, familiar friends. But the
tone was wrong. It was high,
shrill, parrot-like, and mechanical.
Ned's gaze searched for the
source of the voice—located the
black box just outside of his
crystal vat. From that box the
voice seemed to have originated.
Before it crouched a small,
brownish animal with a bulging
head. The animal's tiny-fingered
paws—hands they were, really—were
touching rows of keys.
To Ned Vince, it was all utterly
insane and incomprehensible.
A rodent, looking like a prairie dog,
a little; but plainly possessing
a high order of intelligence.
And a voice whose soothingly
familiar words were more repugnant
somehow, simply because
they could never belong in a
place as eerie as this.
Ned Vince did not know how
Loy Chuk had probed his brain,
with the aid of a pair of helmets,
and the black box apparatus. He
did not know that in the latter,
his language, taken from his
own revitalized mind, was recorded,
and that Loy Chuk had
only to press certain buttons to
make the instrument express his
thoughts in common, long-dead
English. Loy, whose vocal organs
were not human, would have had
great difficulty speaking English
words, anyway.
Ned's dark hair was wildly
awry. His gaunt, young face
held befuddled terror. He gasped
in the thin atmosphere. "I've
gone nuts," he pronounced with
a curious calm. "Stark—starin'—nuts...."
Loy's box, with its recorded
English words and its sonic detectors,
could translate for its
master, too. As the man spoke,
Loy read the illuminated symbols
in his own language, flashed
on a frosted crystal plate before
him. Thus he knew what Ned
Vince was saying.
Loy Chuk pressed more keys,
and the box reproduced his answer:
"No, Ned, not nuts. Not a
bit of it! There are just a lot of
things that you've got to get
used to, that's all. You drowned
about a million years ago. I discovered
your body. I brought you
back to life. We have science
that can do that. I'm Loy
Chuk...."
It took only a moment for the
box to tell the full story in clear,
bold, friendly terms. Thus Loy
sought, with calm, human logic,
to make his charge feel at home.
Probably, though, he was a fool,
to suppose that he could succeed,
thus.
Vince started to mutter,
struggling desperately to reason
it out. "A prairie dog," he said.
"Speaking to me. One million
years. Evolution. The scientists
say that people grew up from
fishes in the sea. Prairie dogs
are smart. So maybe super-prairie-dogs
could come from
them. A lot easier than men
from fish...."
It was all sound logic. Even
Ned Vince knew that. Still, his
mind, tuned to ordinary, simple
things, couldn't quite realize all
the vast things that had happened
to himself, and to the
world. The scope of it all was too
staggeringly big. One million
years. God!...
Ned Vince made a last effort
to control himself. His knuckles
tightened on the edge of the vat.
"I don't know what you've been
talking about," he grated wildly.
"But I want to get out of here!
I want to go back where I came
from! Do you understand—whoever,
or whatever you are?"
Loy Chuk pressed more keys.
"But you can't go back to the
Twentieth Century," said the
box. "Nor is there any better
place for you to be now, than
Kar-Rah. You are the only man
left on Earth. Those men that
exist in other star systems are
not really your kind anymore,
though their forefathers originated
on this planet. They have
gone far beyond you in evolution.
To them you would be only a
senseless curiosity. You are
much better off with my people—our
minds are much more like
yours. We will take care of you,
and make you comfortable...."
But Ned Vince wasn't listening,
now. "You are the only
man left on Earth." That had
been enough for him to hear. He
didn't more than half believe it.
His mind was too confused for
conviction about anything. Everything
he saw and felt and
heard might be some kind of
nightmare. But then it might all
be real instead, and that was
abysmal horror. Ned was no
coward—death and danger of
any ordinary Earthly kind, he
could have faced bravely. But the
loneliness here, and the utter
strangeness, were hideous like
being stranded alone on another
world!
His heart was pounding heavily,
and his eyes were wide. He
looked across this eerie room.
There was a ramp there at the
other side, leading upward instead
of a stairway. Fierce impulse
to escape this nameless
lair, to try to learn the facts for
himself, possessed him. He
bounded out of the vat, and
with head down, dashed for the
ramp.
He had to go most of the way
on his hands and knees, for the
up-slanting passage was low. Excited
animal chucklings around
him, and the occasional touch of
a furry body, hurried his feverish
scrambling. But he emerged
at last at the surface.
He stood there panting in that
frigid, rarefied air. It was night.
The Moon was a gigantic, pock-marked
bulk. The constellations
were unrecognizable. The rodent
city was a glowing expanse of
shallow, crystalline domes, set
among odd, scrub trees and
bushes. The crags loomed on all
sides, all their jaggedness lost
after a million years of erosion
under an ocean that was gone.
In that ghastly moonlight, the
ground glistened with dry salt.
"Well, I guess it's all true,
huh?" Ned Vince muttered in a
flat tone.
Behind him he heard an excited,
squeaky chattering. Rodents
in pursuit. Looking back,
he saw the pinpoint gleams of
countless little eyes. Yes, he
might as well be an exile on another
planet—so changed had the
Earth become.
A wave of intolerable homesickness
came over him as he
sensed the distances of time that
had passed—those inconceivable
eons, separating himself from
his friends, from Betty, from almost
everything that was familiar.
He started to run, away
from those glittering rodent
eyes. He sensed death in that
cold sea-bottom, but what of it?
What reason did he have left to
live? He'd be only a museum
piece here, a thing to be caged
and studied....
Prison or a madhouse would
be far better. He tried to get
hold of his courage. But what
was there to inspire it? Nothing!
He laughed harshly as he
ran, welcoming that bitter, killing
cold. Nostalgia had him in
its clutch, and there was no answer
in his hell-world, lost beyond
the barrier of the years....
Loy Chuk and his followers
presently came upon Ned Vince's
unconscious form, a mile from
the city of Kar-Rah. In a flying
machine they took him back, and
applied stimulants. He came to,
in the same laboratory room as
before. But he was firmly
strapped to a low platform this
time, so that he could not escape
again. There he lay, helpless,
until presently an idea occurred
to him. It gave him a few crumbs
of hope.
"Hey, somebody!" he called.
"You'd better get some rest,
Ned Vince," came the answer
from the black box. It was Loy
Chuk speaking again.
"But listen!" Ned protested.
"You know a lot more than we
did in the Twentieth Century.
And—well—there's that thing
called time-travel, that I used to
read about. Maybe you know how
to make it work! Maybe you
could send me back to my own
time after all!"
Little Loy Chuk was in a
black, discouraged mood, himself.
He could understand the
utter, sick dejection of this
giant from the past, lost from
his own kind. Probably insanity
looming. In far less extreme circumstances
than this, death from
homesickness had come.
Loy Chuk was a scientist. In
common with all real scientists,
regardless of the species from
which they spring, he loved the
subjects of his researches. He
wanted this ancient man to live
and to be happy. Or this creature
would be of scant value for
study.
So Loy considered carefully
what Ned Vince had suggested.
Time-travel. Almost a legend. An
assault upon an intangible wall
that had baffled far keener wits
than Loy's. But he was bent,
now, on the well-being of this
anachronism he had so miraculously
resurrected—this human,
this Kaalleee....
Loy jabbed buttons on the
black box. "Yes, Ned Vince,"
said the sonic apparatus. "Time-travel.
Perhaps that is the only
thing to do—to send you back
to your own period of history.
For I see that you will never be
yourself, here. It will be hard to
accomplish, but we'll try. Now
I shall put you under an anesthetic...."
Ned felt better immediately,
for there was real hope now,
where there had been none before.
Maybe he'd be back in his
home-town of Harwich again.
Maybe he'd see the old machine-shop,
there. And the trees greening
out in Spring. Maybe he'd
be seeing Betty Moore in Hurley,
soon.... Ned relaxed, as a tiny
hypo-needle bit into his arm....
As soon as Ned Vince passed
into unconsciousness, Loy Chuk
went to work once more, using
that pair of brain-helmets again,
exploring carefully the man's
mind. After hours of research,
he proceeded to prepare his
plans. The government of Kar-Rah
was a scientific oligarchy,
of which Loy was a prime member.
It would be easy to get the
help he needed.
A horde of small, grey-furred
beings and their machines, toiled
for many days.
Ned Vince's mind swam
gradually out of the blur that
had enveloped it. He was wandering
aimlessly about in a familiar
room. The girders of the
roof above were of red-painted
steel. His tool-benches were
there, greasy and littered with
metal filings, just as they had
always been. He had a tractor to
repair, and a seed-drill. Outside
of the machine-shop, the old,
familiar yellow sun was shining.
Across the street was the small
brown house, where he lived.
With a sudden startlement, he
saw Betty Moore in the doorway.
She wore a blue dress, and a mischievous
smile curved her lips.
As though she had succeeded in
creeping up on him, for a surprise.
"Why, Ned," she chuckled.
"You look as though you've been
dreaming, and just woke up!"
He grimaced ruefully as she
approached. With a kind of fierce
gratitude, he took her in his
arms. Yes, she was just like
always.
"I guess I
was
dreaming,
Betty," he whispered, feeling
that mighty sense of relief. "I
must have fallen asleep at the
bench, here, and had a nightmare.
I thought I had an accident
at Pit Bend—and that a
lot of worse things happened....
But it wasn't true ..."
Ned Vince's mind, over which
there was still an elusive fog that
he did not try to shake off, accepted
apparent facts simply.
He did not know anything
about the invisible radiations
beating down upon him, soothing
and dimming his brain, so that
it would never question or doubt,
or observe too closely the incongruous
circumstances that must
often appear. The lack of traffic
in the street without, for instance—and
the lack of people
besides himself and Betty.
He didn't know that this machine-shop
was built from his
own memories of the original.
He didn't know that this Betty
was of the same origin—a miraculous
fabrication of metal
and energy-units and soft plastic.
The trees outside were only
lantern-slide illusions.
It was all built inside a great,
opaque dome. But there were
hidden television systems, too.
Thus Loy Chuk's kind could
study this ancient man—this
Kaalleee. Thus, their motives
were mostly selfish.
Loy, though, was not observing,
now. He had wandered far
out into cold, sad sea-bottom, to
ponder. He squeaked and chatted
to himself, contemplating the
magnificent, inexorable march of
the ages. He remembered the ancient
ruins, left by the final supermen.
"The Kaalleee believes himself
home," Loy was thinking. "He
will survive and be happy. But
there was no other way. Time is
an Eternal Wall. Our archeological
researches among the cities
of the supermen show the truth.
Even they, who once ruled Earth,
never escaped from the present
by so much as an instant...."
THE END
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
April 1956 and
was first published in
Amazing Stories
November 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Loy Chuk's workers wrapped Ned's body in strips of cloth to preserve it in transport. | The earth became a desert wasteland. All the moisture was leached from the corpse. | A combination of the alkali and mud his body had been soaked in. Also, the years of dryness after the world became a desert. | The body had been devoid of moisture for a million years. | 2 |
27110_29Z96YG1_3 | Why did Loy Chuk's people live underground? | THE
ETERNAL
WALL
By RAYMOND Z. GALLUN
A scream of brakes, the splash
into icy waters, a long descent
into alkaline depths ... it was
death. But Ned Vince lived
again—a million years later!
"See
you in half an hour,
Betty," said Ned Vince
over the party telephone. "We'll
be out at the Silver Basket before
ten-thirty...."
Ned Vince was eager for the
company of the girl he loved.
That was why he was in a hurry
to get to the neighboring town
of Hurley, where she lived. His
old car rattled and roared as he
swung it recklessly around Pit
Bend.
There was where Death tapped
him on the shoulder. Another car
leaped suddenly into view, its
lights glaring blindingly past a
high, up-jutting mass of Jurassic
rock at the turn of the road.
Dazzled, and befuddled by his
own rash speed, Ned Vince had
only swift young reflexes to rely
on to avoid a fearful, telescoping
collision. He flicked his wheel
smoothly to the right; but the
County Highway Commission
hadn't yet tarred the traffic-loosened
gravel at the Bend.
An incredible science, millions of years old, lay in the minds of these creatures.
Ned could scarcely have chosen
a worse place to start sliding and
spinning. His car hit the white-painted
wooden rail sideways,
crashed through, tumbled down
a steep slope, struck a huge boulder,
bounced up a little, and
arced outward, falling as gracefully
as a swan-diver toward the
inky waters of the Pit, fifty feet
beneath....
Ned Vince was still dimly conscious
when that black, quiet
pool geysered around him in a
mighty splash. He had only a
dazing welt on his forehead, and
a gag of terror in his throat.
Movement was slower now, as
he began to sink, trapped inside
his wrecked car. Nothing that he
could imagine could mean doom
more certainly than this. The Pit
was a tremendously deep pocket
in the ground, spring-fed. The
edges of that almost bottomless
pool were caked with a rim of
white—for the water, on which
dead birds so often floated, was
surcharged with alkali. As that
heavy, natronous liquid rushed
up through the openings and
cracks beneath his feet, Ned
Vince knew that his friends and
his family would never see his
body again, lost beyond recovery
in this abyss.
The car was deeply submerged.
The light had blinked out on the
dash-panel, leaving Ned in absolute
darkness. A flood rushed
in at the shattered window. He
clawed at the door, trying to
open it, but it was jammed in
the crash-bent frame, and he
couldn't fight against the force
of that incoming water. The
welt, left by the blow he had received
on his forehead, put a
thickening mist over his brain,
so that he could not think clearly.
Presently, when he could no
longer hold his breath, bitter
liquid was sucked into his lungs.
His last thoughts were those
of a drowning man. The machine-shop
he and his dad had
had in Harwich. Betty Moore,
with the smiling Irish eyes—like
in the song. Betty and he
had planned to go to the State
University this Fall. They'd
planned to be married sometime....
Goodbye, Betty ...
The ripples that had ruffled
the surface waters in the Pit,
quieted again to glassy smoothness.
The eternal stars shone
calmly. The geologic Dakota
hills, which might have seen the
dinosaurs, still bulked along the
highway. Time, the Brother of
Death, and the Father of
Change, seemed to wait....
"Kaalleee! Tik!... Tik, tik,
tik!... Kaalleee!..."
The excited cry, which no human
throat could quite have duplicated
accurately, arose thinly
from the depths of a powder-dry
gulch, water-scarred from an inconceivable
antiquity. The noon-day
Sun was red and huge. The
air was tenuous, dehydrated,
chill.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik,
tik!..."
At first there was only one
voice uttering those weird, triumphant
sounds. Then other
vocal organs took up that trilling
wail, and those short, sharp
chuckles of eagerness. Other
questioning, wondering notes
mixed with the cadence. Lacking
qualities identifiable as human,
the disturbance was still like the
babble of a group of workmen
who have discovered something
remarkable.
The desolate expanse around
the gulch, was all but without
motion. The icy breeze tore tiny
puffs of dust from grotesque,
angling drifts of soil, nearly
waterless for eons. Patches of
drab lichen grew here and there
on the up-jutting rocks, but in
the desert itself, no other life
was visible. Even the hills had
sagged away, flattened by incalculable
ages of erosion.
At a mile distance, a crumbling
heap of rubble arose. Once
it had been a building. A gigantic,
jagged mass of detritus
slanted upward from its crest—red
debris that had once been
steel. A launching catapult for
the last space ships built by the
gods in exodus, perhaps it was—half
a million years ago. Man
was gone from the Earth. Glacial
ages, war, decadence, disease,
and a final scattering of those
ultimate superhumans to newer
worlds in other solar systems,
had done that.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik, tik!..."
The sounds were not human.
They were more like the chatter
and wail of small desert animals.
But there was a seeming paradox
here in the depths of that
gulch, too. The glint of metal,
sharp and burnished. The flat,
streamlined bulk of a flying machine,
shiny and new. The bell-like
muzzle of a strange excavator-apparatus,
which seemed to
depend on a blast of atoms to
clear away rock and soil. Thus
the gulch had been cleared of the
accumulated rubbish of antiquity.
Man, it seemed, had a successor,
as ruler of the Earth.
Loy Chuk had flown his geological
expedition out from the
far lowlands to the east, out
from the city of Kar-Rah. And
he was very happy now—flushed
with a vast and unlooked-for
success.
He crouched there on his
haunches, at the dry bottom of
the Pit. The breeze rumpled his
long, brown fur. He wasn't very
different in appearance from his
ancestors. A foot tall, perhaps,
as he squatted there in that antique
stance of his kind. His tail
was short and furred, his undersides
creamy. White whiskers
spread around his inquisitive,
pink-tipped snout.
But his cranium bulged up and
forward between shrewd, beady
eyes, betraying the slow heritage
of time, of survival of the fittest,
of evolution. He could think and
dream and invent, and the civilization
of his kind was already
far beyond that of the ancient
Twentieth Century.
Loy Chuk and his fellow workers
were gathered, tense and
gleeful, around the things their
digging had exposed to the daylight.
There was a gob of junk—scarcely
more than an irregular
formation of flaky rust. But imbedded
in it was a huddled form,
brown and hard as old wood. The
dry mud that had encased it
like an airtight coffin, had by
now been chipped away by the
tiny investigators; but soiled
clothing still clung to it, after
perhaps a million years. Metal
had gone into decay—yes. But
not this body. The answer to this
was simple—alkali. A mineral
saturation that had held time
and change in stasis. A perfect
preservative for organic tissue,
aided probably during most of
those passing eras by desert dryness.
The Dakotas had turned
arid very swiftly. This body was
not a mere fossil. It was a
mummy.
"Kaalleee!" Man, that meant.
Not the star-conquering demi-gods,
but the ancestral stock
that had built the first
machines on Earth, and in the
early Twenty-first Century, the
first interplanetary rockets. No
wonder Loy Chuk and his co-workers
were happy in their
paleontological enthusiasm! A
strange accident, happening in a
legendary antiquity, had aided
them in their quest for knowledge.
At last Loy Chuk gave a soft,
chirping signal. The chant of
triumph ended, while instruments
flicked in his tiny hands.
The final instrument he used to
test the mummy, looked like a
miniature stereoscope, with complicated
details. He held it over
his eyes. On the tiny screen
within, through the agency of
focused X-rays, he saw magnified
images of the internal organs
of this ancient human
corpse.
What his probing gaze revealed
to him, made his pleasure
even greater than before. In
twittering, chattering sounds, he
communicated his further knowledge
to his henchmen. Though
devoid of moisture, the mummy
was perfectly preserved, even to
its brain cells! Medical and biological
sciences were far advanced
among Loy Chuk's kind.
Perhaps, by the application of
principles long known to them,
this long-dead body could be
made to live again! It might
move, speak, remember its past!
What a marvelous subject for
study it would make, back there
in the museums of Kar-Rah!
"Tik, tik, tik!..."
But Loy silenced this fresh,
eager chattering with a command.
Work was always more
substantial than cheering.
With infinite care—small,
sharp hand-tools were used, now—the
mummy of Ned Vince was
disengaged from the worthless
rust of his primitive automobile.
With infinite care it was crated
in a metal case, and hauled into
the flying machine.
Flashing flame, the latter
arose, bearing the entire hundred
members of the expedition.
The craft shot eastward at bullet-like
speed. The spreading
continental plateau of North
America seemed to crawl backward,
beneath. A tremendous
sand desert, marked with low,
washed-down mountains, and the
vague, angular, geometric
mounds of human cities that
were gone forever.
Beyond the eastern rim of the
continent, the plain dipped downward
steeply. The white of dried
salt was on the hills, but there
was a little green growth here,
too. The dead sea-bottom of the
vanished Atlantic was not as
dead as the highlands.
Far out in a deep valley, Kar-Rah,
the city of the rodents,
came into view—a crystalline
maze of low, bubble-like structures,
glinting in the red sunshine.
But this was only its surface
aspect. Loy Chuk's people
had built their homes mostly underground,
since the beginning
of their foggy evolution. Besides,
in this latter day, the
nights were very cold, the shelter
of subterranean passages and
rooms was welcome.
The mummy was taken to Loy
Chuk's laboratory, a short distance
below the surface. Here at
once, the scientist began his
work. The body of the ancient
man was put in a large vat.
Fluids submerged it, slowly
soaking from that hardened flesh
the alkali that had preserved it
for so long. The fluid was
changed often, until woody muscles
and other tissues became
pliable once more.
Then the more delicate processes
began. Still submerged in
liquid, the corpse was submitted
to a flow of restorative energy,
passing between complicated
electrodes. The cells of antique
flesh and brain gradually took on
a chemical composition nearer to
that of the life that they had
once known.
At last the final liquid was
drained away, and the mummy
lay there, a mummy no more, but
a pale, silent figure in its tatters
of clothing. Loy Chuk put an odd,
metal-fabric helmet on its head,
and a second, much smaller helmet
on his own. Connected with
this arrangement, was a black
box of many uses. For hours he
worked with his apparatus,
studying, and guiding the recording
instruments. The time
passed swiftly.
At last, eager and ready for
whatever might happen now,
Loy Chuk pushed another switch.
With a cold, rosy flare, energy
blazed around that moveless
form.
For Ned Vince, timeless eternity
ended like a gradual fading
mist. When he could see clearly
again, he experienced that inevitable
shock of vast change
around him. Though it had been
dehydrated, his brain had been
kept perfectly intact through the
ages, and now it was restored.
So his memories were as vivid as
yesterday.
Yet, through that crystalline
vat in which he lay, he could see
a broad, low room, in which he
could barely have stood erect. He
saw instruments and equipment
whose weird shapes suggested
alienness, and knowledge beyond
the era he had known! The walls
were lavender and phosphorescent.
Fossil bone-fragments were
mounted in shallow cases. Dinosaur
bones, some of them
seemed, from their size. But
there was a complete skeleton of
a dog, too, and the skeleton of a
man, and a second man-skeleton
that was not quite human. Its
neck-vertebrae were very thick
and solid, its shoulders were
wide, and its skull was gigantic.
All this weirdness had a violent
effect on Ned Vince—a sudden,
nostalgic panic. Something
was fearfully wrong!
The nervous terror of the unknown
was on him. Feeble and
dizzy after his weird resurrection,
which he could not understand,
remembering as he did
that moment of sinking to certain
death in the pool at Pit
Bend, he caught the edge of the
transparent vat, and pulled himself
to a sitting posture. There
was a muffled murmur around
him, as of some vast, un-Earthly
metropolis.
"Take it easy, Ned Vince...."
The words themselves, and the
way they were assembled, were
old, familiar friends. But the
tone was wrong. It was high,
shrill, parrot-like, and mechanical.
Ned's gaze searched for the
source of the voice—located the
black box just outside of his
crystal vat. From that box the
voice seemed to have originated.
Before it crouched a small,
brownish animal with a bulging
head. The animal's tiny-fingered
paws—hands they were, really—were
touching rows of keys.
To Ned Vince, it was all utterly
insane and incomprehensible.
A rodent, looking like a prairie dog,
a little; but plainly possessing
a high order of intelligence.
And a voice whose soothingly
familiar words were more repugnant
somehow, simply because
they could never belong in a
place as eerie as this.
Ned Vince did not know how
Loy Chuk had probed his brain,
with the aid of a pair of helmets,
and the black box apparatus. He
did not know that in the latter,
his language, taken from his
own revitalized mind, was recorded,
and that Loy Chuk had
only to press certain buttons to
make the instrument express his
thoughts in common, long-dead
English. Loy, whose vocal organs
were not human, would have had
great difficulty speaking English
words, anyway.
Ned's dark hair was wildly
awry. His gaunt, young face
held befuddled terror. He gasped
in the thin atmosphere. "I've
gone nuts," he pronounced with
a curious calm. "Stark—starin'—nuts...."
Loy's box, with its recorded
English words and its sonic detectors,
could translate for its
master, too. As the man spoke,
Loy read the illuminated symbols
in his own language, flashed
on a frosted crystal plate before
him. Thus he knew what Ned
Vince was saying.
Loy Chuk pressed more keys,
and the box reproduced his answer:
"No, Ned, not nuts. Not a
bit of it! There are just a lot of
things that you've got to get
used to, that's all. You drowned
about a million years ago. I discovered
your body. I brought you
back to life. We have science
that can do that. I'm Loy
Chuk...."
It took only a moment for the
box to tell the full story in clear,
bold, friendly terms. Thus Loy
sought, with calm, human logic,
to make his charge feel at home.
Probably, though, he was a fool,
to suppose that he could succeed,
thus.
Vince started to mutter,
struggling desperately to reason
it out. "A prairie dog," he said.
"Speaking to me. One million
years. Evolution. The scientists
say that people grew up from
fishes in the sea. Prairie dogs
are smart. So maybe super-prairie-dogs
could come from
them. A lot easier than men
from fish...."
It was all sound logic. Even
Ned Vince knew that. Still, his
mind, tuned to ordinary, simple
things, couldn't quite realize all
the vast things that had happened
to himself, and to the
world. The scope of it all was too
staggeringly big. One million
years. God!...
Ned Vince made a last effort
to control himself. His knuckles
tightened on the edge of the vat.
"I don't know what you've been
talking about," he grated wildly.
"But I want to get out of here!
I want to go back where I came
from! Do you understand—whoever,
or whatever you are?"
Loy Chuk pressed more keys.
"But you can't go back to the
Twentieth Century," said the
box. "Nor is there any better
place for you to be now, than
Kar-Rah. You are the only man
left on Earth. Those men that
exist in other star systems are
not really your kind anymore,
though their forefathers originated
on this planet. They have
gone far beyond you in evolution.
To them you would be only a
senseless curiosity. You are
much better off with my people—our
minds are much more like
yours. We will take care of you,
and make you comfortable...."
But Ned Vince wasn't listening,
now. "You are the only
man left on Earth." That had
been enough for him to hear. He
didn't more than half believe it.
His mind was too confused for
conviction about anything. Everything
he saw and felt and
heard might be some kind of
nightmare. But then it might all
be real instead, and that was
abysmal horror. Ned was no
coward—death and danger of
any ordinary Earthly kind, he
could have faced bravely. But the
loneliness here, and the utter
strangeness, were hideous like
being stranded alone on another
world!
His heart was pounding heavily,
and his eyes were wide. He
looked across this eerie room.
There was a ramp there at the
other side, leading upward instead
of a stairway. Fierce impulse
to escape this nameless
lair, to try to learn the facts for
himself, possessed him. He
bounded out of the vat, and
with head down, dashed for the
ramp.
He had to go most of the way
on his hands and knees, for the
up-slanting passage was low. Excited
animal chucklings around
him, and the occasional touch of
a furry body, hurried his feverish
scrambling. But he emerged
at last at the surface.
He stood there panting in that
frigid, rarefied air. It was night.
The Moon was a gigantic, pock-marked
bulk. The constellations
were unrecognizable. The rodent
city was a glowing expanse of
shallow, crystalline domes, set
among odd, scrub trees and
bushes. The crags loomed on all
sides, all their jaggedness lost
after a million years of erosion
under an ocean that was gone.
In that ghastly moonlight, the
ground glistened with dry salt.
"Well, I guess it's all true,
huh?" Ned Vince muttered in a
flat tone.
Behind him he heard an excited,
squeaky chattering. Rodents
in pursuit. Looking back,
he saw the pinpoint gleams of
countless little eyes. Yes, he
might as well be an exile on another
planet—so changed had the
Earth become.
A wave of intolerable homesickness
came over him as he
sensed the distances of time that
had passed—those inconceivable
eons, separating himself from
his friends, from Betty, from almost
everything that was familiar.
He started to run, away
from those glittering rodent
eyes. He sensed death in that
cold sea-bottom, but what of it?
What reason did he have left to
live? He'd be only a museum
piece here, a thing to be caged
and studied....
Prison or a madhouse would
be far better. He tried to get
hold of his courage. But what
was there to inspire it? Nothing!
He laughed harshly as he
ran, welcoming that bitter, killing
cold. Nostalgia had him in
its clutch, and there was no answer
in his hell-world, lost beyond
the barrier of the years....
Loy Chuk and his followers
presently came upon Ned Vince's
unconscious form, a mile from
the city of Kar-Rah. In a flying
machine they took him back, and
applied stimulants. He came to,
in the same laboratory room as
before. But he was firmly
strapped to a low platform this
time, so that he could not escape
again. There he lay, helpless,
until presently an idea occurred
to him. It gave him a few crumbs
of hope.
"Hey, somebody!" he called.
"You'd better get some rest,
Ned Vince," came the answer
from the black box. It was Loy
Chuk speaking again.
"But listen!" Ned protested.
"You know a lot more than we
did in the Twentieth Century.
And—well—there's that thing
called time-travel, that I used to
read about. Maybe you know how
to make it work! Maybe you
could send me back to my own
time after all!"
Little Loy Chuk was in a
black, discouraged mood, himself.
He could understand the
utter, sick dejection of this
giant from the past, lost from
his own kind. Probably insanity
looming. In far less extreme circumstances
than this, death from
homesickness had come.
Loy Chuk was a scientist. In
common with all real scientists,
regardless of the species from
which they spring, he loved the
subjects of his researches. He
wanted this ancient man to live
and to be happy. Or this creature
would be of scant value for
study.
So Loy considered carefully
what Ned Vince had suggested.
Time-travel. Almost a legend. An
assault upon an intangible wall
that had baffled far keener wits
than Loy's. But he was bent,
now, on the well-being of this
anachronism he had so miraculously
resurrected—this human,
this Kaalleee....
Loy jabbed buttons on the
black box. "Yes, Ned Vince,"
said the sonic apparatus. "Time-travel.
Perhaps that is the only
thing to do—to send you back
to your own period of history.
For I see that you will never be
yourself, here. It will be hard to
accomplish, but we'll try. Now
I shall put you under an anesthetic...."
Ned felt better immediately,
for there was real hope now,
where there had been none before.
Maybe he'd be back in his
home-town of Harwich again.
Maybe he'd see the old machine-shop,
there. And the trees greening
out in Spring. Maybe he'd
be seeing Betty Moore in Hurley,
soon.... Ned relaxed, as a tiny
hypo-needle bit into his arm....
As soon as Ned Vince passed
into unconsciousness, Loy Chuk
went to work once more, using
that pair of brain-helmets again,
exploring carefully the man's
mind. After hours of research,
he proceeded to prepare his
plans. The government of Kar-Rah
was a scientific oligarchy,
of which Loy was a prime member.
It would be easy to get the
help he needed.
A horde of small, grey-furred
beings and their machines, toiled
for many days.
Ned Vince's mind swam
gradually out of the blur that
had enveloped it. He was wandering
aimlessly about in a familiar
room. The girders of the
roof above were of red-painted
steel. His tool-benches were
there, greasy and littered with
metal filings, just as they had
always been. He had a tractor to
repair, and a seed-drill. Outside
of the machine-shop, the old,
familiar yellow sun was shining.
Across the street was the small
brown house, where he lived.
With a sudden startlement, he
saw Betty Moore in the doorway.
She wore a blue dress, and a mischievous
smile curved her lips.
As though she had succeeded in
creeping up on him, for a surprise.
"Why, Ned," she chuckled.
"You look as though you've been
dreaming, and just woke up!"
He grimaced ruefully as she
approached. With a kind of fierce
gratitude, he took her in his
arms. Yes, she was just like
always.
"I guess I
was
dreaming,
Betty," he whispered, feeling
that mighty sense of relief. "I
must have fallen asleep at the
bench, here, and had a nightmare.
I thought I had an accident
at Pit Bend—and that a
lot of worse things happened....
But it wasn't true ..."
Ned Vince's mind, over which
there was still an elusive fog that
he did not try to shake off, accepted
apparent facts simply.
He did not know anything
about the invisible radiations
beating down upon him, soothing
and dimming his brain, so that
it would never question or doubt,
or observe too closely the incongruous
circumstances that must
often appear. The lack of traffic
in the street without, for instance—and
the lack of people
besides himself and Betty.
He didn't know that this machine-shop
was built from his
own memories of the original.
He didn't know that this Betty
was of the same origin—a miraculous
fabrication of metal
and energy-units and soft plastic.
The trees outside were only
lantern-slide illusions.
It was all built inside a great,
opaque dome. But there were
hidden television systems, too.
Thus Loy Chuk's kind could
study this ancient man—this
Kaalleee. Thus, their motives
were mostly selfish.
Loy, though, was not observing,
now. He had wandered far
out into cold, sad sea-bottom, to
ponder. He squeaked and chatted
to himself, contemplating the
magnificent, inexorable march of
the ages. He remembered the ancient
ruins, left by the final supermen.
"The Kaalleee believes himself
home," Loy was thinking. "He
will survive and be happy. But
there was no other way. Time is
an Eternal Wall. Our archeological
researches among the cities
of the supermen show the truth.
Even they, who once ruled Earth,
never escaped from the present
by so much as an instant...."
THE END
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
April 1956 and
was first published in
Amazing Stories
November 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Subterranean passages protect against desert sand storms. | Subterranean passages protect against larger predators. | Loy Chuk comes from a rodent species. Rodents usually live in underground burrows. | The temperature above ground at night is very cold. | 3 |
27110_29Z96YG1_4 | How does Loy Chuk communicate with Ned? | THE
ETERNAL
WALL
By RAYMOND Z. GALLUN
A scream of brakes, the splash
into icy waters, a long descent
into alkaline depths ... it was
death. But Ned Vince lived
again—a million years later!
"See
you in half an hour,
Betty," said Ned Vince
over the party telephone. "We'll
be out at the Silver Basket before
ten-thirty...."
Ned Vince was eager for the
company of the girl he loved.
That was why he was in a hurry
to get to the neighboring town
of Hurley, where she lived. His
old car rattled and roared as he
swung it recklessly around Pit
Bend.
There was where Death tapped
him on the shoulder. Another car
leaped suddenly into view, its
lights glaring blindingly past a
high, up-jutting mass of Jurassic
rock at the turn of the road.
Dazzled, and befuddled by his
own rash speed, Ned Vince had
only swift young reflexes to rely
on to avoid a fearful, telescoping
collision. He flicked his wheel
smoothly to the right; but the
County Highway Commission
hadn't yet tarred the traffic-loosened
gravel at the Bend.
An incredible science, millions of years old, lay in the minds of these creatures.
Ned could scarcely have chosen
a worse place to start sliding and
spinning. His car hit the white-painted
wooden rail sideways,
crashed through, tumbled down
a steep slope, struck a huge boulder,
bounced up a little, and
arced outward, falling as gracefully
as a swan-diver toward the
inky waters of the Pit, fifty feet
beneath....
Ned Vince was still dimly conscious
when that black, quiet
pool geysered around him in a
mighty splash. He had only a
dazing welt on his forehead, and
a gag of terror in his throat.
Movement was slower now, as
he began to sink, trapped inside
his wrecked car. Nothing that he
could imagine could mean doom
more certainly than this. The Pit
was a tremendously deep pocket
in the ground, spring-fed. The
edges of that almost bottomless
pool were caked with a rim of
white—for the water, on which
dead birds so often floated, was
surcharged with alkali. As that
heavy, natronous liquid rushed
up through the openings and
cracks beneath his feet, Ned
Vince knew that his friends and
his family would never see his
body again, lost beyond recovery
in this abyss.
The car was deeply submerged.
The light had blinked out on the
dash-panel, leaving Ned in absolute
darkness. A flood rushed
in at the shattered window. He
clawed at the door, trying to
open it, but it was jammed in
the crash-bent frame, and he
couldn't fight against the force
of that incoming water. The
welt, left by the blow he had received
on his forehead, put a
thickening mist over his brain,
so that he could not think clearly.
Presently, when he could no
longer hold his breath, bitter
liquid was sucked into his lungs.
His last thoughts were those
of a drowning man. The machine-shop
he and his dad had
had in Harwich. Betty Moore,
with the smiling Irish eyes—like
in the song. Betty and he
had planned to go to the State
University this Fall. They'd
planned to be married sometime....
Goodbye, Betty ...
The ripples that had ruffled
the surface waters in the Pit,
quieted again to glassy smoothness.
The eternal stars shone
calmly. The geologic Dakota
hills, which might have seen the
dinosaurs, still bulked along the
highway. Time, the Brother of
Death, and the Father of
Change, seemed to wait....
"Kaalleee! Tik!... Tik, tik,
tik!... Kaalleee!..."
The excited cry, which no human
throat could quite have duplicated
accurately, arose thinly
from the depths of a powder-dry
gulch, water-scarred from an inconceivable
antiquity. The noon-day
Sun was red and huge. The
air was tenuous, dehydrated,
chill.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik,
tik!..."
At first there was only one
voice uttering those weird, triumphant
sounds. Then other
vocal organs took up that trilling
wail, and those short, sharp
chuckles of eagerness. Other
questioning, wondering notes
mixed with the cadence. Lacking
qualities identifiable as human,
the disturbance was still like the
babble of a group of workmen
who have discovered something
remarkable.
The desolate expanse around
the gulch, was all but without
motion. The icy breeze tore tiny
puffs of dust from grotesque,
angling drifts of soil, nearly
waterless for eons. Patches of
drab lichen grew here and there
on the up-jutting rocks, but in
the desert itself, no other life
was visible. Even the hills had
sagged away, flattened by incalculable
ages of erosion.
At a mile distance, a crumbling
heap of rubble arose. Once
it had been a building. A gigantic,
jagged mass of detritus
slanted upward from its crest—red
debris that had once been
steel. A launching catapult for
the last space ships built by the
gods in exodus, perhaps it was—half
a million years ago. Man
was gone from the Earth. Glacial
ages, war, decadence, disease,
and a final scattering of those
ultimate superhumans to newer
worlds in other solar systems,
had done that.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik, tik!..."
The sounds were not human.
They were more like the chatter
and wail of small desert animals.
But there was a seeming paradox
here in the depths of that
gulch, too. The glint of metal,
sharp and burnished. The flat,
streamlined bulk of a flying machine,
shiny and new. The bell-like
muzzle of a strange excavator-apparatus,
which seemed to
depend on a blast of atoms to
clear away rock and soil. Thus
the gulch had been cleared of the
accumulated rubbish of antiquity.
Man, it seemed, had a successor,
as ruler of the Earth.
Loy Chuk had flown his geological
expedition out from the
far lowlands to the east, out
from the city of Kar-Rah. And
he was very happy now—flushed
with a vast and unlooked-for
success.
He crouched there on his
haunches, at the dry bottom of
the Pit. The breeze rumpled his
long, brown fur. He wasn't very
different in appearance from his
ancestors. A foot tall, perhaps,
as he squatted there in that antique
stance of his kind. His tail
was short and furred, his undersides
creamy. White whiskers
spread around his inquisitive,
pink-tipped snout.
But his cranium bulged up and
forward between shrewd, beady
eyes, betraying the slow heritage
of time, of survival of the fittest,
of evolution. He could think and
dream and invent, and the civilization
of his kind was already
far beyond that of the ancient
Twentieth Century.
Loy Chuk and his fellow workers
were gathered, tense and
gleeful, around the things their
digging had exposed to the daylight.
There was a gob of junk—scarcely
more than an irregular
formation of flaky rust. But imbedded
in it was a huddled form,
brown and hard as old wood. The
dry mud that had encased it
like an airtight coffin, had by
now been chipped away by the
tiny investigators; but soiled
clothing still clung to it, after
perhaps a million years. Metal
had gone into decay—yes. But
not this body. The answer to this
was simple—alkali. A mineral
saturation that had held time
and change in stasis. A perfect
preservative for organic tissue,
aided probably during most of
those passing eras by desert dryness.
The Dakotas had turned
arid very swiftly. This body was
not a mere fossil. It was a
mummy.
"Kaalleee!" Man, that meant.
Not the star-conquering demi-gods,
but the ancestral stock
that had built the first
machines on Earth, and in the
early Twenty-first Century, the
first interplanetary rockets. No
wonder Loy Chuk and his co-workers
were happy in their
paleontological enthusiasm! A
strange accident, happening in a
legendary antiquity, had aided
them in their quest for knowledge.
At last Loy Chuk gave a soft,
chirping signal. The chant of
triumph ended, while instruments
flicked in his tiny hands.
The final instrument he used to
test the mummy, looked like a
miniature stereoscope, with complicated
details. He held it over
his eyes. On the tiny screen
within, through the agency of
focused X-rays, he saw magnified
images of the internal organs
of this ancient human
corpse.
What his probing gaze revealed
to him, made his pleasure
even greater than before. In
twittering, chattering sounds, he
communicated his further knowledge
to his henchmen. Though
devoid of moisture, the mummy
was perfectly preserved, even to
its brain cells! Medical and biological
sciences were far advanced
among Loy Chuk's kind.
Perhaps, by the application of
principles long known to them,
this long-dead body could be
made to live again! It might
move, speak, remember its past!
What a marvelous subject for
study it would make, back there
in the museums of Kar-Rah!
"Tik, tik, tik!..."
But Loy silenced this fresh,
eager chattering with a command.
Work was always more
substantial than cheering.
With infinite care—small,
sharp hand-tools were used, now—the
mummy of Ned Vince was
disengaged from the worthless
rust of his primitive automobile.
With infinite care it was crated
in a metal case, and hauled into
the flying machine.
Flashing flame, the latter
arose, bearing the entire hundred
members of the expedition.
The craft shot eastward at bullet-like
speed. The spreading
continental plateau of North
America seemed to crawl backward,
beneath. A tremendous
sand desert, marked with low,
washed-down mountains, and the
vague, angular, geometric
mounds of human cities that
were gone forever.
Beyond the eastern rim of the
continent, the plain dipped downward
steeply. The white of dried
salt was on the hills, but there
was a little green growth here,
too. The dead sea-bottom of the
vanished Atlantic was not as
dead as the highlands.
Far out in a deep valley, Kar-Rah,
the city of the rodents,
came into view—a crystalline
maze of low, bubble-like structures,
glinting in the red sunshine.
But this was only its surface
aspect. Loy Chuk's people
had built their homes mostly underground,
since the beginning
of their foggy evolution. Besides,
in this latter day, the
nights were very cold, the shelter
of subterranean passages and
rooms was welcome.
The mummy was taken to Loy
Chuk's laboratory, a short distance
below the surface. Here at
once, the scientist began his
work. The body of the ancient
man was put in a large vat.
Fluids submerged it, slowly
soaking from that hardened flesh
the alkali that had preserved it
for so long. The fluid was
changed often, until woody muscles
and other tissues became
pliable once more.
Then the more delicate processes
began. Still submerged in
liquid, the corpse was submitted
to a flow of restorative energy,
passing between complicated
electrodes. The cells of antique
flesh and brain gradually took on
a chemical composition nearer to
that of the life that they had
once known.
At last the final liquid was
drained away, and the mummy
lay there, a mummy no more, but
a pale, silent figure in its tatters
of clothing. Loy Chuk put an odd,
metal-fabric helmet on its head,
and a second, much smaller helmet
on his own. Connected with
this arrangement, was a black
box of many uses. For hours he
worked with his apparatus,
studying, and guiding the recording
instruments. The time
passed swiftly.
At last, eager and ready for
whatever might happen now,
Loy Chuk pushed another switch.
With a cold, rosy flare, energy
blazed around that moveless
form.
For Ned Vince, timeless eternity
ended like a gradual fading
mist. When he could see clearly
again, he experienced that inevitable
shock of vast change
around him. Though it had been
dehydrated, his brain had been
kept perfectly intact through the
ages, and now it was restored.
So his memories were as vivid as
yesterday.
Yet, through that crystalline
vat in which he lay, he could see
a broad, low room, in which he
could barely have stood erect. He
saw instruments and equipment
whose weird shapes suggested
alienness, and knowledge beyond
the era he had known! The walls
were lavender and phosphorescent.
Fossil bone-fragments were
mounted in shallow cases. Dinosaur
bones, some of them
seemed, from their size. But
there was a complete skeleton of
a dog, too, and the skeleton of a
man, and a second man-skeleton
that was not quite human. Its
neck-vertebrae were very thick
and solid, its shoulders were
wide, and its skull was gigantic.
All this weirdness had a violent
effect on Ned Vince—a sudden,
nostalgic panic. Something
was fearfully wrong!
The nervous terror of the unknown
was on him. Feeble and
dizzy after his weird resurrection,
which he could not understand,
remembering as he did
that moment of sinking to certain
death in the pool at Pit
Bend, he caught the edge of the
transparent vat, and pulled himself
to a sitting posture. There
was a muffled murmur around
him, as of some vast, un-Earthly
metropolis.
"Take it easy, Ned Vince...."
The words themselves, and the
way they were assembled, were
old, familiar friends. But the
tone was wrong. It was high,
shrill, parrot-like, and mechanical.
Ned's gaze searched for the
source of the voice—located the
black box just outside of his
crystal vat. From that box the
voice seemed to have originated.
Before it crouched a small,
brownish animal with a bulging
head. The animal's tiny-fingered
paws—hands they were, really—were
touching rows of keys.
To Ned Vince, it was all utterly
insane and incomprehensible.
A rodent, looking like a prairie dog,
a little; but plainly possessing
a high order of intelligence.
And a voice whose soothingly
familiar words were more repugnant
somehow, simply because
they could never belong in a
place as eerie as this.
Ned Vince did not know how
Loy Chuk had probed his brain,
with the aid of a pair of helmets,
and the black box apparatus. He
did not know that in the latter,
his language, taken from his
own revitalized mind, was recorded,
and that Loy Chuk had
only to press certain buttons to
make the instrument express his
thoughts in common, long-dead
English. Loy, whose vocal organs
were not human, would have had
great difficulty speaking English
words, anyway.
Ned's dark hair was wildly
awry. His gaunt, young face
held befuddled terror. He gasped
in the thin atmosphere. "I've
gone nuts," he pronounced with
a curious calm. "Stark—starin'—nuts...."
Loy's box, with its recorded
English words and its sonic detectors,
could translate for its
master, too. As the man spoke,
Loy read the illuminated symbols
in his own language, flashed
on a frosted crystal plate before
him. Thus he knew what Ned
Vince was saying.
Loy Chuk pressed more keys,
and the box reproduced his answer:
"No, Ned, not nuts. Not a
bit of it! There are just a lot of
things that you've got to get
used to, that's all. You drowned
about a million years ago. I discovered
your body. I brought you
back to life. We have science
that can do that. I'm Loy
Chuk...."
It took only a moment for the
box to tell the full story in clear,
bold, friendly terms. Thus Loy
sought, with calm, human logic,
to make his charge feel at home.
Probably, though, he was a fool,
to suppose that he could succeed,
thus.
Vince started to mutter,
struggling desperately to reason
it out. "A prairie dog," he said.
"Speaking to me. One million
years. Evolution. The scientists
say that people grew up from
fishes in the sea. Prairie dogs
are smart. So maybe super-prairie-dogs
could come from
them. A lot easier than men
from fish...."
It was all sound logic. Even
Ned Vince knew that. Still, his
mind, tuned to ordinary, simple
things, couldn't quite realize all
the vast things that had happened
to himself, and to the
world. The scope of it all was too
staggeringly big. One million
years. God!...
Ned Vince made a last effort
to control himself. His knuckles
tightened on the edge of the vat.
"I don't know what you've been
talking about," he grated wildly.
"But I want to get out of here!
I want to go back where I came
from! Do you understand—whoever,
or whatever you are?"
Loy Chuk pressed more keys.
"But you can't go back to the
Twentieth Century," said the
box. "Nor is there any better
place for you to be now, than
Kar-Rah. You are the only man
left on Earth. Those men that
exist in other star systems are
not really your kind anymore,
though their forefathers originated
on this planet. They have
gone far beyond you in evolution.
To them you would be only a
senseless curiosity. You are
much better off with my people—our
minds are much more like
yours. We will take care of you,
and make you comfortable...."
But Ned Vince wasn't listening,
now. "You are the only
man left on Earth." That had
been enough for him to hear. He
didn't more than half believe it.
His mind was too confused for
conviction about anything. Everything
he saw and felt and
heard might be some kind of
nightmare. But then it might all
be real instead, and that was
abysmal horror. Ned was no
coward—death and danger of
any ordinary Earthly kind, he
could have faced bravely. But the
loneliness here, and the utter
strangeness, were hideous like
being stranded alone on another
world!
His heart was pounding heavily,
and his eyes were wide. He
looked across this eerie room.
There was a ramp there at the
other side, leading upward instead
of a stairway. Fierce impulse
to escape this nameless
lair, to try to learn the facts for
himself, possessed him. He
bounded out of the vat, and
with head down, dashed for the
ramp.
He had to go most of the way
on his hands and knees, for the
up-slanting passage was low. Excited
animal chucklings around
him, and the occasional touch of
a furry body, hurried his feverish
scrambling. But he emerged
at last at the surface.
He stood there panting in that
frigid, rarefied air. It was night.
The Moon was a gigantic, pock-marked
bulk. The constellations
were unrecognizable. The rodent
city was a glowing expanse of
shallow, crystalline domes, set
among odd, scrub trees and
bushes. The crags loomed on all
sides, all their jaggedness lost
after a million years of erosion
under an ocean that was gone.
In that ghastly moonlight, the
ground glistened with dry salt.
"Well, I guess it's all true,
huh?" Ned Vince muttered in a
flat tone.
Behind him he heard an excited,
squeaky chattering. Rodents
in pursuit. Looking back,
he saw the pinpoint gleams of
countless little eyes. Yes, he
might as well be an exile on another
planet—so changed had the
Earth become.
A wave of intolerable homesickness
came over him as he
sensed the distances of time that
had passed—those inconceivable
eons, separating himself from
his friends, from Betty, from almost
everything that was familiar.
He started to run, away
from those glittering rodent
eyes. He sensed death in that
cold sea-bottom, but what of it?
What reason did he have left to
live? He'd be only a museum
piece here, a thing to be caged
and studied....
Prison or a madhouse would
be far better. He tried to get
hold of his courage. But what
was there to inspire it? Nothing!
He laughed harshly as he
ran, welcoming that bitter, killing
cold. Nostalgia had him in
its clutch, and there was no answer
in his hell-world, lost beyond
the barrier of the years....
Loy Chuk and his followers
presently came upon Ned Vince's
unconscious form, a mile from
the city of Kar-Rah. In a flying
machine they took him back, and
applied stimulants. He came to,
in the same laboratory room as
before. But he was firmly
strapped to a low platform this
time, so that he could not escape
again. There he lay, helpless,
until presently an idea occurred
to him. It gave him a few crumbs
of hope.
"Hey, somebody!" he called.
"You'd better get some rest,
Ned Vince," came the answer
from the black box. It was Loy
Chuk speaking again.
"But listen!" Ned protested.
"You know a lot more than we
did in the Twentieth Century.
And—well—there's that thing
called time-travel, that I used to
read about. Maybe you know how
to make it work! Maybe you
could send me back to my own
time after all!"
Little Loy Chuk was in a
black, discouraged mood, himself.
He could understand the
utter, sick dejection of this
giant from the past, lost from
his own kind. Probably insanity
looming. In far less extreme circumstances
than this, death from
homesickness had come.
Loy Chuk was a scientist. In
common with all real scientists,
regardless of the species from
which they spring, he loved the
subjects of his researches. He
wanted this ancient man to live
and to be happy. Or this creature
would be of scant value for
study.
So Loy considered carefully
what Ned Vince had suggested.
Time-travel. Almost a legend. An
assault upon an intangible wall
that had baffled far keener wits
than Loy's. But he was bent,
now, on the well-being of this
anachronism he had so miraculously
resurrected—this human,
this Kaalleee....
Loy jabbed buttons on the
black box. "Yes, Ned Vince,"
said the sonic apparatus. "Time-travel.
Perhaps that is the only
thing to do—to send you back
to your own period of history.
For I see that you will never be
yourself, here. It will be hard to
accomplish, but we'll try. Now
I shall put you under an anesthetic...."
Ned felt better immediately,
for there was real hope now,
where there had been none before.
Maybe he'd be back in his
home-town of Harwich again.
Maybe he'd see the old machine-shop,
there. And the trees greening
out in Spring. Maybe he'd
be seeing Betty Moore in Hurley,
soon.... Ned relaxed, as a tiny
hypo-needle bit into his arm....
As soon as Ned Vince passed
into unconsciousness, Loy Chuk
went to work once more, using
that pair of brain-helmets again,
exploring carefully the man's
mind. After hours of research,
he proceeded to prepare his
plans. The government of Kar-Rah
was a scientific oligarchy,
of which Loy was a prime member.
It would be easy to get the
help he needed.
A horde of small, grey-furred
beings and their machines, toiled
for many days.
Ned Vince's mind swam
gradually out of the blur that
had enveloped it. He was wandering
aimlessly about in a familiar
room. The girders of the
roof above were of red-painted
steel. His tool-benches were
there, greasy and littered with
metal filings, just as they had
always been. He had a tractor to
repair, and a seed-drill. Outside
of the machine-shop, the old,
familiar yellow sun was shining.
Across the street was the small
brown house, where he lived.
With a sudden startlement, he
saw Betty Moore in the doorway.
She wore a blue dress, and a mischievous
smile curved her lips.
As though she had succeeded in
creeping up on him, for a surprise.
"Why, Ned," she chuckled.
"You look as though you've been
dreaming, and just woke up!"
He grimaced ruefully as she
approached. With a kind of fierce
gratitude, he took her in his
arms. Yes, she was just like
always.
"I guess I
was
dreaming,
Betty," he whispered, feeling
that mighty sense of relief. "I
must have fallen asleep at the
bench, here, and had a nightmare.
I thought I had an accident
at Pit Bend—and that a
lot of worse things happened....
But it wasn't true ..."
Ned Vince's mind, over which
there was still an elusive fog that
he did not try to shake off, accepted
apparent facts simply.
He did not know anything
about the invisible radiations
beating down upon him, soothing
and dimming his brain, so that
it would never question or doubt,
or observe too closely the incongruous
circumstances that must
often appear. The lack of traffic
in the street without, for instance—and
the lack of people
besides himself and Betty.
He didn't know that this machine-shop
was built from his
own memories of the original.
He didn't know that this Betty
was of the same origin—a miraculous
fabrication of metal
and energy-units and soft plastic.
The trees outside were only
lantern-slide illusions.
It was all built inside a great,
opaque dome. But there were
hidden television systems, too.
Thus Loy Chuk's kind could
study this ancient man—this
Kaalleee. Thus, their motives
were mostly selfish.
Loy, though, was not observing,
now. He had wandered far
out into cold, sad sea-bottom, to
ponder. He squeaked and chatted
to himself, contemplating the
magnificent, inexorable march of
the ages. He remembered the ancient
ruins, left by the final supermen.
"The Kaalleee believes himself
home," Loy was thinking. "He
will survive and be happy. But
there was no other way. Time is
an Eternal Wall. Our archeological
researches among the cities
of the supermen show the truth.
Even they, who once ruled Earth,
never escaped from the present
by so much as an instant...."
THE END
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
April 1956 and
was first published in
Amazing Stories
November 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Loy Chuk communicates with Ned through telepathy. | Loy Chuk has a device that translates his speech into English. | Loy Chuk has a device that lets him speak English. | Loy Chuk has a device that converts his thoughts into English. | 3 |
27110_29Z96YG1_5 | How does Loy Chuk bring the mummy to life? | THE
ETERNAL
WALL
By RAYMOND Z. GALLUN
A scream of brakes, the splash
into icy waters, a long descent
into alkaline depths ... it was
death. But Ned Vince lived
again—a million years later!
"See
you in half an hour,
Betty," said Ned Vince
over the party telephone. "We'll
be out at the Silver Basket before
ten-thirty...."
Ned Vince was eager for the
company of the girl he loved.
That was why he was in a hurry
to get to the neighboring town
of Hurley, where she lived. His
old car rattled and roared as he
swung it recklessly around Pit
Bend.
There was where Death tapped
him on the shoulder. Another car
leaped suddenly into view, its
lights glaring blindingly past a
high, up-jutting mass of Jurassic
rock at the turn of the road.
Dazzled, and befuddled by his
own rash speed, Ned Vince had
only swift young reflexes to rely
on to avoid a fearful, telescoping
collision. He flicked his wheel
smoothly to the right; but the
County Highway Commission
hadn't yet tarred the traffic-loosened
gravel at the Bend.
An incredible science, millions of years old, lay in the minds of these creatures.
Ned could scarcely have chosen
a worse place to start sliding and
spinning. His car hit the white-painted
wooden rail sideways,
crashed through, tumbled down
a steep slope, struck a huge boulder,
bounced up a little, and
arced outward, falling as gracefully
as a swan-diver toward the
inky waters of the Pit, fifty feet
beneath....
Ned Vince was still dimly conscious
when that black, quiet
pool geysered around him in a
mighty splash. He had only a
dazing welt on his forehead, and
a gag of terror in his throat.
Movement was slower now, as
he began to sink, trapped inside
his wrecked car. Nothing that he
could imagine could mean doom
more certainly than this. The Pit
was a tremendously deep pocket
in the ground, spring-fed. The
edges of that almost bottomless
pool were caked with a rim of
white—for the water, on which
dead birds so often floated, was
surcharged with alkali. As that
heavy, natronous liquid rushed
up through the openings and
cracks beneath his feet, Ned
Vince knew that his friends and
his family would never see his
body again, lost beyond recovery
in this abyss.
The car was deeply submerged.
The light had blinked out on the
dash-panel, leaving Ned in absolute
darkness. A flood rushed
in at the shattered window. He
clawed at the door, trying to
open it, but it was jammed in
the crash-bent frame, and he
couldn't fight against the force
of that incoming water. The
welt, left by the blow he had received
on his forehead, put a
thickening mist over his brain,
so that he could not think clearly.
Presently, when he could no
longer hold his breath, bitter
liquid was sucked into his lungs.
His last thoughts were those
of a drowning man. The machine-shop
he and his dad had
had in Harwich. Betty Moore,
with the smiling Irish eyes—like
in the song. Betty and he
had planned to go to the State
University this Fall. They'd
planned to be married sometime....
Goodbye, Betty ...
The ripples that had ruffled
the surface waters in the Pit,
quieted again to glassy smoothness.
The eternal stars shone
calmly. The geologic Dakota
hills, which might have seen the
dinosaurs, still bulked along the
highway. Time, the Brother of
Death, and the Father of
Change, seemed to wait....
"Kaalleee! Tik!... Tik, tik,
tik!... Kaalleee!..."
The excited cry, which no human
throat could quite have duplicated
accurately, arose thinly
from the depths of a powder-dry
gulch, water-scarred from an inconceivable
antiquity. The noon-day
Sun was red and huge. The
air was tenuous, dehydrated,
chill.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik,
tik!..."
At first there was only one
voice uttering those weird, triumphant
sounds. Then other
vocal organs took up that trilling
wail, and those short, sharp
chuckles of eagerness. Other
questioning, wondering notes
mixed with the cadence. Lacking
qualities identifiable as human,
the disturbance was still like the
babble of a group of workmen
who have discovered something
remarkable.
The desolate expanse around
the gulch, was all but without
motion. The icy breeze tore tiny
puffs of dust from grotesque,
angling drifts of soil, nearly
waterless for eons. Patches of
drab lichen grew here and there
on the up-jutting rocks, but in
the desert itself, no other life
was visible. Even the hills had
sagged away, flattened by incalculable
ages of erosion.
At a mile distance, a crumbling
heap of rubble arose. Once
it had been a building. A gigantic,
jagged mass of detritus
slanted upward from its crest—red
debris that had once been
steel. A launching catapult for
the last space ships built by the
gods in exodus, perhaps it was—half
a million years ago. Man
was gone from the Earth. Glacial
ages, war, decadence, disease,
and a final scattering of those
ultimate superhumans to newer
worlds in other solar systems,
had done that.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik, tik!..."
The sounds were not human.
They were more like the chatter
and wail of small desert animals.
But there was a seeming paradox
here in the depths of that
gulch, too. The glint of metal,
sharp and burnished. The flat,
streamlined bulk of a flying machine,
shiny and new. The bell-like
muzzle of a strange excavator-apparatus,
which seemed to
depend on a blast of atoms to
clear away rock and soil. Thus
the gulch had been cleared of the
accumulated rubbish of antiquity.
Man, it seemed, had a successor,
as ruler of the Earth.
Loy Chuk had flown his geological
expedition out from the
far lowlands to the east, out
from the city of Kar-Rah. And
he was very happy now—flushed
with a vast and unlooked-for
success.
He crouched there on his
haunches, at the dry bottom of
the Pit. The breeze rumpled his
long, brown fur. He wasn't very
different in appearance from his
ancestors. A foot tall, perhaps,
as he squatted there in that antique
stance of his kind. His tail
was short and furred, his undersides
creamy. White whiskers
spread around his inquisitive,
pink-tipped snout.
But his cranium bulged up and
forward between shrewd, beady
eyes, betraying the slow heritage
of time, of survival of the fittest,
of evolution. He could think and
dream and invent, and the civilization
of his kind was already
far beyond that of the ancient
Twentieth Century.
Loy Chuk and his fellow workers
were gathered, tense and
gleeful, around the things their
digging had exposed to the daylight.
There was a gob of junk—scarcely
more than an irregular
formation of flaky rust. But imbedded
in it was a huddled form,
brown and hard as old wood. The
dry mud that had encased it
like an airtight coffin, had by
now been chipped away by the
tiny investigators; but soiled
clothing still clung to it, after
perhaps a million years. Metal
had gone into decay—yes. But
not this body. The answer to this
was simple—alkali. A mineral
saturation that had held time
and change in stasis. A perfect
preservative for organic tissue,
aided probably during most of
those passing eras by desert dryness.
The Dakotas had turned
arid very swiftly. This body was
not a mere fossil. It was a
mummy.
"Kaalleee!" Man, that meant.
Not the star-conquering demi-gods,
but the ancestral stock
that had built the first
machines on Earth, and in the
early Twenty-first Century, the
first interplanetary rockets. No
wonder Loy Chuk and his co-workers
were happy in their
paleontological enthusiasm! A
strange accident, happening in a
legendary antiquity, had aided
them in their quest for knowledge.
At last Loy Chuk gave a soft,
chirping signal. The chant of
triumph ended, while instruments
flicked in his tiny hands.
The final instrument he used to
test the mummy, looked like a
miniature stereoscope, with complicated
details. He held it over
his eyes. On the tiny screen
within, through the agency of
focused X-rays, he saw magnified
images of the internal organs
of this ancient human
corpse.
What his probing gaze revealed
to him, made his pleasure
even greater than before. In
twittering, chattering sounds, he
communicated his further knowledge
to his henchmen. Though
devoid of moisture, the mummy
was perfectly preserved, even to
its brain cells! Medical and biological
sciences were far advanced
among Loy Chuk's kind.
Perhaps, by the application of
principles long known to them,
this long-dead body could be
made to live again! It might
move, speak, remember its past!
What a marvelous subject for
study it would make, back there
in the museums of Kar-Rah!
"Tik, tik, tik!..."
But Loy silenced this fresh,
eager chattering with a command.
Work was always more
substantial than cheering.
With infinite care—small,
sharp hand-tools were used, now—the
mummy of Ned Vince was
disengaged from the worthless
rust of his primitive automobile.
With infinite care it was crated
in a metal case, and hauled into
the flying machine.
Flashing flame, the latter
arose, bearing the entire hundred
members of the expedition.
The craft shot eastward at bullet-like
speed. The spreading
continental plateau of North
America seemed to crawl backward,
beneath. A tremendous
sand desert, marked with low,
washed-down mountains, and the
vague, angular, geometric
mounds of human cities that
were gone forever.
Beyond the eastern rim of the
continent, the plain dipped downward
steeply. The white of dried
salt was on the hills, but there
was a little green growth here,
too. The dead sea-bottom of the
vanished Atlantic was not as
dead as the highlands.
Far out in a deep valley, Kar-Rah,
the city of the rodents,
came into view—a crystalline
maze of low, bubble-like structures,
glinting in the red sunshine.
But this was only its surface
aspect. Loy Chuk's people
had built their homes mostly underground,
since the beginning
of their foggy evolution. Besides,
in this latter day, the
nights were very cold, the shelter
of subterranean passages and
rooms was welcome.
The mummy was taken to Loy
Chuk's laboratory, a short distance
below the surface. Here at
once, the scientist began his
work. The body of the ancient
man was put in a large vat.
Fluids submerged it, slowly
soaking from that hardened flesh
the alkali that had preserved it
for so long. The fluid was
changed often, until woody muscles
and other tissues became
pliable once more.
Then the more delicate processes
began. Still submerged in
liquid, the corpse was submitted
to a flow of restorative energy,
passing between complicated
electrodes. The cells of antique
flesh and brain gradually took on
a chemical composition nearer to
that of the life that they had
once known.
At last the final liquid was
drained away, and the mummy
lay there, a mummy no more, but
a pale, silent figure in its tatters
of clothing. Loy Chuk put an odd,
metal-fabric helmet on its head,
and a second, much smaller helmet
on his own. Connected with
this arrangement, was a black
box of many uses. For hours he
worked with his apparatus,
studying, and guiding the recording
instruments. The time
passed swiftly.
At last, eager and ready for
whatever might happen now,
Loy Chuk pushed another switch.
With a cold, rosy flare, energy
blazed around that moveless
form.
For Ned Vince, timeless eternity
ended like a gradual fading
mist. When he could see clearly
again, he experienced that inevitable
shock of vast change
around him. Though it had been
dehydrated, his brain had been
kept perfectly intact through the
ages, and now it was restored.
So his memories were as vivid as
yesterday.
Yet, through that crystalline
vat in which he lay, he could see
a broad, low room, in which he
could barely have stood erect. He
saw instruments and equipment
whose weird shapes suggested
alienness, and knowledge beyond
the era he had known! The walls
were lavender and phosphorescent.
Fossil bone-fragments were
mounted in shallow cases. Dinosaur
bones, some of them
seemed, from their size. But
there was a complete skeleton of
a dog, too, and the skeleton of a
man, and a second man-skeleton
that was not quite human. Its
neck-vertebrae were very thick
and solid, its shoulders were
wide, and its skull was gigantic.
All this weirdness had a violent
effect on Ned Vince—a sudden,
nostalgic panic. Something
was fearfully wrong!
The nervous terror of the unknown
was on him. Feeble and
dizzy after his weird resurrection,
which he could not understand,
remembering as he did
that moment of sinking to certain
death in the pool at Pit
Bend, he caught the edge of the
transparent vat, and pulled himself
to a sitting posture. There
was a muffled murmur around
him, as of some vast, un-Earthly
metropolis.
"Take it easy, Ned Vince...."
The words themselves, and the
way they were assembled, were
old, familiar friends. But the
tone was wrong. It was high,
shrill, parrot-like, and mechanical.
Ned's gaze searched for the
source of the voice—located the
black box just outside of his
crystal vat. From that box the
voice seemed to have originated.
Before it crouched a small,
brownish animal with a bulging
head. The animal's tiny-fingered
paws—hands they were, really—were
touching rows of keys.
To Ned Vince, it was all utterly
insane and incomprehensible.
A rodent, looking like a prairie dog,
a little; but plainly possessing
a high order of intelligence.
And a voice whose soothingly
familiar words were more repugnant
somehow, simply because
they could never belong in a
place as eerie as this.
Ned Vince did not know how
Loy Chuk had probed his brain,
with the aid of a pair of helmets,
and the black box apparatus. He
did not know that in the latter,
his language, taken from his
own revitalized mind, was recorded,
and that Loy Chuk had
only to press certain buttons to
make the instrument express his
thoughts in common, long-dead
English. Loy, whose vocal organs
were not human, would have had
great difficulty speaking English
words, anyway.
Ned's dark hair was wildly
awry. His gaunt, young face
held befuddled terror. He gasped
in the thin atmosphere. "I've
gone nuts," he pronounced with
a curious calm. "Stark—starin'—nuts...."
Loy's box, with its recorded
English words and its sonic detectors,
could translate for its
master, too. As the man spoke,
Loy read the illuminated symbols
in his own language, flashed
on a frosted crystal plate before
him. Thus he knew what Ned
Vince was saying.
Loy Chuk pressed more keys,
and the box reproduced his answer:
"No, Ned, not nuts. Not a
bit of it! There are just a lot of
things that you've got to get
used to, that's all. You drowned
about a million years ago. I discovered
your body. I brought you
back to life. We have science
that can do that. I'm Loy
Chuk...."
It took only a moment for the
box to tell the full story in clear,
bold, friendly terms. Thus Loy
sought, with calm, human logic,
to make his charge feel at home.
Probably, though, he was a fool,
to suppose that he could succeed,
thus.
Vince started to mutter,
struggling desperately to reason
it out. "A prairie dog," he said.
"Speaking to me. One million
years. Evolution. The scientists
say that people grew up from
fishes in the sea. Prairie dogs
are smart. So maybe super-prairie-dogs
could come from
them. A lot easier than men
from fish...."
It was all sound logic. Even
Ned Vince knew that. Still, his
mind, tuned to ordinary, simple
things, couldn't quite realize all
the vast things that had happened
to himself, and to the
world. The scope of it all was too
staggeringly big. One million
years. God!...
Ned Vince made a last effort
to control himself. His knuckles
tightened on the edge of the vat.
"I don't know what you've been
talking about," he grated wildly.
"But I want to get out of here!
I want to go back where I came
from! Do you understand—whoever,
or whatever you are?"
Loy Chuk pressed more keys.
"But you can't go back to the
Twentieth Century," said the
box. "Nor is there any better
place for you to be now, than
Kar-Rah. You are the only man
left on Earth. Those men that
exist in other star systems are
not really your kind anymore,
though their forefathers originated
on this planet. They have
gone far beyond you in evolution.
To them you would be only a
senseless curiosity. You are
much better off with my people—our
minds are much more like
yours. We will take care of you,
and make you comfortable...."
But Ned Vince wasn't listening,
now. "You are the only
man left on Earth." That had
been enough for him to hear. He
didn't more than half believe it.
His mind was too confused for
conviction about anything. Everything
he saw and felt and
heard might be some kind of
nightmare. But then it might all
be real instead, and that was
abysmal horror. Ned was no
coward—death and danger of
any ordinary Earthly kind, he
could have faced bravely. But the
loneliness here, and the utter
strangeness, were hideous like
being stranded alone on another
world!
His heart was pounding heavily,
and his eyes were wide. He
looked across this eerie room.
There was a ramp there at the
other side, leading upward instead
of a stairway. Fierce impulse
to escape this nameless
lair, to try to learn the facts for
himself, possessed him. He
bounded out of the vat, and
with head down, dashed for the
ramp.
He had to go most of the way
on his hands and knees, for the
up-slanting passage was low. Excited
animal chucklings around
him, and the occasional touch of
a furry body, hurried his feverish
scrambling. But he emerged
at last at the surface.
He stood there panting in that
frigid, rarefied air. It was night.
The Moon was a gigantic, pock-marked
bulk. The constellations
were unrecognizable. The rodent
city was a glowing expanse of
shallow, crystalline domes, set
among odd, scrub trees and
bushes. The crags loomed on all
sides, all their jaggedness lost
after a million years of erosion
under an ocean that was gone.
In that ghastly moonlight, the
ground glistened with dry salt.
"Well, I guess it's all true,
huh?" Ned Vince muttered in a
flat tone.
Behind him he heard an excited,
squeaky chattering. Rodents
in pursuit. Looking back,
he saw the pinpoint gleams of
countless little eyes. Yes, he
might as well be an exile on another
planet—so changed had the
Earth become.
A wave of intolerable homesickness
came over him as he
sensed the distances of time that
had passed—those inconceivable
eons, separating himself from
his friends, from Betty, from almost
everything that was familiar.
He started to run, away
from those glittering rodent
eyes. He sensed death in that
cold sea-bottom, but what of it?
What reason did he have left to
live? He'd be only a museum
piece here, a thing to be caged
and studied....
Prison or a madhouse would
be far better. He tried to get
hold of his courage. But what
was there to inspire it? Nothing!
He laughed harshly as he
ran, welcoming that bitter, killing
cold. Nostalgia had him in
its clutch, and there was no answer
in his hell-world, lost beyond
the barrier of the years....
Loy Chuk and his followers
presently came upon Ned Vince's
unconscious form, a mile from
the city of Kar-Rah. In a flying
machine they took him back, and
applied stimulants. He came to,
in the same laboratory room as
before. But he was firmly
strapped to a low platform this
time, so that he could not escape
again. There he lay, helpless,
until presently an idea occurred
to him. It gave him a few crumbs
of hope.
"Hey, somebody!" he called.
"You'd better get some rest,
Ned Vince," came the answer
from the black box. It was Loy
Chuk speaking again.
"But listen!" Ned protested.
"You know a lot more than we
did in the Twentieth Century.
And—well—there's that thing
called time-travel, that I used to
read about. Maybe you know how
to make it work! Maybe you
could send me back to my own
time after all!"
Little Loy Chuk was in a
black, discouraged mood, himself.
He could understand the
utter, sick dejection of this
giant from the past, lost from
his own kind. Probably insanity
looming. In far less extreme circumstances
than this, death from
homesickness had come.
Loy Chuk was a scientist. In
common with all real scientists,
regardless of the species from
which they spring, he loved the
subjects of his researches. He
wanted this ancient man to live
and to be happy. Or this creature
would be of scant value for
study.
So Loy considered carefully
what Ned Vince had suggested.
Time-travel. Almost a legend. An
assault upon an intangible wall
that had baffled far keener wits
than Loy's. But he was bent,
now, on the well-being of this
anachronism he had so miraculously
resurrected—this human,
this Kaalleee....
Loy jabbed buttons on the
black box. "Yes, Ned Vince,"
said the sonic apparatus. "Time-travel.
Perhaps that is the only
thing to do—to send you back
to your own period of history.
For I see that you will never be
yourself, here. It will be hard to
accomplish, but we'll try. Now
I shall put you under an anesthetic...."
Ned felt better immediately,
for there was real hope now,
where there had been none before.
Maybe he'd be back in his
home-town of Harwich again.
Maybe he'd see the old machine-shop,
there. And the trees greening
out in Spring. Maybe he'd
be seeing Betty Moore in Hurley,
soon.... Ned relaxed, as a tiny
hypo-needle bit into his arm....
As soon as Ned Vince passed
into unconsciousness, Loy Chuk
went to work once more, using
that pair of brain-helmets again,
exploring carefully the man's
mind. After hours of research,
he proceeded to prepare his
plans. The government of Kar-Rah
was a scientific oligarchy,
of which Loy was a prime member.
It would be easy to get the
help he needed.
A horde of small, grey-furred
beings and their machines, toiled
for many days.
Ned Vince's mind swam
gradually out of the blur that
had enveloped it. He was wandering
aimlessly about in a familiar
room. The girders of the
roof above were of red-painted
steel. His tool-benches were
there, greasy and littered with
metal filings, just as they had
always been. He had a tractor to
repair, and a seed-drill. Outside
of the machine-shop, the old,
familiar yellow sun was shining.
Across the street was the small
brown house, where he lived.
With a sudden startlement, he
saw Betty Moore in the doorway.
She wore a blue dress, and a mischievous
smile curved her lips.
As though she had succeeded in
creeping up on him, for a surprise.
"Why, Ned," she chuckled.
"You look as though you've been
dreaming, and just woke up!"
He grimaced ruefully as she
approached. With a kind of fierce
gratitude, he took her in his
arms. Yes, she was just like
always.
"I guess I
was
dreaming,
Betty," he whispered, feeling
that mighty sense of relief. "I
must have fallen asleep at the
bench, here, and had a nightmare.
I thought I had an accident
at Pit Bend—and that a
lot of worse things happened....
But it wasn't true ..."
Ned Vince's mind, over which
there was still an elusive fog that
he did not try to shake off, accepted
apparent facts simply.
He did not know anything
about the invisible radiations
beating down upon him, soothing
and dimming his brain, so that
it would never question or doubt,
or observe too closely the incongruous
circumstances that must
often appear. The lack of traffic
in the street without, for instance—and
the lack of people
besides himself and Betty.
He didn't know that this machine-shop
was built from his
own memories of the original.
He didn't know that this Betty
was of the same origin—a miraculous
fabrication of metal
and energy-units and soft plastic.
The trees outside were only
lantern-slide illusions.
It was all built inside a great,
opaque dome. But there were
hidden television systems, too.
Thus Loy Chuk's kind could
study this ancient man—this
Kaalleee. Thus, their motives
were mostly selfish.
Loy, though, was not observing,
now. He had wandered far
out into cold, sad sea-bottom, to
ponder. He squeaked and chatted
to himself, contemplating the
magnificent, inexorable march of
the ages. He remembered the ancient
ruins, left by the final supermen.
"The Kaalleee believes himself
home," Loy was thinking. "He
will survive and be happy. But
there was no other way. Time is
an Eternal Wall. Our archeological
researches among the cities
of the supermen show the truth.
Even they, who once ruled Earth,
never escaped from the present
by so much as an instant...."
THE END
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
April 1956 and
was first published in
Amazing Stories
November 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | While rehydrating the body, Loy Chuk sent electricity into the body using a metal helmet. | After rehydrating the body, Loy Chuk sent electricity into the body using a metal helmet. | While rehydrating the body, Loy Chuk used electrodes to send energy throughout the body. | After rehydrating the body, Loy Chuk used electrodes to send energy throughout the body. | 2 |
27110_29Z96YG1_6 | Why can't Loy Chuk use time travel to send Ned back to Earth before his death? | THE
ETERNAL
WALL
By RAYMOND Z. GALLUN
A scream of brakes, the splash
into icy waters, a long descent
into alkaline depths ... it was
death. But Ned Vince lived
again—a million years later!
"See
you in half an hour,
Betty," said Ned Vince
over the party telephone. "We'll
be out at the Silver Basket before
ten-thirty...."
Ned Vince was eager for the
company of the girl he loved.
That was why he was in a hurry
to get to the neighboring town
of Hurley, where she lived. His
old car rattled and roared as he
swung it recklessly around Pit
Bend.
There was where Death tapped
him on the shoulder. Another car
leaped suddenly into view, its
lights glaring blindingly past a
high, up-jutting mass of Jurassic
rock at the turn of the road.
Dazzled, and befuddled by his
own rash speed, Ned Vince had
only swift young reflexes to rely
on to avoid a fearful, telescoping
collision. He flicked his wheel
smoothly to the right; but the
County Highway Commission
hadn't yet tarred the traffic-loosened
gravel at the Bend.
An incredible science, millions of years old, lay in the minds of these creatures.
Ned could scarcely have chosen
a worse place to start sliding and
spinning. His car hit the white-painted
wooden rail sideways,
crashed through, tumbled down
a steep slope, struck a huge boulder,
bounced up a little, and
arced outward, falling as gracefully
as a swan-diver toward the
inky waters of the Pit, fifty feet
beneath....
Ned Vince was still dimly conscious
when that black, quiet
pool geysered around him in a
mighty splash. He had only a
dazing welt on his forehead, and
a gag of terror in his throat.
Movement was slower now, as
he began to sink, trapped inside
his wrecked car. Nothing that he
could imagine could mean doom
more certainly than this. The Pit
was a tremendously deep pocket
in the ground, spring-fed. The
edges of that almost bottomless
pool were caked with a rim of
white—for the water, on which
dead birds so often floated, was
surcharged with alkali. As that
heavy, natronous liquid rushed
up through the openings and
cracks beneath his feet, Ned
Vince knew that his friends and
his family would never see his
body again, lost beyond recovery
in this abyss.
The car was deeply submerged.
The light had blinked out on the
dash-panel, leaving Ned in absolute
darkness. A flood rushed
in at the shattered window. He
clawed at the door, trying to
open it, but it was jammed in
the crash-bent frame, and he
couldn't fight against the force
of that incoming water. The
welt, left by the blow he had received
on his forehead, put a
thickening mist over his brain,
so that he could not think clearly.
Presently, when he could no
longer hold his breath, bitter
liquid was sucked into his lungs.
His last thoughts were those
of a drowning man. The machine-shop
he and his dad had
had in Harwich. Betty Moore,
with the smiling Irish eyes—like
in the song. Betty and he
had planned to go to the State
University this Fall. They'd
planned to be married sometime....
Goodbye, Betty ...
The ripples that had ruffled
the surface waters in the Pit,
quieted again to glassy smoothness.
The eternal stars shone
calmly. The geologic Dakota
hills, which might have seen the
dinosaurs, still bulked along the
highway. Time, the Brother of
Death, and the Father of
Change, seemed to wait....
"Kaalleee! Tik!... Tik, tik,
tik!... Kaalleee!..."
The excited cry, which no human
throat could quite have duplicated
accurately, arose thinly
from the depths of a powder-dry
gulch, water-scarred from an inconceivable
antiquity. The noon-day
Sun was red and huge. The
air was tenuous, dehydrated,
chill.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik,
tik!..."
At first there was only one
voice uttering those weird, triumphant
sounds. Then other
vocal organs took up that trilling
wail, and those short, sharp
chuckles of eagerness. Other
questioning, wondering notes
mixed with the cadence. Lacking
qualities identifiable as human,
the disturbance was still like the
babble of a group of workmen
who have discovered something
remarkable.
The desolate expanse around
the gulch, was all but without
motion. The icy breeze tore tiny
puffs of dust from grotesque,
angling drifts of soil, nearly
waterless for eons. Patches of
drab lichen grew here and there
on the up-jutting rocks, but in
the desert itself, no other life
was visible. Even the hills had
sagged away, flattened by incalculable
ages of erosion.
At a mile distance, a crumbling
heap of rubble arose. Once
it had been a building. A gigantic,
jagged mass of detritus
slanted upward from its crest—red
debris that had once been
steel. A launching catapult for
the last space ships built by the
gods in exodus, perhaps it was—half
a million years ago. Man
was gone from the Earth. Glacial
ages, war, decadence, disease,
and a final scattering of those
ultimate superhumans to newer
worlds in other solar systems,
had done that.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik, tik!..."
The sounds were not human.
They were more like the chatter
and wail of small desert animals.
But there was a seeming paradox
here in the depths of that
gulch, too. The glint of metal,
sharp and burnished. The flat,
streamlined bulk of a flying machine,
shiny and new. The bell-like
muzzle of a strange excavator-apparatus,
which seemed to
depend on a blast of atoms to
clear away rock and soil. Thus
the gulch had been cleared of the
accumulated rubbish of antiquity.
Man, it seemed, had a successor,
as ruler of the Earth.
Loy Chuk had flown his geological
expedition out from the
far lowlands to the east, out
from the city of Kar-Rah. And
he was very happy now—flushed
with a vast and unlooked-for
success.
He crouched there on his
haunches, at the dry bottom of
the Pit. The breeze rumpled his
long, brown fur. He wasn't very
different in appearance from his
ancestors. A foot tall, perhaps,
as he squatted there in that antique
stance of his kind. His tail
was short and furred, his undersides
creamy. White whiskers
spread around his inquisitive,
pink-tipped snout.
But his cranium bulged up and
forward between shrewd, beady
eyes, betraying the slow heritage
of time, of survival of the fittest,
of evolution. He could think and
dream and invent, and the civilization
of his kind was already
far beyond that of the ancient
Twentieth Century.
Loy Chuk and his fellow workers
were gathered, tense and
gleeful, around the things their
digging had exposed to the daylight.
There was a gob of junk—scarcely
more than an irregular
formation of flaky rust. But imbedded
in it was a huddled form,
brown and hard as old wood. The
dry mud that had encased it
like an airtight coffin, had by
now been chipped away by the
tiny investigators; but soiled
clothing still clung to it, after
perhaps a million years. Metal
had gone into decay—yes. But
not this body. The answer to this
was simple—alkali. A mineral
saturation that had held time
and change in stasis. A perfect
preservative for organic tissue,
aided probably during most of
those passing eras by desert dryness.
The Dakotas had turned
arid very swiftly. This body was
not a mere fossil. It was a
mummy.
"Kaalleee!" Man, that meant.
Not the star-conquering demi-gods,
but the ancestral stock
that had built the first
machines on Earth, and in the
early Twenty-first Century, the
first interplanetary rockets. No
wonder Loy Chuk and his co-workers
were happy in their
paleontological enthusiasm! A
strange accident, happening in a
legendary antiquity, had aided
them in their quest for knowledge.
At last Loy Chuk gave a soft,
chirping signal. The chant of
triumph ended, while instruments
flicked in his tiny hands.
The final instrument he used to
test the mummy, looked like a
miniature stereoscope, with complicated
details. He held it over
his eyes. On the tiny screen
within, through the agency of
focused X-rays, he saw magnified
images of the internal organs
of this ancient human
corpse.
What his probing gaze revealed
to him, made his pleasure
even greater than before. In
twittering, chattering sounds, he
communicated his further knowledge
to his henchmen. Though
devoid of moisture, the mummy
was perfectly preserved, even to
its brain cells! Medical and biological
sciences were far advanced
among Loy Chuk's kind.
Perhaps, by the application of
principles long known to them,
this long-dead body could be
made to live again! It might
move, speak, remember its past!
What a marvelous subject for
study it would make, back there
in the museums of Kar-Rah!
"Tik, tik, tik!..."
But Loy silenced this fresh,
eager chattering with a command.
Work was always more
substantial than cheering.
With infinite care—small,
sharp hand-tools were used, now—the
mummy of Ned Vince was
disengaged from the worthless
rust of his primitive automobile.
With infinite care it was crated
in a metal case, and hauled into
the flying machine.
Flashing flame, the latter
arose, bearing the entire hundred
members of the expedition.
The craft shot eastward at bullet-like
speed. The spreading
continental plateau of North
America seemed to crawl backward,
beneath. A tremendous
sand desert, marked with low,
washed-down mountains, and the
vague, angular, geometric
mounds of human cities that
were gone forever.
Beyond the eastern rim of the
continent, the plain dipped downward
steeply. The white of dried
salt was on the hills, but there
was a little green growth here,
too. The dead sea-bottom of the
vanished Atlantic was not as
dead as the highlands.
Far out in a deep valley, Kar-Rah,
the city of the rodents,
came into view—a crystalline
maze of low, bubble-like structures,
glinting in the red sunshine.
But this was only its surface
aspect. Loy Chuk's people
had built their homes mostly underground,
since the beginning
of their foggy evolution. Besides,
in this latter day, the
nights were very cold, the shelter
of subterranean passages and
rooms was welcome.
The mummy was taken to Loy
Chuk's laboratory, a short distance
below the surface. Here at
once, the scientist began his
work. The body of the ancient
man was put in a large vat.
Fluids submerged it, slowly
soaking from that hardened flesh
the alkali that had preserved it
for so long. The fluid was
changed often, until woody muscles
and other tissues became
pliable once more.
Then the more delicate processes
began. Still submerged in
liquid, the corpse was submitted
to a flow of restorative energy,
passing between complicated
electrodes. The cells of antique
flesh and brain gradually took on
a chemical composition nearer to
that of the life that they had
once known.
At last the final liquid was
drained away, and the mummy
lay there, a mummy no more, but
a pale, silent figure in its tatters
of clothing. Loy Chuk put an odd,
metal-fabric helmet on its head,
and a second, much smaller helmet
on his own. Connected with
this arrangement, was a black
box of many uses. For hours he
worked with his apparatus,
studying, and guiding the recording
instruments. The time
passed swiftly.
At last, eager and ready for
whatever might happen now,
Loy Chuk pushed another switch.
With a cold, rosy flare, energy
blazed around that moveless
form.
For Ned Vince, timeless eternity
ended like a gradual fading
mist. When he could see clearly
again, he experienced that inevitable
shock of vast change
around him. Though it had been
dehydrated, his brain had been
kept perfectly intact through the
ages, and now it was restored.
So his memories were as vivid as
yesterday.
Yet, through that crystalline
vat in which he lay, he could see
a broad, low room, in which he
could barely have stood erect. He
saw instruments and equipment
whose weird shapes suggested
alienness, and knowledge beyond
the era he had known! The walls
were lavender and phosphorescent.
Fossil bone-fragments were
mounted in shallow cases. Dinosaur
bones, some of them
seemed, from their size. But
there was a complete skeleton of
a dog, too, and the skeleton of a
man, and a second man-skeleton
that was not quite human. Its
neck-vertebrae were very thick
and solid, its shoulders were
wide, and its skull was gigantic.
All this weirdness had a violent
effect on Ned Vince—a sudden,
nostalgic panic. Something
was fearfully wrong!
The nervous terror of the unknown
was on him. Feeble and
dizzy after his weird resurrection,
which he could not understand,
remembering as he did
that moment of sinking to certain
death in the pool at Pit
Bend, he caught the edge of the
transparent vat, and pulled himself
to a sitting posture. There
was a muffled murmur around
him, as of some vast, un-Earthly
metropolis.
"Take it easy, Ned Vince...."
The words themselves, and the
way they were assembled, were
old, familiar friends. But the
tone was wrong. It was high,
shrill, parrot-like, and mechanical.
Ned's gaze searched for the
source of the voice—located the
black box just outside of his
crystal vat. From that box the
voice seemed to have originated.
Before it crouched a small,
brownish animal with a bulging
head. The animal's tiny-fingered
paws—hands they were, really—were
touching rows of keys.
To Ned Vince, it was all utterly
insane and incomprehensible.
A rodent, looking like a prairie dog,
a little; but plainly possessing
a high order of intelligence.
And a voice whose soothingly
familiar words were more repugnant
somehow, simply because
they could never belong in a
place as eerie as this.
Ned Vince did not know how
Loy Chuk had probed his brain,
with the aid of a pair of helmets,
and the black box apparatus. He
did not know that in the latter,
his language, taken from his
own revitalized mind, was recorded,
and that Loy Chuk had
only to press certain buttons to
make the instrument express his
thoughts in common, long-dead
English. Loy, whose vocal organs
were not human, would have had
great difficulty speaking English
words, anyway.
Ned's dark hair was wildly
awry. His gaunt, young face
held befuddled terror. He gasped
in the thin atmosphere. "I've
gone nuts," he pronounced with
a curious calm. "Stark—starin'—nuts...."
Loy's box, with its recorded
English words and its sonic detectors,
could translate for its
master, too. As the man spoke,
Loy read the illuminated symbols
in his own language, flashed
on a frosted crystal plate before
him. Thus he knew what Ned
Vince was saying.
Loy Chuk pressed more keys,
and the box reproduced his answer:
"No, Ned, not nuts. Not a
bit of it! There are just a lot of
things that you've got to get
used to, that's all. You drowned
about a million years ago. I discovered
your body. I brought you
back to life. We have science
that can do that. I'm Loy
Chuk...."
It took only a moment for the
box to tell the full story in clear,
bold, friendly terms. Thus Loy
sought, with calm, human logic,
to make his charge feel at home.
Probably, though, he was a fool,
to suppose that he could succeed,
thus.
Vince started to mutter,
struggling desperately to reason
it out. "A prairie dog," he said.
"Speaking to me. One million
years. Evolution. The scientists
say that people grew up from
fishes in the sea. Prairie dogs
are smart. So maybe super-prairie-dogs
could come from
them. A lot easier than men
from fish...."
It was all sound logic. Even
Ned Vince knew that. Still, his
mind, tuned to ordinary, simple
things, couldn't quite realize all
the vast things that had happened
to himself, and to the
world. The scope of it all was too
staggeringly big. One million
years. God!...
Ned Vince made a last effort
to control himself. His knuckles
tightened on the edge of the vat.
"I don't know what you've been
talking about," he grated wildly.
"But I want to get out of here!
I want to go back where I came
from! Do you understand—whoever,
or whatever you are?"
Loy Chuk pressed more keys.
"But you can't go back to the
Twentieth Century," said the
box. "Nor is there any better
place for you to be now, than
Kar-Rah. You are the only man
left on Earth. Those men that
exist in other star systems are
not really your kind anymore,
though their forefathers originated
on this planet. They have
gone far beyond you in evolution.
To them you would be only a
senseless curiosity. You are
much better off with my people—our
minds are much more like
yours. We will take care of you,
and make you comfortable...."
But Ned Vince wasn't listening,
now. "You are the only
man left on Earth." That had
been enough for him to hear. He
didn't more than half believe it.
His mind was too confused for
conviction about anything. Everything
he saw and felt and
heard might be some kind of
nightmare. But then it might all
be real instead, and that was
abysmal horror. Ned was no
coward—death and danger of
any ordinary Earthly kind, he
could have faced bravely. But the
loneliness here, and the utter
strangeness, were hideous like
being stranded alone on another
world!
His heart was pounding heavily,
and his eyes were wide. He
looked across this eerie room.
There was a ramp there at the
other side, leading upward instead
of a stairway. Fierce impulse
to escape this nameless
lair, to try to learn the facts for
himself, possessed him. He
bounded out of the vat, and
with head down, dashed for the
ramp.
He had to go most of the way
on his hands and knees, for the
up-slanting passage was low. Excited
animal chucklings around
him, and the occasional touch of
a furry body, hurried his feverish
scrambling. But he emerged
at last at the surface.
He stood there panting in that
frigid, rarefied air. It was night.
The Moon was a gigantic, pock-marked
bulk. The constellations
were unrecognizable. The rodent
city was a glowing expanse of
shallow, crystalline domes, set
among odd, scrub trees and
bushes. The crags loomed on all
sides, all their jaggedness lost
after a million years of erosion
under an ocean that was gone.
In that ghastly moonlight, the
ground glistened with dry salt.
"Well, I guess it's all true,
huh?" Ned Vince muttered in a
flat tone.
Behind him he heard an excited,
squeaky chattering. Rodents
in pursuit. Looking back,
he saw the pinpoint gleams of
countless little eyes. Yes, he
might as well be an exile on another
planet—so changed had the
Earth become.
A wave of intolerable homesickness
came over him as he
sensed the distances of time that
had passed—those inconceivable
eons, separating himself from
his friends, from Betty, from almost
everything that was familiar.
He started to run, away
from those glittering rodent
eyes. He sensed death in that
cold sea-bottom, but what of it?
What reason did he have left to
live? He'd be only a museum
piece here, a thing to be caged
and studied....
Prison or a madhouse would
be far better. He tried to get
hold of his courage. But what
was there to inspire it? Nothing!
He laughed harshly as he
ran, welcoming that bitter, killing
cold. Nostalgia had him in
its clutch, and there was no answer
in his hell-world, lost beyond
the barrier of the years....
Loy Chuk and his followers
presently came upon Ned Vince's
unconscious form, a mile from
the city of Kar-Rah. In a flying
machine they took him back, and
applied stimulants. He came to,
in the same laboratory room as
before. But he was firmly
strapped to a low platform this
time, so that he could not escape
again. There he lay, helpless,
until presently an idea occurred
to him. It gave him a few crumbs
of hope.
"Hey, somebody!" he called.
"You'd better get some rest,
Ned Vince," came the answer
from the black box. It was Loy
Chuk speaking again.
"But listen!" Ned protested.
"You know a lot more than we
did in the Twentieth Century.
And—well—there's that thing
called time-travel, that I used to
read about. Maybe you know how
to make it work! Maybe you
could send me back to my own
time after all!"
Little Loy Chuk was in a
black, discouraged mood, himself.
He could understand the
utter, sick dejection of this
giant from the past, lost from
his own kind. Probably insanity
looming. In far less extreme circumstances
than this, death from
homesickness had come.
Loy Chuk was a scientist. In
common with all real scientists,
regardless of the species from
which they spring, he loved the
subjects of his researches. He
wanted this ancient man to live
and to be happy. Or this creature
would be of scant value for
study.
So Loy considered carefully
what Ned Vince had suggested.
Time-travel. Almost a legend. An
assault upon an intangible wall
that had baffled far keener wits
than Loy's. But he was bent,
now, on the well-being of this
anachronism he had so miraculously
resurrected—this human,
this Kaalleee....
Loy jabbed buttons on the
black box. "Yes, Ned Vince,"
said the sonic apparatus. "Time-travel.
Perhaps that is the only
thing to do—to send you back
to your own period of history.
For I see that you will never be
yourself, here. It will be hard to
accomplish, but we'll try. Now
I shall put you under an anesthetic...."
Ned felt better immediately,
for there was real hope now,
where there had been none before.
Maybe he'd be back in his
home-town of Harwich again.
Maybe he'd see the old machine-shop,
there. And the trees greening
out in Spring. Maybe he'd
be seeing Betty Moore in Hurley,
soon.... Ned relaxed, as a tiny
hypo-needle bit into his arm....
As soon as Ned Vince passed
into unconsciousness, Loy Chuk
went to work once more, using
that pair of brain-helmets again,
exploring carefully the man's
mind. After hours of research,
he proceeded to prepare his
plans. The government of Kar-Rah
was a scientific oligarchy,
of which Loy was a prime member.
It would be easy to get the
help he needed.
A horde of small, grey-furred
beings and their machines, toiled
for many days.
Ned Vince's mind swam
gradually out of the blur that
had enveloped it. He was wandering
aimlessly about in a familiar
room. The girders of the
roof above were of red-painted
steel. His tool-benches were
there, greasy and littered with
metal filings, just as they had
always been. He had a tractor to
repair, and a seed-drill. Outside
of the machine-shop, the old,
familiar yellow sun was shining.
Across the street was the small
brown house, where he lived.
With a sudden startlement, he
saw Betty Moore in the doorway.
She wore a blue dress, and a mischievous
smile curved her lips.
As though she had succeeded in
creeping up on him, for a surprise.
"Why, Ned," she chuckled.
"You look as though you've been
dreaming, and just woke up!"
He grimaced ruefully as she
approached. With a kind of fierce
gratitude, he took her in his
arms. Yes, she was just like
always.
"I guess I
was
dreaming,
Betty," he whispered, feeling
that mighty sense of relief. "I
must have fallen asleep at the
bench, here, and had a nightmare.
I thought I had an accident
at Pit Bend—and that a
lot of worse things happened....
But it wasn't true ..."
Ned Vince's mind, over which
there was still an elusive fog that
he did not try to shake off, accepted
apparent facts simply.
He did not know anything
about the invisible radiations
beating down upon him, soothing
and dimming his brain, so that
it would never question or doubt,
or observe too closely the incongruous
circumstances that must
often appear. The lack of traffic
in the street without, for instance—and
the lack of people
besides himself and Betty.
He didn't know that this machine-shop
was built from his
own memories of the original.
He didn't know that this Betty
was of the same origin—a miraculous
fabrication of metal
and energy-units and soft plastic.
The trees outside were only
lantern-slide illusions.
It was all built inside a great,
opaque dome. But there were
hidden television systems, too.
Thus Loy Chuk's kind could
study this ancient man—this
Kaalleee. Thus, their motives
were mostly selfish.
Loy, though, was not observing,
now. He had wandered far
out into cold, sad sea-bottom, to
ponder. He squeaked and chatted
to himself, contemplating the
magnificent, inexorable march of
the ages. He remembered the ancient
ruins, left by the final supermen.
"The Kaalleee believes himself
home," Loy was thinking. "He
will survive and be happy. But
there was no other way. Time is
an Eternal Wall. Our archeological
researches among the cities
of the supermen show the truth.
Even they, who once ruled Earth,
never escaped from the present
by so much as an instant...."
THE END
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
April 1956 and
was first published in
Amazing Stories
November 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The government of Kar-Rah turned down Loy Chuk's request to use time travel. | There is no such thing as time travel. | No one has figured out time travel. | Humans took the secrets of time travel with them when they left Earth. | 2 |
27110_29Z96YG1_7 | Why does Loy Chuk build an artificial environment for Ned? | THE
ETERNAL
WALL
By RAYMOND Z. GALLUN
A scream of brakes, the splash
into icy waters, a long descent
into alkaline depths ... it was
death. But Ned Vince lived
again—a million years later!
"See
you in half an hour,
Betty," said Ned Vince
over the party telephone. "We'll
be out at the Silver Basket before
ten-thirty...."
Ned Vince was eager for the
company of the girl he loved.
That was why he was in a hurry
to get to the neighboring town
of Hurley, where she lived. His
old car rattled and roared as he
swung it recklessly around Pit
Bend.
There was where Death tapped
him on the shoulder. Another car
leaped suddenly into view, its
lights glaring blindingly past a
high, up-jutting mass of Jurassic
rock at the turn of the road.
Dazzled, and befuddled by his
own rash speed, Ned Vince had
only swift young reflexes to rely
on to avoid a fearful, telescoping
collision. He flicked his wheel
smoothly to the right; but the
County Highway Commission
hadn't yet tarred the traffic-loosened
gravel at the Bend.
An incredible science, millions of years old, lay in the minds of these creatures.
Ned could scarcely have chosen
a worse place to start sliding and
spinning. His car hit the white-painted
wooden rail sideways,
crashed through, tumbled down
a steep slope, struck a huge boulder,
bounced up a little, and
arced outward, falling as gracefully
as a swan-diver toward the
inky waters of the Pit, fifty feet
beneath....
Ned Vince was still dimly conscious
when that black, quiet
pool geysered around him in a
mighty splash. He had only a
dazing welt on his forehead, and
a gag of terror in his throat.
Movement was slower now, as
he began to sink, trapped inside
his wrecked car. Nothing that he
could imagine could mean doom
more certainly than this. The Pit
was a tremendously deep pocket
in the ground, spring-fed. The
edges of that almost bottomless
pool were caked with a rim of
white—for the water, on which
dead birds so often floated, was
surcharged with alkali. As that
heavy, natronous liquid rushed
up through the openings and
cracks beneath his feet, Ned
Vince knew that his friends and
his family would never see his
body again, lost beyond recovery
in this abyss.
The car was deeply submerged.
The light had blinked out on the
dash-panel, leaving Ned in absolute
darkness. A flood rushed
in at the shattered window. He
clawed at the door, trying to
open it, but it was jammed in
the crash-bent frame, and he
couldn't fight against the force
of that incoming water. The
welt, left by the blow he had received
on his forehead, put a
thickening mist over his brain,
so that he could not think clearly.
Presently, when he could no
longer hold his breath, bitter
liquid was sucked into his lungs.
His last thoughts were those
of a drowning man. The machine-shop
he and his dad had
had in Harwich. Betty Moore,
with the smiling Irish eyes—like
in the song. Betty and he
had planned to go to the State
University this Fall. They'd
planned to be married sometime....
Goodbye, Betty ...
The ripples that had ruffled
the surface waters in the Pit,
quieted again to glassy smoothness.
The eternal stars shone
calmly. The geologic Dakota
hills, which might have seen the
dinosaurs, still bulked along the
highway. Time, the Brother of
Death, and the Father of
Change, seemed to wait....
"Kaalleee! Tik!... Tik, tik,
tik!... Kaalleee!..."
The excited cry, which no human
throat could quite have duplicated
accurately, arose thinly
from the depths of a powder-dry
gulch, water-scarred from an inconceivable
antiquity. The noon-day
Sun was red and huge. The
air was tenuous, dehydrated,
chill.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik,
tik!..."
At first there was only one
voice uttering those weird, triumphant
sounds. Then other
vocal organs took up that trilling
wail, and those short, sharp
chuckles of eagerness. Other
questioning, wondering notes
mixed with the cadence. Lacking
qualities identifiable as human,
the disturbance was still like the
babble of a group of workmen
who have discovered something
remarkable.
The desolate expanse around
the gulch, was all but without
motion. The icy breeze tore tiny
puffs of dust from grotesque,
angling drifts of soil, nearly
waterless for eons. Patches of
drab lichen grew here and there
on the up-jutting rocks, but in
the desert itself, no other life
was visible. Even the hills had
sagged away, flattened by incalculable
ages of erosion.
At a mile distance, a crumbling
heap of rubble arose. Once
it had been a building. A gigantic,
jagged mass of detritus
slanted upward from its crest—red
debris that had once been
steel. A launching catapult for
the last space ships built by the
gods in exodus, perhaps it was—half
a million years ago. Man
was gone from the Earth. Glacial
ages, war, decadence, disease,
and a final scattering of those
ultimate superhumans to newer
worlds in other solar systems,
had done that.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik, tik!..."
The sounds were not human.
They were more like the chatter
and wail of small desert animals.
But there was a seeming paradox
here in the depths of that
gulch, too. The glint of metal,
sharp and burnished. The flat,
streamlined bulk of a flying machine,
shiny and new. The bell-like
muzzle of a strange excavator-apparatus,
which seemed to
depend on a blast of atoms to
clear away rock and soil. Thus
the gulch had been cleared of the
accumulated rubbish of antiquity.
Man, it seemed, had a successor,
as ruler of the Earth.
Loy Chuk had flown his geological
expedition out from the
far lowlands to the east, out
from the city of Kar-Rah. And
he was very happy now—flushed
with a vast and unlooked-for
success.
He crouched there on his
haunches, at the dry bottom of
the Pit. The breeze rumpled his
long, brown fur. He wasn't very
different in appearance from his
ancestors. A foot tall, perhaps,
as he squatted there in that antique
stance of his kind. His tail
was short and furred, his undersides
creamy. White whiskers
spread around his inquisitive,
pink-tipped snout.
But his cranium bulged up and
forward between shrewd, beady
eyes, betraying the slow heritage
of time, of survival of the fittest,
of evolution. He could think and
dream and invent, and the civilization
of his kind was already
far beyond that of the ancient
Twentieth Century.
Loy Chuk and his fellow workers
were gathered, tense and
gleeful, around the things their
digging had exposed to the daylight.
There was a gob of junk—scarcely
more than an irregular
formation of flaky rust. But imbedded
in it was a huddled form,
brown and hard as old wood. The
dry mud that had encased it
like an airtight coffin, had by
now been chipped away by the
tiny investigators; but soiled
clothing still clung to it, after
perhaps a million years. Metal
had gone into decay—yes. But
not this body. The answer to this
was simple—alkali. A mineral
saturation that had held time
and change in stasis. A perfect
preservative for organic tissue,
aided probably during most of
those passing eras by desert dryness.
The Dakotas had turned
arid very swiftly. This body was
not a mere fossil. It was a
mummy.
"Kaalleee!" Man, that meant.
Not the star-conquering demi-gods,
but the ancestral stock
that had built the first
machines on Earth, and in the
early Twenty-first Century, the
first interplanetary rockets. No
wonder Loy Chuk and his co-workers
were happy in their
paleontological enthusiasm! A
strange accident, happening in a
legendary antiquity, had aided
them in their quest for knowledge.
At last Loy Chuk gave a soft,
chirping signal. The chant of
triumph ended, while instruments
flicked in his tiny hands.
The final instrument he used to
test the mummy, looked like a
miniature stereoscope, with complicated
details. He held it over
his eyes. On the tiny screen
within, through the agency of
focused X-rays, he saw magnified
images of the internal organs
of this ancient human
corpse.
What his probing gaze revealed
to him, made his pleasure
even greater than before. In
twittering, chattering sounds, he
communicated his further knowledge
to his henchmen. Though
devoid of moisture, the mummy
was perfectly preserved, even to
its brain cells! Medical and biological
sciences were far advanced
among Loy Chuk's kind.
Perhaps, by the application of
principles long known to them,
this long-dead body could be
made to live again! It might
move, speak, remember its past!
What a marvelous subject for
study it would make, back there
in the museums of Kar-Rah!
"Tik, tik, tik!..."
But Loy silenced this fresh,
eager chattering with a command.
Work was always more
substantial than cheering.
With infinite care—small,
sharp hand-tools were used, now—the
mummy of Ned Vince was
disengaged from the worthless
rust of his primitive automobile.
With infinite care it was crated
in a metal case, and hauled into
the flying machine.
Flashing flame, the latter
arose, bearing the entire hundred
members of the expedition.
The craft shot eastward at bullet-like
speed. The spreading
continental plateau of North
America seemed to crawl backward,
beneath. A tremendous
sand desert, marked with low,
washed-down mountains, and the
vague, angular, geometric
mounds of human cities that
were gone forever.
Beyond the eastern rim of the
continent, the plain dipped downward
steeply. The white of dried
salt was on the hills, but there
was a little green growth here,
too. The dead sea-bottom of the
vanished Atlantic was not as
dead as the highlands.
Far out in a deep valley, Kar-Rah,
the city of the rodents,
came into view—a crystalline
maze of low, bubble-like structures,
glinting in the red sunshine.
But this was only its surface
aspect. Loy Chuk's people
had built their homes mostly underground,
since the beginning
of their foggy evolution. Besides,
in this latter day, the
nights were very cold, the shelter
of subterranean passages and
rooms was welcome.
The mummy was taken to Loy
Chuk's laboratory, a short distance
below the surface. Here at
once, the scientist began his
work. The body of the ancient
man was put in a large vat.
Fluids submerged it, slowly
soaking from that hardened flesh
the alkali that had preserved it
for so long. The fluid was
changed often, until woody muscles
and other tissues became
pliable once more.
Then the more delicate processes
began. Still submerged in
liquid, the corpse was submitted
to a flow of restorative energy,
passing between complicated
electrodes. The cells of antique
flesh and brain gradually took on
a chemical composition nearer to
that of the life that they had
once known.
At last the final liquid was
drained away, and the mummy
lay there, a mummy no more, but
a pale, silent figure in its tatters
of clothing. Loy Chuk put an odd,
metal-fabric helmet on its head,
and a second, much smaller helmet
on his own. Connected with
this arrangement, was a black
box of many uses. For hours he
worked with his apparatus,
studying, and guiding the recording
instruments. The time
passed swiftly.
At last, eager and ready for
whatever might happen now,
Loy Chuk pushed another switch.
With a cold, rosy flare, energy
blazed around that moveless
form.
For Ned Vince, timeless eternity
ended like a gradual fading
mist. When he could see clearly
again, he experienced that inevitable
shock of vast change
around him. Though it had been
dehydrated, his brain had been
kept perfectly intact through the
ages, and now it was restored.
So his memories were as vivid as
yesterday.
Yet, through that crystalline
vat in which he lay, he could see
a broad, low room, in which he
could barely have stood erect. He
saw instruments and equipment
whose weird shapes suggested
alienness, and knowledge beyond
the era he had known! The walls
were lavender and phosphorescent.
Fossil bone-fragments were
mounted in shallow cases. Dinosaur
bones, some of them
seemed, from their size. But
there was a complete skeleton of
a dog, too, and the skeleton of a
man, and a second man-skeleton
that was not quite human. Its
neck-vertebrae were very thick
and solid, its shoulders were
wide, and its skull was gigantic.
All this weirdness had a violent
effect on Ned Vince—a sudden,
nostalgic panic. Something
was fearfully wrong!
The nervous terror of the unknown
was on him. Feeble and
dizzy after his weird resurrection,
which he could not understand,
remembering as he did
that moment of sinking to certain
death in the pool at Pit
Bend, he caught the edge of the
transparent vat, and pulled himself
to a sitting posture. There
was a muffled murmur around
him, as of some vast, un-Earthly
metropolis.
"Take it easy, Ned Vince...."
The words themselves, and the
way they were assembled, were
old, familiar friends. But the
tone was wrong. It was high,
shrill, parrot-like, and mechanical.
Ned's gaze searched for the
source of the voice—located the
black box just outside of his
crystal vat. From that box the
voice seemed to have originated.
Before it crouched a small,
brownish animal with a bulging
head. The animal's tiny-fingered
paws—hands they were, really—were
touching rows of keys.
To Ned Vince, it was all utterly
insane and incomprehensible.
A rodent, looking like a prairie dog,
a little; but plainly possessing
a high order of intelligence.
And a voice whose soothingly
familiar words were more repugnant
somehow, simply because
they could never belong in a
place as eerie as this.
Ned Vince did not know how
Loy Chuk had probed his brain,
with the aid of a pair of helmets,
and the black box apparatus. He
did not know that in the latter,
his language, taken from his
own revitalized mind, was recorded,
and that Loy Chuk had
only to press certain buttons to
make the instrument express his
thoughts in common, long-dead
English. Loy, whose vocal organs
were not human, would have had
great difficulty speaking English
words, anyway.
Ned's dark hair was wildly
awry. His gaunt, young face
held befuddled terror. He gasped
in the thin atmosphere. "I've
gone nuts," he pronounced with
a curious calm. "Stark—starin'—nuts...."
Loy's box, with its recorded
English words and its sonic detectors,
could translate for its
master, too. As the man spoke,
Loy read the illuminated symbols
in his own language, flashed
on a frosted crystal plate before
him. Thus he knew what Ned
Vince was saying.
Loy Chuk pressed more keys,
and the box reproduced his answer:
"No, Ned, not nuts. Not a
bit of it! There are just a lot of
things that you've got to get
used to, that's all. You drowned
about a million years ago. I discovered
your body. I brought you
back to life. We have science
that can do that. I'm Loy
Chuk...."
It took only a moment for the
box to tell the full story in clear,
bold, friendly terms. Thus Loy
sought, with calm, human logic,
to make his charge feel at home.
Probably, though, he was a fool,
to suppose that he could succeed,
thus.
Vince started to mutter,
struggling desperately to reason
it out. "A prairie dog," he said.
"Speaking to me. One million
years. Evolution. The scientists
say that people grew up from
fishes in the sea. Prairie dogs
are smart. So maybe super-prairie-dogs
could come from
them. A lot easier than men
from fish...."
It was all sound logic. Even
Ned Vince knew that. Still, his
mind, tuned to ordinary, simple
things, couldn't quite realize all
the vast things that had happened
to himself, and to the
world. The scope of it all was too
staggeringly big. One million
years. God!...
Ned Vince made a last effort
to control himself. His knuckles
tightened on the edge of the vat.
"I don't know what you've been
talking about," he grated wildly.
"But I want to get out of here!
I want to go back where I came
from! Do you understand—whoever,
or whatever you are?"
Loy Chuk pressed more keys.
"But you can't go back to the
Twentieth Century," said the
box. "Nor is there any better
place for you to be now, than
Kar-Rah. You are the only man
left on Earth. Those men that
exist in other star systems are
not really your kind anymore,
though their forefathers originated
on this planet. They have
gone far beyond you in evolution.
To them you would be only a
senseless curiosity. You are
much better off with my people—our
minds are much more like
yours. We will take care of you,
and make you comfortable...."
But Ned Vince wasn't listening,
now. "You are the only
man left on Earth." That had
been enough for him to hear. He
didn't more than half believe it.
His mind was too confused for
conviction about anything. Everything
he saw and felt and
heard might be some kind of
nightmare. But then it might all
be real instead, and that was
abysmal horror. Ned was no
coward—death and danger of
any ordinary Earthly kind, he
could have faced bravely. But the
loneliness here, and the utter
strangeness, were hideous like
being stranded alone on another
world!
His heart was pounding heavily,
and his eyes were wide. He
looked across this eerie room.
There was a ramp there at the
other side, leading upward instead
of a stairway. Fierce impulse
to escape this nameless
lair, to try to learn the facts for
himself, possessed him. He
bounded out of the vat, and
with head down, dashed for the
ramp.
He had to go most of the way
on his hands and knees, for the
up-slanting passage was low. Excited
animal chucklings around
him, and the occasional touch of
a furry body, hurried his feverish
scrambling. But he emerged
at last at the surface.
He stood there panting in that
frigid, rarefied air. It was night.
The Moon was a gigantic, pock-marked
bulk. The constellations
were unrecognizable. The rodent
city was a glowing expanse of
shallow, crystalline domes, set
among odd, scrub trees and
bushes. The crags loomed on all
sides, all their jaggedness lost
after a million years of erosion
under an ocean that was gone.
In that ghastly moonlight, the
ground glistened with dry salt.
"Well, I guess it's all true,
huh?" Ned Vince muttered in a
flat tone.
Behind him he heard an excited,
squeaky chattering. Rodents
in pursuit. Looking back,
he saw the pinpoint gleams of
countless little eyes. Yes, he
might as well be an exile on another
planet—so changed had the
Earth become.
A wave of intolerable homesickness
came over him as he
sensed the distances of time that
had passed—those inconceivable
eons, separating himself from
his friends, from Betty, from almost
everything that was familiar.
He started to run, away
from those glittering rodent
eyes. He sensed death in that
cold sea-bottom, but what of it?
What reason did he have left to
live? He'd be only a museum
piece here, a thing to be caged
and studied....
Prison or a madhouse would
be far better. He tried to get
hold of his courage. But what
was there to inspire it? Nothing!
He laughed harshly as he
ran, welcoming that bitter, killing
cold. Nostalgia had him in
its clutch, and there was no answer
in his hell-world, lost beyond
the barrier of the years....
Loy Chuk and his followers
presently came upon Ned Vince's
unconscious form, a mile from
the city of Kar-Rah. In a flying
machine they took him back, and
applied stimulants. He came to,
in the same laboratory room as
before. But he was firmly
strapped to a low platform this
time, so that he could not escape
again. There he lay, helpless,
until presently an idea occurred
to him. It gave him a few crumbs
of hope.
"Hey, somebody!" he called.
"You'd better get some rest,
Ned Vince," came the answer
from the black box. It was Loy
Chuk speaking again.
"But listen!" Ned protested.
"You know a lot more than we
did in the Twentieth Century.
And—well—there's that thing
called time-travel, that I used to
read about. Maybe you know how
to make it work! Maybe you
could send me back to my own
time after all!"
Little Loy Chuk was in a
black, discouraged mood, himself.
He could understand the
utter, sick dejection of this
giant from the past, lost from
his own kind. Probably insanity
looming. In far less extreme circumstances
than this, death from
homesickness had come.
Loy Chuk was a scientist. In
common with all real scientists,
regardless of the species from
which they spring, he loved the
subjects of his researches. He
wanted this ancient man to live
and to be happy. Or this creature
would be of scant value for
study.
So Loy considered carefully
what Ned Vince had suggested.
Time-travel. Almost a legend. An
assault upon an intangible wall
that had baffled far keener wits
than Loy's. But he was bent,
now, on the well-being of this
anachronism he had so miraculously
resurrected—this human,
this Kaalleee....
Loy jabbed buttons on the
black box. "Yes, Ned Vince,"
said the sonic apparatus. "Time-travel.
Perhaps that is the only
thing to do—to send you back
to your own period of history.
For I see that you will never be
yourself, here. It will be hard to
accomplish, but we'll try. Now
I shall put you under an anesthetic...."
Ned felt better immediately,
for there was real hope now,
where there had been none before.
Maybe he'd be back in his
home-town of Harwich again.
Maybe he'd see the old machine-shop,
there. And the trees greening
out in Spring. Maybe he'd
be seeing Betty Moore in Hurley,
soon.... Ned relaxed, as a tiny
hypo-needle bit into his arm....
As soon as Ned Vince passed
into unconsciousness, Loy Chuk
went to work once more, using
that pair of brain-helmets again,
exploring carefully the man's
mind. After hours of research,
he proceeded to prepare his
plans. The government of Kar-Rah
was a scientific oligarchy,
of which Loy was a prime member.
It would be easy to get the
help he needed.
A horde of small, grey-furred
beings and their machines, toiled
for many days.
Ned Vince's mind swam
gradually out of the blur that
had enveloped it. He was wandering
aimlessly about in a familiar
room. The girders of the
roof above were of red-painted
steel. His tool-benches were
there, greasy and littered with
metal filings, just as they had
always been. He had a tractor to
repair, and a seed-drill. Outside
of the machine-shop, the old,
familiar yellow sun was shining.
Across the street was the small
brown house, where he lived.
With a sudden startlement, he
saw Betty Moore in the doorway.
She wore a blue dress, and a mischievous
smile curved her lips.
As though she had succeeded in
creeping up on him, for a surprise.
"Why, Ned," she chuckled.
"You look as though you've been
dreaming, and just woke up!"
He grimaced ruefully as she
approached. With a kind of fierce
gratitude, he took her in his
arms. Yes, she was just like
always.
"I guess I
was
dreaming,
Betty," he whispered, feeling
that mighty sense of relief. "I
must have fallen asleep at the
bench, here, and had a nightmare.
I thought I had an accident
at Pit Bend—and that a
lot of worse things happened....
But it wasn't true ..."
Ned Vince's mind, over which
there was still an elusive fog that
he did not try to shake off, accepted
apparent facts simply.
He did not know anything
about the invisible radiations
beating down upon him, soothing
and dimming his brain, so that
it would never question or doubt,
or observe too closely the incongruous
circumstances that must
often appear. The lack of traffic
in the street without, for instance—and
the lack of people
besides himself and Betty.
He didn't know that this machine-shop
was built from his
own memories of the original.
He didn't know that this Betty
was of the same origin—a miraculous
fabrication of metal
and energy-units and soft plastic.
The trees outside were only
lantern-slide illusions.
It was all built inside a great,
opaque dome. But there were
hidden television systems, too.
Thus Loy Chuk's kind could
study this ancient man—this
Kaalleee. Thus, their motives
were mostly selfish.
Loy, though, was not observing,
now. He had wandered far
out into cold, sad sea-bottom, to
ponder. He squeaked and chatted
to himself, contemplating the
magnificent, inexorable march of
the ages. He remembered the ancient
ruins, left by the final supermen.
"The Kaalleee believes himself
home," Loy was thinking. "He
will survive and be happy. But
there was no other way. Time is
an Eternal Wall. Our archeological
researches among the cities
of the supermen show the truth.
Even they, who once ruled Earth,
never escaped from the present
by so much as an instant...."
THE END
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
April 1956 and
was first published in
Amazing Stories
November 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | He needs to keep Ned calm. If Ned believes himself to back in his own time, he will remain calm. | He realizes Ned is mentally unstable from the trauma of being brought back to life. He doesn't want Ned to commit suicide. | He needs a habitat for Ned until they can figure out time travel. | He needs a habitat for Ned, so he can study Ned in a natural setting. | 3 |
27110_29Z96YG1_8 | How did Loy Chuk's team find Ned at the bottom of the Pit? | THE
ETERNAL
WALL
By RAYMOND Z. GALLUN
A scream of brakes, the splash
into icy waters, a long descent
into alkaline depths ... it was
death. But Ned Vince lived
again—a million years later!
"See
you in half an hour,
Betty," said Ned Vince
over the party telephone. "We'll
be out at the Silver Basket before
ten-thirty...."
Ned Vince was eager for the
company of the girl he loved.
That was why he was in a hurry
to get to the neighboring town
of Hurley, where she lived. His
old car rattled and roared as he
swung it recklessly around Pit
Bend.
There was where Death tapped
him on the shoulder. Another car
leaped suddenly into view, its
lights glaring blindingly past a
high, up-jutting mass of Jurassic
rock at the turn of the road.
Dazzled, and befuddled by his
own rash speed, Ned Vince had
only swift young reflexes to rely
on to avoid a fearful, telescoping
collision. He flicked his wheel
smoothly to the right; but the
County Highway Commission
hadn't yet tarred the traffic-loosened
gravel at the Bend.
An incredible science, millions of years old, lay in the minds of these creatures.
Ned could scarcely have chosen
a worse place to start sliding and
spinning. His car hit the white-painted
wooden rail sideways,
crashed through, tumbled down
a steep slope, struck a huge boulder,
bounced up a little, and
arced outward, falling as gracefully
as a swan-diver toward the
inky waters of the Pit, fifty feet
beneath....
Ned Vince was still dimly conscious
when that black, quiet
pool geysered around him in a
mighty splash. He had only a
dazing welt on his forehead, and
a gag of terror in his throat.
Movement was slower now, as
he began to sink, trapped inside
his wrecked car. Nothing that he
could imagine could mean doom
more certainly than this. The Pit
was a tremendously deep pocket
in the ground, spring-fed. The
edges of that almost bottomless
pool were caked with a rim of
white—for the water, on which
dead birds so often floated, was
surcharged with alkali. As that
heavy, natronous liquid rushed
up through the openings and
cracks beneath his feet, Ned
Vince knew that his friends and
his family would never see his
body again, lost beyond recovery
in this abyss.
The car was deeply submerged.
The light had blinked out on the
dash-panel, leaving Ned in absolute
darkness. A flood rushed
in at the shattered window. He
clawed at the door, trying to
open it, but it was jammed in
the crash-bent frame, and he
couldn't fight against the force
of that incoming water. The
welt, left by the blow he had received
on his forehead, put a
thickening mist over his brain,
so that he could not think clearly.
Presently, when he could no
longer hold his breath, bitter
liquid was sucked into his lungs.
His last thoughts were those
of a drowning man. The machine-shop
he and his dad had
had in Harwich. Betty Moore,
with the smiling Irish eyes—like
in the song. Betty and he
had planned to go to the State
University this Fall. They'd
planned to be married sometime....
Goodbye, Betty ...
The ripples that had ruffled
the surface waters in the Pit,
quieted again to glassy smoothness.
The eternal stars shone
calmly. The geologic Dakota
hills, which might have seen the
dinosaurs, still bulked along the
highway. Time, the Brother of
Death, and the Father of
Change, seemed to wait....
"Kaalleee! Tik!... Tik, tik,
tik!... Kaalleee!..."
The excited cry, which no human
throat could quite have duplicated
accurately, arose thinly
from the depths of a powder-dry
gulch, water-scarred from an inconceivable
antiquity. The noon-day
Sun was red and huge. The
air was tenuous, dehydrated,
chill.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik,
tik!..."
At first there was only one
voice uttering those weird, triumphant
sounds. Then other
vocal organs took up that trilling
wail, and those short, sharp
chuckles of eagerness. Other
questioning, wondering notes
mixed with the cadence. Lacking
qualities identifiable as human,
the disturbance was still like the
babble of a group of workmen
who have discovered something
remarkable.
The desolate expanse around
the gulch, was all but without
motion. The icy breeze tore tiny
puffs of dust from grotesque,
angling drifts of soil, nearly
waterless for eons. Patches of
drab lichen grew here and there
on the up-jutting rocks, but in
the desert itself, no other life
was visible. Even the hills had
sagged away, flattened by incalculable
ages of erosion.
At a mile distance, a crumbling
heap of rubble arose. Once
it had been a building. A gigantic,
jagged mass of detritus
slanted upward from its crest—red
debris that had once been
steel. A launching catapult for
the last space ships built by the
gods in exodus, perhaps it was—half
a million years ago. Man
was gone from the Earth. Glacial
ages, war, decadence, disease,
and a final scattering of those
ultimate superhumans to newer
worlds in other solar systems,
had done that.
"Kaalleee!... Tik, tik, tik!..."
The sounds were not human.
They were more like the chatter
and wail of small desert animals.
But there was a seeming paradox
here in the depths of that
gulch, too. The glint of metal,
sharp and burnished. The flat,
streamlined bulk of a flying machine,
shiny and new. The bell-like
muzzle of a strange excavator-apparatus,
which seemed to
depend on a blast of atoms to
clear away rock and soil. Thus
the gulch had been cleared of the
accumulated rubbish of antiquity.
Man, it seemed, had a successor,
as ruler of the Earth.
Loy Chuk had flown his geological
expedition out from the
far lowlands to the east, out
from the city of Kar-Rah. And
he was very happy now—flushed
with a vast and unlooked-for
success.
He crouched there on his
haunches, at the dry bottom of
the Pit. The breeze rumpled his
long, brown fur. He wasn't very
different in appearance from his
ancestors. A foot tall, perhaps,
as he squatted there in that antique
stance of his kind. His tail
was short and furred, his undersides
creamy. White whiskers
spread around his inquisitive,
pink-tipped snout.
But his cranium bulged up and
forward between shrewd, beady
eyes, betraying the slow heritage
of time, of survival of the fittest,
of evolution. He could think and
dream and invent, and the civilization
of his kind was already
far beyond that of the ancient
Twentieth Century.
Loy Chuk and his fellow workers
were gathered, tense and
gleeful, around the things their
digging had exposed to the daylight.
There was a gob of junk—scarcely
more than an irregular
formation of flaky rust. But imbedded
in it was a huddled form,
brown and hard as old wood. The
dry mud that had encased it
like an airtight coffin, had by
now been chipped away by the
tiny investigators; but soiled
clothing still clung to it, after
perhaps a million years. Metal
had gone into decay—yes. But
not this body. The answer to this
was simple—alkali. A mineral
saturation that had held time
and change in stasis. A perfect
preservative for organic tissue,
aided probably during most of
those passing eras by desert dryness.
The Dakotas had turned
arid very swiftly. This body was
not a mere fossil. It was a
mummy.
"Kaalleee!" Man, that meant.
Not the star-conquering demi-gods,
but the ancestral stock
that had built the first
machines on Earth, and in the
early Twenty-first Century, the
first interplanetary rockets. No
wonder Loy Chuk and his co-workers
were happy in their
paleontological enthusiasm! A
strange accident, happening in a
legendary antiquity, had aided
them in their quest for knowledge.
At last Loy Chuk gave a soft,
chirping signal. The chant of
triumph ended, while instruments
flicked in his tiny hands.
The final instrument he used to
test the mummy, looked like a
miniature stereoscope, with complicated
details. He held it over
his eyes. On the tiny screen
within, through the agency of
focused X-rays, he saw magnified
images of the internal organs
of this ancient human
corpse.
What his probing gaze revealed
to him, made his pleasure
even greater than before. In
twittering, chattering sounds, he
communicated his further knowledge
to his henchmen. Though
devoid of moisture, the mummy
was perfectly preserved, even to
its brain cells! Medical and biological
sciences were far advanced
among Loy Chuk's kind.
Perhaps, by the application of
principles long known to them,
this long-dead body could be
made to live again! It might
move, speak, remember its past!
What a marvelous subject for
study it would make, back there
in the museums of Kar-Rah!
"Tik, tik, tik!..."
But Loy silenced this fresh,
eager chattering with a command.
Work was always more
substantial than cheering.
With infinite care—small,
sharp hand-tools were used, now—the
mummy of Ned Vince was
disengaged from the worthless
rust of his primitive automobile.
With infinite care it was crated
in a metal case, and hauled into
the flying machine.
Flashing flame, the latter
arose, bearing the entire hundred
members of the expedition.
The craft shot eastward at bullet-like
speed. The spreading
continental plateau of North
America seemed to crawl backward,
beneath. A tremendous
sand desert, marked with low,
washed-down mountains, and the
vague, angular, geometric
mounds of human cities that
were gone forever.
Beyond the eastern rim of the
continent, the plain dipped downward
steeply. The white of dried
salt was on the hills, but there
was a little green growth here,
too. The dead sea-bottom of the
vanished Atlantic was not as
dead as the highlands.
Far out in a deep valley, Kar-Rah,
the city of the rodents,
came into view—a crystalline
maze of low, bubble-like structures,
glinting in the red sunshine.
But this was only its surface
aspect. Loy Chuk's people
had built their homes mostly underground,
since the beginning
of their foggy evolution. Besides,
in this latter day, the
nights were very cold, the shelter
of subterranean passages and
rooms was welcome.
The mummy was taken to Loy
Chuk's laboratory, a short distance
below the surface. Here at
once, the scientist began his
work. The body of the ancient
man was put in a large vat.
Fluids submerged it, slowly
soaking from that hardened flesh
the alkali that had preserved it
for so long. The fluid was
changed often, until woody muscles
and other tissues became
pliable once more.
Then the more delicate processes
began. Still submerged in
liquid, the corpse was submitted
to a flow of restorative energy,
passing between complicated
electrodes. The cells of antique
flesh and brain gradually took on
a chemical composition nearer to
that of the life that they had
once known.
At last the final liquid was
drained away, and the mummy
lay there, a mummy no more, but
a pale, silent figure in its tatters
of clothing. Loy Chuk put an odd,
metal-fabric helmet on its head,
and a second, much smaller helmet
on his own. Connected with
this arrangement, was a black
box of many uses. For hours he
worked with his apparatus,
studying, and guiding the recording
instruments. The time
passed swiftly.
At last, eager and ready for
whatever might happen now,
Loy Chuk pushed another switch.
With a cold, rosy flare, energy
blazed around that moveless
form.
For Ned Vince, timeless eternity
ended like a gradual fading
mist. When he could see clearly
again, he experienced that inevitable
shock of vast change
around him. Though it had been
dehydrated, his brain had been
kept perfectly intact through the
ages, and now it was restored.
So his memories were as vivid as
yesterday.
Yet, through that crystalline
vat in which he lay, he could see
a broad, low room, in which he
could barely have stood erect. He
saw instruments and equipment
whose weird shapes suggested
alienness, and knowledge beyond
the era he had known! The walls
were lavender and phosphorescent.
Fossil bone-fragments were
mounted in shallow cases. Dinosaur
bones, some of them
seemed, from their size. But
there was a complete skeleton of
a dog, too, and the skeleton of a
man, and a second man-skeleton
that was not quite human. Its
neck-vertebrae were very thick
and solid, its shoulders were
wide, and its skull was gigantic.
All this weirdness had a violent
effect on Ned Vince—a sudden,
nostalgic panic. Something
was fearfully wrong!
The nervous terror of the unknown
was on him. Feeble and
dizzy after his weird resurrection,
which he could not understand,
remembering as he did
that moment of sinking to certain
death in the pool at Pit
Bend, he caught the edge of the
transparent vat, and pulled himself
to a sitting posture. There
was a muffled murmur around
him, as of some vast, un-Earthly
metropolis.
"Take it easy, Ned Vince...."
The words themselves, and the
way they were assembled, were
old, familiar friends. But the
tone was wrong. It was high,
shrill, parrot-like, and mechanical.
Ned's gaze searched for the
source of the voice—located the
black box just outside of his
crystal vat. From that box the
voice seemed to have originated.
Before it crouched a small,
brownish animal with a bulging
head. The animal's tiny-fingered
paws—hands they were, really—were
touching rows of keys.
To Ned Vince, it was all utterly
insane and incomprehensible.
A rodent, looking like a prairie dog,
a little; but plainly possessing
a high order of intelligence.
And a voice whose soothingly
familiar words were more repugnant
somehow, simply because
they could never belong in a
place as eerie as this.
Ned Vince did not know how
Loy Chuk had probed his brain,
with the aid of a pair of helmets,
and the black box apparatus. He
did not know that in the latter,
his language, taken from his
own revitalized mind, was recorded,
and that Loy Chuk had
only to press certain buttons to
make the instrument express his
thoughts in common, long-dead
English. Loy, whose vocal organs
were not human, would have had
great difficulty speaking English
words, anyway.
Ned's dark hair was wildly
awry. His gaunt, young face
held befuddled terror. He gasped
in the thin atmosphere. "I've
gone nuts," he pronounced with
a curious calm. "Stark—starin'—nuts...."
Loy's box, with its recorded
English words and its sonic detectors,
could translate for its
master, too. As the man spoke,
Loy read the illuminated symbols
in his own language, flashed
on a frosted crystal plate before
him. Thus he knew what Ned
Vince was saying.
Loy Chuk pressed more keys,
and the box reproduced his answer:
"No, Ned, not nuts. Not a
bit of it! There are just a lot of
things that you've got to get
used to, that's all. You drowned
about a million years ago. I discovered
your body. I brought you
back to life. We have science
that can do that. I'm Loy
Chuk...."
It took only a moment for the
box to tell the full story in clear,
bold, friendly terms. Thus Loy
sought, with calm, human logic,
to make his charge feel at home.
Probably, though, he was a fool,
to suppose that he could succeed,
thus.
Vince started to mutter,
struggling desperately to reason
it out. "A prairie dog," he said.
"Speaking to me. One million
years. Evolution. The scientists
say that people grew up from
fishes in the sea. Prairie dogs
are smart. So maybe super-prairie-dogs
could come from
them. A lot easier than men
from fish...."
It was all sound logic. Even
Ned Vince knew that. Still, his
mind, tuned to ordinary, simple
things, couldn't quite realize all
the vast things that had happened
to himself, and to the
world. The scope of it all was too
staggeringly big. One million
years. God!...
Ned Vince made a last effort
to control himself. His knuckles
tightened on the edge of the vat.
"I don't know what you've been
talking about," he grated wildly.
"But I want to get out of here!
I want to go back where I came
from! Do you understand—whoever,
or whatever you are?"
Loy Chuk pressed more keys.
"But you can't go back to the
Twentieth Century," said the
box. "Nor is there any better
place for you to be now, than
Kar-Rah. You are the only man
left on Earth. Those men that
exist in other star systems are
not really your kind anymore,
though their forefathers originated
on this planet. They have
gone far beyond you in evolution.
To them you would be only a
senseless curiosity. You are
much better off with my people—our
minds are much more like
yours. We will take care of you,
and make you comfortable...."
But Ned Vince wasn't listening,
now. "You are the only
man left on Earth." That had
been enough for him to hear. He
didn't more than half believe it.
His mind was too confused for
conviction about anything. Everything
he saw and felt and
heard might be some kind of
nightmare. But then it might all
be real instead, and that was
abysmal horror. Ned was no
coward—death and danger of
any ordinary Earthly kind, he
could have faced bravely. But the
loneliness here, and the utter
strangeness, were hideous like
being stranded alone on another
world!
His heart was pounding heavily,
and his eyes were wide. He
looked across this eerie room.
There was a ramp there at the
other side, leading upward instead
of a stairway. Fierce impulse
to escape this nameless
lair, to try to learn the facts for
himself, possessed him. He
bounded out of the vat, and
with head down, dashed for the
ramp.
He had to go most of the way
on his hands and knees, for the
up-slanting passage was low. Excited
animal chucklings around
him, and the occasional touch of
a furry body, hurried his feverish
scrambling. But he emerged
at last at the surface.
He stood there panting in that
frigid, rarefied air. It was night.
The Moon was a gigantic, pock-marked
bulk. The constellations
were unrecognizable. The rodent
city was a glowing expanse of
shallow, crystalline domes, set
among odd, scrub trees and
bushes. The crags loomed on all
sides, all their jaggedness lost
after a million years of erosion
under an ocean that was gone.
In that ghastly moonlight, the
ground glistened with dry salt.
"Well, I guess it's all true,
huh?" Ned Vince muttered in a
flat tone.
Behind him he heard an excited,
squeaky chattering. Rodents
in pursuit. Looking back,
he saw the pinpoint gleams of
countless little eyes. Yes, he
might as well be an exile on another
planet—so changed had the
Earth become.
A wave of intolerable homesickness
came over him as he
sensed the distances of time that
had passed—those inconceivable
eons, separating himself from
his friends, from Betty, from almost
everything that was familiar.
He started to run, away
from those glittering rodent
eyes. He sensed death in that
cold sea-bottom, but what of it?
What reason did he have left to
live? He'd be only a museum
piece here, a thing to be caged
and studied....
Prison or a madhouse would
be far better. He tried to get
hold of his courage. But what
was there to inspire it? Nothing!
He laughed harshly as he
ran, welcoming that bitter, killing
cold. Nostalgia had him in
its clutch, and there was no answer
in his hell-world, lost beyond
the barrier of the years....
Loy Chuk and his followers
presently came upon Ned Vince's
unconscious form, a mile from
the city of Kar-Rah. In a flying
machine they took him back, and
applied stimulants. He came to,
in the same laboratory room as
before. But he was firmly
strapped to a low platform this
time, so that he could not escape
again. There he lay, helpless,
until presently an idea occurred
to him. It gave him a few crumbs
of hope.
"Hey, somebody!" he called.
"You'd better get some rest,
Ned Vince," came the answer
from the black box. It was Loy
Chuk speaking again.
"But listen!" Ned protested.
"You know a lot more than we
did in the Twentieth Century.
And—well—there's that thing
called time-travel, that I used to
read about. Maybe you know how
to make it work! Maybe you
could send me back to my own
time after all!"
Little Loy Chuk was in a
black, discouraged mood, himself.
He could understand the
utter, sick dejection of this
giant from the past, lost from
his own kind. Probably insanity
looming. In far less extreme circumstances
than this, death from
homesickness had come.
Loy Chuk was a scientist. In
common with all real scientists,
regardless of the species from
which they spring, he loved the
subjects of his researches. He
wanted this ancient man to live
and to be happy. Or this creature
would be of scant value for
study.
So Loy considered carefully
what Ned Vince had suggested.
Time-travel. Almost a legend. An
assault upon an intangible wall
that had baffled far keener wits
than Loy's. But he was bent,
now, on the well-being of this
anachronism he had so miraculously
resurrected—this human,
this Kaalleee....
Loy jabbed buttons on the
black box. "Yes, Ned Vince,"
said the sonic apparatus. "Time-travel.
Perhaps that is the only
thing to do—to send you back
to your own period of history.
For I see that you will never be
yourself, here. It will be hard to
accomplish, but we'll try. Now
I shall put you under an anesthetic...."
Ned felt better immediately,
for there was real hope now,
where there had been none before.
Maybe he'd be back in his
home-town of Harwich again.
Maybe he'd see the old machine-shop,
there. And the trees greening
out in Spring. Maybe he'd
be seeing Betty Moore in Hurley,
soon.... Ned relaxed, as a tiny
hypo-needle bit into his arm....
As soon as Ned Vince passed
into unconsciousness, Loy Chuk
went to work once more, using
that pair of brain-helmets again,
exploring carefully the man's
mind. After hours of research,
he proceeded to prepare his
plans. The government of Kar-Rah
was a scientific oligarchy,
of which Loy was a prime member.
It would be easy to get the
help he needed.
A horde of small, grey-furred
beings and their machines, toiled
for many days.
Ned Vince's mind swam
gradually out of the blur that
had enveloped it. He was wandering
aimlessly about in a familiar
room. The girders of the
roof above were of red-painted
steel. His tool-benches were
there, greasy and littered with
metal filings, just as they had
always been. He had a tractor to
repair, and a seed-drill. Outside
of the machine-shop, the old,
familiar yellow sun was shining.
Across the street was the small
brown house, where he lived.
With a sudden startlement, he
saw Betty Moore in the doorway.
She wore a blue dress, and a mischievous
smile curved her lips.
As though she had succeeded in
creeping up on him, for a surprise.
"Why, Ned," she chuckled.
"You look as though you've been
dreaming, and just woke up!"
He grimaced ruefully as she
approached. With a kind of fierce
gratitude, he took her in his
arms. Yes, she was just like
always.
"I guess I
was
dreaming,
Betty," he whispered, feeling
that mighty sense of relief. "I
must have fallen asleep at the
bench, here, and had a nightmare.
I thought I had an accident
at Pit Bend—and that a
lot of worse things happened....
But it wasn't true ..."
Ned Vince's mind, over which
there was still an elusive fog that
he did not try to shake off, accepted
apparent facts simply.
He did not know anything
about the invisible radiations
beating down upon him, soothing
and dimming his brain, so that
it would never question or doubt,
or observe too closely the incongruous
circumstances that must
often appear. The lack of traffic
in the street without, for instance—and
the lack of people
besides himself and Betty.
He didn't know that this machine-shop
was built from his
own memories of the original.
He didn't know that this Betty
was of the same origin—a miraculous
fabrication of metal
and energy-units and soft plastic.
The trees outside were only
lantern-slide illusions.
It was all built inside a great,
opaque dome. But there were
hidden television systems, too.
Thus Loy Chuk's kind could
study this ancient man—this
Kaalleee. Thus, their motives
were mostly selfish.
Loy, though, was not observing,
now. He had wandered far
out into cold, sad sea-bottom, to
ponder. He squeaked and chatted
to himself, contemplating the
magnificent, inexorable march of
the ages. He remembered the ancient
ruins, left by the final supermen.
"The Kaalleee believes himself
home," Loy was thinking. "He
will survive and be happy. But
there was no other way. Time is
an Eternal Wall. Our archeological
researches among the cities
of the supermen show the truth.
Even they, who once ruled Earth,
never escaped from the present
by so much as an instant...."
THE END
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Stories
April 1956 and
was first published in
Amazing Stories
November 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The workers noticed red debris. | The workers noticed a flaky rust formation. | The workers noticed a glint of metal. | The workers found him during an excavation. | 3 |
27588_QI4ZJP0M_1 | What is Trella's relationship to Dom Blessing? | Transcriber's Note:
Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
possible; changes (corrections of spelling and punctuation) made to
the original text are marked
like this
.
The original text appears when hovering the cursor over the marked text.
This e-text was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
March 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U. S. copyright on this
publication was renewed.
50
THE
JUPITER
WEAPON
By CHARLES L. FONTENAY
He was a living weapon of
destruction—
immeasurably
powerful, utterly invulnerable.
There was only one
question: Was he human?
Trella
feared she was in
for trouble even before Motwick's
head dropped forward on
his arms in a drunken stupor.
The two evil-looking men at the
table nearby had been watching
her surreptitiously, and now
they shifted restlessly in their
chairs.
Trella had not wanted to come
to the Golden Satellite. It was a
squalid saloon in the rougher
section of Jupiter's View, the
terrestrial dome-colony on Ganymede.
Motwick,
already
drunk,
had insisted.
A woman could not possibly
make her way through these
streets alone to the better section
of town, especially one clad
in a silvery evening dress. Her
only hope was that this place
had a telephone. Perhaps she
could call one of Motwick's
friends; she had no one on Ganymede
she could call a real friend
herself.
Tentatively, she pushed her
chair back from the table and
arose. She had to brush close by
the other table to get to the bar.
As she did, the dark, slick-haired
man reached out and grabbed
her around the waist with a
steely arm.
Trella swung with her whole
body, and slapped him so hard
he nearly fell from his chair. As
she walked swiftly toward the
bar, he leaped up to follow her.
There were only two other
people in the Golden Satellite:
the fat, mustached bartender
and a short, square-built man at
the bar. The latter swung
around at the pistol-like report
of her slap, and she saw that,
though no more than four and a
half feet tall, he was as heavily
muscled as a lion.
51
His face was clean and open,
with close-cropped blond hair
and honest blue eyes. She ran to
him.
“Help me!” she cried. “Please
help me!”
He began to back away from
her.
“I can't,” he muttered in a
deep voice. “I can't help you. I
can't do anything.”
The dark man was at her
heels. In desperation, she dodged
around the short man and took
refuge behind him. Her protector
was obviously unwilling, but
the dark man, faced with his
massiveness, took no chances.
He stopped and shouted:
“Kregg!”
The other man at the table
arose, ponderously, and lumbered
toward them. He was immense,
at least six and a half
feet tall, with a brutal, vacant
face.
Evading her attempts to stay
behind him, the squat man began
to move down the bar away
from the approaching Kregg.
The dark man moved in on
Trella again as Kregg overtook
his quarry and swung a huge
fist like a sledgehammer.
Exactly what happened, Trella
wasn't sure. She had the impression
that Kregg's fist connected
squarely with the short man's
chin
before
he dodged to one
side in a movement so fast it
was a blur. But that couldn't
have been, because the short
man wasn't moved by that blow
that would have felled a steer,
and Kregg roared in pain, grabbing
his injured fist.
“The bar!” yelled Kregg. “I
hit the damn bar!”
At this juncture, the bartender
took a hand. Leaning far
over the bar, he swung a full
bottle in a complete arc. It
smashed on Kregg's head,
splashing the floor with liquor,
and Kregg sank stunned to his
knees. The dark man, who had
grabbed Trella's arm, released
her and ran for the door.
Moving agilely around the end
of the bar, the bartender stood
over Kregg, holding the jagged-edged
bottleneck in his hand
menacingly.
“Get out!” rumbled the bartender.
“I'll have no coppers
raiding my place for the likes of
you!”
Kregg stumbled to his feet
and staggered out. Trella ran to
the unconscious Motwick's side.
“That means you, too, lady,”
said the bartender beside her.
“You and your boy friend get
out of here. You oughtn't to
have come here in the first
place.”
“May I help you, Miss?” asked
a deep, resonant voice behind
her.
She straightened from her
anxious examination of Motwick.
The squat man was standing
there, an apologetic look on
his face.
She looked contemptuously at
the massive muscles whose help
had been denied her. Her arm
ached where the dark man had
grasped it. The broad face before
52
her was not unhandsome,
and the blue eyes were disconcertingly
direct, but she despised
him for a coward.
“I'm sorry I couldn't fight
those men for you, Miss, but I
just couldn't,” he said miserably,
as though reading her thoughts.
“But no one will bother you on
the street if I'm with you.”
“A lot of protection you'd be
if they did!” she snapped. “But
I'm desperate. You can carry
him to the Stellar Hotel for me.”
The gravity of Ganymede was
hardly more than that of Earth's
moon, but the way the man
picked up the limp Motwick with
one hand and tossed him over a
shoulder was startling: as
though he lifted a feather pillow.
He followed Trella out the door
of the Golden Satellite and fell
in step beside her. Immediately
she was grateful for his presence.
The dimly lighted street
was not crowded, but she didn't
like the looks of the men she
saw.
The transparent dome of Jupiter's
View was faintly visible
in the reflected night lights of
the colonial city, but the lights
were overwhelmed by the giant,
vari-colored disc of Jupiter itself,
riding high in the sky.
“I'm Quest Mansard, Miss,”
said her companion. “I'm just in
from Jupiter.”
“I'm Trella Nuspar,” she said,
favoring him with a green-eyed
glance. “You mean Io, don't you—or
Moon Five?”
“No,” he said, grinning at
her. He had an engaging grin,
with even white teeth. “I meant
Jupiter.”
“You're lying,” she said flatly.
“No one has ever landed on
Jupiter. It would be impossible
to blast off again.”
“My parents landed on Jupiter,
and I blasted off from it,”
he said soberly. “I was born
there. Have you ever heard of
Dr. Eriklund Mansard?”
“I certainly have,” she said,
her interest taking a sudden
upward turn. “He developed the
surgiscope, didn't he? But his
ship was drawn into Jupiter and
lost.”
“It was drawn into Jupiter,
but he landed it successfully,”
said Quest. “He and my mother
lived on Jupiter until the oxygen
equipment wore out at last. I
was born and brought up there,
and I was finally able to build
a small rocket with a powerful
enough drive to clear the
planet.”
She looked at him. He was
short, half a head shorter than
she, but broad and powerful as
a man might be who had grown
up in heavy gravity. He trod the
street with a light, controlled
step, seeming to deliberately
hold himself down.
“If Dr. Mansard succeeded in
landing on Jupiter, why didn't
anyone ever hear from him
again?” she demanded.
“Because,” said Quest, “his
radio was sabotaged, just as his
ship's drive was.”
“Jupiter strength,” she murmured,
looking him over coolly.
53
“You wear Motwick on your
shoulder like a scarf. But you
couldn't bring yourself to help
a woman against two thugs.”
He flushed.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “That's
something I couldn't help.”
“Why not?”
“I don't know. It's not that
I'm afraid, but there's something
in me that makes me back
away from the prospect of fighting
anyone.”
Trella sighed. Cowardice was
a state of mind. It was peculiarly
inappropriate, but not unbelievable,
that the strongest and
most agile man on Ganymede
should be a coward. Well, she
thought with a rush of sympathy,
he couldn't help being
what he was.
They had reached the more
brightly lighted section of the
city now. Trella could get a cab
from here, but the Stellar Hotel
wasn't far. They walked on.
Trella had the desk clerk call
a cab to deliver the unconscious
Motwick to his home. She and
Quest had a late sandwich in the
coffee shop.
“I landed here only a week
ago,” he told her, his eyes frankly
admiring her honey-colored
hair and comely face. “I'm heading
for Earth on the next spaceship.”
“We'll be traveling companions,
then,” she said. “I'm going
back on that ship, too.”
For some reason she decided
against telling him that the
assignment on which she had
come to the Jupiter system was
to gather his own father's notebooks
and take them back to
Earth.
Motwick was an irresponsible
playboy whom Trella had known
briefly on Earth, and Trella was
glad to dispense with his company
for the remaining three
weeks before the spaceship
blasted off. She found herself
enjoying the steadier companionship
of Quest.
As a matter of fact, she found
herself enjoying his companionship
more than she intended to.
She found herself falling in love
with him.
Now this did not suit her at
all. Trella had always liked her
men tall and dark. She had determined
that when she married
it would be to a curly-haired six-footer.
She was not at all happy about
being so strongly attracted to a
man several inches shorter than
she. She was particularly unhappy
about feeling drawn to a
man who was a coward.
The ship that they boarded on
Moon Nine was one of the newer
ships that could attain a hundred-mile-per-second
velocity
and take a hyperbolic path to
Earth, but it would still require
fifty-four days to make the trip.
So Trella was delighted to find
that the ship was the
Cometfire
and its skipper was her old
friend, dark-eyed, curly-haired
Jakdane Gille.
“Jakdane,” she said, flirting
with him with her eyes as in
54
days gone by, “I need a chaperon
this trip, and you're ideal for
the job.”
“I never thought of myself in
quite that light, but maybe
I'm getting old,” he answered,
laughing. “What's your trouble,
Trella?”
“I'm in love with that huge
chunk of man who came aboard
with me, and I'm not sure I
ought to be,” she confessed. “I
may need protection against myself
till we get to Earth.”
“If it's to keep you out of another
fellow's clutches, I'm your
man,” agreed Jakdane heartily.
“I always had a mind to save
you for myself. I'll guarantee
you won't have a moment alone
with him the whole trip.”
“You don't have to be that
thorough about it,” she protested
hastily. “I want to get a little
enjoyment out of being in love.
But if I feel myself weakening
too much, I'll holler for help.”
The
Cometfire
swung around
great Jupiter in an opening arc
and plummeted ever more swiftly
toward the tight circles of the
inner planets. There were four
crew members and three passengers
aboard the ship's tiny personnel
sphere, and Trella was
thrown with Quest almost constantly.
She enjoyed every minute
of it.
She told him only that she
was a messenger, sent out to
Ganymede to pick up some important
papers and take them
back to Earth. She was tempted
to tell him what the papers were.
Her employer had impressed upon
her that her mission was confidential,
but surely Dom
Blessing
could not object to Dr.
Mansard's son knowing about it.
All these things had happened
before she was born, and she
did not know what Dom Blessing's
relation to Dr. Mansard
had been, but it must have been
very close. She knew that Dr.
Mansard had invented the surgiscope.
This was an instrument with
a three-dimensional screen as its
heart. The screen was a cubical
frame in which an apparently
solid image was built up of an
object under an electron microscope.
The actual cutting instrument
of the surgiscope was an ion
stream. By operating a tool in
the three-dimensional screen,
corresponding movements were
made by the ion stream on the
object under the microscope.
The
principle
was the same as
that used in operation of remote
control “hands” in atomic laboratories
to handle hot material,
and with the surgiscope very
delicate operations could be performed
at the cellular level.
Dr. Mansard and his wife had
disappeared into the turbulent
atmosphere of Jupiter just after
his invention of the surgiscope,
and it had been developed by
Dom Blessing. Its success had
built Spaceway Instruments, Incorporated,
which Blessing headed.
Through all these years since
Dr. Mansard's disappearance,
55
Blessing had been searching the
Jovian moons for a second, hidden
laboratory of Dr. Mansard.
When it was found at last, he
sent Trella, his most trusted
secretary, to Ganymede to bring
back to him the notebooks found
there.
Blessing would, of course, be
happy to learn that a son of Dr.
Mansard lived, and would see
that he received his rightful
share of the inheritance. Because
of this, Trella was tempted
to tell Quest the good news
herself; but she decided against
it. It was Blessing's privilege to
do this his own way, and he
might not appreciate her meddling.
At midtrip, Trella made a rueful
confession to Jakdane.
“It seems I was taking unnecessary
precautions when I asked
you to be a chaperon,” she said.
“I kept waiting for Quest to do
something, and when he didn't
I told him I loved him.”
“What did he say?”
“It's very peculiar,” she said
unhappily. “He said he
can't
love me. He said he wants to
love me and he feels that he
should, but there's something in
him that refuses to permit it.”
She expected Jakdane to salve
her wounded feelings with a
sympathetic pleasantry, but he
did not. Instead, he just looked
at her very thoughtfully and
said no more about the matter.
He explained his attitude
after Asrange ran amuck.
Asrange was the third passenger.
He was a lean, saturnine
individual who said little and
kept to himself as much as possible.
He was distantly polite in
his relations with both crew and
other passengers, and never
showed the slightest spark of
emotion … until the day Quest
squirted coffee on him.
It was one of those accidents
that can occur easily in space.
The passengers and the two
crewmen on that particular waking
shift (including Jakdane)
were eating lunch on the center-deck.
Quest picked up his bulb
of coffee, but inadvertently
pressed it before he got it to his
lips. The coffee squirted all over
the front of Asrange's clean
white tunic.
“I'm sorry!” exclaimed Quest
in distress.
The man's eyes went wide and
he snarled. So quickly it seemed
impossible, he had unbuckled
himself from his seat and hurled
himself backward from the table
with an incoherent cry. He
seized the first object his hand
touched—it happened to be a
heavy wooden cane leaning
against Jakdane's bunk—propelled
himself like a projectile at
Quest.
Quest rose from the table in
a sudden uncoiling of movement.
He did not unbuckle his safety
belt—he rose and it snapped like
a string.
For a moment Trella thought
he was going to meet Asrange's
assault. But he fled in a long
leap toward the companionway
leading to the astrogation deck
56
above. Landing feet-first in the
middle of the table and rebounding,
Asrange pursued with the
stick upraised.
In his haste, Quest missed the
companionway in his leap and
was cornered against one of the
bunks. Asrange descended on
him like an avenging angel and,
holding onto the bunk with one
hand, rained savage blows on his
head and shoulders with the
heavy stick.
Quest made no effort to retaliate.
He cowered under the attack,
holding his hands in front
of him as if to ward it off. In a
moment, Jakdane and the other
crewman had reached Asrange
and pulled him off.
When they had Asrange in
irons, Jakdane turned to Quest,
who was now sitting unhappily
at the table.
“Take it easy,” he advised.
“I'll wake the psychosurgeon
and have him look you over. Just
stay there.”
Quest shook his head.
“Don't bother him,” he said.
“It's nothing but a few bruises.”
“Bruises? Man, that club
could have broken your skull!
Or a couple of ribs, at the very
least.”
“I'm all right,” insisted
Quest; and when the skeptical
Jakdane insisted on examining
him carefully, he had to admit
it. There was hardly a mark on
him from the blows.
“If it didn't hurt you any
more than that, why didn't you
take that stick away from him?”
demanded Jakdane. “You could
have, easily.”
“I couldn't,” said Quest miserably,
and turned his face
away.
Later, alone with Trella on
the control deck, Jakdane gave
her some sober advice.
“If you think you're in love
with Quest, forget it,” he said.
“Why? Because he's a coward?
I know that ought to make
me despise him, but it doesn't
any more.”
“Not because he's a coward.
Because he's an android!”
“What? Jakdane, you can't be
serious!”
“I am. I say he's an android,
an artificial imitation of a man.
It all figures.
“Look, Trella, he said he was
born on Jupiter. A human could
stand the gravity of Jupiter, inside
a dome or a ship, but what
human could stand the rocket acceleration
necessary to break
free of Jupiter? Here's a man
strong enough to break a spaceship
safety belt just by getting
up out of his chair against it,
tough enough to take a beating
with a heavy stick without being
injured. How can you believe
he's really human?”
Trella remembered the thug
Kregg striking Quest in the face
and then crying that he had injured
his hand on the bar.
“But he said Dr. Mansard was
his father,” protested Trella.
“Robots and androids frequently
look on their makers as
their parents,” said Jakdane.
“Quest may not even know he's
57
artificial. Do you know how
Mansard died?”
“The oxygen equipment failed,
Quest said.”
“Yes. Do you know when?”
“No. Quest never did tell me,
that I remember.”
“He told me: a year before
Quest made his rocket flight to
Ganymede! If the oxygen equipment
failed, how do you think
Quest
lived in the poisonous atmosphere
of Jupiter, if he's human?”
Trella was silent.
“For the protection of humans,
there are two psychological
traits built into every robot
and android,” said Jakdane
gently. “The first is that they
can never, under any circumstances,
attack a human being,
even in self defense. The second
is that, while they may understand
sexual desire objectively,
they can never experience it
themselves.
“Those characteristics fit your
man Quest to a T, Trella. There
is no other explanation for him:
he must be an android.”
Trella did not want to believe
Jakdane was right, but his reasoning
was unassailable. Looking
upon Quest as an android,
many things were explained: his
great strength, his short, broad
build, his immunity to injury,
his refusal to defend himself
against a human, his inability to
return Trella's love for him.
It was not inconceivable that
she should have unknowingly
fallen in love with an android.
Humans could love androids,
with real affection, even knowing
that they were artificial.
There were instances of android
nursemaids who were virtually
members of the families owning
them.
She was glad now that she
had not told Quest of her mission
to Ganymede. He thought
he was Dr. Mansard's son, but
an android had no legal right of
inheritance from his owner. She
would leave it to Dom Blessing
to decide what to do about Quest.
Thus she did not, as she had
intended originally, speak to
Quest about seeing him again
after she had completed her assignment.
Even if Jakdane was
wrong and Quest was human—as
now seemed unlikely—Quest
had told her he could not love
her. Her best course was to try
to forget him.
Nor did Quest try to arrange
with her for a later meeting.
“It has been pleasant knowing
you, Trella,” he said when they
left the G-boat at White Sands.
A faraway look came into his
blue eyes, and he added: “I'm
sorry things couldn't have been
different, somehow.”
“Let's don't be sorry for what
we can't help,” she said gently,
taking his hand in farewell.
Trella took a fast plane from
White Sands, and twenty-four
hours later walked up the front
steps of the familiar brownstone
house on the outskirts of Washington.
Dom Blessing himself met her
at the door, a stooped, graying
58
man who peered at her over his
spectacles.
“You have the papers, eh?”
he said, spying the brief case.
“Good, good. Come in and we'll
see what we have, eh?”
She accompanied him through
the bare, windowless anteroom
which had always seemed to her
such a strange feature of this
luxurious house, and they entered
the big living room. They sat
before a fire in the old-fashioned
fireplace and Blessing opened the
brief case with trembling hands.
“There are things here,” he
said, his eyes sparkling as he
glanced through the notebooks.
“Yes, there are things here. We
shall make something of these,
Miss Trella, eh?”
“I'm glad they're something
you can use, Mr. Blessing,” she
said. “There's something else I
found on my trip, that I think
I should tell you about.”
She told him about Quest.
“He thinks he's the son of Dr.
Mansard,” she finished, “but apparently
he is, without knowing
it, an android Dr. Mansard built
on Jupiter.”
“He came back to Earth with
you, eh?” asked Blessing intently.
“Yes. I'm afraid it's your decision
whether to let him go on
living as a man or to tell him
he's an android and claim ownership
as Dr. Mansard's heir.”
Trella planned to spend a few
days resting in her employer's
spacious home, and then to take
a short vacation before resuming
her duties as his confidential
secretary. The next morning
when she came down from her
room, a change had been made.
Two armed men were with
Dom Blessing at breakfast and
accompanied him wherever he
went. She discovered that two
more men with guns were stationed
in the bare anteroom and
a guard was stationed at every
entrance to the house.
“Why all the protection?” she
asked Blessing.
“A wealthy man must be careful,”
said Blessing cheerfully.
“When we don't understand all
the implications of new circumstances,
we must be prepared for
anything, eh?”
There was only one new circumstance
Trella could think
of. Without actually intending
to, she exclaimed:
“You aren't afraid of Quest?
Why, an android can't hurt a
human!”
Blessing peered at her over his
spectacles.
“And what if he isn't an android,
eh? And if he is—what if
old Mansard didn't build in the
prohibition against harming humans
that's required by law?
What about that, eh?”
Trella was silent, shocked.
There was something here she
hadn't known about, hadn't even
suspected. For some reason, Dom
Blessing feared Dr. Eriklund
Mansard … or his heir … or
his mechanical servant.
She was sure that Blessing
was wrong, that Quest, whether
man or android, intended no
59
harm to him. Surely, Quest
would have said something of
such bitterness during their long
time together on Ganymede and
aspace, since he did not know of
Trella's connection with Blessing.
But, since this was to be
the atmosphere of Blessing's
house, she was glad that he decided
to assign her to take the
Mansard papers to the New
York laboratory.
Quest came the day before she
was scheduled to leave.
Trella was in the living room
with Blessing, discussing the instructions
she was to give to the
laboratory officials in New York.
The two bodyguards were with
them. The other guards were at
their posts.
Trella heard the doorbell ring.
The heavy oaken front door was
kept locked now, and the guards
in the anteroom examined callers
through a tiny window.
Suddenly alarm bells rang all
over the house. There was a terrific
crash outside the room as
the front door splintered. There
were shouts and the sound of a
shot.
“The steel doors!” cried Blessing,
turning white. “Let's get
out of here.”
He and his bodyguards ran
through the back of the house
out of the garage.
Blessing, ahead of the rest,
leaped into one of the cars and
started the engine.
The door from the house shattered
and Quest burst through.
The two guards turned and fired
together.
He could be hurt by bullets.
He was staggered momentarily.
Then, in a blur of motion, he
sprang forward and swept the
guards aside with one hand with
such force that they skidded
across the floor and lay in an
unconscious heap against the
rear of the garage. Trella had
opened the door of the car, but
it was wrenched from her hand
as Blessing stepped on the accelerator
and it leaped into the
driveway with spinning wheels.
Quest was after it, like a
chunky deer, running faster
than Trella had ever seen a man
run before.
Blessing slowed for the turn
at the end of the driveway and
glanced back over his shoulder.
Seeing Quest almost upon him,
he slammed down the accelerator
and twisted the wheel hard.
The car whipped into the
street, careened, and rolled over
and over, bringing up against a
tree on the other side in a twisted
tangle of wreckage.
With a horrified gasp, Trella
ran down the driveway toward
the smoking heap of metal.
Quest was already beside it,
probing it. As she reached his
side, he lifted the torn body of
Dom Blessing. Blessing was
dead.
“I'm lucky,” said Quest soberly.
“I would have murdered
him.”
“But why, Quest? I knew he
was afraid of you, but he didn't
tell me why.”
“It was conditioned into me,”
answered Quest “I didn't know
60
it until just now, when it ended,
but my father conditioned me
psychologically from my birth
to the task of hunting down
Dom Blessing and killing him. It
was an unconscious drive in me
that wouldn't release me until
the task was finished.
“You see, Blessing was my father's
assistant on Ganymede.
Right after my father completed
development of the surgiscope,
he and my mother blasted off for
Io. Blessing wanted the valuable
rights to the surgiscope, and he
sabotaged the ship's drive so it
would fall into Jupiter.
“But my father was able to
control it in the heavy atmosphere
of Jupiter, and landed it
successfully. I was born there,
and he conditioned me to come
to Earth and track down Blessing.
I know now that it was
part of the conditioning that I
was unable to fight any other
man until my task was finished:
it might have gotten me in trouble
and diverted me from that
purpose.”
More gently than Trella would
have believed possible for his
Jupiter-strong muscles, Quest
took her in his arms.
“Now I can say I love you,”
he said. “That was part of the
conditioning too: I couldn't love
any woman until my job was
done.”
Trella disengaged herself.
“I'm sorry,” she said. “Don't
you know this, too, now: that
you're not a man, but an android?”
He looked at her in astonishment,
stunned by her words.
“What in space makes you
think that?” he demanded.
“Why, Quest, it's obvious,”
she cried, tears in her eyes.
“Everything about you … your
build, suited for Jupiter's gravity …
your strength … the
fact that you were able to live
in Jupiter's atmosphere after
the oxygen equipment failed.
I know you think Dr. Mansard
was your father, but androids
often believe that.”
He grinned at her.
“I'm no android,” he said confidently.
“Do you forget my father
was inventor of the surgiscope?
He knew I'd have to grow
up on Jupiter, and he operated
on the genes before I was born.
He altered my inherited characteristics
to adapt me to the climate
of Jupiter … even to
being able to breathe a chlorine
atmosphere as well as an oxygen
atmosphere.”
Trella looked at him. He was
not badly hurt, any more than
an elephant would have been,
but his tunic was stained with
red blood where the bullets had
struck him. Normal android
blood was green.
“How can you be sure?” she
asked doubtfully.
“Androids are made,” he answered
with a laugh. “They
don't grow up. And I remember
my boyhood on Jupiter very
well.”
He took her in his arms again,
and this time she did not resist.
His lips were very human.
THE END | Trella is Dom Blessing's employer. | Trella is Dom Blessing's sister. | Trella is Dom Blessing's employee. | Trella is Dom Blessing's mistress. | 2 |
27588_QI4ZJP0M_2 | What is Dom Blessings's relationship to Dr. Mansard? | Transcriber's Note:
Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
possible; changes (corrections of spelling and punctuation) made to
the original text are marked
like this
.
The original text appears when hovering the cursor over the marked text.
This e-text was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
March 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U. S. copyright on this
publication was renewed.
50
THE
JUPITER
WEAPON
By CHARLES L. FONTENAY
He was a living weapon of
destruction—
immeasurably
powerful, utterly invulnerable.
There was only one
question: Was he human?
Trella
feared she was in
for trouble even before Motwick's
head dropped forward on
his arms in a drunken stupor.
The two evil-looking men at the
table nearby had been watching
her surreptitiously, and now
they shifted restlessly in their
chairs.
Trella had not wanted to come
to the Golden Satellite. It was a
squalid saloon in the rougher
section of Jupiter's View, the
terrestrial dome-colony on Ganymede.
Motwick,
already
drunk,
had insisted.
A woman could not possibly
make her way through these
streets alone to the better section
of town, especially one clad
in a silvery evening dress. Her
only hope was that this place
had a telephone. Perhaps she
could call one of Motwick's
friends; she had no one on Ganymede
she could call a real friend
herself.
Tentatively, she pushed her
chair back from the table and
arose. She had to brush close by
the other table to get to the bar.
As she did, the dark, slick-haired
man reached out and grabbed
her around the waist with a
steely arm.
Trella swung with her whole
body, and slapped him so hard
he nearly fell from his chair. As
she walked swiftly toward the
bar, he leaped up to follow her.
There were only two other
people in the Golden Satellite:
the fat, mustached bartender
and a short, square-built man at
the bar. The latter swung
around at the pistol-like report
of her slap, and she saw that,
though no more than four and a
half feet tall, he was as heavily
muscled as a lion.
51
His face was clean and open,
with close-cropped blond hair
and honest blue eyes. She ran to
him.
“Help me!” she cried. “Please
help me!”
He began to back away from
her.
“I can't,” he muttered in a
deep voice. “I can't help you. I
can't do anything.”
The dark man was at her
heels. In desperation, she dodged
around the short man and took
refuge behind him. Her protector
was obviously unwilling, but
the dark man, faced with his
massiveness, took no chances.
He stopped and shouted:
“Kregg!”
The other man at the table
arose, ponderously, and lumbered
toward them. He was immense,
at least six and a half
feet tall, with a brutal, vacant
face.
Evading her attempts to stay
behind him, the squat man began
to move down the bar away
from the approaching Kregg.
The dark man moved in on
Trella again as Kregg overtook
his quarry and swung a huge
fist like a sledgehammer.
Exactly what happened, Trella
wasn't sure. She had the impression
that Kregg's fist connected
squarely with the short man's
chin
before
he dodged to one
side in a movement so fast it
was a blur. But that couldn't
have been, because the short
man wasn't moved by that blow
that would have felled a steer,
and Kregg roared in pain, grabbing
his injured fist.
“The bar!” yelled Kregg. “I
hit the damn bar!”
At this juncture, the bartender
took a hand. Leaning far
over the bar, he swung a full
bottle in a complete arc. It
smashed on Kregg's head,
splashing the floor with liquor,
and Kregg sank stunned to his
knees. The dark man, who had
grabbed Trella's arm, released
her and ran for the door.
Moving agilely around the end
of the bar, the bartender stood
over Kregg, holding the jagged-edged
bottleneck in his hand
menacingly.
“Get out!” rumbled the bartender.
“I'll have no coppers
raiding my place for the likes of
you!”
Kregg stumbled to his feet
and staggered out. Trella ran to
the unconscious Motwick's side.
“That means you, too, lady,”
said the bartender beside her.
“You and your boy friend get
out of here. You oughtn't to
have come here in the first
place.”
“May I help you, Miss?” asked
a deep, resonant voice behind
her.
She straightened from her
anxious examination of Motwick.
The squat man was standing
there, an apologetic look on
his face.
She looked contemptuously at
the massive muscles whose help
had been denied her. Her arm
ached where the dark man had
grasped it. The broad face before
52
her was not unhandsome,
and the blue eyes were disconcertingly
direct, but she despised
him for a coward.
“I'm sorry I couldn't fight
those men for you, Miss, but I
just couldn't,” he said miserably,
as though reading her thoughts.
“But no one will bother you on
the street if I'm with you.”
“A lot of protection you'd be
if they did!” she snapped. “But
I'm desperate. You can carry
him to the Stellar Hotel for me.”
The gravity of Ganymede was
hardly more than that of Earth's
moon, but the way the man
picked up the limp Motwick with
one hand and tossed him over a
shoulder was startling: as
though he lifted a feather pillow.
He followed Trella out the door
of the Golden Satellite and fell
in step beside her. Immediately
she was grateful for his presence.
The dimly lighted street
was not crowded, but she didn't
like the looks of the men she
saw.
The transparent dome of Jupiter's
View was faintly visible
in the reflected night lights of
the colonial city, but the lights
were overwhelmed by the giant,
vari-colored disc of Jupiter itself,
riding high in the sky.
“I'm Quest Mansard, Miss,”
said her companion. “I'm just in
from Jupiter.”
“I'm Trella Nuspar,” she said,
favoring him with a green-eyed
glance. “You mean Io, don't you—or
Moon Five?”
“No,” he said, grinning at
her. He had an engaging grin,
with even white teeth. “I meant
Jupiter.”
“You're lying,” she said flatly.
“No one has ever landed on
Jupiter. It would be impossible
to blast off again.”
“My parents landed on Jupiter,
and I blasted off from it,”
he said soberly. “I was born
there. Have you ever heard of
Dr. Eriklund Mansard?”
“I certainly have,” she said,
her interest taking a sudden
upward turn. “He developed the
surgiscope, didn't he? But his
ship was drawn into Jupiter and
lost.”
“It was drawn into Jupiter,
but he landed it successfully,”
said Quest. “He and my mother
lived on Jupiter until the oxygen
equipment wore out at last. I
was born and brought up there,
and I was finally able to build
a small rocket with a powerful
enough drive to clear the
planet.”
She looked at him. He was
short, half a head shorter than
she, but broad and powerful as
a man might be who had grown
up in heavy gravity. He trod the
street with a light, controlled
step, seeming to deliberately
hold himself down.
“If Dr. Mansard succeeded in
landing on Jupiter, why didn't
anyone ever hear from him
again?” she demanded.
“Because,” said Quest, “his
radio was sabotaged, just as his
ship's drive was.”
“Jupiter strength,” she murmured,
looking him over coolly.
53
“You wear Motwick on your
shoulder like a scarf. But you
couldn't bring yourself to help
a woman against two thugs.”
He flushed.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “That's
something I couldn't help.”
“Why not?”
“I don't know. It's not that
I'm afraid, but there's something
in me that makes me back
away from the prospect of fighting
anyone.”
Trella sighed. Cowardice was
a state of mind. It was peculiarly
inappropriate, but not unbelievable,
that the strongest and
most agile man on Ganymede
should be a coward. Well, she
thought with a rush of sympathy,
he couldn't help being
what he was.
They had reached the more
brightly lighted section of the
city now. Trella could get a cab
from here, but the Stellar Hotel
wasn't far. They walked on.
Trella had the desk clerk call
a cab to deliver the unconscious
Motwick to his home. She and
Quest had a late sandwich in the
coffee shop.
“I landed here only a week
ago,” he told her, his eyes frankly
admiring her honey-colored
hair and comely face. “I'm heading
for Earth on the next spaceship.”
“We'll be traveling companions,
then,” she said. “I'm going
back on that ship, too.”
For some reason she decided
against telling him that the
assignment on which she had
come to the Jupiter system was
to gather his own father's notebooks
and take them back to
Earth.
Motwick was an irresponsible
playboy whom Trella had known
briefly on Earth, and Trella was
glad to dispense with his company
for the remaining three
weeks before the spaceship
blasted off. She found herself
enjoying the steadier companionship
of Quest.
As a matter of fact, she found
herself enjoying his companionship
more than she intended to.
She found herself falling in love
with him.
Now this did not suit her at
all. Trella had always liked her
men tall and dark. She had determined
that when she married
it would be to a curly-haired six-footer.
She was not at all happy about
being so strongly attracted to a
man several inches shorter than
she. She was particularly unhappy
about feeling drawn to a
man who was a coward.
The ship that they boarded on
Moon Nine was one of the newer
ships that could attain a hundred-mile-per-second
velocity
and take a hyperbolic path to
Earth, but it would still require
fifty-four days to make the trip.
So Trella was delighted to find
that the ship was the
Cometfire
and its skipper was her old
friend, dark-eyed, curly-haired
Jakdane Gille.
“Jakdane,” she said, flirting
with him with her eyes as in
54
days gone by, “I need a chaperon
this trip, and you're ideal for
the job.”
“I never thought of myself in
quite that light, but maybe
I'm getting old,” he answered,
laughing. “What's your trouble,
Trella?”
“I'm in love with that huge
chunk of man who came aboard
with me, and I'm not sure I
ought to be,” she confessed. “I
may need protection against myself
till we get to Earth.”
“If it's to keep you out of another
fellow's clutches, I'm your
man,” agreed Jakdane heartily.
“I always had a mind to save
you for myself. I'll guarantee
you won't have a moment alone
with him the whole trip.”
“You don't have to be that
thorough about it,” she protested
hastily. “I want to get a little
enjoyment out of being in love.
But if I feel myself weakening
too much, I'll holler for help.”
The
Cometfire
swung around
great Jupiter in an opening arc
and plummeted ever more swiftly
toward the tight circles of the
inner planets. There were four
crew members and three passengers
aboard the ship's tiny personnel
sphere, and Trella was
thrown with Quest almost constantly.
She enjoyed every minute
of it.
She told him only that she
was a messenger, sent out to
Ganymede to pick up some important
papers and take them
back to Earth. She was tempted
to tell him what the papers were.
Her employer had impressed upon
her that her mission was confidential,
but surely Dom
Blessing
could not object to Dr.
Mansard's son knowing about it.
All these things had happened
before she was born, and she
did not know what Dom Blessing's
relation to Dr. Mansard
had been, but it must have been
very close. She knew that Dr.
Mansard had invented the surgiscope.
This was an instrument with
a three-dimensional screen as its
heart. The screen was a cubical
frame in which an apparently
solid image was built up of an
object under an electron microscope.
The actual cutting instrument
of the surgiscope was an ion
stream. By operating a tool in
the three-dimensional screen,
corresponding movements were
made by the ion stream on the
object under the microscope.
The
principle
was the same as
that used in operation of remote
control “hands” in atomic laboratories
to handle hot material,
and with the surgiscope very
delicate operations could be performed
at the cellular level.
Dr. Mansard and his wife had
disappeared into the turbulent
atmosphere of Jupiter just after
his invention of the surgiscope,
and it had been developed by
Dom Blessing. Its success had
built Spaceway Instruments, Incorporated,
which Blessing headed.
Through all these years since
Dr. Mansard's disappearance,
55
Blessing had been searching the
Jovian moons for a second, hidden
laboratory of Dr. Mansard.
When it was found at last, he
sent Trella, his most trusted
secretary, to Ganymede to bring
back to him the notebooks found
there.
Blessing would, of course, be
happy to learn that a son of Dr.
Mansard lived, and would see
that he received his rightful
share of the inheritance. Because
of this, Trella was tempted
to tell Quest the good news
herself; but she decided against
it. It was Blessing's privilege to
do this his own way, and he
might not appreciate her meddling.
At midtrip, Trella made a rueful
confession to Jakdane.
“It seems I was taking unnecessary
precautions when I asked
you to be a chaperon,” she said.
“I kept waiting for Quest to do
something, and when he didn't
I told him I loved him.”
“What did he say?”
“It's very peculiar,” she said
unhappily. “He said he
can't
love me. He said he wants to
love me and he feels that he
should, but there's something in
him that refuses to permit it.”
She expected Jakdane to salve
her wounded feelings with a
sympathetic pleasantry, but he
did not. Instead, he just looked
at her very thoughtfully and
said no more about the matter.
He explained his attitude
after Asrange ran amuck.
Asrange was the third passenger.
He was a lean, saturnine
individual who said little and
kept to himself as much as possible.
He was distantly polite in
his relations with both crew and
other passengers, and never
showed the slightest spark of
emotion … until the day Quest
squirted coffee on him.
It was one of those accidents
that can occur easily in space.
The passengers and the two
crewmen on that particular waking
shift (including Jakdane)
were eating lunch on the center-deck.
Quest picked up his bulb
of coffee, but inadvertently
pressed it before he got it to his
lips. The coffee squirted all over
the front of Asrange's clean
white tunic.
“I'm sorry!” exclaimed Quest
in distress.
The man's eyes went wide and
he snarled. So quickly it seemed
impossible, he had unbuckled
himself from his seat and hurled
himself backward from the table
with an incoherent cry. He
seized the first object his hand
touched—it happened to be a
heavy wooden cane leaning
against Jakdane's bunk—propelled
himself like a projectile at
Quest.
Quest rose from the table in
a sudden uncoiling of movement.
He did not unbuckle his safety
belt—he rose and it snapped like
a string.
For a moment Trella thought
he was going to meet Asrange's
assault. But he fled in a long
leap toward the companionway
leading to the astrogation deck
56
above. Landing feet-first in the
middle of the table and rebounding,
Asrange pursued with the
stick upraised.
In his haste, Quest missed the
companionway in his leap and
was cornered against one of the
bunks. Asrange descended on
him like an avenging angel and,
holding onto the bunk with one
hand, rained savage blows on his
head and shoulders with the
heavy stick.
Quest made no effort to retaliate.
He cowered under the attack,
holding his hands in front
of him as if to ward it off. In a
moment, Jakdane and the other
crewman had reached Asrange
and pulled him off.
When they had Asrange in
irons, Jakdane turned to Quest,
who was now sitting unhappily
at the table.
“Take it easy,” he advised.
“I'll wake the psychosurgeon
and have him look you over. Just
stay there.”
Quest shook his head.
“Don't bother him,” he said.
“It's nothing but a few bruises.”
“Bruises? Man, that club
could have broken your skull!
Or a couple of ribs, at the very
least.”
“I'm all right,” insisted
Quest; and when the skeptical
Jakdane insisted on examining
him carefully, he had to admit
it. There was hardly a mark on
him from the blows.
“If it didn't hurt you any
more than that, why didn't you
take that stick away from him?”
demanded Jakdane. “You could
have, easily.”
“I couldn't,” said Quest miserably,
and turned his face
away.
Later, alone with Trella on
the control deck, Jakdane gave
her some sober advice.
“If you think you're in love
with Quest, forget it,” he said.
“Why? Because he's a coward?
I know that ought to make
me despise him, but it doesn't
any more.”
“Not because he's a coward.
Because he's an android!”
“What? Jakdane, you can't be
serious!”
“I am. I say he's an android,
an artificial imitation of a man.
It all figures.
“Look, Trella, he said he was
born on Jupiter. A human could
stand the gravity of Jupiter, inside
a dome or a ship, but what
human could stand the rocket acceleration
necessary to break
free of Jupiter? Here's a man
strong enough to break a spaceship
safety belt just by getting
up out of his chair against it,
tough enough to take a beating
with a heavy stick without being
injured. How can you believe
he's really human?”
Trella remembered the thug
Kregg striking Quest in the face
and then crying that he had injured
his hand on the bar.
“But he said Dr. Mansard was
his father,” protested Trella.
“Robots and androids frequently
look on their makers as
their parents,” said Jakdane.
“Quest may not even know he's
57
artificial. Do you know how
Mansard died?”
“The oxygen equipment failed,
Quest said.”
“Yes. Do you know when?”
“No. Quest never did tell me,
that I remember.”
“He told me: a year before
Quest made his rocket flight to
Ganymede! If the oxygen equipment
failed, how do you think
Quest
lived in the poisonous atmosphere
of Jupiter, if he's human?”
Trella was silent.
“For the protection of humans,
there are two psychological
traits built into every robot
and android,” said Jakdane
gently. “The first is that they
can never, under any circumstances,
attack a human being,
even in self defense. The second
is that, while they may understand
sexual desire objectively,
they can never experience it
themselves.
“Those characteristics fit your
man Quest to a T, Trella. There
is no other explanation for him:
he must be an android.”
Trella did not want to believe
Jakdane was right, but his reasoning
was unassailable. Looking
upon Quest as an android,
many things were explained: his
great strength, his short, broad
build, his immunity to injury,
his refusal to defend himself
against a human, his inability to
return Trella's love for him.
It was not inconceivable that
she should have unknowingly
fallen in love with an android.
Humans could love androids,
with real affection, even knowing
that they were artificial.
There were instances of android
nursemaids who were virtually
members of the families owning
them.
She was glad now that she
had not told Quest of her mission
to Ganymede. He thought
he was Dr. Mansard's son, but
an android had no legal right of
inheritance from his owner. She
would leave it to Dom Blessing
to decide what to do about Quest.
Thus she did not, as she had
intended originally, speak to
Quest about seeing him again
after she had completed her assignment.
Even if Jakdane was
wrong and Quest was human—as
now seemed unlikely—Quest
had told her he could not love
her. Her best course was to try
to forget him.
Nor did Quest try to arrange
with her for a later meeting.
“It has been pleasant knowing
you, Trella,” he said when they
left the G-boat at White Sands.
A faraway look came into his
blue eyes, and he added: “I'm
sorry things couldn't have been
different, somehow.”
“Let's don't be sorry for what
we can't help,” she said gently,
taking his hand in farewell.
Trella took a fast plane from
White Sands, and twenty-four
hours later walked up the front
steps of the familiar brownstone
house on the outskirts of Washington.
Dom Blessing himself met her
at the door, a stooped, graying
58
man who peered at her over his
spectacles.
“You have the papers, eh?”
he said, spying the brief case.
“Good, good. Come in and we'll
see what we have, eh?”
She accompanied him through
the bare, windowless anteroom
which had always seemed to her
such a strange feature of this
luxurious house, and they entered
the big living room. They sat
before a fire in the old-fashioned
fireplace and Blessing opened the
brief case with trembling hands.
“There are things here,” he
said, his eyes sparkling as he
glanced through the notebooks.
“Yes, there are things here. We
shall make something of these,
Miss Trella, eh?”
“I'm glad they're something
you can use, Mr. Blessing,” she
said. “There's something else I
found on my trip, that I think
I should tell you about.”
She told him about Quest.
“He thinks he's the son of Dr.
Mansard,” she finished, “but apparently
he is, without knowing
it, an android Dr. Mansard built
on Jupiter.”
“He came back to Earth with
you, eh?” asked Blessing intently.
“Yes. I'm afraid it's your decision
whether to let him go on
living as a man or to tell him
he's an android and claim ownership
as Dr. Mansard's heir.”
Trella planned to spend a few
days resting in her employer's
spacious home, and then to take
a short vacation before resuming
her duties as his confidential
secretary. The next morning
when she came down from her
room, a change had been made.
Two armed men were with
Dom Blessing at breakfast and
accompanied him wherever he
went. She discovered that two
more men with guns were stationed
in the bare anteroom and
a guard was stationed at every
entrance to the house.
“Why all the protection?” she
asked Blessing.
“A wealthy man must be careful,”
said Blessing cheerfully.
“When we don't understand all
the implications of new circumstances,
we must be prepared for
anything, eh?”
There was only one new circumstance
Trella could think
of. Without actually intending
to, she exclaimed:
“You aren't afraid of Quest?
Why, an android can't hurt a
human!”
Blessing peered at her over his
spectacles.
“And what if he isn't an android,
eh? And if he is—what if
old Mansard didn't build in the
prohibition against harming humans
that's required by law?
What about that, eh?”
Trella was silent, shocked.
There was something here she
hadn't known about, hadn't even
suspected. For some reason, Dom
Blessing feared Dr. Eriklund
Mansard … or his heir … or
his mechanical servant.
She was sure that Blessing
was wrong, that Quest, whether
man or android, intended no
59
harm to him. Surely, Quest
would have said something of
such bitterness during their long
time together on Ganymede and
aspace, since he did not know of
Trella's connection with Blessing.
But, since this was to be
the atmosphere of Blessing's
house, she was glad that he decided
to assign her to take the
Mansard papers to the New
York laboratory.
Quest came the day before she
was scheduled to leave.
Trella was in the living room
with Blessing, discussing the instructions
she was to give to the
laboratory officials in New York.
The two bodyguards were with
them. The other guards were at
their posts.
Trella heard the doorbell ring.
The heavy oaken front door was
kept locked now, and the guards
in the anteroom examined callers
through a tiny window.
Suddenly alarm bells rang all
over the house. There was a terrific
crash outside the room as
the front door splintered. There
were shouts and the sound of a
shot.
“The steel doors!” cried Blessing,
turning white. “Let's get
out of here.”
He and his bodyguards ran
through the back of the house
out of the garage.
Blessing, ahead of the rest,
leaped into one of the cars and
started the engine.
The door from the house shattered
and Quest burst through.
The two guards turned and fired
together.
He could be hurt by bullets.
He was staggered momentarily.
Then, in a blur of motion, he
sprang forward and swept the
guards aside with one hand with
such force that they skidded
across the floor and lay in an
unconscious heap against the
rear of the garage. Trella had
opened the door of the car, but
it was wrenched from her hand
as Blessing stepped on the accelerator
and it leaped into the
driveway with spinning wheels.
Quest was after it, like a
chunky deer, running faster
than Trella had ever seen a man
run before.
Blessing slowed for the turn
at the end of the driveway and
glanced back over his shoulder.
Seeing Quest almost upon him,
he slammed down the accelerator
and twisted the wheel hard.
The car whipped into the
street, careened, and rolled over
and over, bringing up against a
tree on the other side in a twisted
tangle of wreckage.
With a horrified gasp, Trella
ran down the driveway toward
the smoking heap of metal.
Quest was already beside it,
probing it. As she reached his
side, he lifted the torn body of
Dom Blessing. Blessing was
dead.
“I'm lucky,” said Quest soberly.
“I would have murdered
him.”
“But why, Quest? I knew he
was afraid of you, but he didn't
tell me why.”
“It was conditioned into me,”
answered Quest “I didn't know
60
it until just now, when it ended,
but my father conditioned me
psychologically from my birth
to the task of hunting down
Dom Blessing and killing him. It
was an unconscious drive in me
that wouldn't release me until
the task was finished.
“You see, Blessing was my father's
assistant on Ganymede.
Right after my father completed
development of the surgiscope,
he and my mother blasted off for
Io. Blessing wanted the valuable
rights to the surgiscope, and he
sabotaged the ship's drive so it
would fall into Jupiter.
“But my father was able to
control it in the heavy atmosphere
of Jupiter, and landed it
successfully. I was born there,
and he conditioned me to come
to Earth and track down Blessing.
I know now that it was
part of the conditioning that I
was unable to fight any other
man until my task was finished:
it might have gotten me in trouble
and diverted me from that
purpose.”
More gently than Trella would
have believed possible for his
Jupiter-strong muscles, Quest
took her in his arms.
“Now I can say I love you,”
he said. “That was part of the
conditioning too: I couldn't love
any woman until my job was
done.”
Trella disengaged herself.
“I'm sorry,” she said. “Don't
you know this, too, now: that
you're not a man, but an android?”
He looked at her in astonishment,
stunned by her words.
“What in space makes you
think that?” he demanded.
“Why, Quest, it's obvious,”
she cried, tears in her eyes.
“Everything about you … your
build, suited for Jupiter's gravity …
your strength … the
fact that you were able to live
in Jupiter's atmosphere after
the oxygen equipment failed.
I know you think Dr. Mansard
was your father, but androids
often believe that.”
He grinned at her.
“I'm no android,” he said confidently.
“Do you forget my father
was inventor of the surgiscope?
He knew I'd have to grow
up on Jupiter, and he operated
on the genes before I was born.
He altered my inherited characteristics
to adapt me to the climate
of Jupiter … even to
being able to breathe a chlorine
atmosphere as well as an oxygen
atmosphere.”
Trella looked at him. He was
not badly hurt, any more than
an elephant would have been,
but his tunic was stained with
red blood where the bullets had
struck him. Normal android
blood was green.
“How can you be sure?” she
asked doubtfully.
“Androids are made,” he answered
with a laugh. “They
don't grow up. And I remember
my boyhood on Jupiter very
well.”
He took her in his arms again,
and this time she did not resist.
His lips were very human.
THE END | Dom Blessing was Dr. Mansard's assistant. | Dom Blessing was Dr. Mansard's business partner. | Dom Blessing was Dr. Mansard's employer. | Dom Blessing was Dr. Mansard's best friend. | 0 |
27588_QI4ZJP0M_3 | Why doesn't Trella tell Quest about her mission? | Transcriber's Note:
Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
possible; changes (corrections of spelling and punctuation) made to
the original text are marked
like this
.
The original text appears when hovering the cursor over the marked text.
This e-text was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
March 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U. S. copyright on this
publication was renewed.
50
THE
JUPITER
WEAPON
By CHARLES L. FONTENAY
He was a living weapon of
destruction—
immeasurably
powerful, utterly invulnerable.
There was only one
question: Was he human?
Trella
feared she was in
for trouble even before Motwick's
head dropped forward on
his arms in a drunken stupor.
The two evil-looking men at the
table nearby had been watching
her surreptitiously, and now
they shifted restlessly in their
chairs.
Trella had not wanted to come
to the Golden Satellite. It was a
squalid saloon in the rougher
section of Jupiter's View, the
terrestrial dome-colony on Ganymede.
Motwick,
already
drunk,
had insisted.
A woman could not possibly
make her way through these
streets alone to the better section
of town, especially one clad
in a silvery evening dress. Her
only hope was that this place
had a telephone. Perhaps she
could call one of Motwick's
friends; she had no one on Ganymede
she could call a real friend
herself.
Tentatively, she pushed her
chair back from the table and
arose. She had to brush close by
the other table to get to the bar.
As she did, the dark, slick-haired
man reached out and grabbed
her around the waist with a
steely arm.
Trella swung with her whole
body, and slapped him so hard
he nearly fell from his chair. As
she walked swiftly toward the
bar, he leaped up to follow her.
There were only two other
people in the Golden Satellite:
the fat, mustached bartender
and a short, square-built man at
the bar. The latter swung
around at the pistol-like report
of her slap, and she saw that,
though no more than four and a
half feet tall, he was as heavily
muscled as a lion.
51
His face was clean and open,
with close-cropped blond hair
and honest blue eyes. She ran to
him.
“Help me!” she cried. “Please
help me!”
He began to back away from
her.
“I can't,” he muttered in a
deep voice. “I can't help you. I
can't do anything.”
The dark man was at her
heels. In desperation, she dodged
around the short man and took
refuge behind him. Her protector
was obviously unwilling, but
the dark man, faced with his
massiveness, took no chances.
He stopped and shouted:
“Kregg!”
The other man at the table
arose, ponderously, and lumbered
toward them. He was immense,
at least six and a half
feet tall, with a brutal, vacant
face.
Evading her attempts to stay
behind him, the squat man began
to move down the bar away
from the approaching Kregg.
The dark man moved in on
Trella again as Kregg overtook
his quarry and swung a huge
fist like a sledgehammer.
Exactly what happened, Trella
wasn't sure. She had the impression
that Kregg's fist connected
squarely with the short man's
chin
before
he dodged to one
side in a movement so fast it
was a blur. But that couldn't
have been, because the short
man wasn't moved by that blow
that would have felled a steer,
and Kregg roared in pain, grabbing
his injured fist.
“The bar!” yelled Kregg. “I
hit the damn bar!”
At this juncture, the bartender
took a hand. Leaning far
over the bar, he swung a full
bottle in a complete arc. It
smashed on Kregg's head,
splashing the floor with liquor,
and Kregg sank stunned to his
knees. The dark man, who had
grabbed Trella's arm, released
her and ran for the door.
Moving agilely around the end
of the bar, the bartender stood
over Kregg, holding the jagged-edged
bottleneck in his hand
menacingly.
“Get out!” rumbled the bartender.
“I'll have no coppers
raiding my place for the likes of
you!”
Kregg stumbled to his feet
and staggered out. Trella ran to
the unconscious Motwick's side.
“That means you, too, lady,”
said the bartender beside her.
“You and your boy friend get
out of here. You oughtn't to
have come here in the first
place.”
“May I help you, Miss?” asked
a deep, resonant voice behind
her.
She straightened from her
anxious examination of Motwick.
The squat man was standing
there, an apologetic look on
his face.
She looked contemptuously at
the massive muscles whose help
had been denied her. Her arm
ached where the dark man had
grasped it. The broad face before
52
her was not unhandsome,
and the blue eyes were disconcertingly
direct, but she despised
him for a coward.
“I'm sorry I couldn't fight
those men for you, Miss, but I
just couldn't,” he said miserably,
as though reading her thoughts.
“But no one will bother you on
the street if I'm with you.”
“A lot of protection you'd be
if they did!” she snapped. “But
I'm desperate. You can carry
him to the Stellar Hotel for me.”
The gravity of Ganymede was
hardly more than that of Earth's
moon, but the way the man
picked up the limp Motwick with
one hand and tossed him over a
shoulder was startling: as
though he lifted a feather pillow.
He followed Trella out the door
of the Golden Satellite and fell
in step beside her. Immediately
she was grateful for his presence.
The dimly lighted street
was not crowded, but she didn't
like the looks of the men she
saw.
The transparent dome of Jupiter's
View was faintly visible
in the reflected night lights of
the colonial city, but the lights
were overwhelmed by the giant,
vari-colored disc of Jupiter itself,
riding high in the sky.
“I'm Quest Mansard, Miss,”
said her companion. “I'm just in
from Jupiter.”
“I'm Trella Nuspar,” she said,
favoring him with a green-eyed
glance. “You mean Io, don't you—or
Moon Five?”
“No,” he said, grinning at
her. He had an engaging grin,
with even white teeth. “I meant
Jupiter.”
“You're lying,” she said flatly.
“No one has ever landed on
Jupiter. It would be impossible
to blast off again.”
“My parents landed on Jupiter,
and I blasted off from it,”
he said soberly. “I was born
there. Have you ever heard of
Dr. Eriklund Mansard?”
“I certainly have,” she said,
her interest taking a sudden
upward turn. “He developed the
surgiscope, didn't he? But his
ship was drawn into Jupiter and
lost.”
“It was drawn into Jupiter,
but he landed it successfully,”
said Quest. “He and my mother
lived on Jupiter until the oxygen
equipment wore out at last. I
was born and brought up there,
and I was finally able to build
a small rocket with a powerful
enough drive to clear the
planet.”
She looked at him. He was
short, half a head shorter than
she, but broad and powerful as
a man might be who had grown
up in heavy gravity. He trod the
street with a light, controlled
step, seeming to deliberately
hold himself down.
“If Dr. Mansard succeeded in
landing on Jupiter, why didn't
anyone ever hear from him
again?” she demanded.
“Because,” said Quest, “his
radio was sabotaged, just as his
ship's drive was.”
“Jupiter strength,” she murmured,
looking him over coolly.
53
“You wear Motwick on your
shoulder like a scarf. But you
couldn't bring yourself to help
a woman against two thugs.”
He flushed.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “That's
something I couldn't help.”
“Why not?”
“I don't know. It's not that
I'm afraid, but there's something
in me that makes me back
away from the prospect of fighting
anyone.”
Trella sighed. Cowardice was
a state of mind. It was peculiarly
inappropriate, but not unbelievable,
that the strongest and
most agile man on Ganymede
should be a coward. Well, she
thought with a rush of sympathy,
he couldn't help being
what he was.
They had reached the more
brightly lighted section of the
city now. Trella could get a cab
from here, but the Stellar Hotel
wasn't far. They walked on.
Trella had the desk clerk call
a cab to deliver the unconscious
Motwick to his home. She and
Quest had a late sandwich in the
coffee shop.
“I landed here only a week
ago,” he told her, his eyes frankly
admiring her honey-colored
hair and comely face. “I'm heading
for Earth on the next spaceship.”
“We'll be traveling companions,
then,” she said. “I'm going
back on that ship, too.”
For some reason she decided
against telling him that the
assignment on which she had
come to the Jupiter system was
to gather his own father's notebooks
and take them back to
Earth.
Motwick was an irresponsible
playboy whom Trella had known
briefly on Earth, and Trella was
glad to dispense with his company
for the remaining three
weeks before the spaceship
blasted off. She found herself
enjoying the steadier companionship
of Quest.
As a matter of fact, she found
herself enjoying his companionship
more than she intended to.
She found herself falling in love
with him.
Now this did not suit her at
all. Trella had always liked her
men tall and dark. She had determined
that when she married
it would be to a curly-haired six-footer.
She was not at all happy about
being so strongly attracted to a
man several inches shorter than
she. She was particularly unhappy
about feeling drawn to a
man who was a coward.
The ship that they boarded on
Moon Nine was one of the newer
ships that could attain a hundred-mile-per-second
velocity
and take a hyperbolic path to
Earth, but it would still require
fifty-four days to make the trip.
So Trella was delighted to find
that the ship was the
Cometfire
and its skipper was her old
friend, dark-eyed, curly-haired
Jakdane Gille.
“Jakdane,” she said, flirting
with him with her eyes as in
54
days gone by, “I need a chaperon
this trip, and you're ideal for
the job.”
“I never thought of myself in
quite that light, but maybe
I'm getting old,” he answered,
laughing. “What's your trouble,
Trella?”
“I'm in love with that huge
chunk of man who came aboard
with me, and I'm not sure I
ought to be,” she confessed. “I
may need protection against myself
till we get to Earth.”
“If it's to keep you out of another
fellow's clutches, I'm your
man,” agreed Jakdane heartily.
“I always had a mind to save
you for myself. I'll guarantee
you won't have a moment alone
with him the whole trip.”
“You don't have to be that
thorough about it,” she protested
hastily. “I want to get a little
enjoyment out of being in love.
But if I feel myself weakening
too much, I'll holler for help.”
The
Cometfire
swung around
great Jupiter in an opening arc
and plummeted ever more swiftly
toward the tight circles of the
inner planets. There were four
crew members and three passengers
aboard the ship's tiny personnel
sphere, and Trella was
thrown with Quest almost constantly.
She enjoyed every minute
of it.
She told him only that she
was a messenger, sent out to
Ganymede to pick up some important
papers and take them
back to Earth. She was tempted
to tell him what the papers were.
Her employer had impressed upon
her that her mission was confidential,
but surely Dom
Blessing
could not object to Dr.
Mansard's son knowing about it.
All these things had happened
before she was born, and she
did not know what Dom Blessing's
relation to Dr. Mansard
had been, but it must have been
very close. She knew that Dr.
Mansard had invented the surgiscope.
This was an instrument with
a three-dimensional screen as its
heart. The screen was a cubical
frame in which an apparently
solid image was built up of an
object under an electron microscope.
The actual cutting instrument
of the surgiscope was an ion
stream. By operating a tool in
the three-dimensional screen,
corresponding movements were
made by the ion stream on the
object under the microscope.
The
principle
was the same as
that used in operation of remote
control “hands” in atomic laboratories
to handle hot material,
and with the surgiscope very
delicate operations could be performed
at the cellular level.
Dr. Mansard and his wife had
disappeared into the turbulent
atmosphere of Jupiter just after
his invention of the surgiscope,
and it had been developed by
Dom Blessing. Its success had
built Spaceway Instruments, Incorporated,
which Blessing headed.
Through all these years since
Dr. Mansard's disappearance,
55
Blessing had been searching the
Jovian moons for a second, hidden
laboratory of Dr. Mansard.
When it was found at last, he
sent Trella, his most trusted
secretary, to Ganymede to bring
back to him the notebooks found
there.
Blessing would, of course, be
happy to learn that a son of Dr.
Mansard lived, and would see
that he received his rightful
share of the inheritance. Because
of this, Trella was tempted
to tell Quest the good news
herself; but she decided against
it. It was Blessing's privilege to
do this his own way, and he
might not appreciate her meddling.
At midtrip, Trella made a rueful
confession to Jakdane.
“It seems I was taking unnecessary
precautions when I asked
you to be a chaperon,” she said.
“I kept waiting for Quest to do
something, and when he didn't
I told him I loved him.”
“What did he say?”
“It's very peculiar,” she said
unhappily. “He said he
can't
love me. He said he wants to
love me and he feels that he
should, but there's something in
him that refuses to permit it.”
She expected Jakdane to salve
her wounded feelings with a
sympathetic pleasantry, but he
did not. Instead, he just looked
at her very thoughtfully and
said no more about the matter.
He explained his attitude
after Asrange ran amuck.
Asrange was the third passenger.
He was a lean, saturnine
individual who said little and
kept to himself as much as possible.
He was distantly polite in
his relations with both crew and
other passengers, and never
showed the slightest spark of
emotion … until the day Quest
squirted coffee on him.
It was one of those accidents
that can occur easily in space.
The passengers and the two
crewmen on that particular waking
shift (including Jakdane)
were eating lunch on the center-deck.
Quest picked up his bulb
of coffee, but inadvertently
pressed it before he got it to his
lips. The coffee squirted all over
the front of Asrange's clean
white tunic.
“I'm sorry!” exclaimed Quest
in distress.
The man's eyes went wide and
he snarled. So quickly it seemed
impossible, he had unbuckled
himself from his seat and hurled
himself backward from the table
with an incoherent cry. He
seized the first object his hand
touched—it happened to be a
heavy wooden cane leaning
against Jakdane's bunk—propelled
himself like a projectile at
Quest.
Quest rose from the table in
a sudden uncoiling of movement.
He did not unbuckle his safety
belt—he rose and it snapped like
a string.
For a moment Trella thought
he was going to meet Asrange's
assault. But he fled in a long
leap toward the companionway
leading to the astrogation deck
56
above. Landing feet-first in the
middle of the table and rebounding,
Asrange pursued with the
stick upraised.
In his haste, Quest missed the
companionway in his leap and
was cornered against one of the
bunks. Asrange descended on
him like an avenging angel and,
holding onto the bunk with one
hand, rained savage blows on his
head and shoulders with the
heavy stick.
Quest made no effort to retaliate.
He cowered under the attack,
holding his hands in front
of him as if to ward it off. In a
moment, Jakdane and the other
crewman had reached Asrange
and pulled him off.
When they had Asrange in
irons, Jakdane turned to Quest,
who was now sitting unhappily
at the table.
“Take it easy,” he advised.
“I'll wake the psychosurgeon
and have him look you over. Just
stay there.”
Quest shook his head.
“Don't bother him,” he said.
“It's nothing but a few bruises.”
“Bruises? Man, that club
could have broken your skull!
Or a couple of ribs, at the very
least.”
“I'm all right,” insisted
Quest; and when the skeptical
Jakdane insisted on examining
him carefully, he had to admit
it. There was hardly a mark on
him from the blows.
“If it didn't hurt you any
more than that, why didn't you
take that stick away from him?”
demanded Jakdane. “You could
have, easily.”
“I couldn't,” said Quest miserably,
and turned his face
away.
Later, alone with Trella on
the control deck, Jakdane gave
her some sober advice.
“If you think you're in love
with Quest, forget it,” he said.
“Why? Because he's a coward?
I know that ought to make
me despise him, but it doesn't
any more.”
“Not because he's a coward.
Because he's an android!”
“What? Jakdane, you can't be
serious!”
“I am. I say he's an android,
an artificial imitation of a man.
It all figures.
“Look, Trella, he said he was
born on Jupiter. A human could
stand the gravity of Jupiter, inside
a dome or a ship, but what
human could stand the rocket acceleration
necessary to break
free of Jupiter? Here's a man
strong enough to break a spaceship
safety belt just by getting
up out of his chair against it,
tough enough to take a beating
with a heavy stick without being
injured. How can you believe
he's really human?”
Trella remembered the thug
Kregg striking Quest in the face
and then crying that he had injured
his hand on the bar.
“But he said Dr. Mansard was
his father,” protested Trella.
“Robots and androids frequently
look on their makers as
their parents,” said Jakdane.
“Quest may not even know he's
57
artificial. Do you know how
Mansard died?”
“The oxygen equipment failed,
Quest said.”
“Yes. Do you know when?”
“No. Quest never did tell me,
that I remember.”
“He told me: a year before
Quest made his rocket flight to
Ganymede! If the oxygen equipment
failed, how do you think
Quest
lived in the poisonous atmosphere
of Jupiter, if he's human?”
Trella was silent.
“For the protection of humans,
there are two psychological
traits built into every robot
and android,” said Jakdane
gently. “The first is that they
can never, under any circumstances,
attack a human being,
even in self defense. The second
is that, while they may understand
sexual desire objectively,
they can never experience it
themselves.
“Those characteristics fit your
man Quest to a T, Trella. There
is no other explanation for him:
he must be an android.”
Trella did not want to believe
Jakdane was right, but his reasoning
was unassailable. Looking
upon Quest as an android,
many things were explained: his
great strength, his short, broad
build, his immunity to injury,
his refusal to defend himself
against a human, his inability to
return Trella's love for him.
It was not inconceivable that
she should have unknowingly
fallen in love with an android.
Humans could love androids,
with real affection, even knowing
that they were artificial.
There were instances of android
nursemaids who were virtually
members of the families owning
them.
She was glad now that she
had not told Quest of her mission
to Ganymede. He thought
he was Dr. Mansard's son, but
an android had no legal right of
inheritance from his owner. She
would leave it to Dom Blessing
to decide what to do about Quest.
Thus she did not, as she had
intended originally, speak to
Quest about seeing him again
after she had completed her assignment.
Even if Jakdane was
wrong and Quest was human—as
now seemed unlikely—Quest
had told her he could not love
her. Her best course was to try
to forget him.
Nor did Quest try to arrange
with her for a later meeting.
“It has been pleasant knowing
you, Trella,” he said when they
left the G-boat at White Sands.
A faraway look came into his
blue eyes, and he added: “I'm
sorry things couldn't have been
different, somehow.”
“Let's don't be sorry for what
we can't help,” she said gently,
taking his hand in farewell.
Trella took a fast plane from
White Sands, and twenty-four
hours later walked up the front
steps of the familiar brownstone
house on the outskirts of Washington.
Dom Blessing himself met her
at the door, a stooped, graying
58
man who peered at her over his
spectacles.
“You have the papers, eh?”
he said, spying the brief case.
“Good, good. Come in and we'll
see what we have, eh?”
She accompanied him through
the bare, windowless anteroom
which had always seemed to her
such a strange feature of this
luxurious house, and they entered
the big living room. They sat
before a fire in the old-fashioned
fireplace and Blessing opened the
brief case with trembling hands.
“There are things here,” he
said, his eyes sparkling as he
glanced through the notebooks.
“Yes, there are things here. We
shall make something of these,
Miss Trella, eh?”
“I'm glad they're something
you can use, Mr. Blessing,” she
said. “There's something else I
found on my trip, that I think
I should tell you about.”
She told him about Quest.
“He thinks he's the son of Dr.
Mansard,” she finished, “but apparently
he is, without knowing
it, an android Dr. Mansard built
on Jupiter.”
“He came back to Earth with
you, eh?” asked Blessing intently.
“Yes. I'm afraid it's your decision
whether to let him go on
living as a man or to tell him
he's an android and claim ownership
as Dr. Mansard's heir.”
Trella planned to spend a few
days resting in her employer's
spacious home, and then to take
a short vacation before resuming
her duties as his confidential
secretary. The next morning
when she came down from her
room, a change had been made.
Two armed men were with
Dom Blessing at breakfast and
accompanied him wherever he
went. She discovered that two
more men with guns were stationed
in the bare anteroom and
a guard was stationed at every
entrance to the house.
“Why all the protection?” she
asked Blessing.
“A wealthy man must be careful,”
said Blessing cheerfully.
“When we don't understand all
the implications of new circumstances,
we must be prepared for
anything, eh?”
There was only one new circumstance
Trella could think
of. Without actually intending
to, she exclaimed:
“You aren't afraid of Quest?
Why, an android can't hurt a
human!”
Blessing peered at her over his
spectacles.
“And what if he isn't an android,
eh? And if he is—what if
old Mansard didn't build in the
prohibition against harming humans
that's required by law?
What about that, eh?”
Trella was silent, shocked.
There was something here she
hadn't known about, hadn't even
suspected. For some reason, Dom
Blessing feared Dr. Eriklund
Mansard … or his heir … or
his mechanical servant.
She was sure that Blessing
was wrong, that Quest, whether
man or android, intended no
59
harm to him. Surely, Quest
would have said something of
such bitterness during their long
time together on Ganymede and
aspace, since he did not know of
Trella's connection with Blessing.
But, since this was to be
the atmosphere of Blessing's
house, she was glad that he decided
to assign her to take the
Mansard papers to the New
York laboratory.
Quest came the day before she
was scheduled to leave.
Trella was in the living room
with Blessing, discussing the instructions
she was to give to the
laboratory officials in New York.
The two bodyguards were with
them. The other guards were at
their posts.
Trella heard the doorbell ring.
The heavy oaken front door was
kept locked now, and the guards
in the anteroom examined callers
through a tiny window.
Suddenly alarm bells rang all
over the house. There was a terrific
crash outside the room as
the front door splintered. There
were shouts and the sound of a
shot.
“The steel doors!” cried Blessing,
turning white. “Let's get
out of here.”
He and his bodyguards ran
through the back of the house
out of the garage.
Blessing, ahead of the rest,
leaped into one of the cars and
started the engine.
The door from the house shattered
and Quest burst through.
The two guards turned and fired
together.
He could be hurt by bullets.
He was staggered momentarily.
Then, in a blur of motion, he
sprang forward and swept the
guards aside with one hand with
such force that they skidded
across the floor and lay in an
unconscious heap against the
rear of the garage. Trella had
opened the door of the car, but
it was wrenched from her hand
as Blessing stepped on the accelerator
and it leaped into the
driveway with spinning wheels.
Quest was after it, like a
chunky deer, running faster
than Trella had ever seen a man
run before.
Blessing slowed for the turn
at the end of the driveway and
glanced back over his shoulder.
Seeing Quest almost upon him,
he slammed down the accelerator
and twisted the wheel hard.
The car whipped into the
street, careened, and rolled over
and over, bringing up against a
tree on the other side in a twisted
tangle of wreckage.
With a horrified gasp, Trella
ran down the driveway toward
the smoking heap of metal.
Quest was already beside it,
probing it. As she reached his
side, he lifted the torn body of
Dom Blessing. Blessing was
dead.
“I'm lucky,” said Quest soberly.
“I would have murdered
him.”
“But why, Quest? I knew he
was afraid of you, but he didn't
tell me why.”
“It was conditioned into me,”
answered Quest “I didn't know
60
it until just now, when it ended,
but my father conditioned me
psychologically from my birth
to the task of hunting down
Dom Blessing and killing him. It
was an unconscious drive in me
that wouldn't release me until
the task was finished.
“You see, Blessing was my father's
assistant on Ganymede.
Right after my father completed
development of the surgiscope,
he and my mother blasted off for
Io. Blessing wanted the valuable
rights to the surgiscope, and he
sabotaged the ship's drive so it
would fall into Jupiter.
“But my father was able to
control it in the heavy atmosphere
of Jupiter, and landed it
successfully. I was born there,
and he conditioned me to come
to Earth and track down Blessing.
I know now that it was
part of the conditioning that I
was unable to fight any other
man until my task was finished:
it might have gotten me in trouble
and diverted me from that
purpose.”
More gently than Trella would
have believed possible for his
Jupiter-strong muscles, Quest
took her in his arms.
“Now I can say I love you,”
he said. “That was part of the
conditioning too: I couldn't love
any woman until my job was
done.”
Trella disengaged herself.
“I'm sorry,” she said. “Don't
you know this, too, now: that
you're not a man, but an android?”
He looked at her in astonishment,
stunned by her words.
“What in space makes you
think that?” he demanded.
“Why, Quest, it's obvious,”
she cried, tears in her eyes.
“Everything about you … your
build, suited for Jupiter's gravity …
your strength … the
fact that you were able to live
in Jupiter's atmosphere after
the oxygen equipment failed.
I know you think Dr. Mansard
was your father, but androids
often believe that.”
He grinned at her.
“I'm no android,” he said confidently.
“Do you forget my father
was inventor of the surgiscope?
He knew I'd have to grow
up on Jupiter, and he operated
on the genes before I was born.
He altered my inherited characteristics
to adapt me to the climate
of Jupiter … even to
being able to breathe a chlorine
atmosphere as well as an oxygen
atmosphere.”
Trella looked at him. He was
not badly hurt, any more than
an elephant would have been,
but his tunic was stained with
red blood where the bullets had
struck him. Normal android
blood was green.
“How can you be sure?” she
asked doubtfully.
“Androids are made,” he answered
with a laugh. “They
don't grow up. And I remember
my boyhood on Jupiter very
well.”
He took her in his arms again,
and this time she did not resist.
His lips were very human.
THE END | Trella is afraid Quest won't love her if he finds out about her mission. | Trella is worried Quest will take his father's papers and leave her. | Trella was told specifically to stay away from Quest. | Trella's employer wants the mission kept confidential. | 3 |
27588_QI4ZJP0M_4 | How does Jakdane feel about Trella? | Transcriber's Note:
Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
possible; changes (corrections of spelling and punctuation) made to
the original text are marked
like this
.
The original text appears when hovering the cursor over the marked text.
This e-text was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
March 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U. S. copyright on this
publication was renewed.
50
THE
JUPITER
WEAPON
By CHARLES L. FONTENAY
He was a living weapon of
destruction—
immeasurably
powerful, utterly invulnerable.
There was only one
question: Was he human?
Trella
feared she was in
for trouble even before Motwick's
head dropped forward on
his arms in a drunken stupor.
The two evil-looking men at the
table nearby had been watching
her surreptitiously, and now
they shifted restlessly in their
chairs.
Trella had not wanted to come
to the Golden Satellite. It was a
squalid saloon in the rougher
section of Jupiter's View, the
terrestrial dome-colony on Ganymede.
Motwick,
already
drunk,
had insisted.
A woman could not possibly
make her way through these
streets alone to the better section
of town, especially one clad
in a silvery evening dress. Her
only hope was that this place
had a telephone. Perhaps she
could call one of Motwick's
friends; she had no one on Ganymede
she could call a real friend
herself.
Tentatively, she pushed her
chair back from the table and
arose. She had to brush close by
the other table to get to the bar.
As she did, the dark, slick-haired
man reached out and grabbed
her around the waist with a
steely arm.
Trella swung with her whole
body, and slapped him so hard
he nearly fell from his chair. As
she walked swiftly toward the
bar, he leaped up to follow her.
There were only two other
people in the Golden Satellite:
the fat, mustached bartender
and a short, square-built man at
the bar. The latter swung
around at the pistol-like report
of her slap, and she saw that,
though no more than four and a
half feet tall, he was as heavily
muscled as a lion.
51
His face was clean and open,
with close-cropped blond hair
and honest blue eyes. She ran to
him.
“Help me!” she cried. “Please
help me!”
He began to back away from
her.
“I can't,” he muttered in a
deep voice. “I can't help you. I
can't do anything.”
The dark man was at her
heels. In desperation, she dodged
around the short man and took
refuge behind him. Her protector
was obviously unwilling, but
the dark man, faced with his
massiveness, took no chances.
He stopped and shouted:
“Kregg!”
The other man at the table
arose, ponderously, and lumbered
toward them. He was immense,
at least six and a half
feet tall, with a brutal, vacant
face.
Evading her attempts to stay
behind him, the squat man began
to move down the bar away
from the approaching Kregg.
The dark man moved in on
Trella again as Kregg overtook
his quarry and swung a huge
fist like a sledgehammer.
Exactly what happened, Trella
wasn't sure. She had the impression
that Kregg's fist connected
squarely with the short man's
chin
before
he dodged to one
side in a movement so fast it
was a blur. But that couldn't
have been, because the short
man wasn't moved by that blow
that would have felled a steer,
and Kregg roared in pain, grabbing
his injured fist.
“The bar!” yelled Kregg. “I
hit the damn bar!”
At this juncture, the bartender
took a hand. Leaning far
over the bar, he swung a full
bottle in a complete arc. It
smashed on Kregg's head,
splashing the floor with liquor,
and Kregg sank stunned to his
knees. The dark man, who had
grabbed Trella's arm, released
her and ran for the door.
Moving agilely around the end
of the bar, the bartender stood
over Kregg, holding the jagged-edged
bottleneck in his hand
menacingly.
“Get out!” rumbled the bartender.
“I'll have no coppers
raiding my place for the likes of
you!”
Kregg stumbled to his feet
and staggered out. Trella ran to
the unconscious Motwick's side.
“That means you, too, lady,”
said the bartender beside her.
“You and your boy friend get
out of here. You oughtn't to
have come here in the first
place.”
“May I help you, Miss?” asked
a deep, resonant voice behind
her.
She straightened from her
anxious examination of Motwick.
The squat man was standing
there, an apologetic look on
his face.
She looked contemptuously at
the massive muscles whose help
had been denied her. Her arm
ached where the dark man had
grasped it. The broad face before
52
her was not unhandsome,
and the blue eyes were disconcertingly
direct, but she despised
him for a coward.
“I'm sorry I couldn't fight
those men for you, Miss, but I
just couldn't,” he said miserably,
as though reading her thoughts.
“But no one will bother you on
the street if I'm with you.”
“A lot of protection you'd be
if they did!” she snapped. “But
I'm desperate. You can carry
him to the Stellar Hotel for me.”
The gravity of Ganymede was
hardly more than that of Earth's
moon, but the way the man
picked up the limp Motwick with
one hand and tossed him over a
shoulder was startling: as
though he lifted a feather pillow.
He followed Trella out the door
of the Golden Satellite and fell
in step beside her. Immediately
she was grateful for his presence.
The dimly lighted street
was not crowded, but she didn't
like the looks of the men she
saw.
The transparent dome of Jupiter's
View was faintly visible
in the reflected night lights of
the colonial city, but the lights
were overwhelmed by the giant,
vari-colored disc of Jupiter itself,
riding high in the sky.
“I'm Quest Mansard, Miss,”
said her companion. “I'm just in
from Jupiter.”
“I'm Trella Nuspar,” she said,
favoring him with a green-eyed
glance. “You mean Io, don't you—or
Moon Five?”
“No,” he said, grinning at
her. He had an engaging grin,
with even white teeth. “I meant
Jupiter.”
“You're lying,” she said flatly.
“No one has ever landed on
Jupiter. It would be impossible
to blast off again.”
“My parents landed on Jupiter,
and I blasted off from it,”
he said soberly. “I was born
there. Have you ever heard of
Dr. Eriklund Mansard?”
“I certainly have,” she said,
her interest taking a sudden
upward turn. “He developed the
surgiscope, didn't he? But his
ship was drawn into Jupiter and
lost.”
“It was drawn into Jupiter,
but he landed it successfully,”
said Quest. “He and my mother
lived on Jupiter until the oxygen
equipment wore out at last. I
was born and brought up there,
and I was finally able to build
a small rocket with a powerful
enough drive to clear the
planet.”
She looked at him. He was
short, half a head shorter than
she, but broad and powerful as
a man might be who had grown
up in heavy gravity. He trod the
street with a light, controlled
step, seeming to deliberately
hold himself down.
“If Dr. Mansard succeeded in
landing on Jupiter, why didn't
anyone ever hear from him
again?” she demanded.
“Because,” said Quest, “his
radio was sabotaged, just as his
ship's drive was.”
“Jupiter strength,” she murmured,
looking him over coolly.
53
“You wear Motwick on your
shoulder like a scarf. But you
couldn't bring yourself to help
a woman against two thugs.”
He flushed.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “That's
something I couldn't help.”
“Why not?”
“I don't know. It's not that
I'm afraid, but there's something
in me that makes me back
away from the prospect of fighting
anyone.”
Trella sighed. Cowardice was
a state of mind. It was peculiarly
inappropriate, but not unbelievable,
that the strongest and
most agile man on Ganymede
should be a coward. Well, she
thought with a rush of sympathy,
he couldn't help being
what he was.
They had reached the more
brightly lighted section of the
city now. Trella could get a cab
from here, but the Stellar Hotel
wasn't far. They walked on.
Trella had the desk clerk call
a cab to deliver the unconscious
Motwick to his home. She and
Quest had a late sandwich in the
coffee shop.
“I landed here only a week
ago,” he told her, his eyes frankly
admiring her honey-colored
hair and comely face. “I'm heading
for Earth on the next spaceship.”
“We'll be traveling companions,
then,” she said. “I'm going
back on that ship, too.”
For some reason she decided
against telling him that the
assignment on which she had
come to the Jupiter system was
to gather his own father's notebooks
and take them back to
Earth.
Motwick was an irresponsible
playboy whom Trella had known
briefly on Earth, and Trella was
glad to dispense with his company
for the remaining three
weeks before the spaceship
blasted off. She found herself
enjoying the steadier companionship
of Quest.
As a matter of fact, she found
herself enjoying his companionship
more than she intended to.
She found herself falling in love
with him.
Now this did not suit her at
all. Trella had always liked her
men tall and dark. She had determined
that when she married
it would be to a curly-haired six-footer.
She was not at all happy about
being so strongly attracted to a
man several inches shorter than
she. She was particularly unhappy
about feeling drawn to a
man who was a coward.
The ship that they boarded on
Moon Nine was one of the newer
ships that could attain a hundred-mile-per-second
velocity
and take a hyperbolic path to
Earth, but it would still require
fifty-four days to make the trip.
So Trella was delighted to find
that the ship was the
Cometfire
and its skipper was her old
friend, dark-eyed, curly-haired
Jakdane Gille.
“Jakdane,” she said, flirting
with him with her eyes as in
54
days gone by, “I need a chaperon
this trip, and you're ideal for
the job.”
“I never thought of myself in
quite that light, but maybe
I'm getting old,” he answered,
laughing. “What's your trouble,
Trella?”
“I'm in love with that huge
chunk of man who came aboard
with me, and I'm not sure I
ought to be,” she confessed. “I
may need protection against myself
till we get to Earth.”
“If it's to keep you out of another
fellow's clutches, I'm your
man,” agreed Jakdane heartily.
“I always had a mind to save
you for myself. I'll guarantee
you won't have a moment alone
with him the whole trip.”
“You don't have to be that
thorough about it,” she protested
hastily. “I want to get a little
enjoyment out of being in love.
But if I feel myself weakening
too much, I'll holler for help.”
The
Cometfire
swung around
great Jupiter in an opening arc
and plummeted ever more swiftly
toward the tight circles of the
inner planets. There were four
crew members and three passengers
aboard the ship's tiny personnel
sphere, and Trella was
thrown with Quest almost constantly.
She enjoyed every minute
of it.
She told him only that she
was a messenger, sent out to
Ganymede to pick up some important
papers and take them
back to Earth. She was tempted
to tell him what the papers were.
Her employer had impressed upon
her that her mission was confidential,
but surely Dom
Blessing
could not object to Dr.
Mansard's son knowing about it.
All these things had happened
before she was born, and she
did not know what Dom Blessing's
relation to Dr. Mansard
had been, but it must have been
very close. She knew that Dr.
Mansard had invented the surgiscope.
This was an instrument with
a three-dimensional screen as its
heart. The screen was a cubical
frame in which an apparently
solid image was built up of an
object under an electron microscope.
The actual cutting instrument
of the surgiscope was an ion
stream. By operating a tool in
the three-dimensional screen,
corresponding movements were
made by the ion stream on the
object under the microscope.
The
principle
was the same as
that used in operation of remote
control “hands” in atomic laboratories
to handle hot material,
and with the surgiscope very
delicate operations could be performed
at the cellular level.
Dr. Mansard and his wife had
disappeared into the turbulent
atmosphere of Jupiter just after
his invention of the surgiscope,
and it had been developed by
Dom Blessing. Its success had
built Spaceway Instruments, Incorporated,
which Blessing headed.
Through all these years since
Dr. Mansard's disappearance,
55
Blessing had been searching the
Jovian moons for a second, hidden
laboratory of Dr. Mansard.
When it was found at last, he
sent Trella, his most trusted
secretary, to Ganymede to bring
back to him the notebooks found
there.
Blessing would, of course, be
happy to learn that a son of Dr.
Mansard lived, and would see
that he received his rightful
share of the inheritance. Because
of this, Trella was tempted
to tell Quest the good news
herself; but she decided against
it. It was Blessing's privilege to
do this his own way, and he
might not appreciate her meddling.
At midtrip, Trella made a rueful
confession to Jakdane.
“It seems I was taking unnecessary
precautions when I asked
you to be a chaperon,” she said.
“I kept waiting for Quest to do
something, and when he didn't
I told him I loved him.”
“What did he say?”
“It's very peculiar,” she said
unhappily. “He said he
can't
love me. He said he wants to
love me and he feels that he
should, but there's something in
him that refuses to permit it.”
She expected Jakdane to salve
her wounded feelings with a
sympathetic pleasantry, but he
did not. Instead, he just looked
at her very thoughtfully and
said no more about the matter.
He explained his attitude
after Asrange ran amuck.
Asrange was the third passenger.
He was a lean, saturnine
individual who said little and
kept to himself as much as possible.
He was distantly polite in
his relations with both crew and
other passengers, and never
showed the slightest spark of
emotion … until the day Quest
squirted coffee on him.
It was one of those accidents
that can occur easily in space.
The passengers and the two
crewmen on that particular waking
shift (including Jakdane)
were eating lunch on the center-deck.
Quest picked up his bulb
of coffee, but inadvertently
pressed it before he got it to his
lips. The coffee squirted all over
the front of Asrange's clean
white tunic.
“I'm sorry!” exclaimed Quest
in distress.
The man's eyes went wide and
he snarled. So quickly it seemed
impossible, he had unbuckled
himself from his seat and hurled
himself backward from the table
with an incoherent cry. He
seized the first object his hand
touched—it happened to be a
heavy wooden cane leaning
against Jakdane's bunk—propelled
himself like a projectile at
Quest.
Quest rose from the table in
a sudden uncoiling of movement.
He did not unbuckle his safety
belt—he rose and it snapped like
a string.
For a moment Trella thought
he was going to meet Asrange's
assault. But he fled in a long
leap toward the companionway
leading to the astrogation deck
56
above. Landing feet-first in the
middle of the table and rebounding,
Asrange pursued with the
stick upraised.
In his haste, Quest missed the
companionway in his leap and
was cornered against one of the
bunks. Asrange descended on
him like an avenging angel and,
holding onto the bunk with one
hand, rained savage blows on his
head and shoulders with the
heavy stick.
Quest made no effort to retaliate.
He cowered under the attack,
holding his hands in front
of him as if to ward it off. In a
moment, Jakdane and the other
crewman had reached Asrange
and pulled him off.
When they had Asrange in
irons, Jakdane turned to Quest,
who was now sitting unhappily
at the table.
“Take it easy,” he advised.
“I'll wake the psychosurgeon
and have him look you over. Just
stay there.”
Quest shook his head.
“Don't bother him,” he said.
“It's nothing but a few bruises.”
“Bruises? Man, that club
could have broken your skull!
Or a couple of ribs, at the very
least.”
“I'm all right,” insisted
Quest; and when the skeptical
Jakdane insisted on examining
him carefully, he had to admit
it. There was hardly a mark on
him from the blows.
“If it didn't hurt you any
more than that, why didn't you
take that stick away from him?”
demanded Jakdane. “You could
have, easily.”
“I couldn't,” said Quest miserably,
and turned his face
away.
Later, alone with Trella on
the control deck, Jakdane gave
her some sober advice.
“If you think you're in love
with Quest, forget it,” he said.
“Why? Because he's a coward?
I know that ought to make
me despise him, but it doesn't
any more.”
“Not because he's a coward.
Because he's an android!”
“What? Jakdane, you can't be
serious!”
“I am. I say he's an android,
an artificial imitation of a man.
It all figures.
“Look, Trella, he said he was
born on Jupiter. A human could
stand the gravity of Jupiter, inside
a dome or a ship, but what
human could stand the rocket acceleration
necessary to break
free of Jupiter? Here's a man
strong enough to break a spaceship
safety belt just by getting
up out of his chair against it,
tough enough to take a beating
with a heavy stick without being
injured. How can you believe
he's really human?”
Trella remembered the thug
Kregg striking Quest in the face
and then crying that he had injured
his hand on the bar.
“But he said Dr. Mansard was
his father,” protested Trella.
“Robots and androids frequently
look on their makers as
their parents,” said Jakdane.
“Quest may not even know he's
57
artificial. Do you know how
Mansard died?”
“The oxygen equipment failed,
Quest said.”
“Yes. Do you know when?”
“No. Quest never did tell me,
that I remember.”
“He told me: a year before
Quest made his rocket flight to
Ganymede! If the oxygen equipment
failed, how do you think
Quest
lived in the poisonous atmosphere
of Jupiter, if he's human?”
Trella was silent.
“For the protection of humans,
there are two psychological
traits built into every robot
and android,” said Jakdane
gently. “The first is that they
can never, under any circumstances,
attack a human being,
even in self defense. The second
is that, while they may understand
sexual desire objectively,
they can never experience it
themselves.
“Those characteristics fit your
man Quest to a T, Trella. There
is no other explanation for him:
he must be an android.”
Trella did not want to believe
Jakdane was right, but his reasoning
was unassailable. Looking
upon Quest as an android,
many things were explained: his
great strength, his short, broad
build, his immunity to injury,
his refusal to defend himself
against a human, his inability to
return Trella's love for him.
It was not inconceivable that
she should have unknowingly
fallen in love with an android.
Humans could love androids,
with real affection, even knowing
that they were artificial.
There were instances of android
nursemaids who were virtually
members of the families owning
them.
She was glad now that she
had not told Quest of her mission
to Ganymede. He thought
he was Dr. Mansard's son, but
an android had no legal right of
inheritance from his owner. She
would leave it to Dom Blessing
to decide what to do about Quest.
Thus she did not, as she had
intended originally, speak to
Quest about seeing him again
after she had completed her assignment.
Even if Jakdane was
wrong and Quest was human—as
now seemed unlikely—Quest
had told her he could not love
her. Her best course was to try
to forget him.
Nor did Quest try to arrange
with her for a later meeting.
“It has been pleasant knowing
you, Trella,” he said when they
left the G-boat at White Sands.
A faraway look came into his
blue eyes, and he added: “I'm
sorry things couldn't have been
different, somehow.”
“Let's don't be sorry for what
we can't help,” she said gently,
taking his hand in farewell.
Trella took a fast plane from
White Sands, and twenty-four
hours later walked up the front
steps of the familiar brownstone
house on the outskirts of Washington.
Dom Blessing himself met her
at the door, a stooped, graying
58
man who peered at her over his
spectacles.
“You have the papers, eh?”
he said, spying the brief case.
“Good, good. Come in and we'll
see what we have, eh?”
She accompanied him through
the bare, windowless anteroom
which had always seemed to her
such a strange feature of this
luxurious house, and they entered
the big living room. They sat
before a fire in the old-fashioned
fireplace and Blessing opened the
brief case with trembling hands.
“There are things here,” he
said, his eyes sparkling as he
glanced through the notebooks.
“Yes, there are things here. We
shall make something of these,
Miss Trella, eh?”
“I'm glad they're something
you can use, Mr. Blessing,” she
said. “There's something else I
found on my trip, that I think
I should tell you about.”
She told him about Quest.
“He thinks he's the son of Dr.
Mansard,” she finished, “but apparently
he is, without knowing
it, an android Dr. Mansard built
on Jupiter.”
“He came back to Earth with
you, eh?” asked Blessing intently.
“Yes. I'm afraid it's your decision
whether to let him go on
living as a man or to tell him
he's an android and claim ownership
as Dr. Mansard's heir.”
Trella planned to spend a few
days resting in her employer's
spacious home, and then to take
a short vacation before resuming
her duties as his confidential
secretary. The next morning
when she came down from her
room, a change had been made.
Two armed men were with
Dom Blessing at breakfast and
accompanied him wherever he
went. She discovered that two
more men with guns were stationed
in the bare anteroom and
a guard was stationed at every
entrance to the house.
“Why all the protection?” she
asked Blessing.
“A wealthy man must be careful,”
said Blessing cheerfully.
“When we don't understand all
the implications of new circumstances,
we must be prepared for
anything, eh?”
There was only one new circumstance
Trella could think
of. Without actually intending
to, she exclaimed:
“You aren't afraid of Quest?
Why, an android can't hurt a
human!”
Blessing peered at her over his
spectacles.
“And what if he isn't an android,
eh? And if he is—what if
old Mansard didn't build in the
prohibition against harming humans
that's required by law?
What about that, eh?”
Trella was silent, shocked.
There was something here she
hadn't known about, hadn't even
suspected. For some reason, Dom
Blessing feared Dr. Eriklund
Mansard … or his heir … or
his mechanical servant.
She was sure that Blessing
was wrong, that Quest, whether
man or android, intended no
59
harm to him. Surely, Quest
would have said something of
such bitterness during their long
time together on Ganymede and
aspace, since he did not know of
Trella's connection with Blessing.
But, since this was to be
the atmosphere of Blessing's
house, she was glad that he decided
to assign her to take the
Mansard papers to the New
York laboratory.
Quest came the day before she
was scheduled to leave.
Trella was in the living room
with Blessing, discussing the instructions
she was to give to the
laboratory officials in New York.
The two bodyguards were with
them. The other guards were at
their posts.
Trella heard the doorbell ring.
The heavy oaken front door was
kept locked now, and the guards
in the anteroom examined callers
through a tiny window.
Suddenly alarm bells rang all
over the house. There was a terrific
crash outside the room as
the front door splintered. There
were shouts and the sound of a
shot.
“The steel doors!” cried Blessing,
turning white. “Let's get
out of here.”
He and his bodyguards ran
through the back of the house
out of the garage.
Blessing, ahead of the rest,
leaped into one of the cars and
started the engine.
The door from the house shattered
and Quest burst through.
The two guards turned and fired
together.
He could be hurt by bullets.
He was staggered momentarily.
Then, in a blur of motion, he
sprang forward and swept the
guards aside with one hand with
such force that they skidded
across the floor and lay in an
unconscious heap against the
rear of the garage. Trella had
opened the door of the car, but
it was wrenched from her hand
as Blessing stepped on the accelerator
and it leaped into the
driveway with spinning wheels.
Quest was after it, like a
chunky deer, running faster
than Trella had ever seen a man
run before.
Blessing slowed for the turn
at the end of the driveway and
glanced back over his shoulder.
Seeing Quest almost upon him,
he slammed down the accelerator
and twisted the wheel hard.
The car whipped into the
street, careened, and rolled over
and over, bringing up against a
tree on the other side in a twisted
tangle of wreckage.
With a horrified gasp, Trella
ran down the driveway toward
the smoking heap of metal.
Quest was already beside it,
probing it. As she reached his
side, he lifted the torn body of
Dom Blessing. Blessing was
dead.
“I'm lucky,” said Quest soberly.
“I would have murdered
him.”
“But why, Quest? I knew he
was afraid of you, but he didn't
tell me why.”
“It was conditioned into me,”
answered Quest “I didn't know
60
it until just now, when it ended,
but my father conditioned me
psychologically from my birth
to the task of hunting down
Dom Blessing and killing him. It
was an unconscious drive in me
that wouldn't release me until
the task was finished.
“You see, Blessing was my father's
assistant on Ganymede.
Right after my father completed
development of the surgiscope,
he and my mother blasted off for
Io. Blessing wanted the valuable
rights to the surgiscope, and he
sabotaged the ship's drive so it
would fall into Jupiter.
“But my father was able to
control it in the heavy atmosphere
of Jupiter, and landed it
successfully. I was born there,
and he conditioned me to come
to Earth and track down Blessing.
I know now that it was
part of the conditioning that I
was unable to fight any other
man until my task was finished:
it might have gotten me in trouble
and diverted me from that
purpose.”
More gently than Trella would
have believed possible for his
Jupiter-strong muscles, Quest
took her in his arms.
“Now I can say I love you,”
he said. “That was part of the
conditioning too: I couldn't love
any woman until my job was
done.”
Trella disengaged herself.
“I'm sorry,” she said. “Don't
you know this, too, now: that
you're not a man, but an android?”
He looked at her in astonishment,
stunned by her words.
“What in space makes you
think that?” he demanded.
“Why, Quest, it's obvious,”
she cried, tears in her eyes.
“Everything about you … your
build, suited for Jupiter's gravity …
your strength … the
fact that you were able to live
in Jupiter's atmosphere after
the oxygen equipment failed.
I know you think Dr. Mansard
was your father, but androids
often believe that.”
He grinned at her.
“I'm no android,” he said confidently.
“Do you forget my father
was inventor of the surgiscope?
He knew I'd have to grow
up on Jupiter, and he operated
on the genes before I was born.
He altered my inherited characteristics
to adapt me to the climate
of Jupiter … even to
being able to breathe a chlorine
atmosphere as well as an oxygen
atmosphere.”
Trella looked at him. He was
not badly hurt, any more than
an elephant would have been,
but his tunic was stained with
red blood where the bullets had
struck him. Normal android
blood was green.
“How can you be sure?” she
asked doubtfully.
“Androids are made,” he answered
with a laugh. “They
don't grow up. And I remember
my boyhood on Jupiter very
well.”
He took her in his arms again,
and this time she did not resist.
His lips were very human.
THE END | Jakdane thinks of Trella as a little sister. | Jakdane has always had a crush on Trella, but they are just friends. | Jakdane is obsessed with Trella. That is why he's on the same ship to Earth. | Jakdane thinks Trella might be stalking him. She is on the same ship to Earth. | 1 |
27588_QI4ZJP0M_5 | Why couldn't Dr. Mansard and his wife leave Jupiter? | Transcriber's Note:
Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
possible; changes (corrections of spelling and punctuation) made to
the original text are marked
like this
.
The original text appears when hovering the cursor over the marked text.
This e-text was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
March 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U. S. copyright on this
publication was renewed.
50
THE
JUPITER
WEAPON
By CHARLES L. FONTENAY
He was a living weapon of
destruction—
immeasurably
powerful, utterly invulnerable.
There was only one
question: Was he human?
Trella
feared she was in
for trouble even before Motwick's
head dropped forward on
his arms in a drunken stupor.
The two evil-looking men at the
table nearby had been watching
her surreptitiously, and now
they shifted restlessly in their
chairs.
Trella had not wanted to come
to the Golden Satellite. It was a
squalid saloon in the rougher
section of Jupiter's View, the
terrestrial dome-colony on Ganymede.
Motwick,
already
drunk,
had insisted.
A woman could not possibly
make her way through these
streets alone to the better section
of town, especially one clad
in a silvery evening dress. Her
only hope was that this place
had a telephone. Perhaps she
could call one of Motwick's
friends; she had no one on Ganymede
she could call a real friend
herself.
Tentatively, she pushed her
chair back from the table and
arose. She had to brush close by
the other table to get to the bar.
As she did, the dark, slick-haired
man reached out and grabbed
her around the waist with a
steely arm.
Trella swung with her whole
body, and slapped him so hard
he nearly fell from his chair. As
she walked swiftly toward the
bar, he leaped up to follow her.
There were only two other
people in the Golden Satellite:
the fat, mustached bartender
and a short, square-built man at
the bar. The latter swung
around at the pistol-like report
of her slap, and she saw that,
though no more than four and a
half feet tall, he was as heavily
muscled as a lion.
51
His face was clean and open,
with close-cropped blond hair
and honest blue eyes. She ran to
him.
“Help me!” she cried. “Please
help me!”
He began to back away from
her.
“I can't,” he muttered in a
deep voice. “I can't help you. I
can't do anything.”
The dark man was at her
heels. In desperation, she dodged
around the short man and took
refuge behind him. Her protector
was obviously unwilling, but
the dark man, faced with his
massiveness, took no chances.
He stopped and shouted:
“Kregg!”
The other man at the table
arose, ponderously, and lumbered
toward them. He was immense,
at least six and a half
feet tall, with a brutal, vacant
face.
Evading her attempts to stay
behind him, the squat man began
to move down the bar away
from the approaching Kregg.
The dark man moved in on
Trella again as Kregg overtook
his quarry and swung a huge
fist like a sledgehammer.
Exactly what happened, Trella
wasn't sure. She had the impression
that Kregg's fist connected
squarely with the short man's
chin
before
he dodged to one
side in a movement so fast it
was a blur. But that couldn't
have been, because the short
man wasn't moved by that blow
that would have felled a steer,
and Kregg roared in pain, grabbing
his injured fist.
“The bar!” yelled Kregg. “I
hit the damn bar!”
At this juncture, the bartender
took a hand. Leaning far
over the bar, he swung a full
bottle in a complete arc. It
smashed on Kregg's head,
splashing the floor with liquor,
and Kregg sank stunned to his
knees. The dark man, who had
grabbed Trella's arm, released
her and ran for the door.
Moving agilely around the end
of the bar, the bartender stood
over Kregg, holding the jagged-edged
bottleneck in his hand
menacingly.
“Get out!” rumbled the bartender.
“I'll have no coppers
raiding my place for the likes of
you!”
Kregg stumbled to his feet
and staggered out. Trella ran to
the unconscious Motwick's side.
“That means you, too, lady,”
said the bartender beside her.
“You and your boy friend get
out of here. You oughtn't to
have come here in the first
place.”
“May I help you, Miss?” asked
a deep, resonant voice behind
her.
She straightened from her
anxious examination of Motwick.
The squat man was standing
there, an apologetic look on
his face.
She looked contemptuously at
the massive muscles whose help
had been denied her. Her arm
ached where the dark man had
grasped it. The broad face before
52
her was not unhandsome,
and the blue eyes were disconcertingly
direct, but she despised
him for a coward.
“I'm sorry I couldn't fight
those men for you, Miss, but I
just couldn't,” he said miserably,
as though reading her thoughts.
“But no one will bother you on
the street if I'm with you.”
“A lot of protection you'd be
if they did!” she snapped. “But
I'm desperate. You can carry
him to the Stellar Hotel for me.”
The gravity of Ganymede was
hardly more than that of Earth's
moon, but the way the man
picked up the limp Motwick with
one hand and tossed him over a
shoulder was startling: as
though he lifted a feather pillow.
He followed Trella out the door
of the Golden Satellite and fell
in step beside her. Immediately
she was grateful for his presence.
The dimly lighted street
was not crowded, but she didn't
like the looks of the men she
saw.
The transparent dome of Jupiter's
View was faintly visible
in the reflected night lights of
the colonial city, but the lights
were overwhelmed by the giant,
vari-colored disc of Jupiter itself,
riding high in the sky.
“I'm Quest Mansard, Miss,”
said her companion. “I'm just in
from Jupiter.”
“I'm Trella Nuspar,” she said,
favoring him with a green-eyed
glance. “You mean Io, don't you—or
Moon Five?”
“No,” he said, grinning at
her. He had an engaging grin,
with even white teeth. “I meant
Jupiter.”
“You're lying,” she said flatly.
“No one has ever landed on
Jupiter. It would be impossible
to blast off again.”
“My parents landed on Jupiter,
and I blasted off from it,”
he said soberly. “I was born
there. Have you ever heard of
Dr. Eriklund Mansard?”
“I certainly have,” she said,
her interest taking a sudden
upward turn. “He developed the
surgiscope, didn't he? But his
ship was drawn into Jupiter and
lost.”
“It was drawn into Jupiter,
but he landed it successfully,”
said Quest. “He and my mother
lived on Jupiter until the oxygen
equipment wore out at last. I
was born and brought up there,
and I was finally able to build
a small rocket with a powerful
enough drive to clear the
planet.”
She looked at him. He was
short, half a head shorter than
she, but broad and powerful as
a man might be who had grown
up in heavy gravity. He trod the
street with a light, controlled
step, seeming to deliberately
hold himself down.
“If Dr. Mansard succeeded in
landing on Jupiter, why didn't
anyone ever hear from him
again?” she demanded.
“Because,” said Quest, “his
radio was sabotaged, just as his
ship's drive was.”
“Jupiter strength,” she murmured,
looking him over coolly.
53
“You wear Motwick on your
shoulder like a scarf. But you
couldn't bring yourself to help
a woman against two thugs.”
He flushed.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “That's
something I couldn't help.”
“Why not?”
“I don't know. It's not that
I'm afraid, but there's something
in me that makes me back
away from the prospect of fighting
anyone.”
Trella sighed. Cowardice was
a state of mind. It was peculiarly
inappropriate, but not unbelievable,
that the strongest and
most agile man on Ganymede
should be a coward. Well, she
thought with a rush of sympathy,
he couldn't help being
what he was.
They had reached the more
brightly lighted section of the
city now. Trella could get a cab
from here, but the Stellar Hotel
wasn't far. They walked on.
Trella had the desk clerk call
a cab to deliver the unconscious
Motwick to his home. She and
Quest had a late sandwich in the
coffee shop.
“I landed here only a week
ago,” he told her, his eyes frankly
admiring her honey-colored
hair and comely face. “I'm heading
for Earth on the next spaceship.”
“We'll be traveling companions,
then,” she said. “I'm going
back on that ship, too.”
For some reason she decided
against telling him that the
assignment on which she had
come to the Jupiter system was
to gather his own father's notebooks
and take them back to
Earth.
Motwick was an irresponsible
playboy whom Trella had known
briefly on Earth, and Trella was
glad to dispense with his company
for the remaining three
weeks before the spaceship
blasted off. She found herself
enjoying the steadier companionship
of Quest.
As a matter of fact, she found
herself enjoying his companionship
more than she intended to.
She found herself falling in love
with him.
Now this did not suit her at
all. Trella had always liked her
men tall and dark. She had determined
that when she married
it would be to a curly-haired six-footer.
She was not at all happy about
being so strongly attracted to a
man several inches shorter than
she. She was particularly unhappy
about feeling drawn to a
man who was a coward.
The ship that they boarded on
Moon Nine was one of the newer
ships that could attain a hundred-mile-per-second
velocity
and take a hyperbolic path to
Earth, but it would still require
fifty-four days to make the trip.
So Trella was delighted to find
that the ship was the
Cometfire
and its skipper was her old
friend, dark-eyed, curly-haired
Jakdane Gille.
“Jakdane,” she said, flirting
with him with her eyes as in
54
days gone by, “I need a chaperon
this trip, and you're ideal for
the job.”
“I never thought of myself in
quite that light, but maybe
I'm getting old,” he answered,
laughing. “What's your trouble,
Trella?”
“I'm in love with that huge
chunk of man who came aboard
with me, and I'm not sure I
ought to be,” she confessed. “I
may need protection against myself
till we get to Earth.”
“If it's to keep you out of another
fellow's clutches, I'm your
man,” agreed Jakdane heartily.
“I always had a mind to save
you for myself. I'll guarantee
you won't have a moment alone
with him the whole trip.”
“You don't have to be that
thorough about it,” she protested
hastily. “I want to get a little
enjoyment out of being in love.
But if I feel myself weakening
too much, I'll holler for help.”
The
Cometfire
swung around
great Jupiter in an opening arc
and plummeted ever more swiftly
toward the tight circles of the
inner planets. There were four
crew members and three passengers
aboard the ship's tiny personnel
sphere, and Trella was
thrown with Quest almost constantly.
She enjoyed every minute
of it.
She told him only that she
was a messenger, sent out to
Ganymede to pick up some important
papers and take them
back to Earth. She was tempted
to tell him what the papers were.
Her employer had impressed upon
her that her mission was confidential,
but surely Dom
Blessing
could not object to Dr.
Mansard's son knowing about it.
All these things had happened
before she was born, and she
did not know what Dom Blessing's
relation to Dr. Mansard
had been, but it must have been
very close. She knew that Dr.
Mansard had invented the surgiscope.
This was an instrument with
a three-dimensional screen as its
heart. The screen was a cubical
frame in which an apparently
solid image was built up of an
object under an electron microscope.
The actual cutting instrument
of the surgiscope was an ion
stream. By operating a tool in
the three-dimensional screen,
corresponding movements were
made by the ion stream on the
object under the microscope.
The
principle
was the same as
that used in operation of remote
control “hands” in atomic laboratories
to handle hot material,
and with the surgiscope very
delicate operations could be performed
at the cellular level.
Dr. Mansard and his wife had
disappeared into the turbulent
atmosphere of Jupiter just after
his invention of the surgiscope,
and it had been developed by
Dom Blessing. Its success had
built Spaceway Instruments, Incorporated,
which Blessing headed.
Through all these years since
Dr. Mansard's disappearance,
55
Blessing had been searching the
Jovian moons for a second, hidden
laboratory of Dr. Mansard.
When it was found at last, he
sent Trella, his most trusted
secretary, to Ganymede to bring
back to him the notebooks found
there.
Blessing would, of course, be
happy to learn that a son of Dr.
Mansard lived, and would see
that he received his rightful
share of the inheritance. Because
of this, Trella was tempted
to tell Quest the good news
herself; but she decided against
it. It was Blessing's privilege to
do this his own way, and he
might not appreciate her meddling.
At midtrip, Trella made a rueful
confession to Jakdane.
“It seems I was taking unnecessary
precautions when I asked
you to be a chaperon,” she said.
“I kept waiting for Quest to do
something, and when he didn't
I told him I loved him.”
“What did he say?”
“It's very peculiar,” she said
unhappily. “He said he
can't
love me. He said he wants to
love me and he feels that he
should, but there's something in
him that refuses to permit it.”
She expected Jakdane to salve
her wounded feelings with a
sympathetic pleasantry, but he
did not. Instead, he just looked
at her very thoughtfully and
said no more about the matter.
He explained his attitude
after Asrange ran amuck.
Asrange was the third passenger.
He was a lean, saturnine
individual who said little and
kept to himself as much as possible.
He was distantly polite in
his relations with both crew and
other passengers, and never
showed the slightest spark of
emotion … until the day Quest
squirted coffee on him.
It was one of those accidents
that can occur easily in space.
The passengers and the two
crewmen on that particular waking
shift (including Jakdane)
were eating lunch on the center-deck.
Quest picked up his bulb
of coffee, but inadvertently
pressed it before he got it to his
lips. The coffee squirted all over
the front of Asrange's clean
white tunic.
“I'm sorry!” exclaimed Quest
in distress.
The man's eyes went wide and
he snarled. So quickly it seemed
impossible, he had unbuckled
himself from his seat and hurled
himself backward from the table
with an incoherent cry. He
seized the first object his hand
touched—it happened to be a
heavy wooden cane leaning
against Jakdane's bunk—propelled
himself like a projectile at
Quest.
Quest rose from the table in
a sudden uncoiling of movement.
He did not unbuckle his safety
belt—he rose and it snapped like
a string.
For a moment Trella thought
he was going to meet Asrange's
assault. But he fled in a long
leap toward the companionway
leading to the astrogation deck
56
above. Landing feet-first in the
middle of the table and rebounding,
Asrange pursued with the
stick upraised.
In his haste, Quest missed the
companionway in his leap and
was cornered against one of the
bunks. Asrange descended on
him like an avenging angel and,
holding onto the bunk with one
hand, rained savage blows on his
head and shoulders with the
heavy stick.
Quest made no effort to retaliate.
He cowered under the attack,
holding his hands in front
of him as if to ward it off. In a
moment, Jakdane and the other
crewman had reached Asrange
and pulled him off.
When they had Asrange in
irons, Jakdane turned to Quest,
who was now sitting unhappily
at the table.
“Take it easy,” he advised.
“I'll wake the psychosurgeon
and have him look you over. Just
stay there.”
Quest shook his head.
“Don't bother him,” he said.
“It's nothing but a few bruises.”
“Bruises? Man, that club
could have broken your skull!
Or a couple of ribs, at the very
least.”
“I'm all right,” insisted
Quest; and when the skeptical
Jakdane insisted on examining
him carefully, he had to admit
it. There was hardly a mark on
him from the blows.
“If it didn't hurt you any
more than that, why didn't you
take that stick away from him?”
demanded Jakdane. “You could
have, easily.”
“I couldn't,” said Quest miserably,
and turned his face
away.
Later, alone with Trella on
the control deck, Jakdane gave
her some sober advice.
“If you think you're in love
with Quest, forget it,” he said.
“Why? Because he's a coward?
I know that ought to make
me despise him, but it doesn't
any more.”
“Not because he's a coward.
Because he's an android!”
“What? Jakdane, you can't be
serious!”
“I am. I say he's an android,
an artificial imitation of a man.
It all figures.
“Look, Trella, he said he was
born on Jupiter. A human could
stand the gravity of Jupiter, inside
a dome or a ship, but what
human could stand the rocket acceleration
necessary to break
free of Jupiter? Here's a man
strong enough to break a spaceship
safety belt just by getting
up out of his chair against it,
tough enough to take a beating
with a heavy stick without being
injured. How can you believe
he's really human?”
Trella remembered the thug
Kregg striking Quest in the face
and then crying that he had injured
his hand on the bar.
“But he said Dr. Mansard was
his father,” protested Trella.
“Robots and androids frequently
look on their makers as
their parents,” said Jakdane.
“Quest may not even know he's
57
artificial. Do you know how
Mansard died?”
“The oxygen equipment failed,
Quest said.”
“Yes. Do you know when?”
“No. Quest never did tell me,
that I remember.”
“He told me: a year before
Quest made his rocket flight to
Ganymede! If the oxygen equipment
failed, how do you think
Quest
lived in the poisonous atmosphere
of Jupiter, if he's human?”
Trella was silent.
“For the protection of humans,
there are two psychological
traits built into every robot
and android,” said Jakdane
gently. “The first is that they
can never, under any circumstances,
attack a human being,
even in self defense. The second
is that, while they may understand
sexual desire objectively,
they can never experience it
themselves.
“Those characteristics fit your
man Quest to a T, Trella. There
is no other explanation for him:
he must be an android.”
Trella did not want to believe
Jakdane was right, but his reasoning
was unassailable. Looking
upon Quest as an android,
many things were explained: his
great strength, his short, broad
build, his immunity to injury,
his refusal to defend himself
against a human, his inability to
return Trella's love for him.
It was not inconceivable that
she should have unknowingly
fallen in love with an android.
Humans could love androids,
with real affection, even knowing
that they were artificial.
There were instances of android
nursemaids who were virtually
members of the families owning
them.
She was glad now that she
had not told Quest of her mission
to Ganymede. He thought
he was Dr. Mansard's son, but
an android had no legal right of
inheritance from his owner. She
would leave it to Dom Blessing
to decide what to do about Quest.
Thus she did not, as she had
intended originally, speak to
Quest about seeing him again
after she had completed her assignment.
Even if Jakdane was
wrong and Quest was human—as
now seemed unlikely—Quest
had told her he could not love
her. Her best course was to try
to forget him.
Nor did Quest try to arrange
with her for a later meeting.
“It has been pleasant knowing
you, Trella,” he said when they
left the G-boat at White Sands.
A faraway look came into his
blue eyes, and he added: “I'm
sorry things couldn't have been
different, somehow.”
“Let's don't be sorry for what
we can't help,” she said gently,
taking his hand in farewell.
Trella took a fast plane from
White Sands, and twenty-four
hours later walked up the front
steps of the familiar brownstone
house on the outskirts of Washington.
Dom Blessing himself met her
at the door, a stooped, graying
58
man who peered at her over his
spectacles.
“You have the papers, eh?”
he said, spying the brief case.
“Good, good. Come in and we'll
see what we have, eh?”
She accompanied him through
the bare, windowless anteroom
which had always seemed to her
such a strange feature of this
luxurious house, and they entered
the big living room. They sat
before a fire in the old-fashioned
fireplace and Blessing opened the
brief case with trembling hands.
“There are things here,” he
said, his eyes sparkling as he
glanced through the notebooks.
“Yes, there are things here. We
shall make something of these,
Miss Trella, eh?”
“I'm glad they're something
you can use, Mr. Blessing,” she
said. “There's something else I
found on my trip, that I think
I should tell you about.”
She told him about Quest.
“He thinks he's the son of Dr.
Mansard,” she finished, “but apparently
he is, without knowing
it, an android Dr. Mansard built
on Jupiter.”
“He came back to Earth with
you, eh?” asked Blessing intently.
“Yes. I'm afraid it's your decision
whether to let him go on
living as a man or to tell him
he's an android and claim ownership
as Dr. Mansard's heir.”
Trella planned to spend a few
days resting in her employer's
spacious home, and then to take
a short vacation before resuming
her duties as his confidential
secretary. The next morning
when she came down from her
room, a change had been made.
Two armed men were with
Dom Blessing at breakfast and
accompanied him wherever he
went. She discovered that two
more men with guns were stationed
in the bare anteroom and
a guard was stationed at every
entrance to the house.
“Why all the protection?” she
asked Blessing.
“A wealthy man must be careful,”
said Blessing cheerfully.
“When we don't understand all
the implications of new circumstances,
we must be prepared for
anything, eh?”
There was only one new circumstance
Trella could think
of. Without actually intending
to, she exclaimed:
“You aren't afraid of Quest?
Why, an android can't hurt a
human!”
Blessing peered at her over his
spectacles.
“And what if he isn't an android,
eh? And if he is—what if
old Mansard didn't build in the
prohibition against harming humans
that's required by law?
What about that, eh?”
Trella was silent, shocked.
There was something here she
hadn't known about, hadn't even
suspected. For some reason, Dom
Blessing feared Dr. Eriklund
Mansard … or his heir … or
his mechanical servant.
She was sure that Blessing
was wrong, that Quest, whether
man or android, intended no
59
harm to him. Surely, Quest
would have said something of
such bitterness during their long
time together on Ganymede and
aspace, since he did not know of
Trella's connection with Blessing.
But, since this was to be
the atmosphere of Blessing's
house, she was glad that he decided
to assign her to take the
Mansard papers to the New
York laboratory.
Quest came the day before she
was scheduled to leave.
Trella was in the living room
with Blessing, discussing the instructions
she was to give to the
laboratory officials in New York.
The two bodyguards were with
them. The other guards were at
their posts.
Trella heard the doorbell ring.
The heavy oaken front door was
kept locked now, and the guards
in the anteroom examined callers
through a tiny window.
Suddenly alarm bells rang all
over the house. There was a terrific
crash outside the room as
the front door splintered. There
were shouts and the sound of a
shot.
“The steel doors!” cried Blessing,
turning white. “Let's get
out of here.”
He and his bodyguards ran
through the back of the house
out of the garage.
Blessing, ahead of the rest,
leaped into one of the cars and
started the engine.
The door from the house shattered
and Quest burst through.
The two guards turned and fired
together.
He could be hurt by bullets.
He was staggered momentarily.
Then, in a blur of motion, he
sprang forward and swept the
guards aside with one hand with
such force that they skidded
across the floor and lay in an
unconscious heap against the
rear of the garage. Trella had
opened the door of the car, but
it was wrenched from her hand
as Blessing stepped on the accelerator
and it leaped into the
driveway with spinning wheels.
Quest was after it, like a
chunky deer, running faster
than Trella had ever seen a man
run before.
Blessing slowed for the turn
at the end of the driveway and
glanced back over his shoulder.
Seeing Quest almost upon him,
he slammed down the accelerator
and twisted the wheel hard.
The car whipped into the
street, careened, and rolled over
and over, bringing up against a
tree on the other side in a twisted
tangle of wreckage.
With a horrified gasp, Trella
ran down the driveway toward
the smoking heap of metal.
Quest was already beside it,
probing it. As she reached his
side, he lifted the torn body of
Dom Blessing. Blessing was
dead.
“I'm lucky,” said Quest soberly.
“I would have murdered
him.”
“But why, Quest? I knew he
was afraid of you, but he didn't
tell me why.”
“It was conditioned into me,”
answered Quest “I didn't know
60
it until just now, when it ended,
but my father conditioned me
psychologically from my birth
to the task of hunting down
Dom Blessing and killing him. It
was an unconscious drive in me
that wouldn't release me until
the task was finished.
“You see, Blessing was my father's
assistant on Ganymede.
Right after my father completed
development of the surgiscope,
he and my mother blasted off for
Io. Blessing wanted the valuable
rights to the surgiscope, and he
sabotaged the ship's drive so it
would fall into Jupiter.
“But my father was able to
control it in the heavy atmosphere
of Jupiter, and landed it
successfully. I was born there,
and he conditioned me to come
to Earth and track down Blessing.
I know now that it was
part of the conditioning that I
was unable to fight any other
man until my task was finished:
it might have gotten me in trouble
and diverted me from that
purpose.”
More gently than Trella would
have believed possible for his
Jupiter-strong muscles, Quest
took her in his arms.
“Now I can say I love you,”
he said. “That was part of the
conditioning too: I couldn't love
any woman until my job was
done.”
Trella disengaged herself.
“I'm sorry,” she said. “Don't
you know this, too, now: that
you're not a man, but an android?”
He looked at her in astonishment,
stunned by her words.
“What in space makes you
think that?” he demanded.
“Why, Quest, it's obvious,”
she cried, tears in her eyes.
“Everything about you … your
build, suited for Jupiter's gravity …
your strength … the
fact that you were able to live
in Jupiter's atmosphere after
the oxygen equipment failed.
I know you think Dr. Mansard
was your father, but androids
often believe that.”
He grinned at her.
“I'm no android,” he said confidently.
“Do you forget my father
was inventor of the surgiscope?
He knew I'd have to grow
up on Jupiter, and he operated
on the genes before I was born.
He altered my inherited characteristics
to adapt me to the climate
of Jupiter … even to
being able to breathe a chlorine
atmosphere as well as an oxygen
atmosphere.”
Trella looked at him. He was
not badly hurt, any more than
an elephant would have been,
but his tunic was stained with
red blood where the bullets had
struck him. Normal android
blood was green.
“How can you be sure?” she
asked doubtfully.
“Androids are made,” he answered
with a laugh. “They
don't grow up. And I remember
my boyhood on Jupiter very
well.”
He took her in his arms again,
and this time she did not resist.
His lips were very human.
THE END | A human would not survive the force of acceleration that would be needed to break free of Jupiter's gravity. | Dr. Mansard and his wife ran out of oxygen before they could complete the repairs to their ship. | Dr. Mansard and his wife were torn apart by gravitational forces when they tried to leave Jupiter. | Dr. Mansard and his wife were unable to repair their ship after crash landing on Jupiter. | 0 |
27588_QI4ZJP0M_6 | What is the Jupiter weapon? | Transcriber's Note:
Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
possible; changes (corrections of spelling and punctuation) made to
the original text are marked
like this
.
The original text appears when hovering the cursor over the marked text.
This e-text was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
March 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U. S. copyright on this
publication was renewed.
50
THE
JUPITER
WEAPON
By CHARLES L. FONTENAY
He was a living weapon of
destruction—
immeasurably
powerful, utterly invulnerable.
There was only one
question: Was he human?
Trella
feared she was in
for trouble even before Motwick's
head dropped forward on
his arms in a drunken stupor.
The two evil-looking men at the
table nearby had been watching
her surreptitiously, and now
they shifted restlessly in their
chairs.
Trella had not wanted to come
to the Golden Satellite. It was a
squalid saloon in the rougher
section of Jupiter's View, the
terrestrial dome-colony on Ganymede.
Motwick,
already
drunk,
had insisted.
A woman could not possibly
make her way through these
streets alone to the better section
of town, especially one clad
in a silvery evening dress. Her
only hope was that this place
had a telephone. Perhaps she
could call one of Motwick's
friends; she had no one on Ganymede
she could call a real friend
herself.
Tentatively, she pushed her
chair back from the table and
arose. She had to brush close by
the other table to get to the bar.
As she did, the dark, slick-haired
man reached out and grabbed
her around the waist with a
steely arm.
Trella swung with her whole
body, and slapped him so hard
he nearly fell from his chair. As
she walked swiftly toward the
bar, he leaped up to follow her.
There were only two other
people in the Golden Satellite:
the fat, mustached bartender
and a short, square-built man at
the bar. The latter swung
around at the pistol-like report
of her slap, and she saw that,
though no more than four and a
half feet tall, he was as heavily
muscled as a lion.
51
His face was clean and open,
with close-cropped blond hair
and honest blue eyes. She ran to
him.
“Help me!” she cried. “Please
help me!”
He began to back away from
her.
“I can't,” he muttered in a
deep voice. “I can't help you. I
can't do anything.”
The dark man was at her
heels. In desperation, she dodged
around the short man and took
refuge behind him. Her protector
was obviously unwilling, but
the dark man, faced with his
massiveness, took no chances.
He stopped and shouted:
“Kregg!”
The other man at the table
arose, ponderously, and lumbered
toward them. He was immense,
at least six and a half
feet tall, with a brutal, vacant
face.
Evading her attempts to stay
behind him, the squat man began
to move down the bar away
from the approaching Kregg.
The dark man moved in on
Trella again as Kregg overtook
his quarry and swung a huge
fist like a sledgehammer.
Exactly what happened, Trella
wasn't sure. She had the impression
that Kregg's fist connected
squarely with the short man's
chin
before
he dodged to one
side in a movement so fast it
was a blur. But that couldn't
have been, because the short
man wasn't moved by that blow
that would have felled a steer,
and Kregg roared in pain, grabbing
his injured fist.
“The bar!” yelled Kregg. “I
hit the damn bar!”
At this juncture, the bartender
took a hand. Leaning far
over the bar, he swung a full
bottle in a complete arc. It
smashed on Kregg's head,
splashing the floor with liquor,
and Kregg sank stunned to his
knees. The dark man, who had
grabbed Trella's arm, released
her and ran for the door.
Moving agilely around the end
of the bar, the bartender stood
over Kregg, holding the jagged-edged
bottleneck in his hand
menacingly.
“Get out!” rumbled the bartender.
“I'll have no coppers
raiding my place for the likes of
you!”
Kregg stumbled to his feet
and staggered out. Trella ran to
the unconscious Motwick's side.
“That means you, too, lady,”
said the bartender beside her.
“You and your boy friend get
out of here. You oughtn't to
have come here in the first
place.”
“May I help you, Miss?” asked
a deep, resonant voice behind
her.
She straightened from her
anxious examination of Motwick.
The squat man was standing
there, an apologetic look on
his face.
She looked contemptuously at
the massive muscles whose help
had been denied her. Her arm
ached where the dark man had
grasped it. The broad face before
52
her was not unhandsome,
and the blue eyes were disconcertingly
direct, but she despised
him for a coward.
“I'm sorry I couldn't fight
those men for you, Miss, but I
just couldn't,” he said miserably,
as though reading her thoughts.
“But no one will bother you on
the street if I'm with you.”
“A lot of protection you'd be
if they did!” she snapped. “But
I'm desperate. You can carry
him to the Stellar Hotel for me.”
The gravity of Ganymede was
hardly more than that of Earth's
moon, but the way the man
picked up the limp Motwick with
one hand and tossed him over a
shoulder was startling: as
though he lifted a feather pillow.
He followed Trella out the door
of the Golden Satellite and fell
in step beside her. Immediately
she was grateful for his presence.
The dimly lighted street
was not crowded, but she didn't
like the looks of the men she
saw.
The transparent dome of Jupiter's
View was faintly visible
in the reflected night lights of
the colonial city, but the lights
were overwhelmed by the giant,
vari-colored disc of Jupiter itself,
riding high in the sky.
“I'm Quest Mansard, Miss,”
said her companion. “I'm just in
from Jupiter.”
“I'm Trella Nuspar,” she said,
favoring him with a green-eyed
glance. “You mean Io, don't you—or
Moon Five?”
“No,” he said, grinning at
her. He had an engaging grin,
with even white teeth. “I meant
Jupiter.”
“You're lying,” she said flatly.
“No one has ever landed on
Jupiter. It would be impossible
to blast off again.”
“My parents landed on Jupiter,
and I blasted off from it,”
he said soberly. “I was born
there. Have you ever heard of
Dr. Eriklund Mansard?”
“I certainly have,” she said,
her interest taking a sudden
upward turn. “He developed the
surgiscope, didn't he? But his
ship was drawn into Jupiter and
lost.”
“It was drawn into Jupiter,
but he landed it successfully,”
said Quest. “He and my mother
lived on Jupiter until the oxygen
equipment wore out at last. I
was born and brought up there,
and I was finally able to build
a small rocket with a powerful
enough drive to clear the
planet.”
She looked at him. He was
short, half a head shorter than
she, but broad and powerful as
a man might be who had grown
up in heavy gravity. He trod the
street with a light, controlled
step, seeming to deliberately
hold himself down.
“If Dr. Mansard succeeded in
landing on Jupiter, why didn't
anyone ever hear from him
again?” she demanded.
“Because,” said Quest, “his
radio was sabotaged, just as his
ship's drive was.”
“Jupiter strength,” she murmured,
looking him over coolly.
53
“You wear Motwick on your
shoulder like a scarf. But you
couldn't bring yourself to help
a woman against two thugs.”
He flushed.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “That's
something I couldn't help.”
“Why not?”
“I don't know. It's not that
I'm afraid, but there's something
in me that makes me back
away from the prospect of fighting
anyone.”
Trella sighed. Cowardice was
a state of mind. It was peculiarly
inappropriate, but not unbelievable,
that the strongest and
most agile man on Ganymede
should be a coward. Well, she
thought with a rush of sympathy,
he couldn't help being
what he was.
They had reached the more
brightly lighted section of the
city now. Trella could get a cab
from here, but the Stellar Hotel
wasn't far. They walked on.
Trella had the desk clerk call
a cab to deliver the unconscious
Motwick to his home. She and
Quest had a late sandwich in the
coffee shop.
“I landed here only a week
ago,” he told her, his eyes frankly
admiring her honey-colored
hair and comely face. “I'm heading
for Earth on the next spaceship.”
“We'll be traveling companions,
then,” she said. “I'm going
back on that ship, too.”
For some reason she decided
against telling him that the
assignment on which she had
come to the Jupiter system was
to gather his own father's notebooks
and take them back to
Earth.
Motwick was an irresponsible
playboy whom Trella had known
briefly on Earth, and Trella was
glad to dispense with his company
for the remaining three
weeks before the spaceship
blasted off. She found herself
enjoying the steadier companionship
of Quest.
As a matter of fact, she found
herself enjoying his companionship
more than she intended to.
She found herself falling in love
with him.
Now this did not suit her at
all. Trella had always liked her
men tall and dark. She had determined
that when she married
it would be to a curly-haired six-footer.
She was not at all happy about
being so strongly attracted to a
man several inches shorter than
she. She was particularly unhappy
about feeling drawn to a
man who was a coward.
The ship that they boarded on
Moon Nine was one of the newer
ships that could attain a hundred-mile-per-second
velocity
and take a hyperbolic path to
Earth, but it would still require
fifty-four days to make the trip.
So Trella was delighted to find
that the ship was the
Cometfire
and its skipper was her old
friend, dark-eyed, curly-haired
Jakdane Gille.
“Jakdane,” she said, flirting
with him with her eyes as in
54
days gone by, “I need a chaperon
this trip, and you're ideal for
the job.”
“I never thought of myself in
quite that light, but maybe
I'm getting old,” he answered,
laughing. “What's your trouble,
Trella?”
“I'm in love with that huge
chunk of man who came aboard
with me, and I'm not sure I
ought to be,” she confessed. “I
may need protection against myself
till we get to Earth.”
“If it's to keep you out of another
fellow's clutches, I'm your
man,” agreed Jakdane heartily.
“I always had a mind to save
you for myself. I'll guarantee
you won't have a moment alone
with him the whole trip.”
“You don't have to be that
thorough about it,” she protested
hastily. “I want to get a little
enjoyment out of being in love.
But if I feel myself weakening
too much, I'll holler for help.”
The
Cometfire
swung around
great Jupiter in an opening arc
and plummeted ever more swiftly
toward the tight circles of the
inner planets. There were four
crew members and three passengers
aboard the ship's tiny personnel
sphere, and Trella was
thrown with Quest almost constantly.
She enjoyed every minute
of it.
She told him only that she
was a messenger, sent out to
Ganymede to pick up some important
papers and take them
back to Earth. She was tempted
to tell him what the papers were.
Her employer had impressed upon
her that her mission was confidential,
but surely Dom
Blessing
could not object to Dr.
Mansard's son knowing about it.
All these things had happened
before she was born, and she
did not know what Dom Blessing's
relation to Dr. Mansard
had been, but it must have been
very close. She knew that Dr.
Mansard had invented the surgiscope.
This was an instrument with
a three-dimensional screen as its
heart. The screen was a cubical
frame in which an apparently
solid image was built up of an
object under an electron microscope.
The actual cutting instrument
of the surgiscope was an ion
stream. By operating a tool in
the three-dimensional screen,
corresponding movements were
made by the ion stream on the
object under the microscope.
The
principle
was the same as
that used in operation of remote
control “hands” in atomic laboratories
to handle hot material,
and with the surgiscope very
delicate operations could be performed
at the cellular level.
Dr. Mansard and his wife had
disappeared into the turbulent
atmosphere of Jupiter just after
his invention of the surgiscope,
and it had been developed by
Dom Blessing. Its success had
built Spaceway Instruments, Incorporated,
which Blessing headed.
Through all these years since
Dr. Mansard's disappearance,
55
Blessing had been searching the
Jovian moons for a second, hidden
laboratory of Dr. Mansard.
When it was found at last, he
sent Trella, his most trusted
secretary, to Ganymede to bring
back to him the notebooks found
there.
Blessing would, of course, be
happy to learn that a son of Dr.
Mansard lived, and would see
that he received his rightful
share of the inheritance. Because
of this, Trella was tempted
to tell Quest the good news
herself; but she decided against
it. It was Blessing's privilege to
do this his own way, and he
might not appreciate her meddling.
At midtrip, Trella made a rueful
confession to Jakdane.
“It seems I was taking unnecessary
precautions when I asked
you to be a chaperon,” she said.
“I kept waiting for Quest to do
something, and when he didn't
I told him I loved him.”
“What did he say?”
“It's very peculiar,” she said
unhappily. “He said he
can't
love me. He said he wants to
love me and he feels that he
should, but there's something in
him that refuses to permit it.”
She expected Jakdane to salve
her wounded feelings with a
sympathetic pleasantry, but he
did not. Instead, he just looked
at her very thoughtfully and
said no more about the matter.
He explained his attitude
after Asrange ran amuck.
Asrange was the third passenger.
He was a lean, saturnine
individual who said little and
kept to himself as much as possible.
He was distantly polite in
his relations with both crew and
other passengers, and never
showed the slightest spark of
emotion … until the day Quest
squirted coffee on him.
It was one of those accidents
that can occur easily in space.
The passengers and the two
crewmen on that particular waking
shift (including Jakdane)
were eating lunch on the center-deck.
Quest picked up his bulb
of coffee, but inadvertently
pressed it before he got it to his
lips. The coffee squirted all over
the front of Asrange's clean
white tunic.
“I'm sorry!” exclaimed Quest
in distress.
The man's eyes went wide and
he snarled. So quickly it seemed
impossible, he had unbuckled
himself from his seat and hurled
himself backward from the table
with an incoherent cry. He
seized the first object his hand
touched—it happened to be a
heavy wooden cane leaning
against Jakdane's bunk—propelled
himself like a projectile at
Quest.
Quest rose from the table in
a sudden uncoiling of movement.
He did not unbuckle his safety
belt—he rose and it snapped like
a string.
For a moment Trella thought
he was going to meet Asrange's
assault. But he fled in a long
leap toward the companionway
leading to the astrogation deck
56
above. Landing feet-first in the
middle of the table and rebounding,
Asrange pursued with the
stick upraised.
In his haste, Quest missed the
companionway in his leap and
was cornered against one of the
bunks. Asrange descended on
him like an avenging angel and,
holding onto the bunk with one
hand, rained savage blows on his
head and shoulders with the
heavy stick.
Quest made no effort to retaliate.
He cowered under the attack,
holding his hands in front
of him as if to ward it off. In a
moment, Jakdane and the other
crewman had reached Asrange
and pulled him off.
When they had Asrange in
irons, Jakdane turned to Quest,
who was now sitting unhappily
at the table.
“Take it easy,” he advised.
“I'll wake the psychosurgeon
and have him look you over. Just
stay there.”
Quest shook his head.
“Don't bother him,” he said.
“It's nothing but a few bruises.”
“Bruises? Man, that club
could have broken your skull!
Or a couple of ribs, at the very
least.”
“I'm all right,” insisted
Quest; and when the skeptical
Jakdane insisted on examining
him carefully, he had to admit
it. There was hardly a mark on
him from the blows.
“If it didn't hurt you any
more than that, why didn't you
take that stick away from him?”
demanded Jakdane. “You could
have, easily.”
“I couldn't,” said Quest miserably,
and turned his face
away.
Later, alone with Trella on
the control deck, Jakdane gave
her some sober advice.
“If you think you're in love
with Quest, forget it,” he said.
“Why? Because he's a coward?
I know that ought to make
me despise him, but it doesn't
any more.”
“Not because he's a coward.
Because he's an android!”
“What? Jakdane, you can't be
serious!”
“I am. I say he's an android,
an artificial imitation of a man.
It all figures.
“Look, Trella, he said he was
born on Jupiter. A human could
stand the gravity of Jupiter, inside
a dome or a ship, but what
human could stand the rocket acceleration
necessary to break
free of Jupiter? Here's a man
strong enough to break a spaceship
safety belt just by getting
up out of his chair against it,
tough enough to take a beating
with a heavy stick without being
injured. How can you believe
he's really human?”
Trella remembered the thug
Kregg striking Quest in the face
and then crying that he had injured
his hand on the bar.
“But he said Dr. Mansard was
his father,” protested Trella.
“Robots and androids frequently
look on their makers as
their parents,” said Jakdane.
“Quest may not even know he's
57
artificial. Do you know how
Mansard died?”
“The oxygen equipment failed,
Quest said.”
“Yes. Do you know when?”
“No. Quest never did tell me,
that I remember.”
“He told me: a year before
Quest made his rocket flight to
Ganymede! If the oxygen equipment
failed, how do you think
Quest
lived in the poisonous atmosphere
of Jupiter, if he's human?”
Trella was silent.
“For the protection of humans,
there are two psychological
traits built into every robot
and android,” said Jakdane
gently. “The first is that they
can never, under any circumstances,
attack a human being,
even in self defense. The second
is that, while they may understand
sexual desire objectively,
they can never experience it
themselves.
“Those characteristics fit your
man Quest to a T, Trella. There
is no other explanation for him:
he must be an android.”
Trella did not want to believe
Jakdane was right, but his reasoning
was unassailable. Looking
upon Quest as an android,
many things were explained: his
great strength, his short, broad
build, his immunity to injury,
his refusal to defend himself
against a human, his inability to
return Trella's love for him.
It was not inconceivable that
she should have unknowingly
fallen in love with an android.
Humans could love androids,
with real affection, even knowing
that they were artificial.
There were instances of android
nursemaids who were virtually
members of the families owning
them.
She was glad now that she
had not told Quest of her mission
to Ganymede. He thought
he was Dr. Mansard's son, but
an android had no legal right of
inheritance from his owner. She
would leave it to Dom Blessing
to decide what to do about Quest.
Thus she did not, as she had
intended originally, speak to
Quest about seeing him again
after she had completed her assignment.
Even if Jakdane was
wrong and Quest was human—as
now seemed unlikely—Quest
had told her he could not love
her. Her best course was to try
to forget him.
Nor did Quest try to arrange
with her for a later meeting.
“It has been pleasant knowing
you, Trella,” he said when they
left the G-boat at White Sands.
A faraway look came into his
blue eyes, and he added: “I'm
sorry things couldn't have been
different, somehow.”
“Let's don't be sorry for what
we can't help,” she said gently,
taking his hand in farewell.
Trella took a fast plane from
White Sands, and twenty-four
hours later walked up the front
steps of the familiar brownstone
house on the outskirts of Washington.
Dom Blessing himself met her
at the door, a stooped, graying
58
man who peered at her over his
spectacles.
“You have the papers, eh?”
he said, spying the brief case.
“Good, good. Come in and we'll
see what we have, eh?”
She accompanied him through
the bare, windowless anteroom
which had always seemed to her
such a strange feature of this
luxurious house, and they entered
the big living room. They sat
before a fire in the old-fashioned
fireplace and Blessing opened the
brief case with trembling hands.
“There are things here,” he
said, his eyes sparkling as he
glanced through the notebooks.
“Yes, there are things here. We
shall make something of these,
Miss Trella, eh?”
“I'm glad they're something
you can use, Mr. Blessing,” she
said. “There's something else I
found on my trip, that I think
I should tell you about.”
She told him about Quest.
“He thinks he's the son of Dr.
Mansard,” she finished, “but apparently
he is, without knowing
it, an android Dr. Mansard built
on Jupiter.”
“He came back to Earth with
you, eh?” asked Blessing intently.
“Yes. I'm afraid it's your decision
whether to let him go on
living as a man or to tell him
he's an android and claim ownership
as Dr. Mansard's heir.”
Trella planned to spend a few
days resting in her employer's
spacious home, and then to take
a short vacation before resuming
her duties as his confidential
secretary. The next morning
when she came down from her
room, a change had been made.
Two armed men were with
Dom Blessing at breakfast and
accompanied him wherever he
went. She discovered that two
more men with guns were stationed
in the bare anteroom and
a guard was stationed at every
entrance to the house.
“Why all the protection?” she
asked Blessing.
“A wealthy man must be careful,”
said Blessing cheerfully.
“When we don't understand all
the implications of new circumstances,
we must be prepared for
anything, eh?”
There was only one new circumstance
Trella could think
of. Without actually intending
to, she exclaimed:
“You aren't afraid of Quest?
Why, an android can't hurt a
human!”
Blessing peered at her over his
spectacles.
“And what if he isn't an android,
eh? And if he is—what if
old Mansard didn't build in the
prohibition against harming humans
that's required by law?
What about that, eh?”
Trella was silent, shocked.
There was something here she
hadn't known about, hadn't even
suspected. For some reason, Dom
Blessing feared Dr. Eriklund
Mansard … or his heir … or
his mechanical servant.
She was sure that Blessing
was wrong, that Quest, whether
man or android, intended no
59
harm to him. Surely, Quest
would have said something of
such bitterness during their long
time together on Ganymede and
aspace, since he did not know of
Trella's connection with Blessing.
But, since this was to be
the atmosphere of Blessing's
house, she was glad that he decided
to assign her to take the
Mansard papers to the New
York laboratory.
Quest came the day before she
was scheduled to leave.
Trella was in the living room
with Blessing, discussing the instructions
she was to give to the
laboratory officials in New York.
The two bodyguards were with
them. The other guards were at
their posts.
Trella heard the doorbell ring.
The heavy oaken front door was
kept locked now, and the guards
in the anteroom examined callers
through a tiny window.
Suddenly alarm bells rang all
over the house. There was a terrific
crash outside the room as
the front door splintered. There
were shouts and the sound of a
shot.
“The steel doors!” cried Blessing,
turning white. “Let's get
out of here.”
He and his bodyguards ran
through the back of the house
out of the garage.
Blessing, ahead of the rest,
leaped into one of the cars and
started the engine.
The door from the house shattered
and Quest burst through.
The two guards turned and fired
together.
He could be hurt by bullets.
He was staggered momentarily.
Then, in a blur of motion, he
sprang forward and swept the
guards aside with one hand with
such force that they skidded
across the floor and lay in an
unconscious heap against the
rear of the garage. Trella had
opened the door of the car, but
it was wrenched from her hand
as Blessing stepped on the accelerator
and it leaped into the
driveway with spinning wheels.
Quest was after it, like a
chunky deer, running faster
than Trella had ever seen a man
run before.
Blessing slowed for the turn
at the end of the driveway and
glanced back over his shoulder.
Seeing Quest almost upon him,
he slammed down the accelerator
and twisted the wheel hard.
The car whipped into the
street, careened, and rolled over
and over, bringing up against a
tree on the other side in a twisted
tangle of wreckage.
With a horrified gasp, Trella
ran down the driveway toward
the smoking heap of metal.
Quest was already beside it,
probing it. As she reached his
side, he lifted the torn body of
Dom Blessing. Blessing was
dead.
“I'm lucky,” said Quest soberly.
“I would have murdered
him.”
“But why, Quest? I knew he
was afraid of you, but he didn't
tell me why.”
“It was conditioned into me,”
answered Quest “I didn't know
60
it until just now, when it ended,
but my father conditioned me
psychologically from my birth
to the task of hunting down
Dom Blessing and killing him. It
was an unconscious drive in me
that wouldn't release me until
the task was finished.
“You see, Blessing was my father's
assistant on Ganymede.
Right after my father completed
development of the surgiscope,
he and my mother blasted off for
Io. Blessing wanted the valuable
rights to the surgiscope, and he
sabotaged the ship's drive so it
would fall into Jupiter.
“But my father was able to
control it in the heavy atmosphere
of Jupiter, and landed it
successfully. I was born there,
and he conditioned me to come
to Earth and track down Blessing.
I know now that it was
part of the conditioning that I
was unable to fight any other
man until my task was finished:
it might have gotten me in trouble
and diverted me from that
purpose.”
More gently than Trella would
have believed possible for his
Jupiter-strong muscles, Quest
took her in his arms.
“Now I can say I love you,”
he said. “That was part of the
conditioning too: I couldn't love
any woman until my job was
done.”
Trella disengaged herself.
“I'm sorry,” she said. “Don't
you know this, too, now: that
you're not a man, but an android?”
He looked at her in astonishment,
stunned by her words.
“What in space makes you
think that?” he demanded.
“Why, Quest, it's obvious,”
she cried, tears in her eyes.
“Everything about you … your
build, suited for Jupiter's gravity …
your strength … the
fact that you were able to live
in Jupiter's atmosphere after
the oxygen equipment failed.
I know you think Dr. Mansard
was your father, but androids
often believe that.”
He grinned at her.
“I'm no android,” he said confidently.
“Do you forget my father
was inventor of the surgiscope?
He knew I'd have to grow
up on Jupiter, and he operated
on the genes before I was born.
He altered my inherited characteristics
to adapt me to the climate
of Jupiter … even to
being able to breathe a chlorine
atmosphere as well as an oxygen
atmosphere.”
Trella looked at him. He was
not badly hurt, any more than
an elephant would have been,
but his tunic was stained with
red blood where the bullets had
struck him. Normal android
blood was green.
“How can you be sure?” she
asked doubtfully.
“Androids are made,” he answered
with a laugh. “They
don't grow up. And I remember
my boyhood on Jupiter very
well.”
He took her in his arms again,
and this time she did not resist.
His lips were very human.
THE END | Asrange is the Jupiter weapon. | The surgiscope is the Jupiter weapon. | No one knows what the Jupiter weapon is, but the plans are in Dr. Mansard's notes. | The Jupiter weapon is Quest himself. | 3 |
27588_QI4ZJP0M_7 | Why does Quest say he is lucky? | Transcriber's Note:
Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
possible; changes (corrections of spelling and punctuation) made to
the original text are marked
like this
.
The original text appears when hovering the cursor over the marked text.
This e-text was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
March 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U. S. copyright on this
publication was renewed.
50
THE
JUPITER
WEAPON
By CHARLES L. FONTENAY
He was a living weapon of
destruction—
immeasurably
powerful, utterly invulnerable.
There was only one
question: Was he human?
Trella
feared she was in
for trouble even before Motwick's
head dropped forward on
his arms in a drunken stupor.
The two evil-looking men at the
table nearby had been watching
her surreptitiously, and now
they shifted restlessly in their
chairs.
Trella had not wanted to come
to the Golden Satellite. It was a
squalid saloon in the rougher
section of Jupiter's View, the
terrestrial dome-colony on Ganymede.
Motwick,
already
drunk,
had insisted.
A woman could not possibly
make her way through these
streets alone to the better section
of town, especially one clad
in a silvery evening dress. Her
only hope was that this place
had a telephone. Perhaps she
could call one of Motwick's
friends; she had no one on Ganymede
she could call a real friend
herself.
Tentatively, she pushed her
chair back from the table and
arose. She had to brush close by
the other table to get to the bar.
As she did, the dark, slick-haired
man reached out and grabbed
her around the waist with a
steely arm.
Trella swung with her whole
body, and slapped him so hard
he nearly fell from his chair. As
she walked swiftly toward the
bar, he leaped up to follow her.
There were only two other
people in the Golden Satellite:
the fat, mustached bartender
and a short, square-built man at
the bar. The latter swung
around at the pistol-like report
of her slap, and she saw that,
though no more than four and a
half feet tall, he was as heavily
muscled as a lion.
51
His face was clean and open,
with close-cropped blond hair
and honest blue eyes. She ran to
him.
“Help me!” she cried. “Please
help me!”
He began to back away from
her.
“I can't,” he muttered in a
deep voice. “I can't help you. I
can't do anything.”
The dark man was at her
heels. In desperation, she dodged
around the short man and took
refuge behind him. Her protector
was obviously unwilling, but
the dark man, faced with his
massiveness, took no chances.
He stopped and shouted:
“Kregg!”
The other man at the table
arose, ponderously, and lumbered
toward them. He was immense,
at least six and a half
feet tall, with a brutal, vacant
face.
Evading her attempts to stay
behind him, the squat man began
to move down the bar away
from the approaching Kregg.
The dark man moved in on
Trella again as Kregg overtook
his quarry and swung a huge
fist like a sledgehammer.
Exactly what happened, Trella
wasn't sure. She had the impression
that Kregg's fist connected
squarely with the short man's
chin
before
he dodged to one
side in a movement so fast it
was a blur. But that couldn't
have been, because the short
man wasn't moved by that blow
that would have felled a steer,
and Kregg roared in pain, grabbing
his injured fist.
“The bar!” yelled Kregg. “I
hit the damn bar!”
At this juncture, the bartender
took a hand. Leaning far
over the bar, he swung a full
bottle in a complete arc. It
smashed on Kregg's head,
splashing the floor with liquor,
and Kregg sank stunned to his
knees. The dark man, who had
grabbed Trella's arm, released
her and ran for the door.
Moving agilely around the end
of the bar, the bartender stood
over Kregg, holding the jagged-edged
bottleneck in his hand
menacingly.
“Get out!” rumbled the bartender.
“I'll have no coppers
raiding my place for the likes of
you!”
Kregg stumbled to his feet
and staggered out. Trella ran to
the unconscious Motwick's side.
“That means you, too, lady,”
said the bartender beside her.
“You and your boy friend get
out of here. You oughtn't to
have come here in the first
place.”
“May I help you, Miss?” asked
a deep, resonant voice behind
her.
She straightened from her
anxious examination of Motwick.
The squat man was standing
there, an apologetic look on
his face.
She looked contemptuously at
the massive muscles whose help
had been denied her. Her arm
ached where the dark man had
grasped it. The broad face before
52
her was not unhandsome,
and the blue eyes were disconcertingly
direct, but she despised
him for a coward.
“I'm sorry I couldn't fight
those men for you, Miss, but I
just couldn't,” he said miserably,
as though reading her thoughts.
“But no one will bother you on
the street if I'm with you.”
“A lot of protection you'd be
if they did!” she snapped. “But
I'm desperate. You can carry
him to the Stellar Hotel for me.”
The gravity of Ganymede was
hardly more than that of Earth's
moon, but the way the man
picked up the limp Motwick with
one hand and tossed him over a
shoulder was startling: as
though he lifted a feather pillow.
He followed Trella out the door
of the Golden Satellite and fell
in step beside her. Immediately
she was grateful for his presence.
The dimly lighted street
was not crowded, but she didn't
like the looks of the men she
saw.
The transparent dome of Jupiter's
View was faintly visible
in the reflected night lights of
the colonial city, but the lights
were overwhelmed by the giant,
vari-colored disc of Jupiter itself,
riding high in the sky.
“I'm Quest Mansard, Miss,”
said her companion. “I'm just in
from Jupiter.”
“I'm Trella Nuspar,” she said,
favoring him with a green-eyed
glance. “You mean Io, don't you—or
Moon Five?”
“No,” he said, grinning at
her. He had an engaging grin,
with even white teeth. “I meant
Jupiter.”
“You're lying,” she said flatly.
“No one has ever landed on
Jupiter. It would be impossible
to blast off again.”
“My parents landed on Jupiter,
and I blasted off from it,”
he said soberly. “I was born
there. Have you ever heard of
Dr. Eriklund Mansard?”
“I certainly have,” she said,
her interest taking a sudden
upward turn. “He developed the
surgiscope, didn't he? But his
ship was drawn into Jupiter and
lost.”
“It was drawn into Jupiter,
but he landed it successfully,”
said Quest. “He and my mother
lived on Jupiter until the oxygen
equipment wore out at last. I
was born and brought up there,
and I was finally able to build
a small rocket with a powerful
enough drive to clear the
planet.”
She looked at him. He was
short, half a head shorter than
she, but broad and powerful as
a man might be who had grown
up in heavy gravity. He trod the
street with a light, controlled
step, seeming to deliberately
hold himself down.
“If Dr. Mansard succeeded in
landing on Jupiter, why didn't
anyone ever hear from him
again?” she demanded.
“Because,” said Quest, “his
radio was sabotaged, just as his
ship's drive was.”
“Jupiter strength,” she murmured,
looking him over coolly.
53
“You wear Motwick on your
shoulder like a scarf. But you
couldn't bring yourself to help
a woman against two thugs.”
He flushed.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “That's
something I couldn't help.”
“Why not?”
“I don't know. It's not that
I'm afraid, but there's something
in me that makes me back
away from the prospect of fighting
anyone.”
Trella sighed. Cowardice was
a state of mind. It was peculiarly
inappropriate, but not unbelievable,
that the strongest and
most agile man on Ganymede
should be a coward. Well, she
thought with a rush of sympathy,
he couldn't help being
what he was.
They had reached the more
brightly lighted section of the
city now. Trella could get a cab
from here, but the Stellar Hotel
wasn't far. They walked on.
Trella had the desk clerk call
a cab to deliver the unconscious
Motwick to his home. She and
Quest had a late sandwich in the
coffee shop.
“I landed here only a week
ago,” he told her, his eyes frankly
admiring her honey-colored
hair and comely face. “I'm heading
for Earth on the next spaceship.”
“We'll be traveling companions,
then,” she said. “I'm going
back on that ship, too.”
For some reason she decided
against telling him that the
assignment on which she had
come to the Jupiter system was
to gather his own father's notebooks
and take them back to
Earth.
Motwick was an irresponsible
playboy whom Trella had known
briefly on Earth, and Trella was
glad to dispense with his company
for the remaining three
weeks before the spaceship
blasted off. She found herself
enjoying the steadier companionship
of Quest.
As a matter of fact, she found
herself enjoying his companionship
more than she intended to.
She found herself falling in love
with him.
Now this did not suit her at
all. Trella had always liked her
men tall and dark. She had determined
that when she married
it would be to a curly-haired six-footer.
She was not at all happy about
being so strongly attracted to a
man several inches shorter than
she. She was particularly unhappy
about feeling drawn to a
man who was a coward.
The ship that they boarded on
Moon Nine was one of the newer
ships that could attain a hundred-mile-per-second
velocity
and take a hyperbolic path to
Earth, but it would still require
fifty-four days to make the trip.
So Trella was delighted to find
that the ship was the
Cometfire
and its skipper was her old
friend, dark-eyed, curly-haired
Jakdane Gille.
“Jakdane,” she said, flirting
with him with her eyes as in
54
days gone by, “I need a chaperon
this trip, and you're ideal for
the job.”
“I never thought of myself in
quite that light, but maybe
I'm getting old,” he answered,
laughing. “What's your trouble,
Trella?”
“I'm in love with that huge
chunk of man who came aboard
with me, and I'm not sure I
ought to be,” she confessed. “I
may need protection against myself
till we get to Earth.”
“If it's to keep you out of another
fellow's clutches, I'm your
man,” agreed Jakdane heartily.
“I always had a mind to save
you for myself. I'll guarantee
you won't have a moment alone
with him the whole trip.”
“You don't have to be that
thorough about it,” she protested
hastily. “I want to get a little
enjoyment out of being in love.
But if I feel myself weakening
too much, I'll holler for help.”
The
Cometfire
swung around
great Jupiter in an opening arc
and plummeted ever more swiftly
toward the tight circles of the
inner planets. There were four
crew members and three passengers
aboard the ship's tiny personnel
sphere, and Trella was
thrown with Quest almost constantly.
She enjoyed every minute
of it.
She told him only that she
was a messenger, sent out to
Ganymede to pick up some important
papers and take them
back to Earth. She was tempted
to tell him what the papers were.
Her employer had impressed upon
her that her mission was confidential,
but surely Dom
Blessing
could not object to Dr.
Mansard's son knowing about it.
All these things had happened
before she was born, and she
did not know what Dom Blessing's
relation to Dr. Mansard
had been, but it must have been
very close. She knew that Dr.
Mansard had invented the surgiscope.
This was an instrument with
a three-dimensional screen as its
heart. The screen was a cubical
frame in which an apparently
solid image was built up of an
object under an electron microscope.
The actual cutting instrument
of the surgiscope was an ion
stream. By operating a tool in
the three-dimensional screen,
corresponding movements were
made by the ion stream on the
object under the microscope.
The
principle
was the same as
that used in operation of remote
control “hands” in atomic laboratories
to handle hot material,
and with the surgiscope very
delicate operations could be performed
at the cellular level.
Dr. Mansard and his wife had
disappeared into the turbulent
atmosphere of Jupiter just after
his invention of the surgiscope,
and it had been developed by
Dom Blessing. Its success had
built Spaceway Instruments, Incorporated,
which Blessing headed.
Through all these years since
Dr. Mansard's disappearance,
55
Blessing had been searching the
Jovian moons for a second, hidden
laboratory of Dr. Mansard.
When it was found at last, he
sent Trella, his most trusted
secretary, to Ganymede to bring
back to him the notebooks found
there.
Blessing would, of course, be
happy to learn that a son of Dr.
Mansard lived, and would see
that he received his rightful
share of the inheritance. Because
of this, Trella was tempted
to tell Quest the good news
herself; but she decided against
it. It was Blessing's privilege to
do this his own way, and he
might not appreciate her meddling.
At midtrip, Trella made a rueful
confession to Jakdane.
“It seems I was taking unnecessary
precautions when I asked
you to be a chaperon,” she said.
“I kept waiting for Quest to do
something, and when he didn't
I told him I loved him.”
“What did he say?”
“It's very peculiar,” she said
unhappily. “He said he
can't
love me. He said he wants to
love me and he feels that he
should, but there's something in
him that refuses to permit it.”
She expected Jakdane to salve
her wounded feelings with a
sympathetic pleasantry, but he
did not. Instead, he just looked
at her very thoughtfully and
said no more about the matter.
He explained his attitude
after Asrange ran amuck.
Asrange was the third passenger.
He was a lean, saturnine
individual who said little and
kept to himself as much as possible.
He was distantly polite in
his relations with both crew and
other passengers, and never
showed the slightest spark of
emotion … until the day Quest
squirted coffee on him.
It was one of those accidents
that can occur easily in space.
The passengers and the two
crewmen on that particular waking
shift (including Jakdane)
were eating lunch on the center-deck.
Quest picked up his bulb
of coffee, but inadvertently
pressed it before he got it to his
lips. The coffee squirted all over
the front of Asrange's clean
white tunic.
“I'm sorry!” exclaimed Quest
in distress.
The man's eyes went wide and
he snarled. So quickly it seemed
impossible, he had unbuckled
himself from his seat and hurled
himself backward from the table
with an incoherent cry. He
seized the first object his hand
touched—it happened to be a
heavy wooden cane leaning
against Jakdane's bunk—propelled
himself like a projectile at
Quest.
Quest rose from the table in
a sudden uncoiling of movement.
He did not unbuckle his safety
belt—he rose and it snapped like
a string.
For a moment Trella thought
he was going to meet Asrange's
assault. But he fled in a long
leap toward the companionway
leading to the astrogation deck
56
above. Landing feet-first in the
middle of the table and rebounding,
Asrange pursued with the
stick upraised.
In his haste, Quest missed the
companionway in his leap and
was cornered against one of the
bunks. Asrange descended on
him like an avenging angel and,
holding onto the bunk with one
hand, rained savage blows on his
head and shoulders with the
heavy stick.
Quest made no effort to retaliate.
He cowered under the attack,
holding his hands in front
of him as if to ward it off. In a
moment, Jakdane and the other
crewman had reached Asrange
and pulled him off.
When they had Asrange in
irons, Jakdane turned to Quest,
who was now sitting unhappily
at the table.
“Take it easy,” he advised.
“I'll wake the psychosurgeon
and have him look you over. Just
stay there.”
Quest shook his head.
“Don't bother him,” he said.
“It's nothing but a few bruises.”
“Bruises? Man, that club
could have broken your skull!
Or a couple of ribs, at the very
least.”
“I'm all right,” insisted
Quest; and when the skeptical
Jakdane insisted on examining
him carefully, he had to admit
it. There was hardly a mark on
him from the blows.
“If it didn't hurt you any
more than that, why didn't you
take that stick away from him?”
demanded Jakdane. “You could
have, easily.”
“I couldn't,” said Quest miserably,
and turned his face
away.
Later, alone with Trella on
the control deck, Jakdane gave
her some sober advice.
“If you think you're in love
with Quest, forget it,” he said.
“Why? Because he's a coward?
I know that ought to make
me despise him, but it doesn't
any more.”
“Not because he's a coward.
Because he's an android!”
“What? Jakdane, you can't be
serious!”
“I am. I say he's an android,
an artificial imitation of a man.
It all figures.
“Look, Trella, he said he was
born on Jupiter. A human could
stand the gravity of Jupiter, inside
a dome or a ship, but what
human could stand the rocket acceleration
necessary to break
free of Jupiter? Here's a man
strong enough to break a spaceship
safety belt just by getting
up out of his chair against it,
tough enough to take a beating
with a heavy stick without being
injured. How can you believe
he's really human?”
Trella remembered the thug
Kregg striking Quest in the face
and then crying that he had injured
his hand on the bar.
“But he said Dr. Mansard was
his father,” protested Trella.
“Robots and androids frequently
look on their makers as
their parents,” said Jakdane.
“Quest may not even know he's
57
artificial. Do you know how
Mansard died?”
“The oxygen equipment failed,
Quest said.”
“Yes. Do you know when?”
“No. Quest never did tell me,
that I remember.”
“He told me: a year before
Quest made his rocket flight to
Ganymede! If the oxygen equipment
failed, how do you think
Quest
lived in the poisonous atmosphere
of Jupiter, if he's human?”
Trella was silent.
“For the protection of humans,
there are two psychological
traits built into every robot
and android,” said Jakdane
gently. “The first is that they
can never, under any circumstances,
attack a human being,
even in self defense. The second
is that, while they may understand
sexual desire objectively,
they can never experience it
themselves.
“Those characteristics fit your
man Quest to a T, Trella. There
is no other explanation for him:
he must be an android.”
Trella did not want to believe
Jakdane was right, but his reasoning
was unassailable. Looking
upon Quest as an android,
many things were explained: his
great strength, his short, broad
build, his immunity to injury,
his refusal to defend himself
against a human, his inability to
return Trella's love for him.
It was not inconceivable that
she should have unknowingly
fallen in love with an android.
Humans could love androids,
with real affection, even knowing
that they were artificial.
There were instances of android
nursemaids who were virtually
members of the families owning
them.
She was glad now that she
had not told Quest of her mission
to Ganymede. He thought
he was Dr. Mansard's son, but
an android had no legal right of
inheritance from his owner. She
would leave it to Dom Blessing
to decide what to do about Quest.
Thus she did not, as she had
intended originally, speak to
Quest about seeing him again
after she had completed her assignment.
Even if Jakdane was
wrong and Quest was human—as
now seemed unlikely—Quest
had told her he could not love
her. Her best course was to try
to forget him.
Nor did Quest try to arrange
with her for a later meeting.
“It has been pleasant knowing
you, Trella,” he said when they
left the G-boat at White Sands.
A faraway look came into his
blue eyes, and he added: “I'm
sorry things couldn't have been
different, somehow.”
“Let's don't be sorry for what
we can't help,” she said gently,
taking his hand in farewell.
Trella took a fast plane from
White Sands, and twenty-four
hours later walked up the front
steps of the familiar brownstone
house on the outskirts of Washington.
Dom Blessing himself met her
at the door, a stooped, graying
58
man who peered at her over his
spectacles.
“You have the papers, eh?”
he said, spying the brief case.
“Good, good. Come in and we'll
see what we have, eh?”
She accompanied him through
the bare, windowless anteroom
which had always seemed to her
such a strange feature of this
luxurious house, and they entered
the big living room. They sat
before a fire in the old-fashioned
fireplace and Blessing opened the
brief case with trembling hands.
“There are things here,” he
said, his eyes sparkling as he
glanced through the notebooks.
“Yes, there are things here. We
shall make something of these,
Miss Trella, eh?”
“I'm glad they're something
you can use, Mr. Blessing,” she
said. “There's something else I
found on my trip, that I think
I should tell you about.”
She told him about Quest.
“He thinks he's the son of Dr.
Mansard,” she finished, “but apparently
he is, without knowing
it, an android Dr. Mansard built
on Jupiter.”
“He came back to Earth with
you, eh?” asked Blessing intently.
“Yes. I'm afraid it's your decision
whether to let him go on
living as a man or to tell him
he's an android and claim ownership
as Dr. Mansard's heir.”
Trella planned to spend a few
days resting in her employer's
spacious home, and then to take
a short vacation before resuming
her duties as his confidential
secretary. The next morning
when she came down from her
room, a change had been made.
Two armed men were with
Dom Blessing at breakfast and
accompanied him wherever he
went. She discovered that two
more men with guns were stationed
in the bare anteroom and
a guard was stationed at every
entrance to the house.
“Why all the protection?” she
asked Blessing.
“A wealthy man must be careful,”
said Blessing cheerfully.
“When we don't understand all
the implications of new circumstances,
we must be prepared for
anything, eh?”
There was only one new circumstance
Trella could think
of. Without actually intending
to, she exclaimed:
“You aren't afraid of Quest?
Why, an android can't hurt a
human!”
Blessing peered at her over his
spectacles.
“And what if he isn't an android,
eh? And if he is—what if
old Mansard didn't build in the
prohibition against harming humans
that's required by law?
What about that, eh?”
Trella was silent, shocked.
There was something here she
hadn't known about, hadn't even
suspected. For some reason, Dom
Blessing feared Dr. Eriklund
Mansard … or his heir … or
his mechanical servant.
She was sure that Blessing
was wrong, that Quest, whether
man or android, intended no
59
harm to him. Surely, Quest
would have said something of
such bitterness during their long
time together on Ganymede and
aspace, since he did not know of
Trella's connection with Blessing.
But, since this was to be
the atmosphere of Blessing's
house, she was glad that he decided
to assign her to take the
Mansard papers to the New
York laboratory.
Quest came the day before she
was scheduled to leave.
Trella was in the living room
with Blessing, discussing the instructions
she was to give to the
laboratory officials in New York.
The two bodyguards were with
them. The other guards were at
their posts.
Trella heard the doorbell ring.
The heavy oaken front door was
kept locked now, and the guards
in the anteroom examined callers
through a tiny window.
Suddenly alarm bells rang all
over the house. There was a terrific
crash outside the room as
the front door splintered. There
were shouts and the sound of a
shot.
“The steel doors!” cried Blessing,
turning white. “Let's get
out of here.”
He and his bodyguards ran
through the back of the house
out of the garage.
Blessing, ahead of the rest,
leaped into one of the cars and
started the engine.
The door from the house shattered
and Quest burst through.
The two guards turned and fired
together.
He could be hurt by bullets.
He was staggered momentarily.
Then, in a blur of motion, he
sprang forward and swept the
guards aside with one hand with
such force that they skidded
across the floor and lay in an
unconscious heap against the
rear of the garage. Trella had
opened the door of the car, but
it was wrenched from her hand
as Blessing stepped on the accelerator
and it leaped into the
driveway with spinning wheels.
Quest was after it, like a
chunky deer, running faster
than Trella had ever seen a man
run before.
Blessing slowed for the turn
at the end of the driveway and
glanced back over his shoulder.
Seeing Quest almost upon him,
he slammed down the accelerator
and twisted the wheel hard.
The car whipped into the
street, careened, and rolled over
and over, bringing up against a
tree on the other side in a twisted
tangle of wreckage.
With a horrified gasp, Trella
ran down the driveway toward
the smoking heap of metal.
Quest was already beside it,
probing it. As she reached his
side, he lifted the torn body of
Dom Blessing. Blessing was
dead.
“I'm lucky,” said Quest soberly.
“I would have murdered
him.”
“But why, Quest? I knew he
was afraid of you, but he didn't
tell me why.”
“It was conditioned into me,”
answered Quest “I didn't know
60
it until just now, when it ended,
but my father conditioned me
psychologically from my birth
to the task of hunting down
Dom Blessing and killing him. It
was an unconscious drive in me
that wouldn't release me until
the task was finished.
“You see, Blessing was my father's
assistant on Ganymede.
Right after my father completed
development of the surgiscope,
he and my mother blasted off for
Io. Blessing wanted the valuable
rights to the surgiscope, and he
sabotaged the ship's drive so it
would fall into Jupiter.
“But my father was able to
control it in the heavy atmosphere
of Jupiter, and landed it
successfully. I was born there,
and he conditioned me to come
to Earth and track down Blessing.
I know now that it was
part of the conditioning that I
was unable to fight any other
man until my task was finished:
it might have gotten me in trouble
and diverted me from that
purpose.”
More gently than Trella would
have believed possible for his
Jupiter-strong muscles, Quest
took her in his arms.
“Now I can say I love you,”
he said. “That was part of the
conditioning too: I couldn't love
any woman until my job was
done.”
Trella disengaged herself.
“I'm sorry,” she said. “Don't
you know this, too, now: that
you're not a man, but an android?”
He looked at her in astonishment,
stunned by her words.
“What in space makes you
think that?” he demanded.
“Why, Quest, it's obvious,”
she cried, tears in her eyes.
“Everything about you … your
build, suited for Jupiter's gravity …
your strength … the
fact that you were able to live
in Jupiter's atmosphere after
the oxygen equipment failed.
I know you think Dr. Mansard
was your father, but androids
often believe that.”
He grinned at her.
“I'm no android,” he said confidently.
“Do you forget my father
was inventor of the surgiscope?
He knew I'd have to grow
up on Jupiter, and he operated
on the genes before I was born.
He altered my inherited characteristics
to adapt me to the climate
of Jupiter … even to
being able to breathe a chlorine
atmosphere as well as an oxygen
atmosphere.”
Trella looked at him. He was
not badly hurt, any more than
an elephant would have been,
but his tunic was stained with
red blood where the bullets had
struck him. Normal android
blood was green.
“How can you be sure?” she
asked doubtfully.
“Androids are made,” he answered
with a laugh. “They
don't grow up. And I remember
my boyhood on Jupiter very
well.”
He took her in his arms again,
and this time she did not resist.
His lips were very human.
THE END | Quest considers himself lucky that Trella is in love with him. | Quest considers himself lucky that he is not actually an android. | Quest considers himself lucky that Asrange did not kill him. | Quest considers himself lucky that he did not commit murder. He is not a murderer at heart. | 3 |
27588_QI4ZJP0M_8 | Why is Jakdane going to Earth? | Transcriber's Note:
Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
possible; changes (corrections of spelling and punctuation) made to
the original text are marked
like this
.
The original text appears when hovering the cursor over the marked text.
This e-text was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
March 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U. S. copyright on this
publication was renewed.
50
THE
JUPITER
WEAPON
By CHARLES L. FONTENAY
He was a living weapon of
destruction—
immeasurably
powerful, utterly invulnerable.
There was only one
question: Was he human?
Trella
feared she was in
for trouble even before Motwick's
head dropped forward on
his arms in a drunken stupor.
The two evil-looking men at the
table nearby had been watching
her surreptitiously, and now
they shifted restlessly in their
chairs.
Trella had not wanted to come
to the Golden Satellite. It was a
squalid saloon in the rougher
section of Jupiter's View, the
terrestrial dome-colony on Ganymede.
Motwick,
already
drunk,
had insisted.
A woman could not possibly
make her way through these
streets alone to the better section
of town, especially one clad
in a silvery evening dress. Her
only hope was that this place
had a telephone. Perhaps she
could call one of Motwick's
friends; she had no one on Ganymede
she could call a real friend
herself.
Tentatively, she pushed her
chair back from the table and
arose. She had to brush close by
the other table to get to the bar.
As she did, the dark, slick-haired
man reached out and grabbed
her around the waist with a
steely arm.
Trella swung with her whole
body, and slapped him so hard
he nearly fell from his chair. As
she walked swiftly toward the
bar, he leaped up to follow her.
There were only two other
people in the Golden Satellite:
the fat, mustached bartender
and a short, square-built man at
the bar. The latter swung
around at the pistol-like report
of her slap, and she saw that,
though no more than four and a
half feet tall, he was as heavily
muscled as a lion.
51
His face was clean and open,
with close-cropped blond hair
and honest blue eyes. She ran to
him.
“Help me!” she cried. “Please
help me!”
He began to back away from
her.
“I can't,” he muttered in a
deep voice. “I can't help you. I
can't do anything.”
The dark man was at her
heels. In desperation, she dodged
around the short man and took
refuge behind him. Her protector
was obviously unwilling, but
the dark man, faced with his
massiveness, took no chances.
He stopped and shouted:
“Kregg!”
The other man at the table
arose, ponderously, and lumbered
toward them. He was immense,
at least six and a half
feet tall, with a brutal, vacant
face.
Evading her attempts to stay
behind him, the squat man began
to move down the bar away
from the approaching Kregg.
The dark man moved in on
Trella again as Kregg overtook
his quarry and swung a huge
fist like a sledgehammer.
Exactly what happened, Trella
wasn't sure. She had the impression
that Kregg's fist connected
squarely with the short man's
chin
before
he dodged to one
side in a movement so fast it
was a blur. But that couldn't
have been, because the short
man wasn't moved by that blow
that would have felled a steer,
and Kregg roared in pain, grabbing
his injured fist.
“The bar!” yelled Kregg. “I
hit the damn bar!”
At this juncture, the bartender
took a hand. Leaning far
over the bar, he swung a full
bottle in a complete arc. It
smashed on Kregg's head,
splashing the floor with liquor,
and Kregg sank stunned to his
knees. The dark man, who had
grabbed Trella's arm, released
her and ran for the door.
Moving agilely around the end
of the bar, the bartender stood
over Kregg, holding the jagged-edged
bottleneck in his hand
menacingly.
“Get out!” rumbled the bartender.
“I'll have no coppers
raiding my place for the likes of
you!”
Kregg stumbled to his feet
and staggered out. Trella ran to
the unconscious Motwick's side.
“That means you, too, lady,”
said the bartender beside her.
“You and your boy friend get
out of here. You oughtn't to
have come here in the first
place.”
“May I help you, Miss?” asked
a deep, resonant voice behind
her.
She straightened from her
anxious examination of Motwick.
The squat man was standing
there, an apologetic look on
his face.
She looked contemptuously at
the massive muscles whose help
had been denied her. Her arm
ached where the dark man had
grasped it. The broad face before
52
her was not unhandsome,
and the blue eyes were disconcertingly
direct, but she despised
him for a coward.
“I'm sorry I couldn't fight
those men for you, Miss, but I
just couldn't,” he said miserably,
as though reading her thoughts.
“But no one will bother you on
the street if I'm with you.”
“A lot of protection you'd be
if they did!” she snapped. “But
I'm desperate. You can carry
him to the Stellar Hotel for me.”
The gravity of Ganymede was
hardly more than that of Earth's
moon, but the way the man
picked up the limp Motwick with
one hand and tossed him over a
shoulder was startling: as
though he lifted a feather pillow.
He followed Trella out the door
of the Golden Satellite and fell
in step beside her. Immediately
she was grateful for his presence.
The dimly lighted street
was not crowded, but she didn't
like the looks of the men she
saw.
The transparent dome of Jupiter's
View was faintly visible
in the reflected night lights of
the colonial city, but the lights
were overwhelmed by the giant,
vari-colored disc of Jupiter itself,
riding high in the sky.
“I'm Quest Mansard, Miss,”
said her companion. “I'm just in
from Jupiter.”
“I'm Trella Nuspar,” she said,
favoring him with a green-eyed
glance. “You mean Io, don't you—or
Moon Five?”
“No,” he said, grinning at
her. He had an engaging grin,
with even white teeth. “I meant
Jupiter.”
“You're lying,” she said flatly.
“No one has ever landed on
Jupiter. It would be impossible
to blast off again.”
“My parents landed on Jupiter,
and I blasted off from it,”
he said soberly. “I was born
there. Have you ever heard of
Dr. Eriklund Mansard?”
“I certainly have,” she said,
her interest taking a sudden
upward turn. “He developed the
surgiscope, didn't he? But his
ship was drawn into Jupiter and
lost.”
“It was drawn into Jupiter,
but he landed it successfully,”
said Quest. “He and my mother
lived on Jupiter until the oxygen
equipment wore out at last. I
was born and brought up there,
and I was finally able to build
a small rocket with a powerful
enough drive to clear the
planet.”
She looked at him. He was
short, half a head shorter than
she, but broad and powerful as
a man might be who had grown
up in heavy gravity. He trod the
street with a light, controlled
step, seeming to deliberately
hold himself down.
“If Dr. Mansard succeeded in
landing on Jupiter, why didn't
anyone ever hear from him
again?” she demanded.
“Because,” said Quest, “his
radio was sabotaged, just as his
ship's drive was.”
“Jupiter strength,” she murmured,
looking him over coolly.
53
“You wear Motwick on your
shoulder like a scarf. But you
couldn't bring yourself to help
a woman against two thugs.”
He flushed.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “That's
something I couldn't help.”
“Why not?”
“I don't know. It's not that
I'm afraid, but there's something
in me that makes me back
away from the prospect of fighting
anyone.”
Trella sighed. Cowardice was
a state of mind. It was peculiarly
inappropriate, but not unbelievable,
that the strongest and
most agile man on Ganymede
should be a coward. Well, she
thought with a rush of sympathy,
he couldn't help being
what he was.
They had reached the more
brightly lighted section of the
city now. Trella could get a cab
from here, but the Stellar Hotel
wasn't far. They walked on.
Trella had the desk clerk call
a cab to deliver the unconscious
Motwick to his home. She and
Quest had a late sandwich in the
coffee shop.
“I landed here only a week
ago,” he told her, his eyes frankly
admiring her honey-colored
hair and comely face. “I'm heading
for Earth on the next spaceship.”
“We'll be traveling companions,
then,” she said. “I'm going
back on that ship, too.”
For some reason she decided
against telling him that the
assignment on which she had
come to the Jupiter system was
to gather his own father's notebooks
and take them back to
Earth.
Motwick was an irresponsible
playboy whom Trella had known
briefly on Earth, and Trella was
glad to dispense with his company
for the remaining three
weeks before the spaceship
blasted off. She found herself
enjoying the steadier companionship
of Quest.
As a matter of fact, she found
herself enjoying his companionship
more than she intended to.
She found herself falling in love
with him.
Now this did not suit her at
all. Trella had always liked her
men tall and dark. She had determined
that when she married
it would be to a curly-haired six-footer.
She was not at all happy about
being so strongly attracted to a
man several inches shorter than
she. She was particularly unhappy
about feeling drawn to a
man who was a coward.
The ship that they boarded on
Moon Nine was one of the newer
ships that could attain a hundred-mile-per-second
velocity
and take a hyperbolic path to
Earth, but it would still require
fifty-four days to make the trip.
So Trella was delighted to find
that the ship was the
Cometfire
and its skipper was her old
friend, dark-eyed, curly-haired
Jakdane Gille.
“Jakdane,” she said, flirting
with him with her eyes as in
54
days gone by, “I need a chaperon
this trip, and you're ideal for
the job.”
“I never thought of myself in
quite that light, but maybe
I'm getting old,” he answered,
laughing. “What's your trouble,
Trella?”
“I'm in love with that huge
chunk of man who came aboard
with me, and I'm not sure I
ought to be,” she confessed. “I
may need protection against myself
till we get to Earth.”
“If it's to keep you out of another
fellow's clutches, I'm your
man,” agreed Jakdane heartily.
“I always had a mind to save
you for myself. I'll guarantee
you won't have a moment alone
with him the whole trip.”
“You don't have to be that
thorough about it,” she protested
hastily. “I want to get a little
enjoyment out of being in love.
But if I feel myself weakening
too much, I'll holler for help.”
The
Cometfire
swung around
great Jupiter in an opening arc
and plummeted ever more swiftly
toward the tight circles of the
inner planets. There were four
crew members and three passengers
aboard the ship's tiny personnel
sphere, and Trella was
thrown with Quest almost constantly.
She enjoyed every minute
of it.
She told him only that she
was a messenger, sent out to
Ganymede to pick up some important
papers and take them
back to Earth. She was tempted
to tell him what the papers were.
Her employer had impressed upon
her that her mission was confidential,
but surely Dom
Blessing
could not object to Dr.
Mansard's son knowing about it.
All these things had happened
before she was born, and she
did not know what Dom Blessing's
relation to Dr. Mansard
had been, but it must have been
very close. She knew that Dr.
Mansard had invented the surgiscope.
This was an instrument with
a three-dimensional screen as its
heart. The screen was a cubical
frame in which an apparently
solid image was built up of an
object under an electron microscope.
The actual cutting instrument
of the surgiscope was an ion
stream. By operating a tool in
the three-dimensional screen,
corresponding movements were
made by the ion stream on the
object under the microscope.
The
principle
was the same as
that used in operation of remote
control “hands” in atomic laboratories
to handle hot material,
and with the surgiscope very
delicate operations could be performed
at the cellular level.
Dr. Mansard and his wife had
disappeared into the turbulent
atmosphere of Jupiter just after
his invention of the surgiscope,
and it had been developed by
Dom Blessing. Its success had
built Spaceway Instruments, Incorporated,
which Blessing headed.
Through all these years since
Dr. Mansard's disappearance,
55
Blessing had been searching the
Jovian moons for a second, hidden
laboratory of Dr. Mansard.
When it was found at last, he
sent Trella, his most trusted
secretary, to Ganymede to bring
back to him the notebooks found
there.
Blessing would, of course, be
happy to learn that a son of Dr.
Mansard lived, and would see
that he received his rightful
share of the inheritance. Because
of this, Trella was tempted
to tell Quest the good news
herself; but she decided against
it. It was Blessing's privilege to
do this his own way, and he
might not appreciate her meddling.
At midtrip, Trella made a rueful
confession to Jakdane.
“It seems I was taking unnecessary
precautions when I asked
you to be a chaperon,” she said.
“I kept waiting for Quest to do
something, and when he didn't
I told him I loved him.”
“What did he say?”
“It's very peculiar,” she said
unhappily. “He said he
can't
love me. He said he wants to
love me and he feels that he
should, but there's something in
him that refuses to permit it.”
She expected Jakdane to salve
her wounded feelings with a
sympathetic pleasantry, but he
did not. Instead, he just looked
at her very thoughtfully and
said no more about the matter.
He explained his attitude
after Asrange ran amuck.
Asrange was the third passenger.
He was a lean, saturnine
individual who said little and
kept to himself as much as possible.
He was distantly polite in
his relations with both crew and
other passengers, and never
showed the slightest spark of
emotion … until the day Quest
squirted coffee on him.
It was one of those accidents
that can occur easily in space.
The passengers and the two
crewmen on that particular waking
shift (including Jakdane)
were eating lunch on the center-deck.
Quest picked up his bulb
of coffee, but inadvertently
pressed it before he got it to his
lips. The coffee squirted all over
the front of Asrange's clean
white tunic.
“I'm sorry!” exclaimed Quest
in distress.
The man's eyes went wide and
he snarled. So quickly it seemed
impossible, he had unbuckled
himself from his seat and hurled
himself backward from the table
with an incoherent cry. He
seized the first object his hand
touched—it happened to be a
heavy wooden cane leaning
against Jakdane's bunk—propelled
himself like a projectile at
Quest.
Quest rose from the table in
a sudden uncoiling of movement.
He did not unbuckle his safety
belt—he rose and it snapped like
a string.
For a moment Trella thought
he was going to meet Asrange's
assault. But he fled in a long
leap toward the companionway
leading to the astrogation deck
56
above. Landing feet-first in the
middle of the table and rebounding,
Asrange pursued with the
stick upraised.
In his haste, Quest missed the
companionway in his leap and
was cornered against one of the
bunks. Asrange descended on
him like an avenging angel and,
holding onto the bunk with one
hand, rained savage blows on his
head and shoulders with the
heavy stick.
Quest made no effort to retaliate.
He cowered under the attack,
holding his hands in front
of him as if to ward it off. In a
moment, Jakdane and the other
crewman had reached Asrange
and pulled him off.
When they had Asrange in
irons, Jakdane turned to Quest,
who was now sitting unhappily
at the table.
“Take it easy,” he advised.
“I'll wake the psychosurgeon
and have him look you over. Just
stay there.”
Quest shook his head.
“Don't bother him,” he said.
“It's nothing but a few bruises.”
“Bruises? Man, that club
could have broken your skull!
Or a couple of ribs, at the very
least.”
“I'm all right,” insisted
Quest; and when the skeptical
Jakdane insisted on examining
him carefully, he had to admit
it. There was hardly a mark on
him from the blows.
“If it didn't hurt you any
more than that, why didn't you
take that stick away from him?”
demanded Jakdane. “You could
have, easily.”
“I couldn't,” said Quest miserably,
and turned his face
away.
Later, alone with Trella on
the control deck, Jakdane gave
her some sober advice.
“If you think you're in love
with Quest, forget it,” he said.
“Why? Because he's a coward?
I know that ought to make
me despise him, but it doesn't
any more.”
“Not because he's a coward.
Because he's an android!”
“What? Jakdane, you can't be
serious!”
“I am. I say he's an android,
an artificial imitation of a man.
It all figures.
“Look, Trella, he said he was
born on Jupiter. A human could
stand the gravity of Jupiter, inside
a dome or a ship, but what
human could stand the rocket acceleration
necessary to break
free of Jupiter? Here's a man
strong enough to break a spaceship
safety belt just by getting
up out of his chair against it,
tough enough to take a beating
with a heavy stick without being
injured. How can you believe
he's really human?”
Trella remembered the thug
Kregg striking Quest in the face
and then crying that he had injured
his hand on the bar.
“But he said Dr. Mansard was
his father,” protested Trella.
“Robots and androids frequently
look on their makers as
their parents,” said Jakdane.
“Quest may not even know he's
57
artificial. Do you know how
Mansard died?”
“The oxygen equipment failed,
Quest said.”
“Yes. Do you know when?”
“No. Quest never did tell me,
that I remember.”
“He told me: a year before
Quest made his rocket flight to
Ganymede! If the oxygen equipment
failed, how do you think
Quest
lived in the poisonous atmosphere
of Jupiter, if he's human?”
Trella was silent.
“For the protection of humans,
there are two psychological
traits built into every robot
and android,” said Jakdane
gently. “The first is that they
can never, under any circumstances,
attack a human being,
even in self defense. The second
is that, while they may understand
sexual desire objectively,
they can never experience it
themselves.
“Those characteristics fit your
man Quest to a T, Trella. There
is no other explanation for him:
he must be an android.”
Trella did not want to believe
Jakdane was right, but his reasoning
was unassailable. Looking
upon Quest as an android,
many things were explained: his
great strength, his short, broad
build, his immunity to injury,
his refusal to defend himself
against a human, his inability to
return Trella's love for him.
It was not inconceivable that
she should have unknowingly
fallen in love with an android.
Humans could love androids,
with real affection, even knowing
that they were artificial.
There were instances of android
nursemaids who were virtually
members of the families owning
them.
She was glad now that she
had not told Quest of her mission
to Ganymede. He thought
he was Dr. Mansard's son, but
an android had no legal right of
inheritance from his owner. She
would leave it to Dom Blessing
to decide what to do about Quest.
Thus she did not, as she had
intended originally, speak to
Quest about seeing him again
after she had completed her assignment.
Even if Jakdane was
wrong and Quest was human—as
now seemed unlikely—Quest
had told her he could not love
her. Her best course was to try
to forget him.
Nor did Quest try to arrange
with her for a later meeting.
“It has been pleasant knowing
you, Trella,” he said when they
left the G-boat at White Sands.
A faraway look came into his
blue eyes, and he added: “I'm
sorry things couldn't have been
different, somehow.”
“Let's don't be sorry for what
we can't help,” she said gently,
taking his hand in farewell.
Trella took a fast plane from
White Sands, and twenty-four
hours later walked up the front
steps of the familiar brownstone
house on the outskirts of Washington.
Dom Blessing himself met her
at the door, a stooped, graying
58
man who peered at her over his
spectacles.
“You have the papers, eh?”
he said, spying the brief case.
“Good, good. Come in and we'll
see what we have, eh?”
She accompanied him through
the bare, windowless anteroom
which had always seemed to her
such a strange feature of this
luxurious house, and they entered
the big living room. They sat
before a fire in the old-fashioned
fireplace and Blessing opened the
brief case with trembling hands.
“There are things here,” he
said, his eyes sparkling as he
glanced through the notebooks.
“Yes, there are things here. We
shall make something of these,
Miss Trella, eh?”
“I'm glad they're something
you can use, Mr. Blessing,” she
said. “There's something else I
found on my trip, that I think
I should tell you about.”
She told him about Quest.
“He thinks he's the son of Dr.
Mansard,” she finished, “but apparently
he is, without knowing
it, an android Dr. Mansard built
on Jupiter.”
“He came back to Earth with
you, eh?” asked Blessing intently.
“Yes. I'm afraid it's your decision
whether to let him go on
living as a man or to tell him
he's an android and claim ownership
as Dr. Mansard's heir.”
Trella planned to spend a few
days resting in her employer's
spacious home, and then to take
a short vacation before resuming
her duties as his confidential
secretary. The next morning
when she came down from her
room, a change had been made.
Two armed men were with
Dom Blessing at breakfast and
accompanied him wherever he
went. She discovered that two
more men with guns were stationed
in the bare anteroom and
a guard was stationed at every
entrance to the house.
“Why all the protection?” she
asked Blessing.
“A wealthy man must be careful,”
said Blessing cheerfully.
“When we don't understand all
the implications of new circumstances,
we must be prepared for
anything, eh?”
There was only one new circumstance
Trella could think
of. Without actually intending
to, she exclaimed:
“You aren't afraid of Quest?
Why, an android can't hurt a
human!”
Blessing peered at her over his
spectacles.
“And what if he isn't an android,
eh? And if he is—what if
old Mansard didn't build in the
prohibition against harming humans
that's required by law?
What about that, eh?”
Trella was silent, shocked.
There was something here she
hadn't known about, hadn't even
suspected. For some reason, Dom
Blessing feared Dr. Eriklund
Mansard … or his heir … or
his mechanical servant.
She was sure that Blessing
was wrong, that Quest, whether
man or android, intended no
59
harm to him. Surely, Quest
would have said something of
such bitterness during their long
time together on Ganymede and
aspace, since he did not know of
Trella's connection with Blessing.
But, since this was to be
the atmosphere of Blessing's
house, she was glad that he decided
to assign her to take the
Mansard papers to the New
York laboratory.
Quest came the day before she
was scheduled to leave.
Trella was in the living room
with Blessing, discussing the instructions
she was to give to the
laboratory officials in New York.
The two bodyguards were with
them. The other guards were at
their posts.
Trella heard the doorbell ring.
The heavy oaken front door was
kept locked now, and the guards
in the anteroom examined callers
through a tiny window.
Suddenly alarm bells rang all
over the house. There was a terrific
crash outside the room as
the front door splintered. There
were shouts and the sound of a
shot.
“The steel doors!” cried Blessing,
turning white. “Let's get
out of here.”
He and his bodyguards ran
through the back of the house
out of the garage.
Blessing, ahead of the rest,
leaped into one of the cars and
started the engine.
The door from the house shattered
and Quest burst through.
The two guards turned and fired
together.
He could be hurt by bullets.
He was staggered momentarily.
Then, in a blur of motion, he
sprang forward and swept the
guards aside with one hand with
such force that they skidded
across the floor and lay in an
unconscious heap against the
rear of the garage. Trella had
opened the door of the car, but
it was wrenched from her hand
as Blessing stepped on the accelerator
and it leaped into the
driveway with spinning wheels.
Quest was after it, like a
chunky deer, running faster
than Trella had ever seen a man
run before.
Blessing slowed for the turn
at the end of the driveway and
glanced back over his shoulder.
Seeing Quest almost upon him,
he slammed down the accelerator
and twisted the wheel hard.
The car whipped into the
street, careened, and rolled over
and over, bringing up against a
tree on the other side in a twisted
tangle of wreckage.
With a horrified gasp, Trella
ran down the driveway toward
the smoking heap of metal.
Quest was already beside it,
probing it. As she reached his
side, he lifted the torn body of
Dom Blessing. Blessing was
dead.
“I'm lucky,” said Quest soberly.
“I would have murdered
him.”
“But why, Quest? I knew he
was afraid of you, but he didn't
tell me why.”
“It was conditioned into me,”
answered Quest “I didn't know
60
it until just now, when it ended,
but my father conditioned me
psychologically from my birth
to the task of hunting down
Dom Blessing and killing him. It
was an unconscious drive in me
that wouldn't release me until
the task was finished.
“You see, Blessing was my father's
assistant on Ganymede.
Right after my father completed
development of the surgiscope,
he and my mother blasted off for
Io. Blessing wanted the valuable
rights to the surgiscope, and he
sabotaged the ship's drive so it
would fall into Jupiter.
“But my father was able to
control it in the heavy atmosphere
of Jupiter, and landed it
successfully. I was born there,
and he conditioned me to come
to Earth and track down Blessing.
I know now that it was
part of the conditioning that I
was unable to fight any other
man until my task was finished:
it might have gotten me in trouble
and diverted me from that
purpose.”
More gently than Trella would
have believed possible for his
Jupiter-strong muscles, Quest
took her in his arms.
“Now I can say I love you,”
he said. “That was part of the
conditioning too: I couldn't love
any woman until my job was
done.”
Trella disengaged herself.
“I'm sorry,” she said. “Don't
you know this, too, now: that
you're not a man, but an android?”
He looked at her in astonishment,
stunned by her words.
“What in space makes you
think that?” he demanded.
“Why, Quest, it's obvious,”
she cried, tears in her eyes.
“Everything about you … your
build, suited for Jupiter's gravity …
your strength … the
fact that you were able to live
in Jupiter's atmosphere after
the oxygen equipment failed.
I know you think Dr. Mansard
was your father, but androids
often believe that.”
He grinned at her.
“I'm no android,” he said confidently.
“Do you forget my father
was inventor of the surgiscope?
He knew I'd have to grow
up on Jupiter, and he operated
on the genes before I was born.
He altered my inherited characteristics
to adapt me to the climate
of Jupiter … even to
being able to breathe a chlorine
atmosphere as well as an oxygen
atmosphere.”
Trella looked at him. He was
not badly hurt, any more than
an elephant would have been,
but his tunic was stained with
red blood where the bullets had
struck him. Normal android
blood was green.
“How can you be sure?” she
asked doubtfully.
“Androids are made,” he answered
with a laugh. “They
don't grow up. And I remember
my boyhood on Jupiter very
well.”
He took her in his arms again,
and this time she did not resist.
His lips were very human.
THE END | Jakdane is a corporate spy from Moon 5 on a mission to infiltrate Dom Blessing's organization. | Jakdane is following Trella to Earth because he is stalking her. | Jakdane is transferring from his company's office on Ganymede to the corporate headquarters on Earth. | Jakdane is the captain of the ship that Trella and Quest are taking to earth. | 3 |
27665_6ZYKASVR_1 | What is the Commission? | Fallout is, of course, always disastrous—
one way or another
JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT
BY WILLIAM LEE
ILLUSTRATED BY SCHOENHERR
"What would you think," I asked
Marjorie over supper, "if I should undertake
to lead a junior achievement
group this summer?"
She pondered it while she went to
the kitchen to bring in the dessert.
It was dried apricot pie, and very
tasty, I might add.
"Why, Donald," she said, "it could
be quite interesting, if I understand
what a junior achievement group is.
What gave you the idea?"
"It wasn't my idea, really," I admitted.
"Mr. McCormack called me
to the office today, and told me that
some of the children in the lower
grades wanted to start one. They
need adult guidance of course, and
one of the group suggested my name."
I should explain, perhaps, that I
teach a course in general science in
our Ridgeville Junior High School,
and another in general physics in the
Senior High School. It's a privilege
which I'm sure many educators must
envy, teaching in Ridgeville, for our
new school is a fine one, and our
academic standards are high. On the
other hand, the fathers of most of
my students work for the Commission
and a constant awareness of the Commission
and its work pervades the
town. It is an uneasy privilege then,
at least sometimes, to teach my old-fashioned
brand of science to these
children of a new age.
"That's very nice," said Marjorie.
"What does a junior achievement
group do?"
"It has the purpose," I told her,
"of teaching the members something
about commerce and industry. They
manufacture simple compositions
like polishing waxes and sell them
from door-to-door. Some groups have
built up tidy little bank accounts
which are available for later educational
expenses."
"Gracious, you wouldn't have to
sell from door-to-door, would you?"
"Of course not. I'd just tell the
kids how to do it."
Marjorie put back her head and
laughed, and I was forced to join her,
for we both recognize that my understanding
and "feel" for commercial
matters—if I may use that expression—is
almost nonexistent.
"Oh, all right," I said, "laugh at
my commercial aspirations. But don't
worry about it, really. Mr. McCormack
said we could get Mr. Wells from
Commercial Department to help out
if he was needed. There is one problem,
though. Mr. McCormack is going
to put up fifty dollars to buy any
raw materials wanted and he rather
suggested that I might advance another
fifty. The question is, could we
do it?"
Marjorie did mental arithmetic.
"Yes," she said, "yes, if it's something
you'd like to do."
We've had to watch such things
rather closely for the last ten—no,
eleven years. Back in the old Ridgeville,
fifty-odd miles to the south, we
had our home almost paid for, when
the accident occurred. It was in the
path of the heaviest fallout, and we
couldn't have kept on living there
even if the town had stayed. When
Ridgeville moved to its present site,
so, of course, did we, which meant
starting mortgage payments all over
again.
Thus it was that on a Wednesday
morning about three weeks later, I
was sitting at one end of a plank picnic
table with five boys and girls
lined up along the sides. This was to
be our headquarters and factory for
the summer—a roomy unused barn
belonging to the parents of one of
the group members, Tommy Miller.
"O.K.," I said, "let's relax. You
don't need to treat me as a teacher,
you know. I stopped being a school
teacher when the final grades went in
last Friday. I'm on vacation now. My
job here is only to advise, and I'm
going to do that as little as possible.
You're going to decide what to do,
and if it's safe and legal and possible
to do with the starting capital we
have, I'll go along with it and help
in any way I can. This is your meeting."
Mr. McCormack had told me, and
in some detail, about the youngsters
I'd be dealing with. The three who
were sitting to my left were the ones
who had proposed the group in the
first place.
Doris Enright was a grave young
lady of ten years, who might, I
thought, be quite a beauty in a few
more years, but was at the moment
rather angular—all shoulders and elbows.
Peter Cope, Jr. and Hilary Matlack
were skinny kids, too. The three
were of an age and were all tall for
ten-year-olds.
I had the impression during that
first meeting that they looked rather
alike, but this wasn't so. Their features
were quite different. Perhaps
from association, for they were close
friends, they had just come to have
a certain similarity of restrained gesture
and of modulated voice. And
they were all tanned by sun and wind
to a degree that made their eyes seem
light and their teeth startlingly white.
The two on my right were cast in
a different mold. Mary McCready
was a big husky redhead of twelve,
with a face full of freckles and an
infectious laugh, and Tommy Miller,
a few months younger, was just an
average, extroverted, well adjusted
youngster, noisy and restless, tee-shirted
and butch-barbered.
The group exchanged looks to see
who would lead off, and Peter Cope
seemed to be elected.
"Well, Mr. Henderson, a junior
achievement group is a bunch of kids
who get together to manufacture and
sell things, and maybe make some
money."
"Is that what you want to do," I
asked, "make money?"
"Why not?" Tommy asked.
"There's something wrong with making
money?"
"Well, sure, I suppose we want to,"
said Hilary. "We'll need some money
to do the things we want to do later."
"And what sort of things would
you like to make and sell?" I asked.
The usual products, of course, with
these junior achievement efforts, are
chemical specialties that can be made
safely and that people will buy and
use without misgivings—solvent to
free up rusty bolts, cleaner to remove
road tar, mechanic's hand soap—that
sort of thing. Mr. McCormack had
told me, though, that I might find
these youngsters a bit more ambitious.
"The Miller boy and Mary McCready,"
he had said, "have exceptionally
high IQ's—around one forty
or one fifty. The other three are hard
to classify. They have some of the
attributes of exceptional pupils, but
much of the time they seem to have
little interest in their studies. The
junior achievement idea has sparked
their imaginations. Maybe it'll be just
what they need."
Mary said, "Why don't we make a
freckle remover? I'd be our first customer."
"The thing to do," Tommy offered,
"is to figure out what people in
Ridgeville want to buy, then sell it
to them."
"I'd like to make something by
powder metallurgy techniques," said
Pete. He fixed me with a challenging
eye. "You should be able to make
ball bearings by molding, then densify
them by electroplating."
"And all we'd need is a hydraulic
press," I told him, "which, on a guess,
might cost ten thousand dollars. Let's
think of something easier."
Pete mulled it over and nodded
reluctantly. "Then maybe something
in the electronics field. A hi-fi sub-assembly
of some kind."
"How about a new detergent?" Hilary
put in.
"Like the liquid dishwashing detergents?"
I asked.
He was scornful. "No, they're formulations—you
know, mixtures.
That's cookbook chemistry. I mean a
brand new synthetic detergent. I've
got an idea for one that ought to be
good even in the hard water we've
got around here."
"Well, now," I said, "organic synthesis
sounds like another operation
calling for capital investment. If we
should keep the achievement group
going for several summers, it might
be possible later on to carry out a
safe synthesis of some sort. You're
Dr. Matlack's son, aren't you? Been
dipping into your father's library?"
"Some," said Hilary, "and I've got
a home laboratory."
"How about you, Doris?" I prompted.
"Do you have a special field of interest?"
"No." She shook her head in mock
despondency. "I'm not very technical.
Just sort of miscellaneous. But if the
group wanted to raise some mice, I'd
be willing to turn over a project I've
had going at home."
"You could sell mice?" Tommy demanded
incredulously.
"Mice," I echoed, then sat back and
thought about it. "Are they a pure
strain? One of the recognized laboratory
strains? Healthy mice of the
right strain," I explained to Tommy,
"might be sold to laboratories. I have
an idea the Commission buys a supply
every month."
"No," said Doris, "these aren't laboratory
mice. They're fancy ones. I
got the first four pairs from a pet
shop in Denver, but they're red—sort
of chipmunk color, you know. I've
carried them through seventeen generations
of careful selection."
"Well, now," I admitted, "the market
for red mice might be rather limited.
Why don't you consider making
an after-shave lotion? Denatured alcohol,
glycerine, water, a little color
and perfume. You could buy some
bottles and have some labels printed.
You'd be in business before you
knew it."
There was a pause, then Tommy
inquired, "How do you sell it?"
"Door-to-door."
He made a face. "Never build up
any volume. Unless it did something
extra. You say we'd put color in it.
How about enough color to leave
your face looking tanned. Men won't
use cosmetics and junk, but if they
didn't have to admit it, they might
like the shave lotion."
Hilary had been deep in thought.
He said suddenly, "Gosh, I think I
know how to make a—what do you
want to call it—a before-shave lotion."
"What would that be?" I asked.
"You'd use it before you shaved."
"I suppose there might be people
who'd prefer to use it beforehand,"
I conceded.
"There will be people," he said
darkly, and subsided.
Mrs. Miller came out to the barn
after a while, bringing a bucket of
soft drinks and ice, a couple of loaves
of bread and ingredients for a variety
of sandwiches. The parents had
agreed to underwrite lunches at the
barn and Betty Miller philosophically
assumed the role of commissary
officer. She paused only to say hello
and to ask how we were progressing
with our organization meeting.
I'd forgotten all about organization,
and that, according to all the
articles I had perused, is most important
to such groups. It's standard practice
for every member of the group
to be a company officer. Of course a
young boy who doesn't know any better,
may wind up a sales manager.
Over the sandwiches, then, I suggested
nominating company officers,
but they seemed not to be interested.
Peter Cope waved it off by remarking
that they'd each do what came
naturally. On the other hand, they
pondered at some length about a
name for the organization, without
reaching any conclusions, so we returned
to the problem of what to
make.
It was Mary, finally, who advanced
the thought of kites. At first there
was little enthusiasm, then Peter said,
"You know, we could work up something
new. Has anybody ever seen a
kite made like a wind sock?"
Nobody had. Pete drew figures in
the air with his hands. "How about
the hole at the small end?"
"I'll make one tonight," said Doris,
"and think about the small end.
It'll work out all right."
I wished that the youngsters weren't
starting out by inventing a new
article to manufacture, and risking an
almost certain disappointment, but to
hold my guidance to the minimum, I
said nothing, knowing that later I
could help them redesign it along
standard lines.
At supper I reviewed the day's
happenings with Marjorie and tried
to recall all of the ideas which had
been propounded. Most of them were
impractical, of course, for a group of
children to attempt, but several of
them appeared quite attractive.
Tommy, for example, wanted to
put tooth powder into tablets that
one would chew before brushing the
teeth. He thought there should be
two colors in the same bottle—orange
for morning and blue for night,
the blue ones designed to leave the
mouth alkaline at bed time.
Pete wanted to make a combination
nail and wood screw. You'd
drive it in with a hammer up to the
threaded part, then send it home with
a few turns of a screwdriver.
Hilary, reluctantly forsaking his
ideas on detergents, suggested we
make black plastic discs, like poker
chips but thinner and as cheap as
possible, to scatter on a snowy sidewalk
where they would pick up extra
heat from the sun and melt the
snow more rapidly. Afterward one
would sweep up and collect the discs.
Doris added to this that if you
could make the discs light enough to
float, they might be colored white
and spread on the surface of a reservoir
to reduce evaporation.
These latter ideas had made unknowing
use of some basic physics,
and I'm afraid I relapsed for a few
minutes into the role of teacher and
told them a little bit about the laws
of radiation and absorption of heat.
"My," said Marjorie, "they're really
smart boys and girls. Tommy Miller
does sound like a born salesman.
Somehow I don't think you're going
to have to call in Mr. Wells."
I do feel just a little embarrassed
about the kite, even now. The fact
that it flew surprised me. That it flew
so confoundedly well was humiliating.
Four of them were at the barn
when I arrived next morning; or
rather on the rise of ground just beyond
it, and the kite hung motionless
and almost out of sight in the pale
sky. I stood and watched for a moment,
then they saw me.
"Hello, Mr. Henderson," Mary said,
and proffered the cord which was
wound on a fishing reel. I played the
kite up and down for a few minutes,
then reeled it in. It was, almost exactly,
a wind sock, but the hole at the
small end was shaped—by wire—into
the general form of a kidney bean.
It was beautifully made, and had a
sort of professional look about it.
"It flies too well," Mary told Doris.
"A kite ought to get caught in a tree
sometimes."
"You're right," Doris agreed. "Let's
see it." She gave the wire at the small
end the slightest of twists. "There, it
ought to swoop."
Sure enough, in the moderate
breeze of that morning, the kite
swooped and yawed to Mary's entire
satisfaction. As we trailed back to the
barn I asked Doris, "How did you
know that flattening the lower edge
of the hole would create instability?"
She looked doubtful.
"Why it would have to, wouldn't
it? It changed the pattern of air pressures."
She glanced at me quickly.
"Of course, I tried a lot of different
shapes while I was making it."
"Naturally," I said, and let it go at
that. "Where's Tommy?"
"He stopped off at the bank," Pete
Cope told me, "to borrow some money.
We'll want to buy materials to
make some of these kites."
"But I said yesterday that Mr. McCormack
and I were going to advance
some cash to get started."
"Oh, sure, but don't you think it
would be better to borrow from a
bank? More businesslike?"
"Doubtless," I said, "but banks generally
want some security." I would
have gone on and explained matters
further, except that Tommy walked
in and handed me a pocket check
book.
"I got two hundred and fifty," he
volunteered—not without a hint of
complacency in his voice. "It didn't
take long, but they sure made it out
a big deal. Half the guys in the bank
had to be called in to listen to the
proposition. The account's in your
name, Mr. Henderson, and you'll have
to make out the checks. And they
want you to stop in at the bank and
give them a specimen signature. Oh,
yes, and cosign the note."
My heart sank. I'd never had any
dealings with banks except in the
matter of mortgages, and bank people
make me most uneasy. To say
nothing of finding myself responsible
for a two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar
note—over two weeks salary. I made
a mental vow to sign very few checks.
"So then I stopped by at Apex
Stationers," Tommy went on, "and ordered
some paper and envelopes. We
hadn't picked a name yesterday, but I
figured what's to lose, and picked one.
Ridge Industries, how's that?" Everybody
nodded.
"Just three lines on the letterhead,"
he explained. "Ridge Industries—Ridgeville—Montana."
I got my voice back and said, "Engraved,
I trust."
"Well, sure," he replied. "You can't
afford to look chintzy."
My appetite was not at its best
that evening, and Marjorie recognized
that something was concerning
me, but she asked no questions, and
I only told her about the success of
the kite, and the youngsters embarking
on a shopping trip for paper, glue
and wood splints. There was no use
in both of us worrying.
On Friday we all got down to work,
and presently had a regular production
line under way; stapling the
wood splints, then wetting them with
a resin solution and shaping them
over a mandrel to stiffen, cutting the
plastic film around a pattern, assembling
and hanging the finished kites
from an overhead beam until the cement
had set. Pete Cope had located
a big roll of red plastic film from
somewhere, and it made a wonderful-looking
kite. Happily, I didn't know
what the film cost until the first kites
were sold.
By Wednesday of the following
week we had almost three hundred
kites finished and packed into flat
cardboard boxes, and frankly I didn't
care if I never saw another. Tommy,
who by mutual consent, was our
authority on sales, didn't want to sell
any until we had, as he put it, enough
to meet the demand, but this quantity
seemed to satisfy him. He said he
would sell them the next week and
Mary McCready, with a fine burst of
confidence, asked him in all seriousness
to be sure to hold out a dozen.
Three other things occurred that
day, two of which I knew about immediately.
Mary brought a portable
typewriter from home and spent part
of the afternoon banging away at
what seemed to me, since I use two
fingers only, a very creditable speed.
And Hilary brought in a bottle of
his new detergent. It was a syrupy
yellow liquid with a nice collar of
suds. He'd been busy in his home
laboratory after all, it seemed.
"What is it?" I asked. "You never
told us."
Hilary grinned. "Lauryl benzyl
phosphonic acid, dipotassium salt, in
20% solution."
"Goodness." I protested, "it's been
twenty-five years since my last course
in chemistry. Perhaps if I saw the
formula—."
He gave me a singularly adult
smile and jotted down a scrawl of
symbols and lines. It meant little to
me.
"Is it good?"
For answer he seized the ice bucket,
now empty of its soda bottles,
trickled in a few drops from the bottle
and swished the contents. Foam
mounted to the rim and spilled over.
"And that's our best grade of Ridgeville
water," he pointed out. "Hardest
in the country."
The third event of Wednesday
came to my ears on Thursday morning.
I was a little late arriving at the
barn, and was taken a bit aback to
find the roadway leading to it rather
full of parked automobiles, and the
barn itself rather full of people, including
two policemen. Our Ridgeville
police are quite young men, but
in uniform they still look ominous
and I was relieved to see that they
were laughing and evidently enjoying
themselves.
"Well, now," I demanded, in my
best classroom voice. "What is all
this?"
"Are you Henderson?" the larger
policeman asked.
"I am indeed," I said, and a flash
bulb went off. A young lady grasped
my arm.
"Oh, please, Mr. Henderson, come
outside where it's quieter and tell me
all about it."
"Perhaps," I countered, "somebody
should tell me."
"You mean you don't know, honestly?
Oh, it's fabulous. Best story I've
had for ages. It'll make the city papers."
She led me around the corner
of the barn to a spot of comparative
quiet.
"You didn't know that one of your
junior whatsisnames poured detergent
in the Memorial Fountain basin
last night?"
I shook my head numbly.
"It was priceless. Just before rush
hour. Suds built up in the basin and
overflowed, and down the library
steps and covered the whole street.
And the funniest part was they kept
right on coming. You couldn't imagine
so much suds coming from that
little pool of water. There was a
three-block traffic jam and Harry got
us some marvelous pictures—men
rolling up their trousers to wade
across the street. And this morning,"
she chortled, "somebody phoned in
an anonymous tip to the police—of
course it was the same boy that did
it—Tommy—Miller?—and so here
we are. And we just saw a demonstration
of that fabulous kite and saw
all those simply captivating mice."
"Mice?"
"Yes, of course. Who would ever
have thought you could breed mice
with those cute furry tails?"
Well, after a while things quieted
down. They had to. The police left
after sobering up long enough to
give me a serious warning against
letting such a thing happen again.
Mr. Miller, who had come home to
see what all the excitement was, went
back to work and Mrs. Miller went
back to the house and the reporter
and photographer drifted off to file
their story, or whatever it is they do.
Tommy was jubilant.
"Did you hear what she said? It'll
make the city papers. I wish we had
a thousand kites. Ten thousand. Oh
boy, selling is fun. Hilary, when can
you make some more of that stuff?
And Doris, how many mice do you
have?"
Those mice! I have always kept
my enthusiasm for rodents within
bounds, but I must admit they were
charming little beasts, with tails as
bushy as miniature squirrels.
"How many generations?" I asked
Doris.
"Seventeen. No, eighteen, now.
Want to see the genetic charts?"
I won't try to explain it as she did
to me, but it was quite evident that
the new mice were breeding true.
Presently we asked Betty Miller to
come back down to the barn for a
conference. She listened and asked
questions. At last she said, "Well, all
right, if you promise me they can't
get out of their cages. But heaven
knows what you'll do when fall
comes. They won't live in an unheated
barn and you can't bring them
into the house."
"We'll be out of the mouse business
by then," Doris predicted. "Every pet
shop in the country will have
them and they'll be down to nothing
apiece."
Doris was right, of course, in spite
of our efforts to protect the market.
Anyhow that ushered in our cage
building phase, and for the next
week—with a few interruptions—we
built cages, hundreds of them, a good
many for breeding, but mostly for
shipping.
It was rather regrettable that, after
the
Courier
gave us most of the third
page, including photographs, we rarely
had a day without a few visitors.
Many of them wanted to buy mice or
kites, but Tommy refused to sell any
mice at retail and we soon had to disappoint
those who wanted kites. The
Supermarket took all we had—except
a dozen—and at a dollar fifty
each. Tommy's ideas of pricing rather
frightened me, but he set the value
of the mice at ten dollars a pair
and got it without any arguments.
Our beautiful stationery arrived,
and we had some invoice forms printed
up in a hurry—not engraved, for
a wonder.
It was on Tuesday—following the
Thursday—that a lanky young man
disentangled himself from his car
and strolled into the barn. I looked
up from the floor where I was tacking
squares of screening onto wooden
frames.
"Hi," he said. "You're Donald
Henderson, right? My name is McCord—Jeff
McCord—and I work in
the Patent Section at the Commission's
downtown office. My boss sent
me over here, but if he hadn't, I
think I'd have come anyway. What
are you doing to get patent protection
on Ridge Industries' new developments?"
I got my back unkinked and dusted
off my knees. "Well, now," I said,
"I've been wondering whether something
shouldn't be done, but I know
very little about such matters—."
"Exactly," he broke in, "we guessed
that might be the case, and there are
three patent men in our office who'd
like to chip in and contribute some
time. Partly for the kicks and partly
because we think you may have some
things worth protecting. How about
it? You worry about the filing and
final fees. That's sixty bucks per
brainstorm. We'll worry about everything
else."
"What's to lose," Tommy interjected.
And so we acquired a patent attorney,
several of them, in fact.
The day that our application on
the kite design went to Washington,
Mary wrote a dozen toy manufacturers
scattered from New York to Los
Angeles, sent a kite to each one and
offered to license the design. Result,
one licensee with a thousand dollar
advance against next season's royalties.
It was a rainy morning about three
weeks later that I arrived at the barn.
Jeff McCord was there, and the whole
team except Tommy. Jeff lowered his
feet from the picnic table and said,
"Hi."
"Hi yourself," I told him. "You
look pleased."
"I am," he replied, "in a cautious
legal sense, of course. Hilary and I
were just going over the situation on
his phosphonate detergent. I've spent
the last three nights studying the patent
literature and a few standard
texts touching on phosphonates.
There are a zillion patents on synthetic
detergents and a good round
fifty on phosphonates, but it looks"—he
held up a long admonitory hand—"it
just looks as though we had a clear
spot. If we do get protection, you've
got a real salable property."
"That's fine, Mr. McCord," Hilary
said, "but it's not very important."
"No?" Jeff tilted an inquiring eyebrow
at me, and I handed him a small
bottle. He opened and sniffed at it
gingerly. "What gives?"
"Before-shave lotion," Hilary told
him. "You've shaved this morning,
but try some anyway."
Jeff looked momentarily dubious,
then puddled some in his palm and
moistened his jaw line. "Smells
good," he noted, "and feels nice and
cool. Now what?"
"Wipe your face." Jeff located a
handkerchief and wiped, looked at
the cloth, wiped again, and stared.
"What is it?"
"A whisker stiffener. It makes each
hair brittle enough to break off right
at the surface of your skin."
"So I perceive. What is it?"
"Oh, just a mixture of stuff. Cookbook
chemistry. Cysteine thiolactone
and a fat-soluble magnesium compound."
"I see. Just a mixture of stuff. And
do your whiskers grow back the next
day?"
"Right on schedule," I said.
McCord unfolded his length and
stood staring out into the rain. Presently
he said, "Henderson, Hilary
and I are heading for my office. We
can work there better than here, and
if we're going to break the hearts of
the razor industry, there's no better
time to start than now."
When they had driven off I turned
and said, "Let's talk a while. We can
always clean mouse cages later.
Where's Tommy?"
"Oh, he stopped at the bank to get
a loan."
"What on earth for? We have over
six thousand in the account."
"Well," Peter said, looking a little
embarrassed, "we were planning to
buy a hydraulic press. You see, Doris
put some embroidery on that scheme
of mine for making ball bearings."
He grabbed a sheet of paper. "Look,
we make a roller bearing, this shape
only it's a permanent magnet. Then
you see—." And he was off.
"What did they do today, dear?"
Marge asked as she refilled my coffee
cup.
"Thanks," I said. "Let's see, it was
a big day. We picked out a hydraulic
press, Doris read us the first chapter
of the book she's starting, and we
found a place over a garage on
Fourth Street that we can rent for
winter quarters. Oh, yes, and Jeff is
starting action to get the company
incorporated."
"Winter quarters," Marge repeated.
"You mean you're going to try to
keep the group going after school
starts?"
"Why not? The kids can sail
through their courses without thinking
about them, and actually they
won't put in more than a few hours
a week during the school year."
"Even so, it's child labor, isn't it?"
"Child labor nothing. They're the
employers. Jeff McCord and I will
be the only employees—just at first,
anyway."
Marge choked on something. "Did
you say you'd be an employee?"
"Sure," I told her. "They've offered
me a small share of the company,
and I'd be crazy to turn it down. After
all, what's to lose?"
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog Science Fact & Fiction
July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The Commission is a group of elected officials that run the town of Ridgeville. | The Commission is a metallurgy company and the main employer in Ridgeville. | The Commission is a chemical company and the main employer in Ridgeville. | The Commission is a laboratory and the main employer in Ridgeville. | 3 |
27665_6ZYKASVR_2 | Why are the children of Ridgeville so smart? | Fallout is, of course, always disastrous—
one way or another
JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT
BY WILLIAM LEE
ILLUSTRATED BY SCHOENHERR
"What would you think," I asked
Marjorie over supper, "if I should undertake
to lead a junior achievement
group this summer?"
She pondered it while she went to
the kitchen to bring in the dessert.
It was dried apricot pie, and very
tasty, I might add.
"Why, Donald," she said, "it could
be quite interesting, if I understand
what a junior achievement group is.
What gave you the idea?"
"It wasn't my idea, really," I admitted.
"Mr. McCormack called me
to the office today, and told me that
some of the children in the lower
grades wanted to start one. They
need adult guidance of course, and
one of the group suggested my name."
I should explain, perhaps, that I
teach a course in general science in
our Ridgeville Junior High School,
and another in general physics in the
Senior High School. It's a privilege
which I'm sure many educators must
envy, teaching in Ridgeville, for our
new school is a fine one, and our
academic standards are high. On the
other hand, the fathers of most of
my students work for the Commission
and a constant awareness of the Commission
and its work pervades the
town. It is an uneasy privilege then,
at least sometimes, to teach my old-fashioned
brand of science to these
children of a new age.
"That's very nice," said Marjorie.
"What does a junior achievement
group do?"
"It has the purpose," I told her,
"of teaching the members something
about commerce and industry. They
manufacture simple compositions
like polishing waxes and sell them
from door-to-door. Some groups have
built up tidy little bank accounts
which are available for later educational
expenses."
"Gracious, you wouldn't have to
sell from door-to-door, would you?"
"Of course not. I'd just tell the
kids how to do it."
Marjorie put back her head and
laughed, and I was forced to join her,
for we both recognize that my understanding
and "feel" for commercial
matters—if I may use that expression—is
almost nonexistent.
"Oh, all right," I said, "laugh at
my commercial aspirations. But don't
worry about it, really. Mr. McCormack
said we could get Mr. Wells from
Commercial Department to help out
if he was needed. There is one problem,
though. Mr. McCormack is going
to put up fifty dollars to buy any
raw materials wanted and he rather
suggested that I might advance another
fifty. The question is, could we
do it?"
Marjorie did mental arithmetic.
"Yes," she said, "yes, if it's something
you'd like to do."
We've had to watch such things
rather closely for the last ten—no,
eleven years. Back in the old Ridgeville,
fifty-odd miles to the south, we
had our home almost paid for, when
the accident occurred. It was in the
path of the heaviest fallout, and we
couldn't have kept on living there
even if the town had stayed. When
Ridgeville moved to its present site,
so, of course, did we, which meant
starting mortgage payments all over
again.
Thus it was that on a Wednesday
morning about three weeks later, I
was sitting at one end of a plank picnic
table with five boys and girls
lined up along the sides. This was to
be our headquarters and factory for
the summer—a roomy unused barn
belonging to the parents of one of
the group members, Tommy Miller.
"O.K.," I said, "let's relax. You
don't need to treat me as a teacher,
you know. I stopped being a school
teacher when the final grades went in
last Friday. I'm on vacation now. My
job here is only to advise, and I'm
going to do that as little as possible.
You're going to decide what to do,
and if it's safe and legal and possible
to do with the starting capital we
have, I'll go along with it and help
in any way I can. This is your meeting."
Mr. McCormack had told me, and
in some detail, about the youngsters
I'd be dealing with. The three who
were sitting to my left were the ones
who had proposed the group in the
first place.
Doris Enright was a grave young
lady of ten years, who might, I
thought, be quite a beauty in a few
more years, but was at the moment
rather angular—all shoulders and elbows.
Peter Cope, Jr. and Hilary Matlack
were skinny kids, too. The three
were of an age and were all tall for
ten-year-olds.
I had the impression during that
first meeting that they looked rather
alike, but this wasn't so. Their features
were quite different. Perhaps
from association, for they were close
friends, they had just come to have
a certain similarity of restrained gesture
and of modulated voice. And
they were all tanned by sun and wind
to a degree that made their eyes seem
light and their teeth startlingly white.
The two on my right were cast in
a different mold. Mary McCready
was a big husky redhead of twelve,
with a face full of freckles and an
infectious laugh, and Tommy Miller,
a few months younger, was just an
average, extroverted, well adjusted
youngster, noisy and restless, tee-shirted
and butch-barbered.
The group exchanged looks to see
who would lead off, and Peter Cope
seemed to be elected.
"Well, Mr. Henderson, a junior
achievement group is a bunch of kids
who get together to manufacture and
sell things, and maybe make some
money."
"Is that what you want to do," I
asked, "make money?"
"Why not?" Tommy asked.
"There's something wrong with making
money?"
"Well, sure, I suppose we want to,"
said Hilary. "We'll need some money
to do the things we want to do later."
"And what sort of things would
you like to make and sell?" I asked.
The usual products, of course, with
these junior achievement efforts, are
chemical specialties that can be made
safely and that people will buy and
use without misgivings—solvent to
free up rusty bolts, cleaner to remove
road tar, mechanic's hand soap—that
sort of thing. Mr. McCormack had
told me, though, that I might find
these youngsters a bit more ambitious.
"The Miller boy and Mary McCready,"
he had said, "have exceptionally
high IQ's—around one forty
or one fifty. The other three are hard
to classify. They have some of the
attributes of exceptional pupils, but
much of the time they seem to have
little interest in their studies. The
junior achievement idea has sparked
their imaginations. Maybe it'll be just
what they need."
Mary said, "Why don't we make a
freckle remover? I'd be our first customer."
"The thing to do," Tommy offered,
"is to figure out what people in
Ridgeville want to buy, then sell it
to them."
"I'd like to make something by
powder metallurgy techniques," said
Pete. He fixed me with a challenging
eye. "You should be able to make
ball bearings by molding, then densify
them by electroplating."
"And all we'd need is a hydraulic
press," I told him, "which, on a guess,
might cost ten thousand dollars. Let's
think of something easier."
Pete mulled it over and nodded
reluctantly. "Then maybe something
in the electronics field. A hi-fi sub-assembly
of some kind."
"How about a new detergent?" Hilary
put in.
"Like the liquid dishwashing detergents?"
I asked.
He was scornful. "No, they're formulations—you
know, mixtures.
That's cookbook chemistry. I mean a
brand new synthetic detergent. I've
got an idea for one that ought to be
good even in the hard water we've
got around here."
"Well, now," I said, "organic synthesis
sounds like another operation
calling for capital investment. If we
should keep the achievement group
going for several summers, it might
be possible later on to carry out a
safe synthesis of some sort. You're
Dr. Matlack's son, aren't you? Been
dipping into your father's library?"
"Some," said Hilary, "and I've got
a home laboratory."
"How about you, Doris?" I prompted.
"Do you have a special field of interest?"
"No." She shook her head in mock
despondency. "I'm not very technical.
Just sort of miscellaneous. But if the
group wanted to raise some mice, I'd
be willing to turn over a project I've
had going at home."
"You could sell mice?" Tommy demanded
incredulously.
"Mice," I echoed, then sat back and
thought about it. "Are they a pure
strain? One of the recognized laboratory
strains? Healthy mice of the
right strain," I explained to Tommy,
"might be sold to laboratories. I have
an idea the Commission buys a supply
every month."
"No," said Doris, "these aren't laboratory
mice. They're fancy ones. I
got the first four pairs from a pet
shop in Denver, but they're red—sort
of chipmunk color, you know. I've
carried them through seventeen generations
of careful selection."
"Well, now," I admitted, "the market
for red mice might be rather limited.
Why don't you consider making
an after-shave lotion? Denatured alcohol,
glycerine, water, a little color
and perfume. You could buy some
bottles and have some labels printed.
You'd be in business before you
knew it."
There was a pause, then Tommy
inquired, "How do you sell it?"
"Door-to-door."
He made a face. "Never build up
any volume. Unless it did something
extra. You say we'd put color in it.
How about enough color to leave
your face looking tanned. Men won't
use cosmetics and junk, but if they
didn't have to admit it, they might
like the shave lotion."
Hilary had been deep in thought.
He said suddenly, "Gosh, I think I
know how to make a—what do you
want to call it—a before-shave lotion."
"What would that be?" I asked.
"You'd use it before you shaved."
"I suppose there might be people
who'd prefer to use it beforehand,"
I conceded.
"There will be people," he said
darkly, and subsided.
Mrs. Miller came out to the barn
after a while, bringing a bucket of
soft drinks and ice, a couple of loaves
of bread and ingredients for a variety
of sandwiches. The parents had
agreed to underwrite lunches at the
barn and Betty Miller philosophically
assumed the role of commissary
officer. She paused only to say hello
and to ask how we were progressing
with our organization meeting.
I'd forgotten all about organization,
and that, according to all the
articles I had perused, is most important
to such groups. It's standard practice
for every member of the group
to be a company officer. Of course a
young boy who doesn't know any better,
may wind up a sales manager.
Over the sandwiches, then, I suggested
nominating company officers,
but they seemed not to be interested.
Peter Cope waved it off by remarking
that they'd each do what came
naturally. On the other hand, they
pondered at some length about a
name for the organization, without
reaching any conclusions, so we returned
to the problem of what to
make.
It was Mary, finally, who advanced
the thought of kites. At first there
was little enthusiasm, then Peter said,
"You know, we could work up something
new. Has anybody ever seen a
kite made like a wind sock?"
Nobody had. Pete drew figures in
the air with his hands. "How about
the hole at the small end?"
"I'll make one tonight," said Doris,
"and think about the small end.
It'll work out all right."
I wished that the youngsters weren't
starting out by inventing a new
article to manufacture, and risking an
almost certain disappointment, but to
hold my guidance to the minimum, I
said nothing, knowing that later I
could help them redesign it along
standard lines.
At supper I reviewed the day's
happenings with Marjorie and tried
to recall all of the ideas which had
been propounded. Most of them were
impractical, of course, for a group of
children to attempt, but several of
them appeared quite attractive.
Tommy, for example, wanted to
put tooth powder into tablets that
one would chew before brushing the
teeth. He thought there should be
two colors in the same bottle—orange
for morning and blue for night,
the blue ones designed to leave the
mouth alkaline at bed time.
Pete wanted to make a combination
nail and wood screw. You'd
drive it in with a hammer up to the
threaded part, then send it home with
a few turns of a screwdriver.
Hilary, reluctantly forsaking his
ideas on detergents, suggested we
make black plastic discs, like poker
chips but thinner and as cheap as
possible, to scatter on a snowy sidewalk
where they would pick up extra
heat from the sun and melt the
snow more rapidly. Afterward one
would sweep up and collect the discs.
Doris added to this that if you
could make the discs light enough to
float, they might be colored white
and spread on the surface of a reservoir
to reduce evaporation.
These latter ideas had made unknowing
use of some basic physics,
and I'm afraid I relapsed for a few
minutes into the role of teacher and
told them a little bit about the laws
of radiation and absorption of heat.
"My," said Marjorie, "they're really
smart boys and girls. Tommy Miller
does sound like a born salesman.
Somehow I don't think you're going
to have to call in Mr. Wells."
I do feel just a little embarrassed
about the kite, even now. The fact
that it flew surprised me. That it flew
so confoundedly well was humiliating.
Four of them were at the barn
when I arrived next morning; or
rather on the rise of ground just beyond
it, and the kite hung motionless
and almost out of sight in the pale
sky. I stood and watched for a moment,
then they saw me.
"Hello, Mr. Henderson," Mary said,
and proffered the cord which was
wound on a fishing reel. I played the
kite up and down for a few minutes,
then reeled it in. It was, almost exactly,
a wind sock, but the hole at the
small end was shaped—by wire—into
the general form of a kidney bean.
It was beautifully made, and had a
sort of professional look about it.
"It flies too well," Mary told Doris.
"A kite ought to get caught in a tree
sometimes."
"You're right," Doris agreed. "Let's
see it." She gave the wire at the small
end the slightest of twists. "There, it
ought to swoop."
Sure enough, in the moderate
breeze of that morning, the kite
swooped and yawed to Mary's entire
satisfaction. As we trailed back to the
barn I asked Doris, "How did you
know that flattening the lower edge
of the hole would create instability?"
She looked doubtful.
"Why it would have to, wouldn't
it? It changed the pattern of air pressures."
She glanced at me quickly.
"Of course, I tried a lot of different
shapes while I was making it."
"Naturally," I said, and let it go at
that. "Where's Tommy?"
"He stopped off at the bank," Pete
Cope told me, "to borrow some money.
We'll want to buy materials to
make some of these kites."
"But I said yesterday that Mr. McCormack
and I were going to advance
some cash to get started."
"Oh, sure, but don't you think it
would be better to borrow from a
bank? More businesslike?"
"Doubtless," I said, "but banks generally
want some security." I would
have gone on and explained matters
further, except that Tommy walked
in and handed me a pocket check
book.
"I got two hundred and fifty," he
volunteered—not without a hint of
complacency in his voice. "It didn't
take long, but they sure made it out
a big deal. Half the guys in the bank
had to be called in to listen to the
proposition. The account's in your
name, Mr. Henderson, and you'll have
to make out the checks. And they
want you to stop in at the bank and
give them a specimen signature. Oh,
yes, and cosign the note."
My heart sank. I'd never had any
dealings with banks except in the
matter of mortgages, and bank people
make me most uneasy. To say
nothing of finding myself responsible
for a two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar
note—over two weeks salary. I made
a mental vow to sign very few checks.
"So then I stopped by at Apex
Stationers," Tommy went on, "and ordered
some paper and envelopes. We
hadn't picked a name yesterday, but I
figured what's to lose, and picked one.
Ridge Industries, how's that?" Everybody
nodded.
"Just three lines on the letterhead,"
he explained. "Ridge Industries—Ridgeville—Montana."
I got my voice back and said, "Engraved,
I trust."
"Well, sure," he replied. "You can't
afford to look chintzy."
My appetite was not at its best
that evening, and Marjorie recognized
that something was concerning
me, but she asked no questions, and
I only told her about the success of
the kite, and the youngsters embarking
on a shopping trip for paper, glue
and wood splints. There was no use
in both of us worrying.
On Friday we all got down to work,
and presently had a regular production
line under way; stapling the
wood splints, then wetting them with
a resin solution and shaping them
over a mandrel to stiffen, cutting the
plastic film around a pattern, assembling
and hanging the finished kites
from an overhead beam until the cement
had set. Pete Cope had located
a big roll of red plastic film from
somewhere, and it made a wonderful-looking
kite. Happily, I didn't know
what the film cost until the first kites
were sold.
By Wednesday of the following
week we had almost three hundred
kites finished and packed into flat
cardboard boxes, and frankly I didn't
care if I never saw another. Tommy,
who by mutual consent, was our
authority on sales, didn't want to sell
any until we had, as he put it, enough
to meet the demand, but this quantity
seemed to satisfy him. He said he
would sell them the next week and
Mary McCready, with a fine burst of
confidence, asked him in all seriousness
to be sure to hold out a dozen.
Three other things occurred that
day, two of which I knew about immediately.
Mary brought a portable
typewriter from home and spent part
of the afternoon banging away at
what seemed to me, since I use two
fingers only, a very creditable speed.
And Hilary brought in a bottle of
his new detergent. It was a syrupy
yellow liquid with a nice collar of
suds. He'd been busy in his home
laboratory after all, it seemed.
"What is it?" I asked. "You never
told us."
Hilary grinned. "Lauryl benzyl
phosphonic acid, dipotassium salt, in
20% solution."
"Goodness." I protested, "it's been
twenty-five years since my last course
in chemistry. Perhaps if I saw the
formula—."
He gave me a singularly adult
smile and jotted down a scrawl of
symbols and lines. It meant little to
me.
"Is it good?"
For answer he seized the ice bucket,
now empty of its soda bottles,
trickled in a few drops from the bottle
and swished the contents. Foam
mounted to the rim and spilled over.
"And that's our best grade of Ridgeville
water," he pointed out. "Hardest
in the country."
The third event of Wednesday
came to my ears on Thursday morning.
I was a little late arriving at the
barn, and was taken a bit aback to
find the roadway leading to it rather
full of parked automobiles, and the
barn itself rather full of people, including
two policemen. Our Ridgeville
police are quite young men, but
in uniform they still look ominous
and I was relieved to see that they
were laughing and evidently enjoying
themselves.
"Well, now," I demanded, in my
best classroom voice. "What is all
this?"
"Are you Henderson?" the larger
policeman asked.
"I am indeed," I said, and a flash
bulb went off. A young lady grasped
my arm.
"Oh, please, Mr. Henderson, come
outside where it's quieter and tell me
all about it."
"Perhaps," I countered, "somebody
should tell me."
"You mean you don't know, honestly?
Oh, it's fabulous. Best story I've
had for ages. It'll make the city papers."
She led me around the corner
of the barn to a spot of comparative
quiet.
"You didn't know that one of your
junior whatsisnames poured detergent
in the Memorial Fountain basin
last night?"
I shook my head numbly.
"It was priceless. Just before rush
hour. Suds built up in the basin and
overflowed, and down the library
steps and covered the whole street.
And the funniest part was they kept
right on coming. You couldn't imagine
so much suds coming from that
little pool of water. There was a
three-block traffic jam and Harry got
us some marvelous pictures—men
rolling up their trousers to wade
across the street. And this morning,"
she chortled, "somebody phoned in
an anonymous tip to the police—of
course it was the same boy that did
it—Tommy—Miller?—and so here
we are. And we just saw a demonstration
of that fabulous kite and saw
all those simply captivating mice."
"Mice?"
"Yes, of course. Who would ever
have thought you could breed mice
with those cute furry tails?"
Well, after a while things quieted
down. They had to. The police left
after sobering up long enough to
give me a serious warning against
letting such a thing happen again.
Mr. Miller, who had come home to
see what all the excitement was, went
back to work and Mrs. Miller went
back to the house and the reporter
and photographer drifted off to file
their story, or whatever it is they do.
Tommy was jubilant.
"Did you hear what she said? It'll
make the city papers. I wish we had
a thousand kites. Ten thousand. Oh
boy, selling is fun. Hilary, when can
you make some more of that stuff?
And Doris, how many mice do you
have?"
Those mice! I have always kept
my enthusiasm for rodents within
bounds, but I must admit they were
charming little beasts, with tails as
bushy as miniature squirrels.
"How many generations?" I asked
Doris.
"Seventeen. No, eighteen, now.
Want to see the genetic charts?"
I won't try to explain it as she did
to me, but it was quite evident that
the new mice were breeding true.
Presently we asked Betty Miller to
come back down to the barn for a
conference. She listened and asked
questions. At last she said, "Well, all
right, if you promise me they can't
get out of their cages. But heaven
knows what you'll do when fall
comes. They won't live in an unheated
barn and you can't bring them
into the house."
"We'll be out of the mouse business
by then," Doris predicted. "Every pet
shop in the country will have
them and they'll be down to nothing
apiece."
Doris was right, of course, in spite
of our efforts to protect the market.
Anyhow that ushered in our cage
building phase, and for the next
week—with a few interruptions—we
built cages, hundreds of them, a good
many for breeding, but mostly for
shipping.
It was rather regrettable that, after
the
Courier
gave us most of the third
page, including photographs, we rarely
had a day without a few visitors.
Many of them wanted to buy mice or
kites, but Tommy refused to sell any
mice at retail and we soon had to disappoint
those who wanted kites. The
Supermarket took all we had—except
a dozen—and at a dollar fifty
each. Tommy's ideas of pricing rather
frightened me, but he set the value
of the mice at ten dollars a pair
and got it without any arguments.
Our beautiful stationery arrived,
and we had some invoice forms printed
up in a hurry—not engraved, for
a wonder.
It was on Tuesday—following the
Thursday—that a lanky young man
disentangled himself from his car
and strolled into the barn. I looked
up from the floor where I was tacking
squares of screening onto wooden
frames.
"Hi," he said. "You're Donald
Henderson, right? My name is McCord—Jeff
McCord—and I work in
the Patent Section at the Commission's
downtown office. My boss sent
me over here, but if he hadn't, I
think I'd have come anyway. What
are you doing to get patent protection
on Ridge Industries' new developments?"
I got my back unkinked and dusted
off my knees. "Well, now," I said,
"I've been wondering whether something
shouldn't be done, but I know
very little about such matters—."
"Exactly," he broke in, "we guessed
that might be the case, and there are
three patent men in our office who'd
like to chip in and contribute some
time. Partly for the kicks and partly
because we think you may have some
things worth protecting. How about
it? You worry about the filing and
final fees. That's sixty bucks per
brainstorm. We'll worry about everything
else."
"What's to lose," Tommy interjected.
And so we acquired a patent attorney,
several of them, in fact.
The day that our application on
the kite design went to Washington,
Mary wrote a dozen toy manufacturers
scattered from New York to Los
Angeles, sent a kite to each one and
offered to license the design. Result,
one licensee with a thousand dollar
advance against next season's royalties.
It was a rainy morning about three
weeks later that I arrived at the barn.
Jeff McCord was there, and the whole
team except Tommy. Jeff lowered his
feet from the picnic table and said,
"Hi."
"Hi yourself," I told him. "You
look pleased."
"I am," he replied, "in a cautious
legal sense, of course. Hilary and I
were just going over the situation on
his phosphonate detergent. I've spent
the last three nights studying the patent
literature and a few standard
texts touching on phosphonates.
There are a zillion patents on synthetic
detergents and a good round
fifty on phosphonates, but it looks"—he
held up a long admonitory hand—"it
just looks as though we had a clear
spot. If we do get protection, you've
got a real salable property."
"That's fine, Mr. McCord," Hilary
said, "but it's not very important."
"No?" Jeff tilted an inquiring eyebrow
at me, and I handed him a small
bottle. He opened and sniffed at it
gingerly. "What gives?"
"Before-shave lotion," Hilary told
him. "You've shaved this morning,
but try some anyway."
Jeff looked momentarily dubious,
then puddled some in his palm and
moistened his jaw line. "Smells
good," he noted, "and feels nice and
cool. Now what?"
"Wipe your face." Jeff located a
handkerchief and wiped, looked at
the cloth, wiped again, and stared.
"What is it?"
"A whisker stiffener. It makes each
hair brittle enough to break off right
at the surface of your skin."
"So I perceive. What is it?"
"Oh, just a mixture of stuff. Cookbook
chemistry. Cysteine thiolactone
and a fat-soluble magnesium compound."
"I see. Just a mixture of stuff. And
do your whiskers grow back the next
day?"
"Right on schedule," I said.
McCord unfolded his length and
stood staring out into the rain. Presently
he said, "Henderson, Hilary
and I are heading for my office. We
can work there better than here, and
if we're going to break the hearts of
the razor industry, there's no better
time to start than now."
When they had driven off I turned
and said, "Let's talk a while. We can
always clean mouse cages later.
Where's Tommy?"
"Oh, he stopped at the bank to get
a loan."
"What on earth for? We have over
six thousand in the account."
"Well," Peter said, looking a little
embarrassed, "we were planning to
buy a hydraulic press. You see, Doris
put some embroidery on that scheme
of mine for making ball bearings."
He grabbed a sheet of paper. "Look,
we make a roller bearing, this shape
only it's a permanent magnet. Then
you see—." And he was off.
"What did they do today, dear?"
Marge asked as she refilled my coffee
cup.
"Thanks," I said. "Let's see, it was
a big day. We picked out a hydraulic
press, Doris read us the first chapter
of the book she's starting, and we
found a place over a garage on
Fourth Street that we can rent for
winter quarters. Oh, yes, and Jeff is
starting action to get the company
incorporated."
"Winter quarters," Marge repeated.
"You mean you're going to try to
keep the group going after school
starts?"
"Why not? The kids can sail
through their courses without thinking
about them, and actually they
won't put in more than a few hours
a week during the school year."
"Even so, it's child labor, isn't it?"
"Child labor nothing. They're the
employers. Jeff McCord and I will
be the only employees—just at first,
anyway."
Marge choked on something. "Did
you say you'd be an employee?"
"Sure," I told her. "They've offered
me a small share of the company,
and I'd be crazy to turn it down. After
all, what's to lose?"
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog Science Fact & Fiction
July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | An accident that included chemical fallout occurred, around the time that the children were conceived. | Tommy and Mary have high IQ's and the other three are androids, built by the Commission. | The children are androids, built by the Commission. | The children of Ridgeville were genetically engineered by the Commission. | 0 |
27665_6ZYKASVR_3 | How do the children feel about Mr. Henderson? | Fallout is, of course, always disastrous—
one way or another
JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT
BY WILLIAM LEE
ILLUSTRATED BY SCHOENHERR
"What would you think," I asked
Marjorie over supper, "if I should undertake
to lead a junior achievement
group this summer?"
She pondered it while she went to
the kitchen to bring in the dessert.
It was dried apricot pie, and very
tasty, I might add.
"Why, Donald," she said, "it could
be quite interesting, if I understand
what a junior achievement group is.
What gave you the idea?"
"It wasn't my idea, really," I admitted.
"Mr. McCormack called me
to the office today, and told me that
some of the children in the lower
grades wanted to start one. They
need adult guidance of course, and
one of the group suggested my name."
I should explain, perhaps, that I
teach a course in general science in
our Ridgeville Junior High School,
and another in general physics in the
Senior High School. It's a privilege
which I'm sure many educators must
envy, teaching in Ridgeville, for our
new school is a fine one, and our
academic standards are high. On the
other hand, the fathers of most of
my students work for the Commission
and a constant awareness of the Commission
and its work pervades the
town. It is an uneasy privilege then,
at least sometimes, to teach my old-fashioned
brand of science to these
children of a new age.
"That's very nice," said Marjorie.
"What does a junior achievement
group do?"
"It has the purpose," I told her,
"of teaching the members something
about commerce and industry. They
manufacture simple compositions
like polishing waxes and sell them
from door-to-door. Some groups have
built up tidy little bank accounts
which are available for later educational
expenses."
"Gracious, you wouldn't have to
sell from door-to-door, would you?"
"Of course not. I'd just tell the
kids how to do it."
Marjorie put back her head and
laughed, and I was forced to join her,
for we both recognize that my understanding
and "feel" for commercial
matters—if I may use that expression—is
almost nonexistent.
"Oh, all right," I said, "laugh at
my commercial aspirations. But don't
worry about it, really. Mr. McCormack
said we could get Mr. Wells from
Commercial Department to help out
if he was needed. There is one problem,
though. Mr. McCormack is going
to put up fifty dollars to buy any
raw materials wanted and he rather
suggested that I might advance another
fifty. The question is, could we
do it?"
Marjorie did mental arithmetic.
"Yes," she said, "yes, if it's something
you'd like to do."
We've had to watch such things
rather closely for the last ten—no,
eleven years. Back in the old Ridgeville,
fifty-odd miles to the south, we
had our home almost paid for, when
the accident occurred. It was in the
path of the heaviest fallout, and we
couldn't have kept on living there
even if the town had stayed. When
Ridgeville moved to its present site,
so, of course, did we, which meant
starting mortgage payments all over
again.
Thus it was that on a Wednesday
morning about three weeks later, I
was sitting at one end of a plank picnic
table with five boys and girls
lined up along the sides. This was to
be our headquarters and factory for
the summer—a roomy unused barn
belonging to the parents of one of
the group members, Tommy Miller.
"O.K.," I said, "let's relax. You
don't need to treat me as a teacher,
you know. I stopped being a school
teacher when the final grades went in
last Friday. I'm on vacation now. My
job here is only to advise, and I'm
going to do that as little as possible.
You're going to decide what to do,
and if it's safe and legal and possible
to do with the starting capital we
have, I'll go along with it and help
in any way I can. This is your meeting."
Mr. McCormack had told me, and
in some detail, about the youngsters
I'd be dealing with. The three who
were sitting to my left were the ones
who had proposed the group in the
first place.
Doris Enright was a grave young
lady of ten years, who might, I
thought, be quite a beauty in a few
more years, but was at the moment
rather angular—all shoulders and elbows.
Peter Cope, Jr. and Hilary Matlack
were skinny kids, too. The three
were of an age and were all tall for
ten-year-olds.
I had the impression during that
first meeting that they looked rather
alike, but this wasn't so. Their features
were quite different. Perhaps
from association, for they were close
friends, they had just come to have
a certain similarity of restrained gesture
and of modulated voice. And
they were all tanned by sun and wind
to a degree that made their eyes seem
light and their teeth startlingly white.
The two on my right were cast in
a different mold. Mary McCready
was a big husky redhead of twelve,
with a face full of freckles and an
infectious laugh, and Tommy Miller,
a few months younger, was just an
average, extroverted, well adjusted
youngster, noisy and restless, tee-shirted
and butch-barbered.
The group exchanged looks to see
who would lead off, and Peter Cope
seemed to be elected.
"Well, Mr. Henderson, a junior
achievement group is a bunch of kids
who get together to manufacture and
sell things, and maybe make some
money."
"Is that what you want to do," I
asked, "make money?"
"Why not?" Tommy asked.
"There's something wrong with making
money?"
"Well, sure, I suppose we want to,"
said Hilary. "We'll need some money
to do the things we want to do later."
"And what sort of things would
you like to make and sell?" I asked.
The usual products, of course, with
these junior achievement efforts, are
chemical specialties that can be made
safely and that people will buy and
use without misgivings—solvent to
free up rusty bolts, cleaner to remove
road tar, mechanic's hand soap—that
sort of thing. Mr. McCormack had
told me, though, that I might find
these youngsters a bit more ambitious.
"The Miller boy and Mary McCready,"
he had said, "have exceptionally
high IQ's—around one forty
or one fifty. The other three are hard
to classify. They have some of the
attributes of exceptional pupils, but
much of the time they seem to have
little interest in their studies. The
junior achievement idea has sparked
their imaginations. Maybe it'll be just
what they need."
Mary said, "Why don't we make a
freckle remover? I'd be our first customer."
"The thing to do," Tommy offered,
"is to figure out what people in
Ridgeville want to buy, then sell it
to them."
"I'd like to make something by
powder metallurgy techniques," said
Pete. He fixed me with a challenging
eye. "You should be able to make
ball bearings by molding, then densify
them by electroplating."
"And all we'd need is a hydraulic
press," I told him, "which, on a guess,
might cost ten thousand dollars. Let's
think of something easier."
Pete mulled it over and nodded
reluctantly. "Then maybe something
in the electronics field. A hi-fi sub-assembly
of some kind."
"How about a new detergent?" Hilary
put in.
"Like the liquid dishwashing detergents?"
I asked.
He was scornful. "No, they're formulations—you
know, mixtures.
That's cookbook chemistry. I mean a
brand new synthetic detergent. I've
got an idea for one that ought to be
good even in the hard water we've
got around here."
"Well, now," I said, "organic synthesis
sounds like another operation
calling for capital investment. If we
should keep the achievement group
going for several summers, it might
be possible later on to carry out a
safe synthesis of some sort. You're
Dr. Matlack's son, aren't you? Been
dipping into your father's library?"
"Some," said Hilary, "and I've got
a home laboratory."
"How about you, Doris?" I prompted.
"Do you have a special field of interest?"
"No." She shook her head in mock
despondency. "I'm not very technical.
Just sort of miscellaneous. But if the
group wanted to raise some mice, I'd
be willing to turn over a project I've
had going at home."
"You could sell mice?" Tommy demanded
incredulously.
"Mice," I echoed, then sat back and
thought about it. "Are they a pure
strain? One of the recognized laboratory
strains? Healthy mice of the
right strain," I explained to Tommy,
"might be sold to laboratories. I have
an idea the Commission buys a supply
every month."
"No," said Doris, "these aren't laboratory
mice. They're fancy ones. I
got the first four pairs from a pet
shop in Denver, but they're red—sort
of chipmunk color, you know. I've
carried them through seventeen generations
of careful selection."
"Well, now," I admitted, "the market
for red mice might be rather limited.
Why don't you consider making
an after-shave lotion? Denatured alcohol,
glycerine, water, a little color
and perfume. You could buy some
bottles and have some labels printed.
You'd be in business before you
knew it."
There was a pause, then Tommy
inquired, "How do you sell it?"
"Door-to-door."
He made a face. "Never build up
any volume. Unless it did something
extra. You say we'd put color in it.
How about enough color to leave
your face looking tanned. Men won't
use cosmetics and junk, but if they
didn't have to admit it, they might
like the shave lotion."
Hilary had been deep in thought.
He said suddenly, "Gosh, I think I
know how to make a—what do you
want to call it—a before-shave lotion."
"What would that be?" I asked.
"You'd use it before you shaved."
"I suppose there might be people
who'd prefer to use it beforehand,"
I conceded.
"There will be people," he said
darkly, and subsided.
Mrs. Miller came out to the barn
after a while, bringing a bucket of
soft drinks and ice, a couple of loaves
of bread and ingredients for a variety
of sandwiches. The parents had
agreed to underwrite lunches at the
barn and Betty Miller philosophically
assumed the role of commissary
officer. She paused only to say hello
and to ask how we were progressing
with our organization meeting.
I'd forgotten all about organization,
and that, according to all the
articles I had perused, is most important
to such groups. It's standard practice
for every member of the group
to be a company officer. Of course a
young boy who doesn't know any better,
may wind up a sales manager.
Over the sandwiches, then, I suggested
nominating company officers,
but they seemed not to be interested.
Peter Cope waved it off by remarking
that they'd each do what came
naturally. On the other hand, they
pondered at some length about a
name for the organization, without
reaching any conclusions, so we returned
to the problem of what to
make.
It was Mary, finally, who advanced
the thought of kites. At first there
was little enthusiasm, then Peter said,
"You know, we could work up something
new. Has anybody ever seen a
kite made like a wind sock?"
Nobody had. Pete drew figures in
the air with his hands. "How about
the hole at the small end?"
"I'll make one tonight," said Doris,
"and think about the small end.
It'll work out all right."
I wished that the youngsters weren't
starting out by inventing a new
article to manufacture, and risking an
almost certain disappointment, but to
hold my guidance to the minimum, I
said nothing, knowing that later I
could help them redesign it along
standard lines.
At supper I reviewed the day's
happenings with Marjorie and tried
to recall all of the ideas which had
been propounded. Most of them were
impractical, of course, for a group of
children to attempt, but several of
them appeared quite attractive.
Tommy, for example, wanted to
put tooth powder into tablets that
one would chew before brushing the
teeth. He thought there should be
two colors in the same bottle—orange
for morning and blue for night,
the blue ones designed to leave the
mouth alkaline at bed time.
Pete wanted to make a combination
nail and wood screw. You'd
drive it in with a hammer up to the
threaded part, then send it home with
a few turns of a screwdriver.
Hilary, reluctantly forsaking his
ideas on detergents, suggested we
make black plastic discs, like poker
chips but thinner and as cheap as
possible, to scatter on a snowy sidewalk
where they would pick up extra
heat from the sun and melt the
snow more rapidly. Afterward one
would sweep up and collect the discs.
Doris added to this that if you
could make the discs light enough to
float, they might be colored white
and spread on the surface of a reservoir
to reduce evaporation.
These latter ideas had made unknowing
use of some basic physics,
and I'm afraid I relapsed for a few
minutes into the role of teacher and
told them a little bit about the laws
of radiation and absorption of heat.
"My," said Marjorie, "they're really
smart boys and girls. Tommy Miller
does sound like a born salesman.
Somehow I don't think you're going
to have to call in Mr. Wells."
I do feel just a little embarrassed
about the kite, even now. The fact
that it flew surprised me. That it flew
so confoundedly well was humiliating.
Four of them were at the barn
when I arrived next morning; or
rather on the rise of ground just beyond
it, and the kite hung motionless
and almost out of sight in the pale
sky. I stood and watched for a moment,
then they saw me.
"Hello, Mr. Henderson," Mary said,
and proffered the cord which was
wound on a fishing reel. I played the
kite up and down for a few minutes,
then reeled it in. It was, almost exactly,
a wind sock, but the hole at the
small end was shaped—by wire—into
the general form of a kidney bean.
It was beautifully made, and had a
sort of professional look about it.
"It flies too well," Mary told Doris.
"A kite ought to get caught in a tree
sometimes."
"You're right," Doris agreed. "Let's
see it." She gave the wire at the small
end the slightest of twists. "There, it
ought to swoop."
Sure enough, in the moderate
breeze of that morning, the kite
swooped and yawed to Mary's entire
satisfaction. As we trailed back to the
barn I asked Doris, "How did you
know that flattening the lower edge
of the hole would create instability?"
She looked doubtful.
"Why it would have to, wouldn't
it? It changed the pattern of air pressures."
She glanced at me quickly.
"Of course, I tried a lot of different
shapes while I was making it."
"Naturally," I said, and let it go at
that. "Where's Tommy?"
"He stopped off at the bank," Pete
Cope told me, "to borrow some money.
We'll want to buy materials to
make some of these kites."
"But I said yesterday that Mr. McCormack
and I were going to advance
some cash to get started."
"Oh, sure, but don't you think it
would be better to borrow from a
bank? More businesslike?"
"Doubtless," I said, "but banks generally
want some security." I would
have gone on and explained matters
further, except that Tommy walked
in and handed me a pocket check
book.
"I got two hundred and fifty," he
volunteered—not without a hint of
complacency in his voice. "It didn't
take long, but they sure made it out
a big deal. Half the guys in the bank
had to be called in to listen to the
proposition. The account's in your
name, Mr. Henderson, and you'll have
to make out the checks. And they
want you to stop in at the bank and
give them a specimen signature. Oh,
yes, and cosign the note."
My heart sank. I'd never had any
dealings with banks except in the
matter of mortgages, and bank people
make me most uneasy. To say
nothing of finding myself responsible
for a two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar
note—over two weeks salary. I made
a mental vow to sign very few checks.
"So then I stopped by at Apex
Stationers," Tommy went on, "and ordered
some paper and envelopes. We
hadn't picked a name yesterday, but I
figured what's to lose, and picked one.
Ridge Industries, how's that?" Everybody
nodded.
"Just three lines on the letterhead,"
he explained. "Ridge Industries—Ridgeville—Montana."
I got my voice back and said, "Engraved,
I trust."
"Well, sure," he replied. "You can't
afford to look chintzy."
My appetite was not at its best
that evening, and Marjorie recognized
that something was concerning
me, but she asked no questions, and
I only told her about the success of
the kite, and the youngsters embarking
on a shopping trip for paper, glue
and wood splints. There was no use
in both of us worrying.
On Friday we all got down to work,
and presently had a regular production
line under way; stapling the
wood splints, then wetting them with
a resin solution and shaping them
over a mandrel to stiffen, cutting the
plastic film around a pattern, assembling
and hanging the finished kites
from an overhead beam until the cement
had set. Pete Cope had located
a big roll of red plastic film from
somewhere, and it made a wonderful-looking
kite. Happily, I didn't know
what the film cost until the first kites
were sold.
By Wednesday of the following
week we had almost three hundred
kites finished and packed into flat
cardboard boxes, and frankly I didn't
care if I never saw another. Tommy,
who by mutual consent, was our
authority on sales, didn't want to sell
any until we had, as he put it, enough
to meet the demand, but this quantity
seemed to satisfy him. He said he
would sell them the next week and
Mary McCready, with a fine burst of
confidence, asked him in all seriousness
to be sure to hold out a dozen.
Three other things occurred that
day, two of which I knew about immediately.
Mary brought a portable
typewriter from home and spent part
of the afternoon banging away at
what seemed to me, since I use two
fingers only, a very creditable speed.
And Hilary brought in a bottle of
his new detergent. It was a syrupy
yellow liquid with a nice collar of
suds. He'd been busy in his home
laboratory after all, it seemed.
"What is it?" I asked. "You never
told us."
Hilary grinned. "Lauryl benzyl
phosphonic acid, dipotassium salt, in
20% solution."
"Goodness." I protested, "it's been
twenty-five years since my last course
in chemistry. Perhaps if I saw the
formula—."
He gave me a singularly adult
smile and jotted down a scrawl of
symbols and lines. It meant little to
me.
"Is it good?"
For answer he seized the ice bucket,
now empty of its soda bottles,
trickled in a few drops from the bottle
and swished the contents. Foam
mounted to the rim and spilled over.
"And that's our best grade of Ridgeville
water," he pointed out. "Hardest
in the country."
The third event of Wednesday
came to my ears on Thursday morning.
I was a little late arriving at the
barn, and was taken a bit aback to
find the roadway leading to it rather
full of parked automobiles, and the
barn itself rather full of people, including
two policemen. Our Ridgeville
police are quite young men, but
in uniform they still look ominous
and I was relieved to see that they
were laughing and evidently enjoying
themselves.
"Well, now," I demanded, in my
best classroom voice. "What is all
this?"
"Are you Henderson?" the larger
policeman asked.
"I am indeed," I said, and a flash
bulb went off. A young lady grasped
my arm.
"Oh, please, Mr. Henderson, come
outside where it's quieter and tell me
all about it."
"Perhaps," I countered, "somebody
should tell me."
"You mean you don't know, honestly?
Oh, it's fabulous. Best story I've
had for ages. It'll make the city papers."
She led me around the corner
of the barn to a spot of comparative
quiet.
"You didn't know that one of your
junior whatsisnames poured detergent
in the Memorial Fountain basin
last night?"
I shook my head numbly.
"It was priceless. Just before rush
hour. Suds built up in the basin and
overflowed, and down the library
steps and covered the whole street.
And the funniest part was they kept
right on coming. You couldn't imagine
so much suds coming from that
little pool of water. There was a
three-block traffic jam and Harry got
us some marvelous pictures—men
rolling up their trousers to wade
across the street. And this morning,"
she chortled, "somebody phoned in
an anonymous tip to the police—of
course it was the same boy that did
it—Tommy—Miller?—and so here
we are. And we just saw a demonstration
of that fabulous kite and saw
all those simply captivating mice."
"Mice?"
"Yes, of course. Who would ever
have thought you could breed mice
with those cute furry tails?"
Well, after a while things quieted
down. They had to. The police left
after sobering up long enough to
give me a serious warning against
letting such a thing happen again.
Mr. Miller, who had come home to
see what all the excitement was, went
back to work and Mrs. Miller went
back to the house and the reporter
and photographer drifted off to file
their story, or whatever it is they do.
Tommy was jubilant.
"Did you hear what she said? It'll
make the city papers. I wish we had
a thousand kites. Ten thousand. Oh
boy, selling is fun. Hilary, when can
you make some more of that stuff?
And Doris, how many mice do you
have?"
Those mice! I have always kept
my enthusiasm for rodents within
bounds, but I must admit they were
charming little beasts, with tails as
bushy as miniature squirrels.
"How many generations?" I asked
Doris.
"Seventeen. No, eighteen, now.
Want to see the genetic charts?"
I won't try to explain it as she did
to me, but it was quite evident that
the new mice were breeding true.
Presently we asked Betty Miller to
come back down to the barn for a
conference. She listened and asked
questions. At last she said, "Well, all
right, if you promise me they can't
get out of their cages. But heaven
knows what you'll do when fall
comes. They won't live in an unheated
barn and you can't bring them
into the house."
"We'll be out of the mouse business
by then," Doris predicted. "Every pet
shop in the country will have
them and they'll be down to nothing
apiece."
Doris was right, of course, in spite
of our efforts to protect the market.
Anyhow that ushered in our cage
building phase, and for the next
week—with a few interruptions—we
built cages, hundreds of them, a good
many for breeding, but mostly for
shipping.
It was rather regrettable that, after
the
Courier
gave us most of the third
page, including photographs, we rarely
had a day without a few visitors.
Many of them wanted to buy mice or
kites, but Tommy refused to sell any
mice at retail and we soon had to disappoint
those who wanted kites. The
Supermarket took all we had—except
a dozen—and at a dollar fifty
each. Tommy's ideas of pricing rather
frightened me, but he set the value
of the mice at ten dollars a pair
and got it without any arguments.
Our beautiful stationery arrived,
and we had some invoice forms printed
up in a hurry—not engraved, for
a wonder.
It was on Tuesday—following the
Thursday—that a lanky young man
disentangled himself from his car
and strolled into the barn. I looked
up from the floor where I was tacking
squares of screening onto wooden
frames.
"Hi," he said. "You're Donald
Henderson, right? My name is McCord—Jeff
McCord—and I work in
the Patent Section at the Commission's
downtown office. My boss sent
me over here, but if he hadn't, I
think I'd have come anyway. What
are you doing to get patent protection
on Ridge Industries' new developments?"
I got my back unkinked and dusted
off my knees. "Well, now," I said,
"I've been wondering whether something
shouldn't be done, but I know
very little about such matters—."
"Exactly," he broke in, "we guessed
that might be the case, and there are
three patent men in our office who'd
like to chip in and contribute some
time. Partly for the kicks and partly
because we think you may have some
things worth protecting. How about
it? You worry about the filing and
final fees. That's sixty bucks per
brainstorm. We'll worry about everything
else."
"What's to lose," Tommy interjected.
And so we acquired a patent attorney,
several of them, in fact.
The day that our application on
the kite design went to Washington,
Mary wrote a dozen toy manufacturers
scattered from New York to Los
Angeles, sent a kite to each one and
offered to license the design. Result,
one licensee with a thousand dollar
advance against next season's royalties.
It was a rainy morning about three
weeks later that I arrived at the barn.
Jeff McCord was there, and the whole
team except Tommy. Jeff lowered his
feet from the picnic table and said,
"Hi."
"Hi yourself," I told him. "You
look pleased."
"I am," he replied, "in a cautious
legal sense, of course. Hilary and I
were just going over the situation on
his phosphonate detergent. I've spent
the last three nights studying the patent
literature and a few standard
texts touching on phosphonates.
There are a zillion patents on synthetic
detergents and a good round
fifty on phosphonates, but it looks"—he
held up a long admonitory hand—"it
just looks as though we had a clear
spot. If we do get protection, you've
got a real salable property."
"That's fine, Mr. McCord," Hilary
said, "but it's not very important."
"No?" Jeff tilted an inquiring eyebrow
at me, and I handed him a small
bottle. He opened and sniffed at it
gingerly. "What gives?"
"Before-shave lotion," Hilary told
him. "You've shaved this morning,
but try some anyway."
Jeff looked momentarily dubious,
then puddled some in his palm and
moistened his jaw line. "Smells
good," he noted, "and feels nice and
cool. Now what?"
"Wipe your face." Jeff located a
handkerchief and wiped, looked at
the cloth, wiped again, and stared.
"What is it?"
"A whisker stiffener. It makes each
hair brittle enough to break off right
at the surface of your skin."
"So I perceive. What is it?"
"Oh, just a mixture of stuff. Cookbook
chemistry. Cysteine thiolactone
and a fat-soluble magnesium compound."
"I see. Just a mixture of stuff. And
do your whiskers grow back the next
day?"
"Right on schedule," I said.
McCord unfolded his length and
stood staring out into the rain. Presently
he said, "Henderson, Hilary
and I are heading for my office. We
can work there better than here, and
if we're going to break the hearts of
the razor industry, there's no better
time to start than now."
When they had driven off I turned
and said, "Let's talk a while. We can
always clean mouse cages later.
Where's Tommy?"
"Oh, he stopped at the bank to get
a loan."
"What on earth for? We have over
six thousand in the account."
"Well," Peter said, looking a little
embarrassed, "we were planning to
buy a hydraulic press. You see, Doris
put some embroidery on that scheme
of mine for making ball bearings."
He grabbed a sheet of paper. "Look,
we make a roller bearing, this shape
only it's a permanent magnet. Then
you see—." And he was off.
"What did they do today, dear?"
Marge asked as she refilled my coffee
cup.
"Thanks," I said. "Let's see, it was
a big day. We picked out a hydraulic
press, Doris read us the first chapter
of the book she's starting, and we
found a place over a garage on
Fourth Street that we can rent for
winter quarters. Oh, yes, and Jeff is
starting action to get the company
incorporated."
"Winter quarters," Marge repeated.
"You mean you're going to try to
keep the group going after school
starts?"
"Why not? The kids can sail
through their courses without thinking
about them, and actually they
won't put in more than a few hours
a week during the school year."
"Even so, it's child labor, isn't it?"
"Child labor nothing. They're the
employers. Jeff McCord and I will
be the only employees—just at first,
anyway."
Marge choked on something. "Did
you say you'd be an employee?"
"Sure," I told her. "They've offered
me a small share of the company,
and I'd be crazy to turn it down. After
all, what's to lose?"
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog Science Fact & Fiction
July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The children do not like Mr. Henderson. | The children feel Mr. Henderson is a bit chintzy. | The children feel Mr. Henderson is holding them back from their true potential. | The children like Mr. Henderson, but they know they are smarter than he is. | 3 |
27665_6ZYKASVR_4 | How is Hilary's product going to kill the razor industry? | Fallout is, of course, always disastrous—
one way or another
JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT
BY WILLIAM LEE
ILLUSTRATED BY SCHOENHERR
"What would you think," I asked
Marjorie over supper, "if I should undertake
to lead a junior achievement
group this summer?"
She pondered it while she went to
the kitchen to bring in the dessert.
It was dried apricot pie, and very
tasty, I might add.
"Why, Donald," she said, "it could
be quite interesting, if I understand
what a junior achievement group is.
What gave you the idea?"
"It wasn't my idea, really," I admitted.
"Mr. McCormack called me
to the office today, and told me that
some of the children in the lower
grades wanted to start one. They
need adult guidance of course, and
one of the group suggested my name."
I should explain, perhaps, that I
teach a course in general science in
our Ridgeville Junior High School,
and another in general physics in the
Senior High School. It's a privilege
which I'm sure many educators must
envy, teaching in Ridgeville, for our
new school is a fine one, and our
academic standards are high. On the
other hand, the fathers of most of
my students work for the Commission
and a constant awareness of the Commission
and its work pervades the
town. It is an uneasy privilege then,
at least sometimes, to teach my old-fashioned
brand of science to these
children of a new age.
"That's very nice," said Marjorie.
"What does a junior achievement
group do?"
"It has the purpose," I told her,
"of teaching the members something
about commerce and industry. They
manufacture simple compositions
like polishing waxes and sell them
from door-to-door. Some groups have
built up tidy little bank accounts
which are available for later educational
expenses."
"Gracious, you wouldn't have to
sell from door-to-door, would you?"
"Of course not. I'd just tell the
kids how to do it."
Marjorie put back her head and
laughed, and I was forced to join her,
for we both recognize that my understanding
and "feel" for commercial
matters—if I may use that expression—is
almost nonexistent.
"Oh, all right," I said, "laugh at
my commercial aspirations. But don't
worry about it, really. Mr. McCormack
said we could get Mr. Wells from
Commercial Department to help out
if he was needed. There is one problem,
though. Mr. McCormack is going
to put up fifty dollars to buy any
raw materials wanted and he rather
suggested that I might advance another
fifty. The question is, could we
do it?"
Marjorie did mental arithmetic.
"Yes," she said, "yes, if it's something
you'd like to do."
We've had to watch such things
rather closely for the last ten—no,
eleven years. Back in the old Ridgeville,
fifty-odd miles to the south, we
had our home almost paid for, when
the accident occurred. It was in the
path of the heaviest fallout, and we
couldn't have kept on living there
even if the town had stayed. When
Ridgeville moved to its present site,
so, of course, did we, which meant
starting mortgage payments all over
again.
Thus it was that on a Wednesday
morning about three weeks later, I
was sitting at one end of a plank picnic
table with five boys and girls
lined up along the sides. This was to
be our headquarters and factory for
the summer—a roomy unused barn
belonging to the parents of one of
the group members, Tommy Miller.
"O.K.," I said, "let's relax. You
don't need to treat me as a teacher,
you know. I stopped being a school
teacher when the final grades went in
last Friday. I'm on vacation now. My
job here is only to advise, and I'm
going to do that as little as possible.
You're going to decide what to do,
and if it's safe and legal and possible
to do with the starting capital we
have, I'll go along with it and help
in any way I can. This is your meeting."
Mr. McCormack had told me, and
in some detail, about the youngsters
I'd be dealing with. The three who
were sitting to my left were the ones
who had proposed the group in the
first place.
Doris Enright was a grave young
lady of ten years, who might, I
thought, be quite a beauty in a few
more years, but was at the moment
rather angular—all shoulders and elbows.
Peter Cope, Jr. and Hilary Matlack
were skinny kids, too. The three
were of an age and were all tall for
ten-year-olds.
I had the impression during that
first meeting that they looked rather
alike, but this wasn't so. Their features
were quite different. Perhaps
from association, for they were close
friends, they had just come to have
a certain similarity of restrained gesture
and of modulated voice. And
they were all tanned by sun and wind
to a degree that made their eyes seem
light and their teeth startlingly white.
The two on my right were cast in
a different mold. Mary McCready
was a big husky redhead of twelve,
with a face full of freckles and an
infectious laugh, and Tommy Miller,
a few months younger, was just an
average, extroverted, well adjusted
youngster, noisy and restless, tee-shirted
and butch-barbered.
The group exchanged looks to see
who would lead off, and Peter Cope
seemed to be elected.
"Well, Mr. Henderson, a junior
achievement group is a bunch of kids
who get together to manufacture and
sell things, and maybe make some
money."
"Is that what you want to do," I
asked, "make money?"
"Why not?" Tommy asked.
"There's something wrong with making
money?"
"Well, sure, I suppose we want to,"
said Hilary. "We'll need some money
to do the things we want to do later."
"And what sort of things would
you like to make and sell?" I asked.
The usual products, of course, with
these junior achievement efforts, are
chemical specialties that can be made
safely and that people will buy and
use without misgivings—solvent to
free up rusty bolts, cleaner to remove
road tar, mechanic's hand soap—that
sort of thing. Mr. McCormack had
told me, though, that I might find
these youngsters a bit more ambitious.
"The Miller boy and Mary McCready,"
he had said, "have exceptionally
high IQ's—around one forty
or one fifty. The other three are hard
to classify. They have some of the
attributes of exceptional pupils, but
much of the time they seem to have
little interest in their studies. The
junior achievement idea has sparked
their imaginations. Maybe it'll be just
what they need."
Mary said, "Why don't we make a
freckle remover? I'd be our first customer."
"The thing to do," Tommy offered,
"is to figure out what people in
Ridgeville want to buy, then sell it
to them."
"I'd like to make something by
powder metallurgy techniques," said
Pete. He fixed me with a challenging
eye. "You should be able to make
ball bearings by molding, then densify
them by electroplating."
"And all we'd need is a hydraulic
press," I told him, "which, on a guess,
might cost ten thousand dollars. Let's
think of something easier."
Pete mulled it over and nodded
reluctantly. "Then maybe something
in the electronics field. A hi-fi sub-assembly
of some kind."
"How about a new detergent?" Hilary
put in.
"Like the liquid dishwashing detergents?"
I asked.
He was scornful. "No, they're formulations—you
know, mixtures.
That's cookbook chemistry. I mean a
brand new synthetic detergent. I've
got an idea for one that ought to be
good even in the hard water we've
got around here."
"Well, now," I said, "organic synthesis
sounds like another operation
calling for capital investment. If we
should keep the achievement group
going for several summers, it might
be possible later on to carry out a
safe synthesis of some sort. You're
Dr. Matlack's son, aren't you? Been
dipping into your father's library?"
"Some," said Hilary, "and I've got
a home laboratory."
"How about you, Doris?" I prompted.
"Do you have a special field of interest?"
"No." She shook her head in mock
despondency. "I'm not very technical.
Just sort of miscellaneous. But if the
group wanted to raise some mice, I'd
be willing to turn over a project I've
had going at home."
"You could sell mice?" Tommy demanded
incredulously.
"Mice," I echoed, then sat back and
thought about it. "Are they a pure
strain? One of the recognized laboratory
strains? Healthy mice of the
right strain," I explained to Tommy,
"might be sold to laboratories. I have
an idea the Commission buys a supply
every month."
"No," said Doris, "these aren't laboratory
mice. They're fancy ones. I
got the first four pairs from a pet
shop in Denver, but they're red—sort
of chipmunk color, you know. I've
carried them through seventeen generations
of careful selection."
"Well, now," I admitted, "the market
for red mice might be rather limited.
Why don't you consider making
an after-shave lotion? Denatured alcohol,
glycerine, water, a little color
and perfume. You could buy some
bottles and have some labels printed.
You'd be in business before you
knew it."
There was a pause, then Tommy
inquired, "How do you sell it?"
"Door-to-door."
He made a face. "Never build up
any volume. Unless it did something
extra. You say we'd put color in it.
How about enough color to leave
your face looking tanned. Men won't
use cosmetics and junk, but if they
didn't have to admit it, they might
like the shave lotion."
Hilary had been deep in thought.
He said suddenly, "Gosh, I think I
know how to make a—what do you
want to call it—a before-shave lotion."
"What would that be?" I asked.
"You'd use it before you shaved."
"I suppose there might be people
who'd prefer to use it beforehand,"
I conceded.
"There will be people," he said
darkly, and subsided.
Mrs. Miller came out to the barn
after a while, bringing a bucket of
soft drinks and ice, a couple of loaves
of bread and ingredients for a variety
of sandwiches. The parents had
agreed to underwrite lunches at the
barn and Betty Miller philosophically
assumed the role of commissary
officer. She paused only to say hello
and to ask how we were progressing
with our organization meeting.
I'd forgotten all about organization,
and that, according to all the
articles I had perused, is most important
to such groups. It's standard practice
for every member of the group
to be a company officer. Of course a
young boy who doesn't know any better,
may wind up a sales manager.
Over the sandwiches, then, I suggested
nominating company officers,
but they seemed not to be interested.
Peter Cope waved it off by remarking
that they'd each do what came
naturally. On the other hand, they
pondered at some length about a
name for the organization, without
reaching any conclusions, so we returned
to the problem of what to
make.
It was Mary, finally, who advanced
the thought of kites. At first there
was little enthusiasm, then Peter said,
"You know, we could work up something
new. Has anybody ever seen a
kite made like a wind sock?"
Nobody had. Pete drew figures in
the air with his hands. "How about
the hole at the small end?"
"I'll make one tonight," said Doris,
"and think about the small end.
It'll work out all right."
I wished that the youngsters weren't
starting out by inventing a new
article to manufacture, and risking an
almost certain disappointment, but to
hold my guidance to the minimum, I
said nothing, knowing that later I
could help them redesign it along
standard lines.
At supper I reviewed the day's
happenings with Marjorie and tried
to recall all of the ideas which had
been propounded. Most of them were
impractical, of course, for a group of
children to attempt, but several of
them appeared quite attractive.
Tommy, for example, wanted to
put tooth powder into tablets that
one would chew before brushing the
teeth. He thought there should be
two colors in the same bottle—orange
for morning and blue for night,
the blue ones designed to leave the
mouth alkaline at bed time.
Pete wanted to make a combination
nail and wood screw. You'd
drive it in with a hammer up to the
threaded part, then send it home with
a few turns of a screwdriver.
Hilary, reluctantly forsaking his
ideas on detergents, suggested we
make black plastic discs, like poker
chips but thinner and as cheap as
possible, to scatter on a snowy sidewalk
where they would pick up extra
heat from the sun and melt the
snow more rapidly. Afterward one
would sweep up and collect the discs.
Doris added to this that if you
could make the discs light enough to
float, they might be colored white
and spread on the surface of a reservoir
to reduce evaporation.
These latter ideas had made unknowing
use of some basic physics,
and I'm afraid I relapsed for a few
minutes into the role of teacher and
told them a little bit about the laws
of radiation and absorption of heat.
"My," said Marjorie, "they're really
smart boys and girls. Tommy Miller
does sound like a born salesman.
Somehow I don't think you're going
to have to call in Mr. Wells."
I do feel just a little embarrassed
about the kite, even now. The fact
that it flew surprised me. That it flew
so confoundedly well was humiliating.
Four of them were at the barn
when I arrived next morning; or
rather on the rise of ground just beyond
it, and the kite hung motionless
and almost out of sight in the pale
sky. I stood and watched for a moment,
then they saw me.
"Hello, Mr. Henderson," Mary said,
and proffered the cord which was
wound on a fishing reel. I played the
kite up and down for a few minutes,
then reeled it in. It was, almost exactly,
a wind sock, but the hole at the
small end was shaped—by wire—into
the general form of a kidney bean.
It was beautifully made, and had a
sort of professional look about it.
"It flies too well," Mary told Doris.
"A kite ought to get caught in a tree
sometimes."
"You're right," Doris agreed. "Let's
see it." She gave the wire at the small
end the slightest of twists. "There, it
ought to swoop."
Sure enough, in the moderate
breeze of that morning, the kite
swooped and yawed to Mary's entire
satisfaction. As we trailed back to the
barn I asked Doris, "How did you
know that flattening the lower edge
of the hole would create instability?"
She looked doubtful.
"Why it would have to, wouldn't
it? It changed the pattern of air pressures."
She glanced at me quickly.
"Of course, I tried a lot of different
shapes while I was making it."
"Naturally," I said, and let it go at
that. "Where's Tommy?"
"He stopped off at the bank," Pete
Cope told me, "to borrow some money.
We'll want to buy materials to
make some of these kites."
"But I said yesterday that Mr. McCormack
and I were going to advance
some cash to get started."
"Oh, sure, but don't you think it
would be better to borrow from a
bank? More businesslike?"
"Doubtless," I said, "but banks generally
want some security." I would
have gone on and explained matters
further, except that Tommy walked
in and handed me a pocket check
book.
"I got two hundred and fifty," he
volunteered—not without a hint of
complacency in his voice. "It didn't
take long, but they sure made it out
a big deal. Half the guys in the bank
had to be called in to listen to the
proposition. The account's in your
name, Mr. Henderson, and you'll have
to make out the checks. And they
want you to stop in at the bank and
give them a specimen signature. Oh,
yes, and cosign the note."
My heart sank. I'd never had any
dealings with banks except in the
matter of mortgages, and bank people
make me most uneasy. To say
nothing of finding myself responsible
for a two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar
note—over two weeks salary. I made
a mental vow to sign very few checks.
"So then I stopped by at Apex
Stationers," Tommy went on, "and ordered
some paper and envelopes. We
hadn't picked a name yesterday, but I
figured what's to lose, and picked one.
Ridge Industries, how's that?" Everybody
nodded.
"Just three lines on the letterhead,"
he explained. "Ridge Industries—Ridgeville—Montana."
I got my voice back and said, "Engraved,
I trust."
"Well, sure," he replied. "You can't
afford to look chintzy."
My appetite was not at its best
that evening, and Marjorie recognized
that something was concerning
me, but she asked no questions, and
I only told her about the success of
the kite, and the youngsters embarking
on a shopping trip for paper, glue
and wood splints. There was no use
in both of us worrying.
On Friday we all got down to work,
and presently had a regular production
line under way; stapling the
wood splints, then wetting them with
a resin solution and shaping them
over a mandrel to stiffen, cutting the
plastic film around a pattern, assembling
and hanging the finished kites
from an overhead beam until the cement
had set. Pete Cope had located
a big roll of red plastic film from
somewhere, and it made a wonderful-looking
kite. Happily, I didn't know
what the film cost until the first kites
were sold.
By Wednesday of the following
week we had almost three hundred
kites finished and packed into flat
cardboard boxes, and frankly I didn't
care if I never saw another. Tommy,
who by mutual consent, was our
authority on sales, didn't want to sell
any until we had, as he put it, enough
to meet the demand, but this quantity
seemed to satisfy him. He said he
would sell them the next week and
Mary McCready, with a fine burst of
confidence, asked him in all seriousness
to be sure to hold out a dozen.
Three other things occurred that
day, two of which I knew about immediately.
Mary brought a portable
typewriter from home and spent part
of the afternoon banging away at
what seemed to me, since I use two
fingers only, a very creditable speed.
And Hilary brought in a bottle of
his new detergent. It was a syrupy
yellow liquid with a nice collar of
suds. He'd been busy in his home
laboratory after all, it seemed.
"What is it?" I asked. "You never
told us."
Hilary grinned. "Lauryl benzyl
phosphonic acid, dipotassium salt, in
20% solution."
"Goodness." I protested, "it's been
twenty-five years since my last course
in chemistry. Perhaps if I saw the
formula—."
He gave me a singularly adult
smile and jotted down a scrawl of
symbols and lines. It meant little to
me.
"Is it good?"
For answer he seized the ice bucket,
now empty of its soda bottles,
trickled in a few drops from the bottle
and swished the contents. Foam
mounted to the rim and spilled over.
"And that's our best grade of Ridgeville
water," he pointed out. "Hardest
in the country."
The third event of Wednesday
came to my ears on Thursday morning.
I was a little late arriving at the
barn, and was taken a bit aback to
find the roadway leading to it rather
full of parked automobiles, and the
barn itself rather full of people, including
two policemen. Our Ridgeville
police are quite young men, but
in uniform they still look ominous
and I was relieved to see that they
were laughing and evidently enjoying
themselves.
"Well, now," I demanded, in my
best classroom voice. "What is all
this?"
"Are you Henderson?" the larger
policeman asked.
"I am indeed," I said, and a flash
bulb went off. A young lady grasped
my arm.
"Oh, please, Mr. Henderson, come
outside where it's quieter and tell me
all about it."
"Perhaps," I countered, "somebody
should tell me."
"You mean you don't know, honestly?
Oh, it's fabulous. Best story I've
had for ages. It'll make the city papers."
She led me around the corner
of the barn to a spot of comparative
quiet.
"You didn't know that one of your
junior whatsisnames poured detergent
in the Memorial Fountain basin
last night?"
I shook my head numbly.
"It was priceless. Just before rush
hour. Suds built up in the basin and
overflowed, and down the library
steps and covered the whole street.
And the funniest part was they kept
right on coming. You couldn't imagine
so much suds coming from that
little pool of water. There was a
three-block traffic jam and Harry got
us some marvelous pictures—men
rolling up their trousers to wade
across the street. And this morning,"
she chortled, "somebody phoned in
an anonymous tip to the police—of
course it was the same boy that did
it—Tommy—Miller?—and so here
we are. And we just saw a demonstration
of that fabulous kite and saw
all those simply captivating mice."
"Mice?"
"Yes, of course. Who would ever
have thought you could breed mice
with those cute furry tails?"
Well, after a while things quieted
down. They had to. The police left
after sobering up long enough to
give me a serious warning against
letting such a thing happen again.
Mr. Miller, who had come home to
see what all the excitement was, went
back to work and Mrs. Miller went
back to the house and the reporter
and photographer drifted off to file
their story, or whatever it is they do.
Tommy was jubilant.
"Did you hear what she said? It'll
make the city papers. I wish we had
a thousand kites. Ten thousand. Oh
boy, selling is fun. Hilary, when can
you make some more of that stuff?
And Doris, how many mice do you
have?"
Those mice! I have always kept
my enthusiasm for rodents within
bounds, but I must admit they were
charming little beasts, with tails as
bushy as miniature squirrels.
"How many generations?" I asked
Doris.
"Seventeen. No, eighteen, now.
Want to see the genetic charts?"
I won't try to explain it as she did
to me, but it was quite evident that
the new mice were breeding true.
Presently we asked Betty Miller to
come back down to the barn for a
conference. She listened and asked
questions. At last she said, "Well, all
right, if you promise me they can't
get out of their cages. But heaven
knows what you'll do when fall
comes. They won't live in an unheated
barn and you can't bring them
into the house."
"We'll be out of the mouse business
by then," Doris predicted. "Every pet
shop in the country will have
them and they'll be down to nothing
apiece."
Doris was right, of course, in spite
of our efforts to protect the market.
Anyhow that ushered in our cage
building phase, and for the next
week—with a few interruptions—we
built cages, hundreds of them, a good
many for breeding, but mostly for
shipping.
It was rather regrettable that, after
the
Courier
gave us most of the third
page, including photographs, we rarely
had a day without a few visitors.
Many of them wanted to buy mice or
kites, but Tommy refused to sell any
mice at retail and we soon had to disappoint
those who wanted kites. The
Supermarket took all we had—except
a dozen—and at a dollar fifty
each. Tommy's ideas of pricing rather
frightened me, but he set the value
of the mice at ten dollars a pair
and got it without any arguments.
Our beautiful stationery arrived,
and we had some invoice forms printed
up in a hurry—not engraved, for
a wonder.
It was on Tuesday—following the
Thursday—that a lanky young man
disentangled himself from his car
and strolled into the barn. I looked
up from the floor where I was tacking
squares of screening onto wooden
frames.
"Hi," he said. "You're Donald
Henderson, right? My name is McCord—Jeff
McCord—and I work in
the Patent Section at the Commission's
downtown office. My boss sent
me over here, but if he hadn't, I
think I'd have come anyway. What
are you doing to get patent protection
on Ridge Industries' new developments?"
I got my back unkinked and dusted
off my knees. "Well, now," I said,
"I've been wondering whether something
shouldn't be done, but I know
very little about such matters—."
"Exactly," he broke in, "we guessed
that might be the case, and there are
three patent men in our office who'd
like to chip in and contribute some
time. Partly for the kicks and partly
because we think you may have some
things worth protecting. How about
it? You worry about the filing and
final fees. That's sixty bucks per
brainstorm. We'll worry about everything
else."
"What's to lose," Tommy interjected.
And so we acquired a patent attorney,
several of them, in fact.
The day that our application on
the kite design went to Washington,
Mary wrote a dozen toy manufacturers
scattered from New York to Los
Angeles, sent a kite to each one and
offered to license the design. Result,
one licensee with a thousand dollar
advance against next season's royalties.
It was a rainy morning about three
weeks later that I arrived at the barn.
Jeff McCord was there, and the whole
team except Tommy. Jeff lowered his
feet from the picnic table and said,
"Hi."
"Hi yourself," I told him. "You
look pleased."
"I am," he replied, "in a cautious
legal sense, of course. Hilary and I
were just going over the situation on
his phosphonate detergent. I've spent
the last three nights studying the patent
literature and a few standard
texts touching on phosphonates.
There are a zillion patents on synthetic
detergents and a good round
fifty on phosphonates, but it looks"—he
held up a long admonitory hand—"it
just looks as though we had a clear
spot. If we do get protection, you've
got a real salable property."
"That's fine, Mr. McCord," Hilary
said, "but it's not very important."
"No?" Jeff tilted an inquiring eyebrow
at me, and I handed him a small
bottle. He opened and sniffed at it
gingerly. "What gives?"
"Before-shave lotion," Hilary told
him. "You've shaved this morning,
but try some anyway."
Jeff looked momentarily dubious,
then puddled some in his palm and
moistened his jaw line. "Smells
good," he noted, "and feels nice and
cool. Now what?"
"Wipe your face." Jeff located a
handkerchief and wiped, looked at
the cloth, wiped again, and stared.
"What is it?"
"A whisker stiffener. It makes each
hair brittle enough to break off right
at the surface of your skin."
"So I perceive. What is it?"
"Oh, just a mixture of stuff. Cookbook
chemistry. Cysteine thiolactone
and a fat-soluble magnesium compound."
"I see. Just a mixture of stuff. And
do your whiskers grow back the next
day?"
"Right on schedule," I said.
McCord unfolded his length and
stood staring out into the rain. Presently
he said, "Henderson, Hilary
and I are heading for my office. We
can work there better than here, and
if we're going to break the hearts of
the razor industry, there's no better
time to start than now."
When they had driven off I turned
and said, "Let's talk a while. We can
always clean mouse cages later.
Where's Tommy?"
"Oh, he stopped at the bank to get
a loan."
"What on earth for? We have over
six thousand in the account."
"Well," Peter said, looking a little
embarrassed, "we were planning to
buy a hydraulic press. You see, Doris
put some embroidery on that scheme
of mine for making ball bearings."
He grabbed a sheet of paper. "Look,
we make a roller bearing, this shape
only it's a permanent magnet. Then
you see—." And he was off.
"What did they do today, dear?"
Marge asked as she refilled my coffee
cup.
"Thanks," I said. "Let's see, it was
a big day. We picked out a hydraulic
press, Doris read us the first chapter
of the book she's starting, and we
found a place over a garage on
Fourth Street that we can rent for
winter quarters. Oh, yes, and Jeff is
starting action to get the company
incorporated."
"Winter quarters," Marge repeated.
"You mean you're going to try to
keep the group going after school
starts?"
"Why not? The kids can sail
through their courses without thinking
about them, and actually they
won't put in more than a few hours
a week during the school year."
"Even so, it's child labor, isn't it?"
"Child labor nothing. They're the
employers. Jeff McCord and I will
be the only employees—just at first,
anyway."
Marge choked on something. "Did
you say you'd be an employee?"
"Sure," I told her. "They've offered
me a small share of the company,
and I'd be crazy to turn it down. After
all, what's to lose?"
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog Science Fact & Fiction
July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Before-shave breaks off whiskers, just apply and wipe away. | Before-shave dissolves whiskers permanently. | Before-shave dissolves whiskers for four to six weeks at a time. | Before-shave will never kill the razor industry. That's just wishful thinking. | 0 |
27665_6ZYKASVR_5 | Why does the group want to buy a hydraulic press? | Fallout is, of course, always disastrous—
one way or another
JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT
BY WILLIAM LEE
ILLUSTRATED BY SCHOENHERR
"What would you think," I asked
Marjorie over supper, "if I should undertake
to lead a junior achievement
group this summer?"
She pondered it while she went to
the kitchen to bring in the dessert.
It was dried apricot pie, and very
tasty, I might add.
"Why, Donald," she said, "it could
be quite interesting, if I understand
what a junior achievement group is.
What gave you the idea?"
"It wasn't my idea, really," I admitted.
"Mr. McCormack called me
to the office today, and told me that
some of the children in the lower
grades wanted to start one. They
need adult guidance of course, and
one of the group suggested my name."
I should explain, perhaps, that I
teach a course in general science in
our Ridgeville Junior High School,
and another in general physics in the
Senior High School. It's a privilege
which I'm sure many educators must
envy, teaching in Ridgeville, for our
new school is a fine one, and our
academic standards are high. On the
other hand, the fathers of most of
my students work for the Commission
and a constant awareness of the Commission
and its work pervades the
town. It is an uneasy privilege then,
at least sometimes, to teach my old-fashioned
brand of science to these
children of a new age.
"That's very nice," said Marjorie.
"What does a junior achievement
group do?"
"It has the purpose," I told her,
"of teaching the members something
about commerce and industry. They
manufacture simple compositions
like polishing waxes and sell them
from door-to-door. Some groups have
built up tidy little bank accounts
which are available for later educational
expenses."
"Gracious, you wouldn't have to
sell from door-to-door, would you?"
"Of course not. I'd just tell the
kids how to do it."
Marjorie put back her head and
laughed, and I was forced to join her,
for we both recognize that my understanding
and "feel" for commercial
matters—if I may use that expression—is
almost nonexistent.
"Oh, all right," I said, "laugh at
my commercial aspirations. But don't
worry about it, really. Mr. McCormack
said we could get Mr. Wells from
Commercial Department to help out
if he was needed. There is one problem,
though. Mr. McCormack is going
to put up fifty dollars to buy any
raw materials wanted and he rather
suggested that I might advance another
fifty. The question is, could we
do it?"
Marjorie did mental arithmetic.
"Yes," she said, "yes, if it's something
you'd like to do."
We've had to watch such things
rather closely for the last ten—no,
eleven years. Back in the old Ridgeville,
fifty-odd miles to the south, we
had our home almost paid for, when
the accident occurred. It was in the
path of the heaviest fallout, and we
couldn't have kept on living there
even if the town had stayed. When
Ridgeville moved to its present site,
so, of course, did we, which meant
starting mortgage payments all over
again.
Thus it was that on a Wednesday
morning about three weeks later, I
was sitting at one end of a plank picnic
table with five boys and girls
lined up along the sides. This was to
be our headquarters and factory for
the summer—a roomy unused barn
belonging to the parents of one of
the group members, Tommy Miller.
"O.K.," I said, "let's relax. You
don't need to treat me as a teacher,
you know. I stopped being a school
teacher when the final grades went in
last Friday. I'm on vacation now. My
job here is only to advise, and I'm
going to do that as little as possible.
You're going to decide what to do,
and if it's safe and legal and possible
to do with the starting capital we
have, I'll go along with it and help
in any way I can. This is your meeting."
Mr. McCormack had told me, and
in some detail, about the youngsters
I'd be dealing with. The three who
were sitting to my left were the ones
who had proposed the group in the
first place.
Doris Enright was a grave young
lady of ten years, who might, I
thought, be quite a beauty in a few
more years, but was at the moment
rather angular—all shoulders and elbows.
Peter Cope, Jr. and Hilary Matlack
were skinny kids, too. The three
were of an age and were all tall for
ten-year-olds.
I had the impression during that
first meeting that they looked rather
alike, but this wasn't so. Their features
were quite different. Perhaps
from association, for they were close
friends, they had just come to have
a certain similarity of restrained gesture
and of modulated voice. And
they were all tanned by sun and wind
to a degree that made their eyes seem
light and their teeth startlingly white.
The two on my right were cast in
a different mold. Mary McCready
was a big husky redhead of twelve,
with a face full of freckles and an
infectious laugh, and Tommy Miller,
a few months younger, was just an
average, extroverted, well adjusted
youngster, noisy and restless, tee-shirted
and butch-barbered.
The group exchanged looks to see
who would lead off, and Peter Cope
seemed to be elected.
"Well, Mr. Henderson, a junior
achievement group is a bunch of kids
who get together to manufacture and
sell things, and maybe make some
money."
"Is that what you want to do," I
asked, "make money?"
"Why not?" Tommy asked.
"There's something wrong with making
money?"
"Well, sure, I suppose we want to,"
said Hilary. "We'll need some money
to do the things we want to do later."
"And what sort of things would
you like to make and sell?" I asked.
The usual products, of course, with
these junior achievement efforts, are
chemical specialties that can be made
safely and that people will buy and
use without misgivings—solvent to
free up rusty bolts, cleaner to remove
road tar, mechanic's hand soap—that
sort of thing. Mr. McCormack had
told me, though, that I might find
these youngsters a bit more ambitious.
"The Miller boy and Mary McCready,"
he had said, "have exceptionally
high IQ's—around one forty
or one fifty. The other three are hard
to classify. They have some of the
attributes of exceptional pupils, but
much of the time they seem to have
little interest in their studies. The
junior achievement idea has sparked
their imaginations. Maybe it'll be just
what they need."
Mary said, "Why don't we make a
freckle remover? I'd be our first customer."
"The thing to do," Tommy offered,
"is to figure out what people in
Ridgeville want to buy, then sell it
to them."
"I'd like to make something by
powder metallurgy techniques," said
Pete. He fixed me with a challenging
eye. "You should be able to make
ball bearings by molding, then densify
them by electroplating."
"And all we'd need is a hydraulic
press," I told him, "which, on a guess,
might cost ten thousand dollars. Let's
think of something easier."
Pete mulled it over and nodded
reluctantly. "Then maybe something
in the electronics field. A hi-fi sub-assembly
of some kind."
"How about a new detergent?" Hilary
put in.
"Like the liquid dishwashing detergents?"
I asked.
He was scornful. "No, they're formulations—you
know, mixtures.
That's cookbook chemistry. I mean a
brand new synthetic detergent. I've
got an idea for one that ought to be
good even in the hard water we've
got around here."
"Well, now," I said, "organic synthesis
sounds like another operation
calling for capital investment. If we
should keep the achievement group
going for several summers, it might
be possible later on to carry out a
safe synthesis of some sort. You're
Dr. Matlack's son, aren't you? Been
dipping into your father's library?"
"Some," said Hilary, "and I've got
a home laboratory."
"How about you, Doris?" I prompted.
"Do you have a special field of interest?"
"No." She shook her head in mock
despondency. "I'm not very technical.
Just sort of miscellaneous. But if the
group wanted to raise some mice, I'd
be willing to turn over a project I've
had going at home."
"You could sell mice?" Tommy demanded
incredulously.
"Mice," I echoed, then sat back and
thought about it. "Are they a pure
strain? One of the recognized laboratory
strains? Healthy mice of the
right strain," I explained to Tommy,
"might be sold to laboratories. I have
an idea the Commission buys a supply
every month."
"No," said Doris, "these aren't laboratory
mice. They're fancy ones. I
got the first four pairs from a pet
shop in Denver, but they're red—sort
of chipmunk color, you know. I've
carried them through seventeen generations
of careful selection."
"Well, now," I admitted, "the market
for red mice might be rather limited.
Why don't you consider making
an after-shave lotion? Denatured alcohol,
glycerine, water, a little color
and perfume. You could buy some
bottles and have some labels printed.
You'd be in business before you
knew it."
There was a pause, then Tommy
inquired, "How do you sell it?"
"Door-to-door."
He made a face. "Never build up
any volume. Unless it did something
extra. You say we'd put color in it.
How about enough color to leave
your face looking tanned. Men won't
use cosmetics and junk, but if they
didn't have to admit it, they might
like the shave lotion."
Hilary had been deep in thought.
He said suddenly, "Gosh, I think I
know how to make a—what do you
want to call it—a before-shave lotion."
"What would that be?" I asked.
"You'd use it before you shaved."
"I suppose there might be people
who'd prefer to use it beforehand,"
I conceded.
"There will be people," he said
darkly, and subsided.
Mrs. Miller came out to the barn
after a while, bringing a bucket of
soft drinks and ice, a couple of loaves
of bread and ingredients for a variety
of sandwiches. The parents had
agreed to underwrite lunches at the
barn and Betty Miller philosophically
assumed the role of commissary
officer. She paused only to say hello
and to ask how we were progressing
with our organization meeting.
I'd forgotten all about organization,
and that, according to all the
articles I had perused, is most important
to such groups. It's standard practice
for every member of the group
to be a company officer. Of course a
young boy who doesn't know any better,
may wind up a sales manager.
Over the sandwiches, then, I suggested
nominating company officers,
but they seemed not to be interested.
Peter Cope waved it off by remarking
that they'd each do what came
naturally. On the other hand, they
pondered at some length about a
name for the organization, without
reaching any conclusions, so we returned
to the problem of what to
make.
It was Mary, finally, who advanced
the thought of kites. At first there
was little enthusiasm, then Peter said,
"You know, we could work up something
new. Has anybody ever seen a
kite made like a wind sock?"
Nobody had. Pete drew figures in
the air with his hands. "How about
the hole at the small end?"
"I'll make one tonight," said Doris,
"and think about the small end.
It'll work out all right."
I wished that the youngsters weren't
starting out by inventing a new
article to manufacture, and risking an
almost certain disappointment, but to
hold my guidance to the minimum, I
said nothing, knowing that later I
could help them redesign it along
standard lines.
At supper I reviewed the day's
happenings with Marjorie and tried
to recall all of the ideas which had
been propounded. Most of them were
impractical, of course, for a group of
children to attempt, but several of
them appeared quite attractive.
Tommy, for example, wanted to
put tooth powder into tablets that
one would chew before brushing the
teeth. He thought there should be
two colors in the same bottle—orange
for morning and blue for night,
the blue ones designed to leave the
mouth alkaline at bed time.
Pete wanted to make a combination
nail and wood screw. You'd
drive it in with a hammer up to the
threaded part, then send it home with
a few turns of a screwdriver.
Hilary, reluctantly forsaking his
ideas on detergents, suggested we
make black plastic discs, like poker
chips but thinner and as cheap as
possible, to scatter on a snowy sidewalk
where they would pick up extra
heat from the sun and melt the
snow more rapidly. Afterward one
would sweep up and collect the discs.
Doris added to this that if you
could make the discs light enough to
float, they might be colored white
and spread on the surface of a reservoir
to reduce evaporation.
These latter ideas had made unknowing
use of some basic physics,
and I'm afraid I relapsed for a few
minutes into the role of teacher and
told them a little bit about the laws
of radiation and absorption of heat.
"My," said Marjorie, "they're really
smart boys and girls. Tommy Miller
does sound like a born salesman.
Somehow I don't think you're going
to have to call in Mr. Wells."
I do feel just a little embarrassed
about the kite, even now. The fact
that it flew surprised me. That it flew
so confoundedly well was humiliating.
Four of them were at the barn
when I arrived next morning; or
rather on the rise of ground just beyond
it, and the kite hung motionless
and almost out of sight in the pale
sky. I stood and watched for a moment,
then they saw me.
"Hello, Mr. Henderson," Mary said,
and proffered the cord which was
wound on a fishing reel. I played the
kite up and down for a few minutes,
then reeled it in. It was, almost exactly,
a wind sock, but the hole at the
small end was shaped—by wire—into
the general form of a kidney bean.
It was beautifully made, and had a
sort of professional look about it.
"It flies too well," Mary told Doris.
"A kite ought to get caught in a tree
sometimes."
"You're right," Doris agreed. "Let's
see it." She gave the wire at the small
end the slightest of twists. "There, it
ought to swoop."
Sure enough, in the moderate
breeze of that morning, the kite
swooped and yawed to Mary's entire
satisfaction. As we trailed back to the
barn I asked Doris, "How did you
know that flattening the lower edge
of the hole would create instability?"
She looked doubtful.
"Why it would have to, wouldn't
it? It changed the pattern of air pressures."
She glanced at me quickly.
"Of course, I tried a lot of different
shapes while I was making it."
"Naturally," I said, and let it go at
that. "Where's Tommy?"
"He stopped off at the bank," Pete
Cope told me, "to borrow some money.
We'll want to buy materials to
make some of these kites."
"But I said yesterday that Mr. McCormack
and I were going to advance
some cash to get started."
"Oh, sure, but don't you think it
would be better to borrow from a
bank? More businesslike?"
"Doubtless," I said, "but banks generally
want some security." I would
have gone on and explained matters
further, except that Tommy walked
in and handed me a pocket check
book.
"I got two hundred and fifty," he
volunteered—not without a hint of
complacency in his voice. "It didn't
take long, but they sure made it out
a big deal. Half the guys in the bank
had to be called in to listen to the
proposition. The account's in your
name, Mr. Henderson, and you'll have
to make out the checks. And they
want you to stop in at the bank and
give them a specimen signature. Oh,
yes, and cosign the note."
My heart sank. I'd never had any
dealings with banks except in the
matter of mortgages, and bank people
make me most uneasy. To say
nothing of finding myself responsible
for a two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar
note—over two weeks salary. I made
a mental vow to sign very few checks.
"So then I stopped by at Apex
Stationers," Tommy went on, "and ordered
some paper and envelopes. We
hadn't picked a name yesterday, but I
figured what's to lose, and picked one.
Ridge Industries, how's that?" Everybody
nodded.
"Just three lines on the letterhead,"
he explained. "Ridge Industries—Ridgeville—Montana."
I got my voice back and said, "Engraved,
I trust."
"Well, sure," he replied. "You can't
afford to look chintzy."
My appetite was not at its best
that evening, and Marjorie recognized
that something was concerning
me, but she asked no questions, and
I only told her about the success of
the kite, and the youngsters embarking
on a shopping trip for paper, glue
and wood splints. There was no use
in both of us worrying.
On Friday we all got down to work,
and presently had a regular production
line under way; stapling the
wood splints, then wetting them with
a resin solution and shaping them
over a mandrel to stiffen, cutting the
plastic film around a pattern, assembling
and hanging the finished kites
from an overhead beam until the cement
had set. Pete Cope had located
a big roll of red plastic film from
somewhere, and it made a wonderful-looking
kite. Happily, I didn't know
what the film cost until the first kites
were sold.
By Wednesday of the following
week we had almost three hundred
kites finished and packed into flat
cardboard boxes, and frankly I didn't
care if I never saw another. Tommy,
who by mutual consent, was our
authority on sales, didn't want to sell
any until we had, as he put it, enough
to meet the demand, but this quantity
seemed to satisfy him. He said he
would sell them the next week and
Mary McCready, with a fine burst of
confidence, asked him in all seriousness
to be sure to hold out a dozen.
Three other things occurred that
day, two of which I knew about immediately.
Mary brought a portable
typewriter from home and spent part
of the afternoon banging away at
what seemed to me, since I use two
fingers only, a very creditable speed.
And Hilary brought in a bottle of
his new detergent. It was a syrupy
yellow liquid with a nice collar of
suds. He'd been busy in his home
laboratory after all, it seemed.
"What is it?" I asked. "You never
told us."
Hilary grinned. "Lauryl benzyl
phosphonic acid, dipotassium salt, in
20% solution."
"Goodness." I protested, "it's been
twenty-five years since my last course
in chemistry. Perhaps if I saw the
formula—."
He gave me a singularly adult
smile and jotted down a scrawl of
symbols and lines. It meant little to
me.
"Is it good?"
For answer he seized the ice bucket,
now empty of its soda bottles,
trickled in a few drops from the bottle
and swished the contents. Foam
mounted to the rim and spilled over.
"And that's our best grade of Ridgeville
water," he pointed out. "Hardest
in the country."
The third event of Wednesday
came to my ears on Thursday morning.
I was a little late arriving at the
barn, and was taken a bit aback to
find the roadway leading to it rather
full of parked automobiles, and the
barn itself rather full of people, including
two policemen. Our Ridgeville
police are quite young men, but
in uniform they still look ominous
and I was relieved to see that they
were laughing and evidently enjoying
themselves.
"Well, now," I demanded, in my
best classroom voice. "What is all
this?"
"Are you Henderson?" the larger
policeman asked.
"I am indeed," I said, and a flash
bulb went off. A young lady grasped
my arm.
"Oh, please, Mr. Henderson, come
outside where it's quieter and tell me
all about it."
"Perhaps," I countered, "somebody
should tell me."
"You mean you don't know, honestly?
Oh, it's fabulous. Best story I've
had for ages. It'll make the city papers."
She led me around the corner
of the barn to a spot of comparative
quiet.
"You didn't know that one of your
junior whatsisnames poured detergent
in the Memorial Fountain basin
last night?"
I shook my head numbly.
"It was priceless. Just before rush
hour. Suds built up in the basin and
overflowed, and down the library
steps and covered the whole street.
And the funniest part was they kept
right on coming. You couldn't imagine
so much suds coming from that
little pool of water. There was a
three-block traffic jam and Harry got
us some marvelous pictures—men
rolling up their trousers to wade
across the street. And this morning,"
she chortled, "somebody phoned in
an anonymous tip to the police—of
course it was the same boy that did
it—Tommy—Miller?—and so here
we are. And we just saw a demonstration
of that fabulous kite and saw
all those simply captivating mice."
"Mice?"
"Yes, of course. Who would ever
have thought you could breed mice
with those cute furry tails?"
Well, after a while things quieted
down. They had to. The police left
after sobering up long enough to
give me a serious warning against
letting such a thing happen again.
Mr. Miller, who had come home to
see what all the excitement was, went
back to work and Mrs. Miller went
back to the house and the reporter
and photographer drifted off to file
their story, or whatever it is they do.
Tommy was jubilant.
"Did you hear what she said? It'll
make the city papers. I wish we had
a thousand kites. Ten thousand. Oh
boy, selling is fun. Hilary, when can
you make some more of that stuff?
And Doris, how many mice do you
have?"
Those mice! I have always kept
my enthusiasm for rodents within
bounds, but I must admit they were
charming little beasts, with tails as
bushy as miniature squirrels.
"How many generations?" I asked
Doris.
"Seventeen. No, eighteen, now.
Want to see the genetic charts?"
I won't try to explain it as she did
to me, but it was quite evident that
the new mice were breeding true.
Presently we asked Betty Miller to
come back down to the barn for a
conference. She listened and asked
questions. At last she said, "Well, all
right, if you promise me they can't
get out of their cages. But heaven
knows what you'll do when fall
comes. They won't live in an unheated
barn and you can't bring them
into the house."
"We'll be out of the mouse business
by then," Doris predicted. "Every pet
shop in the country will have
them and they'll be down to nothing
apiece."
Doris was right, of course, in spite
of our efforts to protect the market.
Anyhow that ushered in our cage
building phase, and for the next
week—with a few interruptions—we
built cages, hundreds of them, a good
many for breeding, but mostly for
shipping.
It was rather regrettable that, after
the
Courier
gave us most of the third
page, including photographs, we rarely
had a day without a few visitors.
Many of them wanted to buy mice or
kites, but Tommy refused to sell any
mice at retail and we soon had to disappoint
those who wanted kites. The
Supermarket took all we had—except
a dozen—and at a dollar fifty
each. Tommy's ideas of pricing rather
frightened me, but he set the value
of the mice at ten dollars a pair
and got it without any arguments.
Our beautiful stationery arrived,
and we had some invoice forms printed
up in a hurry—not engraved, for
a wonder.
It was on Tuesday—following the
Thursday—that a lanky young man
disentangled himself from his car
and strolled into the barn. I looked
up from the floor where I was tacking
squares of screening onto wooden
frames.
"Hi," he said. "You're Donald
Henderson, right? My name is McCord—Jeff
McCord—and I work in
the Patent Section at the Commission's
downtown office. My boss sent
me over here, but if he hadn't, I
think I'd have come anyway. What
are you doing to get patent protection
on Ridge Industries' new developments?"
I got my back unkinked and dusted
off my knees. "Well, now," I said,
"I've been wondering whether something
shouldn't be done, but I know
very little about such matters—."
"Exactly," he broke in, "we guessed
that might be the case, and there are
three patent men in our office who'd
like to chip in and contribute some
time. Partly for the kicks and partly
because we think you may have some
things worth protecting. How about
it? You worry about the filing and
final fees. That's sixty bucks per
brainstorm. We'll worry about everything
else."
"What's to lose," Tommy interjected.
And so we acquired a patent attorney,
several of them, in fact.
The day that our application on
the kite design went to Washington,
Mary wrote a dozen toy manufacturers
scattered from New York to Los
Angeles, sent a kite to each one and
offered to license the design. Result,
one licensee with a thousand dollar
advance against next season's royalties.
It was a rainy morning about three
weeks later that I arrived at the barn.
Jeff McCord was there, and the whole
team except Tommy. Jeff lowered his
feet from the picnic table and said,
"Hi."
"Hi yourself," I told him. "You
look pleased."
"I am," he replied, "in a cautious
legal sense, of course. Hilary and I
were just going over the situation on
his phosphonate detergent. I've spent
the last three nights studying the patent
literature and a few standard
texts touching on phosphonates.
There are a zillion patents on synthetic
detergents and a good round
fifty on phosphonates, but it looks"—he
held up a long admonitory hand—"it
just looks as though we had a clear
spot. If we do get protection, you've
got a real salable property."
"That's fine, Mr. McCord," Hilary
said, "but it's not very important."
"No?" Jeff tilted an inquiring eyebrow
at me, and I handed him a small
bottle. He opened and sniffed at it
gingerly. "What gives?"
"Before-shave lotion," Hilary told
him. "You've shaved this morning,
but try some anyway."
Jeff looked momentarily dubious,
then puddled some in his palm and
moistened his jaw line. "Smells
good," he noted, "and feels nice and
cool. Now what?"
"Wipe your face." Jeff located a
handkerchief and wiped, looked at
the cloth, wiped again, and stared.
"What is it?"
"A whisker stiffener. It makes each
hair brittle enough to break off right
at the surface of your skin."
"So I perceive. What is it?"
"Oh, just a mixture of stuff. Cookbook
chemistry. Cysteine thiolactone
and a fat-soluble magnesium compound."
"I see. Just a mixture of stuff. And
do your whiskers grow back the next
day?"
"Right on schedule," I said.
McCord unfolded his length and
stood staring out into the rain. Presently
he said, "Henderson, Hilary
and I are heading for my office. We
can work there better than here, and
if we're going to break the hearts of
the razor industry, there's no better
time to start than now."
When they had driven off I turned
and said, "Let's talk a while. We can
always clean mouse cages later.
Where's Tommy?"
"Oh, he stopped at the bank to get
a loan."
"What on earth for? We have over
six thousand in the account."
"Well," Peter said, looking a little
embarrassed, "we were planning to
buy a hydraulic press. You see, Doris
put some embroidery on that scheme
of mine for making ball bearings."
He grabbed a sheet of paper. "Look,
we make a roller bearing, this shape
only it's a permanent magnet. Then
you see—." And he was off.
"What did they do today, dear?"
Marge asked as she refilled my coffee
cup.
"Thanks," I said. "Let's see, it was
a big day. We picked out a hydraulic
press, Doris read us the first chapter
of the book she's starting, and we
found a place over a garage on
Fourth Street that we can rent for
winter quarters. Oh, yes, and Jeff is
starting action to get the company
incorporated."
"Winter quarters," Marge repeated.
"You mean you're going to try to
keep the group going after school
starts?"
"Why not? The kids can sail
through their courses without thinking
about them, and actually they
won't put in more than a few hours
a week during the school year."
"Even so, it's child labor, isn't it?"
"Child labor nothing. They're the
employers. Jeff McCord and I will
be the only employees—just at first,
anyway."
Marge choked on something. "Did
you say you'd be an employee?"
"Sure," I told her. "They've offered
me a small share of the company,
and I'd be crazy to turn it down. After
all, what's to lose?"
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog Science Fact & Fiction
July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | They want to make cages for the mice. | They want to make ball bearings. | They want to make kites. | They want to make detergent. | 1 |
27665_6ZYKASVR_6 | Why did Hilary pour detergent into the fountain? | Fallout is, of course, always disastrous—
one way or another
JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT
BY WILLIAM LEE
ILLUSTRATED BY SCHOENHERR
"What would you think," I asked
Marjorie over supper, "if I should undertake
to lead a junior achievement
group this summer?"
She pondered it while she went to
the kitchen to bring in the dessert.
It was dried apricot pie, and very
tasty, I might add.
"Why, Donald," she said, "it could
be quite interesting, if I understand
what a junior achievement group is.
What gave you the idea?"
"It wasn't my idea, really," I admitted.
"Mr. McCormack called me
to the office today, and told me that
some of the children in the lower
grades wanted to start one. They
need adult guidance of course, and
one of the group suggested my name."
I should explain, perhaps, that I
teach a course in general science in
our Ridgeville Junior High School,
and another in general physics in the
Senior High School. It's a privilege
which I'm sure many educators must
envy, teaching in Ridgeville, for our
new school is a fine one, and our
academic standards are high. On the
other hand, the fathers of most of
my students work for the Commission
and a constant awareness of the Commission
and its work pervades the
town. It is an uneasy privilege then,
at least sometimes, to teach my old-fashioned
brand of science to these
children of a new age.
"That's very nice," said Marjorie.
"What does a junior achievement
group do?"
"It has the purpose," I told her,
"of teaching the members something
about commerce and industry. They
manufacture simple compositions
like polishing waxes and sell them
from door-to-door. Some groups have
built up tidy little bank accounts
which are available for later educational
expenses."
"Gracious, you wouldn't have to
sell from door-to-door, would you?"
"Of course not. I'd just tell the
kids how to do it."
Marjorie put back her head and
laughed, and I was forced to join her,
for we both recognize that my understanding
and "feel" for commercial
matters—if I may use that expression—is
almost nonexistent.
"Oh, all right," I said, "laugh at
my commercial aspirations. But don't
worry about it, really. Mr. McCormack
said we could get Mr. Wells from
Commercial Department to help out
if he was needed. There is one problem,
though. Mr. McCormack is going
to put up fifty dollars to buy any
raw materials wanted and he rather
suggested that I might advance another
fifty. The question is, could we
do it?"
Marjorie did mental arithmetic.
"Yes," she said, "yes, if it's something
you'd like to do."
We've had to watch such things
rather closely for the last ten—no,
eleven years. Back in the old Ridgeville,
fifty-odd miles to the south, we
had our home almost paid for, when
the accident occurred. It was in the
path of the heaviest fallout, and we
couldn't have kept on living there
even if the town had stayed. When
Ridgeville moved to its present site,
so, of course, did we, which meant
starting mortgage payments all over
again.
Thus it was that on a Wednesday
morning about three weeks later, I
was sitting at one end of a plank picnic
table with five boys and girls
lined up along the sides. This was to
be our headquarters and factory for
the summer—a roomy unused barn
belonging to the parents of one of
the group members, Tommy Miller.
"O.K.," I said, "let's relax. You
don't need to treat me as a teacher,
you know. I stopped being a school
teacher when the final grades went in
last Friday. I'm on vacation now. My
job here is only to advise, and I'm
going to do that as little as possible.
You're going to decide what to do,
and if it's safe and legal and possible
to do with the starting capital we
have, I'll go along with it and help
in any way I can. This is your meeting."
Mr. McCormack had told me, and
in some detail, about the youngsters
I'd be dealing with. The three who
were sitting to my left were the ones
who had proposed the group in the
first place.
Doris Enright was a grave young
lady of ten years, who might, I
thought, be quite a beauty in a few
more years, but was at the moment
rather angular—all shoulders and elbows.
Peter Cope, Jr. and Hilary Matlack
were skinny kids, too. The three
were of an age and were all tall for
ten-year-olds.
I had the impression during that
first meeting that they looked rather
alike, but this wasn't so. Their features
were quite different. Perhaps
from association, for they were close
friends, they had just come to have
a certain similarity of restrained gesture
and of modulated voice. And
they were all tanned by sun and wind
to a degree that made their eyes seem
light and their teeth startlingly white.
The two on my right were cast in
a different mold. Mary McCready
was a big husky redhead of twelve,
with a face full of freckles and an
infectious laugh, and Tommy Miller,
a few months younger, was just an
average, extroverted, well adjusted
youngster, noisy and restless, tee-shirted
and butch-barbered.
The group exchanged looks to see
who would lead off, and Peter Cope
seemed to be elected.
"Well, Mr. Henderson, a junior
achievement group is a bunch of kids
who get together to manufacture and
sell things, and maybe make some
money."
"Is that what you want to do," I
asked, "make money?"
"Why not?" Tommy asked.
"There's something wrong with making
money?"
"Well, sure, I suppose we want to,"
said Hilary. "We'll need some money
to do the things we want to do later."
"And what sort of things would
you like to make and sell?" I asked.
The usual products, of course, with
these junior achievement efforts, are
chemical specialties that can be made
safely and that people will buy and
use without misgivings—solvent to
free up rusty bolts, cleaner to remove
road tar, mechanic's hand soap—that
sort of thing. Mr. McCormack had
told me, though, that I might find
these youngsters a bit more ambitious.
"The Miller boy and Mary McCready,"
he had said, "have exceptionally
high IQ's—around one forty
or one fifty. The other three are hard
to classify. They have some of the
attributes of exceptional pupils, but
much of the time they seem to have
little interest in their studies. The
junior achievement idea has sparked
their imaginations. Maybe it'll be just
what they need."
Mary said, "Why don't we make a
freckle remover? I'd be our first customer."
"The thing to do," Tommy offered,
"is to figure out what people in
Ridgeville want to buy, then sell it
to them."
"I'd like to make something by
powder metallurgy techniques," said
Pete. He fixed me with a challenging
eye. "You should be able to make
ball bearings by molding, then densify
them by electroplating."
"And all we'd need is a hydraulic
press," I told him, "which, on a guess,
might cost ten thousand dollars. Let's
think of something easier."
Pete mulled it over and nodded
reluctantly. "Then maybe something
in the electronics field. A hi-fi sub-assembly
of some kind."
"How about a new detergent?" Hilary
put in.
"Like the liquid dishwashing detergents?"
I asked.
He was scornful. "No, they're formulations—you
know, mixtures.
That's cookbook chemistry. I mean a
brand new synthetic detergent. I've
got an idea for one that ought to be
good even in the hard water we've
got around here."
"Well, now," I said, "organic synthesis
sounds like another operation
calling for capital investment. If we
should keep the achievement group
going for several summers, it might
be possible later on to carry out a
safe synthesis of some sort. You're
Dr. Matlack's son, aren't you? Been
dipping into your father's library?"
"Some," said Hilary, "and I've got
a home laboratory."
"How about you, Doris?" I prompted.
"Do you have a special field of interest?"
"No." She shook her head in mock
despondency. "I'm not very technical.
Just sort of miscellaneous. But if the
group wanted to raise some mice, I'd
be willing to turn over a project I've
had going at home."
"You could sell mice?" Tommy demanded
incredulously.
"Mice," I echoed, then sat back and
thought about it. "Are they a pure
strain? One of the recognized laboratory
strains? Healthy mice of the
right strain," I explained to Tommy,
"might be sold to laboratories. I have
an idea the Commission buys a supply
every month."
"No," said Doris, "these aren't laboratory
mice. They're fancy ones. I
got the first four pairs from a pet
shop in Denver, but they're red—sort
of chipmunk color, you know. I've
carried them through seventeen generations
of careful selection."
"Well, now," I admitted, "the market
for red mice might be rather limited.
Why don't you consider making
an after-shave lotion? Denatured alcohol,
glycerine, water, a little color
and perfume. You could buy some
bottles and have some labels printed.
You'd be in business before you
knew it."
There was a pause, then Tommy
inquired, "How do you sell it?"
"Door-to-door."
He made a face. "Never build up
any volume. Unless it did something
extra. You say we'd put color in it.
How about enough color to leave
your face looking tanned. Men won't
use cosmetics and junk, but if they
didn't have to admit it, they might
like the shave lotion."
Hilary had been deep in thought.
He said suddenly, "Gosh, I think I
know how to make a—what do you
want to call it—a before-shave lotion."
"What would that be?" I asked.
"You'd use it before you shaved."
"I suppose there might be people
who'd prefer to use it beforehand,"
I conceded.
"There will be people," he said
darkly, and subsided.
Mrs. Miller came out to the barn
after a while, bringing a bucket of
soft drinks and ice, a couple of loaves
of bread and ingredients for a variety
of sandwiches. The parents had
agreed to underwrite lunches at the
barn and Betty Miller philosophically
assumed the role of commissary
officer. She paused only to say hello
and to ask how we were progressing
with our organization meeting.
I'd forgotten all about organization,
and that, according to all the
articles I had perused, is most important
to such groups. It's standard practice
for every member of the group
to be a company officer. Of course a
young boy who doesn't know any better,
may wind up a sales manager.
Over the sandwiches, then, I suggested
nominating company officers,
but they seemed not to be interested.
Peter Cope waved it off by remarking
that they'd each do what came
naturally. On the other hand, they
pondered at some length about a
name for the organization, without
reaching any conclusions, so we returned
to the problem of what to
make.
It was Mary, finally, who advanced
the thought of kites. At first there
was little enthusiasm, then Peter said,
"You know, we could work up something
new. Has anybody ever seen a
kite made like a wind sock?"
Nobody had. Pete drew figures in
the air with his hands. "How about
the hole at the small end?"
"I'll make one tonight," said Doris,
"and think about the small end.
It'll work out all right."
I wished that the youngsters weren't
starting out by inventing a new
article to manufacture, and risking an
almost certain disappointment, but to
hold my guidance to the minimum, I
said nothing, knowing that later I
could help them redesign it along
standard lines.
At supper I reviewed the day's
happenings with Marjorie and tried
to recall all of the ideas which had
been propounded. Most of them were
impractical, of course, for a group of
children to attempt, but several of
them appeared quite attractive.
Tommy, for example, wanted to
put tooth powder into tablets that
one would chew before brushing the
teeth. He thought there should be
two colors in the same bottle—orange
for morning and blue for night,
the blue ones designed to leave the
mouth alkaline at bed time.
Pete wanted to make a combination
nail and wood screw. You'd
drive it in with a hammer up to the
threaded part, then send it home with
a few turns of a screwdriver.
Hilary, reluctantly forsaking his
ideas on detergents, suggested we
make black plastic discs, like poker
chips but thinner and as cheap as
possible, to scatter on a snowy sidewalk
where they would pick up extra
heat from the sun and melt the
snow more rapidly. Afterward one
would sweep up and collect the discs.
Doris added to this that if you
could make the discs light enough to
float, they might be colored white
and spread on the surface of a reservoir
to reduce evaporation.
These latter ideas had made unknowing
use of some basic physics,
and I'm afraid I relapsed for a few
minutes into the role of teacher and
told them a little bit about the laws
of radiation and absorption of heat.
"My," said Marjorie, "they're really
smart boys and girls. Tommy Miller
does sound like a born salesman.
Somehow I don't think you're going
to have to call in Mr. Wells."
I do feel just a little embarrassed
about the kite, even now. The fact
that it flew surprised me. That it flew
so confoundedly well was humiliating.
Four of them were at the barn
when I arrived next morning; or
rather on the rise of ground just beyond
it, and the kite hung motionless
and almost out of sight in the pale
sky. I stood and watched for a moment,
then they saw me.
"Hello, Mr. Henderson," Mary said,
and proffered the cord which was
wound on a fishing reel. I played the
kite up and down for a few minutes,
then reeled it in. It was, almost exactly,
a wind sock, but the hole at the
small end was shaped—by wire—into
the general form of a kidney bean.
It was beautifully made, and had a
sort of professional look about it.
"It flies too well," Mary told Doris.
"A kite ought to get caught in a tree
sometimes."
"You're right," Doris agreed. "Let's
see it." She gave the wire at the small
end the slightest of twists. "There, it
ought to swoop."
Sure enough, in the moderate
breeze of that morning, the kite
swooped and yawed to Mary's entire
satisfaction. As we trailed back to the
barn I asked Doris, "How did you
know that flattening the lower edge
of the hole would create instability?"
She looked doubtful.
"Why it would have to, wouldn't
it? It changed the pattern of air pressures."
She glanced at me quickly.
"Of course, I tried a lot of different
shapes while I was making it."
"Naturally," I said, and let it go at
that. "Where's Tommy?"
"He stopped off at the bank," Pete
Cope told me, "to borrow some money.
We'll want to buy materials to
make some of these kites."
"But I said yesterday that Mr. McCormack
and I were going to advance
some cash to get started."
"Oh, sure, but don't you think it
would be better to borrow from a
bank? More businesslike?"
"Doubtless," I said, "but banks generally
want some security." I would
have gone on and explained matters
further, except that Tommy walked
in and handed me a pocket check
book.
"I got two hundred and fifty," he
volunteered—not without a hint of
complacency in his voice. "It didn't
take long, but they sure made it out
a big deal. Half the guys in the bank
had to be called in to listen to the
proposition. The account's in your
name, Mr. Henderson, and you'll have
to make out the checks. And they
want you to stop in at the bank and
give them a specimen signature. Oh,
yes, and cosign the note."
My heart sank. I'd never had any
dealings with banks except in the
matter of mortgages, and bank people
make me most uneasy. To say
nothing of finding myself responsible
for a two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar
note—over two weeks salary. I made
a mental vow to sign very few checks.
"So then I stopped by at Apex
Stationers," Tommy went on, "and ordered
some paper and envelopes. We
hadn't picked a name yesterday, but I
figured what's to lose, and picked one.
Ridge Industries, how's that?" Everybody
nodded.
"Just three lines on the letterhead,"
he explained. "Ridge Industries—Ridgeville—Montana."
I got my voice back and said, "Engraved,
I trust."
"Well, sure," he replied. "You can't
afford to look chintzy."
My appetite was not at its best
that evening, and Marjorie recognized
that something was concerning
me, but she asked no questions, and
I only told her about the success of
the kite, and the youngsters embarking
on a shopping trip for paper, glue
and wood splints. There was no use
in both of us worrying.
On Friday we all got down to work,
and presently had a regular production
line under way; stapling the
wood splints, then wetting them with
a resin solution and shaping them
over a mandrel to stiffen, cutting the
plastic film around a pattern, assembling
and hanging the finished kites
from an overhead beam until the cement
had set. Pete Cope had located
a big roll of red plastic film from
somewhere, and it made a wonderful-looking
kite. Happily, I didn't know
what the film cost until the first kites
were sold.
By Wednesday of the following
week we had almost three hundred
kites finished and packed into flat
cardboard boxes, and frankly I didn't
care if I never saw another. Tommy,
who by mutual consent, was our
authority on sales, didn't want to sell
any until we had, as he put it, enough
to meet the demand, but this quantity
seemed to satisfy him. He said he
would sell them the next week and
Mary McCready, with a fine burst of
confidence, asked him in all seriousness
to be sure to hold out a dozen.
Three other things occurred that
day, two of which I knew about immediately.
Mary brought a portable
typewriter from home and spent part
of the afternoon banging away at
what seemed to me, since I use two
fingers only, a very creditable speed.
And Hilary brought in a bottle of
his new detergent. It was a syrupy
yellow liquid with a nice collar of
suds. He'd been busy in his home
laboratory after all, it seemed.
"What is it?" I asked. "You never
told us."
Hilary grinned. "Lauryl benzyl
phosphonic acid, dipotassium salt, in
20% solution."
"Goodness." I protested, "it's been
twenty-five years since my last course
in chemistry. Perhaps if I saw the
formula—."
He gave me a singularly adult
smile and jotted down a scrawl of
symbols and lines. It meant little to
me.
"Is it good?"
For answer he seized the ice bucket,
now empty of its soda bottles,
trickled in a few drops from the bottle
and swished the contents. Foam
mounted to the rim and spilled over.
"And that's our best grade of Ridgeville
water," he pointed out. "Hardest
in the country."
The third event of Wednesday
came to my ears on Thursday morning.
I was a little late arriving at the
barn, and was taken a bit aback to
find the roadway leading to it rather
full of parked automobiles, and the
barn itself rather full of people, including
two policemen. Our Ridgeville
police are quite young men, but
in uniform they still look ominous
and I was relieved to see that they
were laughing and evidently enjoying
themselves.
"Well, now," I demanded, in my
best classroom voice. "What is all
this?"
"Are you Henderson?" the larger
policeman asked.
"I am indeed," I said, and a flash
bulb went off. A young lady grasped
my arm.
"Oh, please, Mr. Henderson, come
outside where it's quieter and tell me
all about it."
"Perhaps," I countered, "somebody
should tell me."
"You mean you don't know, honestly?
Oh, it's fabulous. Best story I've
had for ages. It'll make the city papers."
She led me around the corner
of the barn to a spot of comparative
quiet.
"You didn't know that one of your
junior whatsisnames poured detergent
in the Memorial Fountain basin
last night?"
I shook my head numbly.
"It was priceless. Just before rush
hour. Suds built up in the basin and
overflowed, and down the library
steps and covered the whole street.
And the funniest part was they kept
right on coming. You couldn't imagine
so much suds coming from that
little pool of water. There was a
three-block traffic jam and Harry got
us some marvelous pictures—men
rolling up their trousers to wade
across the street. And this morning,"
she chortled, "somebody phoned in
an anonymous tip to the police—of
course it was the same boy that did
it—Tommy—Miller?—and so here
we are. And we just saw a demonstration
of that fabulous kite and saw
all those simply captivating mice."
"Mice?"
"Yes, of course. Who would ever
have thought you could breed mice
with those cute furry tails?"
Well, after a while things quieted
down. They had to. The police left
after sobering up long enough to
give me a serious warning against
letting such a thing happen again.
Mr. Miller, who had come home to
see what all the excitement was, went
back to work and Mrs. Miller went
back to the house and the reporter
and photographer drifted off to file
their story, or whatever it is they do.
Tommy was jubilant.
"Did you hear what she said? It'll
make the city papers. I wish we had
a thousand kites. Ten thousand. Oh
boy, selling is fun. Hilary, when can
you make some more of that stuff?
And Doris, how many mice do you
have?"
Those mice! I have always kept
my enthusiasm for rodents within
bounds, but I must admit they were
charming little beasts, with tails as
bushy as miniature squirrels.
"How many generations?" I asked
Doris.
"Seventeen. No, eighteen, now.
Want to see the genetic charts?"
I won't try to explain it as she did
to me, but it was quite evident that
the new mice were breeding true.
Presently we asked Betty Miller to
come back down to the barn for a
conference. She listened and asked
questions. At last she said, "Well, all
right, if you promise me they can't
get out of their cages. But heaven
knows what you'll do when fall
comes. They won't live in an unheated
barn and you can't bring them
into the house."
"We'll be out of the mouse business
by then," Doris predicted. "Every pet
shop in the country will have
them and they'll be down to nothing
apiece."
Doris was right, of course, in spite
of our efforts to protect the market.
Anyhow that ushered in our cage
building phase, and for the next
week—with a few interruptions—we
built cages, hundreds of them, a good
many for breeding, but mostly for
shipping.
It was rather regrettable that, after
the
Courier
gave us most of the third
page, including photographs, we rarely
had a day without a few visitors.
Many of them wanted to buy mice or
kites, but Tommy refused to sell any
mice at retail and we soon had to disappoint
those who wanted kites. The
Supermarket took all we had—except
a dozen—and at a dollar fifty
each. Tommy's ideas of pricing rather
frightened me, but he set the value
of the mice at ten dollars a pair
and got it without any arguments.
Our beautiful stationery arrived,
and we had some invoice forms printed
up in a hurry—not engraved, for
a wonder.
It was on Tuesday—following the
Thursday—that a lanky young man
disentangled himself from his car
and strolled into the barn. I looked
up from the floor where I was tacking
squares of screening onto wooden
frames.
"Hi," he said. "You're Donald
Henderson, right? My name is McCord—Jeff
McCord—and I work in
the Patent Section at the Commission's
downtown office. My boss sent
me over here, but if he hadn't, I
think I'd have come anyway. What
are you doing to get patent protection
on Ridge Industries' new developments?"
I got my back unkinked and dusted
off my knees. "Well, now," I said,
"I've been wondering whether something
shouldn't be done, but I know
very little about such matters—."
"Exactly," he broke in, "we guessed
that might be the case, and there are
three patent men in our office who'd
like to chip in and contribute some
time. Partly for the kicks and partly
because we think you may have some
things worth protecting. How about
it? You worry about the filing and
final fees. That's sixty bucks per
brainstorm. We'll worry about everything
else."
"What's to lose," Tommy interjected.
And so we acquired a patent attorney,
several of them, in fact.
The day that our application on
the kite design went to Washington,
Mary wrote a dozen toy manufacturers
scattered from New York to Los
Angeles, sent a kite to each one and
offered to license the design. Result,
one licensee with a thousand dollar
advance against next season's royalties.
It was a rainy morning about three
weeks later that I arrived at the barn.
Jeff McCord was there, and the whole
team except Tommy. Jeff lowered his
feet from the picnic table and said,
"Hi."
"Hi yourself," I told him. "You
look pleased."
"I am," he replied, "in a cautious
legal sense, of course. Hilary and I
were just going over the situation on
his phosphonate detergent. I've spent
the last three nights studying the patent
literature and a few standard
texts touching on phosphonates.
There are a zillion patents on synthetic
detergents and a good round
fifty on phosphonates, but it looks"—he
held up a long admonitory hand—"it
just looks as though we had a clear
spot. If we do get protection, you've
got a real salable property."
"That's fine, Mr. McCord," Hilary
said, "but it's not very important."
"No?" Jeff tilted an inquiring eyebrow
at me, and I handed him a small
bottle. He opened and sniffed at it
gingerly. "What gives?"
"Before-shave lotion," Hilary told
him. "You've shaved this morning,
but try some anyway."
Jeff looked momentarily dubious,
then puddled some in his palm and
moistened his jaw line. "Smells
good," he noted, "and feels nice and
cool. Now what?"
"Wipe your face." Jeff located a
handkerchief and wiped, looked at
the cloth, wiped again, and stared.
"What is it?"
"A whisker stiffener. It makes each
hair brittle enough to break off right
at the surface of your skin."
"So I perceive. What is it?"
"Oh, just a mixture of stuff. Cookbook
chemistry. Cysteine thiolactone
and a fat-soluble magnesium compound."
"I see. Just a mixture of stuff. And
do your whiskers grow back the next
day?"
"Right on schedule," I said.
McCord unfolded his length and
stood staring out into the rain. Presently
he said, "Henderson, Hilary
and I are heading for my office. We
can work there better than here, and
if we're going to break the hearts of
the razor industry, there's no better
time to start than now."
When they had driven off I turned
and said, "Let's talk a while. We can
always clean mouse cages later.
Where's Tommy?"
"Oh, he stopped at the bank to get
a loan."
"What on earth for? We have over
six thousand in the account."
"Well," Peter said, looking a little
embarrassed, "we were planning to
buy a hydraulic press. You see, Doris
put some embroidery on that scheme
of mine for making ball bearings."
He grabbed a sheet of paper. "Look,
we make a roller bearing, this shape
only it's a permanent magnet. Then
you see—." And he was off.
"What did they do today, dear?"
Marge asked as she refilled my coffee
cup.
"Thanks," I said. "Let's see, it was
a big day. We picked out a hydraulic
press, Doris read us the first chapter
of the book she's starting, and we
found a place over a garage on
Fourth Street that we can rent for
winter quarters. Oh, yes, and Jeff is
starting action to get the company
incorporated."
"Winter quarters," Marge repeated.
"You mean you're going to try to
keep the group going after school
starts?"
"Why not? The kids can sail
through their courses without thinking
about them, and actually they
won't put in more than a few hours
a week during the school year."
"Even so, it's child labor, isn't it?"
"Child labor nothing. They're the
employers. Jeff McCord and I will
be the only employees—just at first,
anyway."
Marge choked on something. "Did
you say you'd be an employee?"
"Sure," I told her. "They've offered
me a small share of the company,
and I'd be crazy to turn it down. After
all, what's to lose?"
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog Science Fact & Fiction
July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | He didn't, it was Mary. | He didn't, it was Tommy. | He didn't, it was Doris. | He didn't, it was Peter. | 1 |
27665_6ZYKASVR_7 | Why will the group be out of the mouse business by the fall? | Fallout is, of course, always disastrous—
one way or another
JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT
BY WILLIAM LEE
ILLUSTRATED BY SCHOENHERR
"What would you think," I asked
Marjorie over supper, "if I should undertake
to lead a junior achievement
group this summer?"
She pondered it while she went to
the kitchen to bring in the dessert.
It was dried apricot pie, and very
tasty, I might add.
"Why, Donald," she said, "it could
be quite interesting, if I understand
what a junior achievement group is.
What gave you the idea?"
"It wasn't my idea, really," I admitted.
"Mr. McCormack called me
to the office today, and told me that
some of the children in the lower
grades wanted to start one. They
need adult guidance of course, and
one of the group suggested my name."
I should explain, perhaps, that I
teach a course in general science in
our Ridgeville Junior High School,
and another in general physics in the
Senior High School. It's a privilege
which I'm sure many educators must
envy, teaching in Ridgeville, for our
new school is a fine one, and our
academic standards are high. On the
other hand, the fathers of most of
my students work for the Commission
and a constant awareness of the Commission
and its work pervades the
town. It is an uneasy privilege then,
at least sometimes, to teach my old-fashioned
brand of science to these
children of a new age.
"That's very nice," said Marjorie.
"What does a junior achievement
group do?"
"It has the purpose," I told her,
"of teaching the members something
about commerce and industry. They
manufacture simple compositions
like polishing waxes and sell them
from door-to-door. Some groups have
built up tidy little bank accounts
which are available for later educational
expenses."
"Gracious, you wouldn't have to
sell from door-to-door, would you?"
"Of course not. I'd just tell the
kids how to do it."
Marjorie put back her head and
laughed, and I was forced to join her,
for we both recognize that my understanding
and "feel" for commercial
matters—if I may use that expression—is
almost nonexistent.
"Oh, all right," I said, "laugh at
my commercial aspirations. But don't
worry about it, really. Mr. McCormack
said we could get Mr. Wells from
Commercial Department to help out
if he was needed. There is one problem,
though. Mr. McCormack is going
to put up fifty dollars to buy any
raw materials wanted and he rather
suggested that I might advance another
fifty. The question is, could we
do it?"
Marjorie did mental arithmetic.
"Yes," she said, "yes, if it's something
you'd like to do."
We've had to watch such things
rather closely for the last ten—no,
eleven years. Back in the old Ridgeville,
fifty-odd miles to the south, we
had our home almost paid for, when
the accident occurred. It was in the
path of the heaviest fallout, and we
couldn't have kept on living there
even if the town had stayed. When
Ridgeville moved to its present site,
so, of course, did we, which meant
starting mortgage payments all over
again.
Thus it was that on a Wednesday
morning about three weeks later, I
was sitting at one end of a plank picnic
table with five boys and girls
lined up along the sides. This was to
be our headquarters and factory for
the summer—a roomy unused barn
belonging to the parents of one of
the group members, Tommy Miller.
"O.K.," I said, "let's relax. You
don't need to treat me as a teacher,
you know. I stopped being a school
teacher when the final grades went in
last Friday. I'm on vacation now. My
job here is only to advise, and I'm
going to do that as little as possible.
You're going to decide what to do,
and if it's safe and legal and possible
to do with the starting capital we
have, I'll go along with it and help
in any way I can. This is your meeting."
Mr. McCormack had told me, and
in some detail, about the youngsters
I'd be dealing with. The three who
were sitting to my left were the ones
who had proposed the group in the
first place.
Doris Enright was a grave young
lady of ten years, who might, I
thought, be quite a beauty in a few
more years, but was at the moment
rather angular—all shoulders and elbows.
Peter Cope, Jr. and Hilary Matlack
were skinny kids, too. The three
were of an age and were all tall for
ten-year-olds.
I had the impression during that
first meeting that they looked rather
alike, but this wasn't so. Their features
were quite different. Perhaps
from association, for they were close
friends, they had just come to have
a certain similarity of restrained gesture
and of modulated voice. And
they were all tanned by sun and wind
to a degree that made their eyes seem
light and their teeth startlingly white.
The two on my right were cast in
a different mold. Mary McCready
was a big husky redhead of twelve,
with a face full of freckles and an
infectious laugh, and Tommy Miller,
a few months younger, was just an
average, extroverted, well adjusted
youngster, noisy and restless, tee-shirted
and butch-barbered.
The group exchanged looks to see
who would lead off, and Peter Cope
seemed to be elected.
"Well, Mr. Henderson, a junior
achievement group is a bunch of kids
who get together to manufacture and
sell things, and maybe make some
money."
"Is that what you want to do," I
asked, "make money?"
"Why not?" Tommy asked.
"There's something wrong with making
money?"
"Well, sure, I suppose we want to,"
said Hilary. "We'll need some money
to do the things we want to do later."
"And what sort of things would
you like to make and sell?" I asked.
The usual products, of course, with
these junior achievement efforts, are
chemical specialties that can be made
safely and that people will buy and
use without misgivings—solvent to
free up rusty bolts, cleaner to remove
road tar, mechanic's hand soap—that
sort of thing. Mr. McCormack had
told me, though, that I might find
these youngsters a bit more ambitious.
"The Miller boy and Mary McCready,"
he had said, "have exceptionally
high IQ's—around one forty
or one fifty. The other three are hard
to classify. They have some of the
attributes of exceptional pupils, but
much of the time they seem to have
little interest in their studies. The
junior achievement idea has sparked
their imaginations. Maybe it'll be just
what they need."
Mary said, "Why don't we make a
freckle remover? I'd be our first customer."
"The thing to do," Tommy offered,
"is to figure out what people in
Ridgeville want to buy, then sell it
to them."
"I'd like to make something by
powder metallurgy techniques," said
Pete. He fixed me with a challenging
eye. "You should be able to make
ball bearings by molding, then densify
them by electroplating."
"And all we'd need is a hydraulic
press," I told him, "which, on a guess,
might cost ten thousand dollars. Let's
think of something easier."
Pete mulled it over and nodded
reluctantly. "Then maybe something
in the electronics field. A hi-fi sub-assembly
of some kind."
"How about a new detergent?" Hilary
put in.
"Like the liquid dishwashing detergents?"
I asked.
He was scornful. "No, they're formulations—you
know, mixtures.
That's cookbook chemistry. I mean a
brand new synthetic detergent. I've
got an idea for one that ought to be
good even in the hard water we've
got around here."
"Well, now," I said, "organic synthesis
sounds like another operation
calling for capital investment. If we
should keep the achievement group
going for several summers, it might
be possible later on to carry out a
safe synthesis of some sort. You're
Dr. Matlack's son, aren't you? Been
dipping into your father's library?"
"Some," said Hilary, "and I've got
a home laboratory."
"How about you, Doris?" I prompted.
"Do you have a special field of interest?"
"No." She shook her head in mock
despondency. "I'm not very technical.
Just sort of miscellaneous. But if the
group wanted to raise some mice, I'd
be willing to turn over a project I've
had going at home."
"You could sell mice?" Tommy demanded
incredulously.
"Mice," I echoed, then sat back and
thought about it. "Are they a pure
strain? One of the recognized laboratory
strains? Healthy mice of the
right strain," I explained to Tommy,
"might be sold to laboratories. I have
an idea the Commission buys a supply
every month."
"No," said Doris, "these aren't laboratory
mice. They're fancy ones. I
got the first four pairs from a pet
shop in Denver, but they're red—sort
of chipmunk color, you know. I've
carried them through seventeen generations
of careful selection."
"Well, now," I admitted, "the market
for red mice might be rather limited.
Why don't you consider making
an after-shave lotion? Denatured alcohol,
glycerine, water, a little color
and perfume. You could buy some
bottles and have some labels printed.
You'd be in business before you
knew it."
There was a pause, then Tommy
inquired, "How do you sell it?"
"Door-to-door."
He made a face. "Never build up
any volume. Unless it did something
extra. You say we'd put color in it.
How about enough color to leave
your face looking tanned. Men won't
use cosmetics and junk, but if they
didn't have to admit it, they might
like the shave lotion."
Hilary had been deep in thought.
He said suddenly, "Gosh, I think I
know how to make a—what do you
want to call it—a before-shave lotion."
"What would that be?" I asked.
"You'd use it before you shaved."
"I suppose there might be people
who'd prefer to use it beforehand,"
I conceded.
"There will be people," he said
darkly, and subsided.
Mrs. Miller came out to the barn
after a while, bringing a bucket of
soft drinks and ice, a couple of loaves
of bread and ingredients for a variety
of sandwiches. The parents had
agreed to underwrite lunches at the
barn and Betty Miller philosophically
assumed the role of commissary
officer. She paused only to say hello
and to ask how we were progressing
with our organization meeting.
I'd forgotten all about organization,
and that, according to all the
articles I had perused, is most important
to such groups. It's standard practice
for every member of the group
to be a company officer. Of course a
young boy who doesn't know any better,
may wind up a sales manager.
Over the sandwiches, then, I suggested
nominating company officers,
but they seemed not to be interested.
Peter Cope waved it off by remarking
that they'd each do what came
naturally. On the other hand, they
pondered at some length about a
name for the organization, without
reaching any conclusions, so we returned
to the problem of what to
make.
It was Mary, finally, who advanced
the thought of kites. At first there
was little enthusiasm, then Peter said,
"You know, we could work up something
new. Has anybody ever seen a
kite made like a wind sock?"
Nobody had. Pete drew figures in
the air with his hands. "How about
the hole at the small end?"
"I'll make one tonight," said Doris,
"and think about the small end.
It'll work out all right."
I wished that the youngsters weren't
starting out by inventing a new
article to manufacture, and risking an
almost certain disappointment, but to
hold my guidance to the minimum, I
said nothing, knowing that later I
could help them redesign it along
standard lines.
At supper I reviewed the day's
happenings with Marjorie and tried
to recall all of the ideas which had
been propounded. Most of them were
impractical, of course, for a group of
children to attempt, but several of
them appeared quite attractive.
Tommy, for example, wanted to
put tooth powder into tablets that
one would chew before brushing the
teeth. He thought there should be
two colors in the same bottle—orange
for morning and blue for night,
the blue ones designed to leave the
mouth alkaline at bed time.
Pete wanted to make a combination
nail and wood screw. You'd
drive it in with a hammer up to the
threaded part, then send it home with
a few turns of a screwdriver.
Hilary, reluctantly forsaking his
ideas on detergents, suggested we
make black plastic discs, like poker
chips but thinner and as cheap as
possible, to scatter on a snowy sidewalk
where they would pick up extra
heat from the sun and melt the
snow more rapidly. Afterward one
would sweep up and collect the discs.
Doris added to this that if you
could make the discs light enough to
float, they might be colored white
and spread on the surface of a reservoir
to reduce evaporation.
These latter ideas had made unknowing
use of some basic physics,
and I'm afraid I relapsed for a few
minutes into the role of teacher and
told them a little bit about the laws
of radiation and absorption of heat.
"My," said Marjorie, "they're really
smart boys and girls. Tommy Miller
does sound like a born salesman.
Somehow I don't think you're going
to have to call in Mr. Wells."
I do feel just a little embarrassed
about the kite, even now. The fact
that it flew surprised me. That it flew
so confoundedly well was humiliating.
Four of them were at the barn
when I arrived next morning; or
rather on the rise of ground just beyond
it, and the kite hung motionless
and almost out of sight in the pale
sky. I stood and watched for a moment,
then they saw me.
"Hello, Mr. Henderson," Mary said,
and proffered the cord which was
wound on a fishing reel. I played the
kite up and down for a few minutes,
then reeled it in. It was, almost exactly,
a wind sock, but the hole at the
small end was shaped—by wire—into
the general form of a kidney bean.
It was beautifully made, and had a
sort of professional look about it.
"It flies too well," Mary told Doris.
"A kite ought to get caught in a tree
sometimes."
"You're right," Doris agreed. "Let's
see it." She gave the wire at the small
end the slightest of twists. "There, it
ought to swoop."
Sure enough, in the moderate
breeze of that morning, the kite
swooped and yawed to Mary's entire
satisfaction. As we trailed back to the
barn I asked Doris, "How did you
know that flattening the lower edge
of the hole would create instability?"
She looked doubtful.
"Why it would have to, wouldn't
it? It changed the pattern of air pressures."
She glanced at me quickly.
"Of course, I tried a lot of different
shapes while I was making it."
"Naturally," I said, and let it go at
that. "Where's Tommy?"
"He stopped off at the bank," Pete
Cope told me, "to borrow some money.
We'll want to buy materials to
make some of these kites."
"But I said yesterday that Mr. McCormack
and I were going to advance
some cash to get started."
"Oh, sure, but don't you think it
would be better to borrow from a
bank? More businesslike?"
"Doubtless," I said, "but banks generally
want some security." I would
have gone on and explained matters
further, except that Tommy walked
in and handed me a pocket check
book.
"I got two hundred and fifty," he
volunteered—not without a hint of
complacency in his voice. "It didn't
take long, but they sure made it out
a big deal. Half the guys in the bank
had to be called in to listen to the
proposition. The account's in your
name, Mr. Henderson, and you'll have
to make out the checks. And they
want you to stop in at the bank and
give them a specimen signature. Oh,
yes, and cosign the note."
My heart sank. I'd never had any
dealings with banks except in the
matter of mortgages, and bank people
make me most uneasy. To say
nothing of finding myself responsible
for a two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar
note—over two weeks salary. I made
a mental vow to sign very few checks.
"So then I stopped by at Apex
Stationers," Tommy went on, "and ordered
some paper and envelopes. We
hadn't picked a name yesterday, but I
figured what's to lose, and picked one.
Ridge Industries, how's that?" Everybody
nodded.
"Just three lines on the letterhead,"
he explained. "Ridge Industries—Ridgeville—Montana."
I got my voice back and said, "Engraved,
I trust."
"Well, sure," he replied. "You can't
afford to look chintzy."
My appetite was not at its best
that evening, and Marjorie recognized
that something was concerning
me, but she asked no questions, and
I only told her about the success of
the kite, and the youngsters embarking
on a shopping trip for paper, glue
and wood splints. There was no use
in both of us worrying.
On Friday we all got down to work,
and presently had a regular production
line under way; stapling the
wood splints, then wetting them with
a resin solution and shaping them
over a mandrel to stiffen, cutting the
plastic film around a pattern, assembling
and hanging the finished kites
from an overhead beam until the cement
had set. Pete Cope had located
a big roll of red plastic film from
somewhere, and it made a wonderful-looking
kite. Happily, I didn't know
what the film cost until the first kites
were sold.
By Wednesday of the following
week we had almost three hundred
kites finished and packed into flat
cardboard boxes, and frankly I didn't
care if I never saw another. Tommy,
who by mutual consent, was our
authority on sales, didn't want to sell
any until we had, as he put it, enough
to meet the demand, but this quantity
seemed to satisfy him. He said he
would sell them the next week and
Mary McCready, with a fine burst of
confidence, asked him in all seriousness
to be sure to hold out a dozen.
Three other things occurred that
day, two of which I knew about immediately.
Mary brought a portable
typewriter from home and spent part
of the afternoon banging away at
what seemed to me, since I use two
fingers only, a very creditable speed.
And Hilary brought in a bottle of
his new detergent. It was a syrupy
yellow liquid with a nice collar of
suds. He'd been busy in his home
laboratory after all, it seemed.
"What is it?" I asked. "You never
told us."
Hilary grinned. "Lauryl benzyl
phosphonic acid, dipotassium salt, in
20% solution."
"Goodness." I protested, "it's been
twenty-five years since my last course
in chemistry. Perhaps if I saw the
formula—."
He gave me a singularly adult
smile and jotted down a scrawl of
symbols and lines. It meant little to
me.
"Is it good?"
For answer he seized the ice bucket,
now empty of its soda bottles,
trickled in a few drops from the bottle
and swished the contents. Foam
mounted to the rim and spilled over.
"And that's our best grade of Ridgeville
water," he pointed out. "Hardest
in the country."
The third event of Wednesday
came to my ears on Thursday morning.
I was a little late arriving at the
barn, and was taken a bit aback to
find the roadway leading to it rather
full of parked automobiles, and the
barn itself rather full of people, including
two policemen. Our Ridgeville
police are quite young men, but
in uniform they still look ominous
and I was relieved to see that they
were laughing and evidently enjoying
themselves.
"Well, now," I demanded, in my
best classroom voice. "What is all
this?"
"Are you Henderson?" the larger
policeman asked.
"I am indeed," I said, and a flash
bulb went off. A young lady grasped
my arm.
"Oh, please, Mr. Henderson, come
outside where it's quieter and tell me
all about it."
"Perhaps," I countered, "somebody
should tell me."
"You mean you don't know, honestly?
Oh, it's fabulous. Best story I've
had for ages. It'll make the city papers."
She led me around the corner
of the barn to a spot of comparative
quiet.
"You didn't know that one of your
junior whatsisnames poured detergent
in the Memorial Fountain basin
last night?"
I shook my head numbly.
"It was priceless. Just before rush
hour. Suds built up in the basin and
overflowed, and down the library
steps and covered the whole street.
And the funniest part was they kept
right on coming. You couldn't imagine
so much suds coming from that
little pool of water. There was a
three-block traffic jam and Harry got
us some marvelous pictures—men
rolling up their trousers to wade
across the street. And this morning,"
she chortled, "somebody phoned in
an anonymous tip to the police—of
course it was the same boy that did
it—Tommy—Miller?—and so here
we are. And we just saw a demonstration
of that fabulous kite and saw
all those simply captivating mice."
"Mice?"
"Yes, of course. Who would ever
have thought you could breed mice
with those cute furry tails?"
Well, after a while things quieted
down. They had to. The police left
after sobering up long enough to
give me a serious warning against
letting such a thing happen again.
Mr. Miller, who had come home to
see what all the excitement was, went
back to work and Mrs. Miller went
back to the house and the reporter
and photographer drifted off to file
their story, or whatever it is they do.
Tommy was jubilant.
"Did you hear what she said? It'll
make the city papers. I wish we had
a thousand kites. Ten thousand. Oh
boy, selling is fun. Hilary, when can
you make some more of that stuff?
And Doris, how many mice do you
have?"
Those mice! I have always kept
my enthusiasm for rodents within
bounds, but I must admit they were
charming little beasts, with tails as
bushy as miniature squirrels.
"How many generations?" I asked
Doris.
"Seventeen. No, eighteen, now.
Want to see the genetic charts?"
I won't try to explain it as she did
to me, but it was quite evident that
the new mice were breeding true.
Presently we asked Betty Miller to
come back down to the barn for a
conference. She listened and asked
questions. At last she said, "Well, all
right, if you promise me they can't
get out of their cages. But heaven
knows what you'll do when fall
comes. They won't live in an unheated
barn and you can't bring them
into the house."
"We'll be out of the mouse business
by then," Doris predicted. "Every pet
shop in the country will have
them and they'll be down to nothing
apiece."
Doris was right, of course, in spite
of our efforts to protect the market.
Anyhow that ushered in our cage
building phase, and for the next
week—with a few interruptions—we
built cages, hundreds of them, a good
many for breeding, but mostly for
shipping.
It was rather regrettable that, after
the
Courier
gave us most of the third
page, including photographs, we rarely
had a day without a few visitors.
Many of them wanted to buy mice or
kites, but Tommy refused to sell any
mice at retail and we soon had to disappoint
those who wanted kites. The
Supermarket took all we had—except
a dozen—and at a dollar fifty
each. Tommy's ideas of pricing rather
frightened me, but he set the value
of the mice at ten dollars a pair
and got it without any arguments.
Our beautiful stationery arrived,
and we had some invoice forms printed
up in a hurry—not engraved, for
a wonder.
It was on Tuesday—following the
Thursday—that a lanky young man
disentangled himself from his car
and strolled into the barn. I looked
up from the floor where I was tacking
squares of screening onto wooden
frames.
"Hi," he said. "You're Donald
Henderson, right? My name is McCord—Jeff
McCord—and I work in
the Patent Section at the Commission's
downtown office. My boss sent
me over here, but if he hadn't, I
think I'd have come anyway. What
are you doing to get patent protection
on Ridge Industries' new developments?"
I got my back unkinked and dusted
off my knees. "Well, now," I said,
"I've been wondering whether something
shouldn't be done, but I know
very little about such matters—."
"Exactly," he broke in, "we guessed
that might be the case, and there are
three patent men in our office who'd
like to chip in and contribute some
time. Partly for the kicks and partly
because we think you may have some
things worth protecting. How about
it? You worry about the filing and
final fees. That's sixty bucks per
brainstorm. We'll worry about everything
else."
"What's to lose," Tommy interjected.
And so we acquired a patent attorney,
several of them, in fact.
The day that our application on
the kite design went to Washington,
Mary wrote a dozen toy manufacturers
scattered from New York to Los
Angeles, sent a kite to each one and
offered to license the design. Result,
one licensee with a thousand dollar
advance against next season's royalties.
It was a rainy morning about three
weeks later that I arrived at the barn.
Jeff McCord was there, and the whole
team except Tommy. Jeff lowered his
feet from the picnic table and said,
"Hi."
"Hi yourself," I told him. "You
look pleased."
"I am," he replied, "in a cautious
legal sense, of course. Hilary and I
were just going over the situation on
his phosphonate detergent. I've spent
the last three nights studying the patent
literature and a few standard
texts touching on phosphonates.
There are a zillion patents on synthetic
detergents and a good round
fifty on phosphonates, but it looks"—he
held up a long admonitory hand—"it
just looks as though we had a clear
spot. If we do get protection, you've
got a real salable property."
"That's fine, Mr. McCord," Hilary
said, "but it's not very important."
"No?" Jeff tilted an inquiring eyebrow
at me, and I handed him a small
bottle. He opened and sniffed at it
gingerly. "What gives?"
"Before-shave lotion," Hilary told
him. "You've shaved this morning,
but try some anyway."
Jeff looked momentarily dubious,
then puddled some in his palm and
moistened his jaw line. "Smells
good," he noted, "and feels nice and
cool. Now what?"
"Wipe your face." Jeff located a
handkerchief and wiped, looked at
the cloth, wiped again, and stared.
"What is it?"
"A whisker stiffener. It makes each
hair brittle enough to break off right
at the surface of your skin."
"So I perceive. What is it?"
"Oh, just a mixture of stuff. Cookbook
chemistry. Cysteine thiolactone
and a fat-soluble magnesium compound."
"I see. Just a mixture of stuff. And
do your whiskers grow back the next
day?"
"Right on schedule," I said.
McCord unfolded his length and
stood staring out into the rain. Presently
he said, "Henderson, Hilary
and I are heading for my office. We
can work there better than here, and
if we're going to break the hearts of
the razor industry, there's no better
time to start than now."
When they had driven off I turned
and said, "Let's talk a while. We can
always clean mouse cages later.
Where's Tommy?"
"Oh, he stopped at the bank to get
a loan."
"What on earth for? We have over
six thousand in the account."
"Well," Peter said, looking a little
embarrassed, "we were planning to
buy a hydraulic press. You see, Doris
put some embroidery on that scheme
of mine for making ball bearings."
He grabbed a sheet of paper. "Look,
we make a roller bearing, this shape
only it's a permanent magnet. Then
you see—." And he was off.
"What did they do today, dear?"
Marge asked as she refilled my coffee
cup.
"Thanks," I said. "Let's see, it was
a big day. We picked out a hydraulic
press, Doris read us the first chapter
of the book she's starting, and we
found a place over a garage on
Fourth Street that we can rent for
winter quarters. Oh, yes, and Jeff is
starting action to get the company
incorporated."
"Winter quarters," Marge repeated.
"You mean you're going to try to
keep the group going after school
starts?"
"Why not? The kids can sail
through their courses without thinking
about them, and actually they
won't put in more than a few hours
a week during the school year."
"Even so, it's child labor, isn't it?"
"Child labor nothing. They're the
employers. Jeff McCord and I will
be the only employees—just at first,
anyway."
Marge choked on something. "Did
you say you'd be an employee?"
"Sure," I told her. "They've offered
me a small share of the company,
and I'd be crazy to turn it down. After
all, what's to lose?"
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog Science Fact & Fiction
July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | They are selling the mice to the Commission. | When the cold weather comes in the fall, the mice won't survive in the cold barn. | Tommy refused to sell the mice. | The mice are breeding so fast, they will not be a novelty much longer. | 3 |
27665_6ZYKASVR_8 | Why does Mr. Henderson want to work for the children? | Fallout is, of course, always disastrous—
one way or another
JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT
BY WILLIAM LEE
ILLUSTRATED BY SCHOENHERR
"What would you think," I asked
Marjorie over supper, "if I should undertake
to lead a junior achievement
group this summer?"
She pondered it while she went to
the kitchen to bring in the dessert.
It was dried apricot pie, and very
tasty, I might add.
"Why, Donald," she said, "it could
be quite interesting, if I understand
what a junior achievement group is.
What gave you the idea?"
"It wasn't my idea, really," I admitted.
"Mr. McCormack called me
to the office today, and told me that
some of the children in the lower
grades wanted to start one. They
need adult guidance of course, and
one of the group suggested my name."
I should explain, perhaps, that I
teach a course in general science in
our Ridgeville Junior High School,
and another in general physics in the
Senior High School. It's a privilege
which I'm sure many educators must
envy, teaching in Ridgeville, for our
new school is a fine one, and our
academic standards are high. On the
other hand, the fathers of most of
my students work for the Commission
and a constant awareness of the Commission
and its work pervades the
town. It is an uneasy privilege then,
at least sometimes, to teach my old-fashioned
brand of science to these
children of a new age.
"That's very nice," said Marjorie.
"What does a junior achievement
group do?"
"It has the purpose," I told her,
"of teaching the members something
about commerce and industry. They
manufacture simple compositions
like polishing waxes and sell them
from door-to-door. Some groups have
built up tidy little bank accounts
which are available for later educational
expenses."
"Gracious, you wouldn't have to
sell from door-to-door, would you?"
"Of course not. I'd just tell the
kids how to do it."
Marjorie put back her head and
laughed, and I was forced to join her,
for we both recognize that my understanding
and "feel" for commercial
matters—if I may use that expression—is
almost nonexistent.
"Oh, all right," I said, "laugh at
my commercial aspirations. But don't
worry about it, really. Mr. McCormack
said we could get Mr. Wells from
Commercial Department to help out
if he was needed. There is one problem,
though. Mr. McCormack is going
to put up fifty dollars to buy any
raw materials wanted and he rather
suggested that I might advance another
fifty. The question is, could we
do it?"
Marjorie did mental arithmetic.
"Yes," she said, "yes, if it's something
you'd like to do."
We've had to watch such things
rather closely for the last ten—no,
eleven years. Back in the old Ridgeville,
fifty-odd miles to the south, we
had our home almost paid for, when
the accident occurred. It was in the
path of the heaviest fallout, and we
couldn't have kept on living there
even if the town had stayed. When
Ridgeville moved to its present site,
so, of course, did we, which meant
starting mortgage payments all over
again.
Thus it was that on a Wednesday
morning about three weeks later, I
was sitting at one end of a plank picnic
table with five boys and girls
lined up along the sides. This was to
be our headquarters and factory for
the summer—a roomy unused barn
belonging to the parents of one of
the group members, Tommy Miller.
"O.K.," I said, "let's relax. You
don't need to treat me as a teacher,
you know. I stopped being a school
teacher when the final grades went in
last Friday. I'm on vacation now. My
job here is only to advise, and I'm
going to do that as little as possible.
You're going to decide what to do,
and if it's safe and legal and possible
to do with the starting capital we
have, I'll go along with it and help
in any way I can. This is your meeting."
Mr. McCormack had told me, and
in some detail, about the youngsters
I'd be dealing with. The three who
were sitting to my left were the ones
who had proposed the group in the
first place.
Doris Enright was a grave young
lady of ten years, who might, I
thought, be quite a beauty in a few
more years, but was at the moment
rather angular—all shoulders and elbows.
Peter Cope, Jr. and Hilary Matlack
were skinny kids, too. The three
were of an age and were all tall for
ten-year-olds.
I had the impression during that
first meeting that they looked rather
alike, but this wasn't so. Their features
were quite different. Perhaps
from association, for they were close
friends, they had just come to have
a certain similarity of restrained gesture
and of modulated voice. And
they were all tanned by sun and wind
to a degree that made their eyes seem
light and their teeth startlingly white.
The two on my right were cast in
a different mold. Mary McCready
was a big husky redhead of twelve,
with a face full of freckles and an
infectious laugh, and Tommy Miller,
a few months younger, was just an
average, extroverted, well adjusted
youngster, noisy and restless, tee-shirted
and butch-barbered.
The group exchanged looks to see
who would lead off, and Peter Cope
seemed to be elected.
"Well, Mr. Henderson, a junior
achievement group is a bunch of kids
who get together to manufacture and
sell things, and maybe make some
money."
"Is that what you want to do," I
asked, "make money?"
"Why not?" Tommy asked.
"There's something wrong with making
money?"
"Well, sure, I suppose we want to,"
said Hilary. "We'll need some money
to do the things we want to do later."
"And what sort of things would
you like to make and sell?" I asked.
The usual products, of course, with
these junior achievement efforts, are
chemical specialties that can be made
safely and that people will buy and
use without misgivings—solvent to
free up rusty bolts, cleaner to remove
road tar, mechanic's hand soap—that
sort of thing. Mr. McCormack had
told me, though, that I might find
these youngsters a bit more ambitious.
"The Miller boy and Mary McCready,"
he had said, "have exceptionally
high IQ's—around one forty
or one fifty. The other three are hard
to classify. They have some of the
attributes of exceptional pupils, but
much of the time they seem to have
little interest in their studies. The
junior achievement idea has sparked
their imaginations. Maybe it'll be just
what they need."
Mary said, "Why don't we make a
freckle remover? I'd be our first customer."
"The thing to do," Tommy offered,
"is to figure out what people in
Ridgeville want to buy, then sell it
to them."
"I'd like to make something by
powder metallurgy techniques," said
Pete. He fixed me with a challenging
eye. "You should be able to make
ball bearings by molding, then densify
them by electroplating."
"And all we'd need is a hydraulic
press," I told him, "which, on a guess,
might cost ten thousand dollars. Let's
think of something easier."
Pete mulled it over and nodded
reluctantly. "Then maybe something
in the electronics field. A hi-fi sub-assembly
of some kind."
"How about a new detergent?" Hilary
put in.
"Like the liquid dishwashing detergents?"
I asked.
He was scornful. "No, they're formulations—you
know, mixtures.
That's cookbook chemistry. I mean a
brand new synthetic detergent. I've
got an idea for one that ought to be
good even in the hard water we've
got around here."
"Well, now," I said, "organic synthesis
sounds like another operation
calling for capital investment. If we
should keep the achievement group
going for several summers, it might
be possible later on to carry out a
safe synthesis of some sort. You're
Dr. Matlack's son, aren't you? Been
dipping into your father's library?"
"Some," said Hilary, "and I've got
a home laboratory."
"How about you, Doris?" I prompted.
"Do you have a special field of interest?"
"No." She shook her head in mock
despondency. "I'm not very technical.
Just sort of miscellaneous. But if the
group wanted to raise some mice, I'd
be willing to turn over a project I've
had going at home."
"You could sell mice?" Tommy demanded
incredulously.
"Mice," I echoed, then sat back and
thought about it. "Are they a pure
strain? One of the recognized laboratory
strains? Healthy mice of the
right strain," I explained to Tommy,
"might be sold to laboratories. I have
an idea the Commission buys a supply
every month."
"No," said Doris, "these aren't laboratory
mice. They're fancy ones. I
got the first four pairs from a pet
shop in Denver, but they're red—sort
of chipmunk color, you know. I've
carried them through seventeen generations
of careful selection."
"Well, now," I admitted, "the market
for red mice might be rather limited.
Why don't you consider making
an after-shave lotion? Denatured alcohol,
glycerine, water, a little color
and perfume. You could buy some
bottles and have some labels printed.
You'd be in business before you
knew it."
There was a pause, then Tommy
inquired, "How do you sell it?"
"Door-to-door."
He made a face. "Never build up
any volume. Unless it did something
extra. You say we'd put color in it.
How about enough color to leave
your face looking tanned. Men won't
use cosmetics and junk, but if they
didn't have to admit it, they might
like the shave lotion."
Hilary had been deep in thought.
He said suddenly, "Gosh, I think I
know how to make a—what do you
want to call it—a before-shave lotion."
"What would that be?" I asked.
"You'd use it before you shaved."
"I suppose there might be people
who'd prefer to use it beforehand,"
I conceded.
"There will be people," he said
darkly, and subsided.
Mrs. Miller came out to the barn
after a while, bringing a bucket of
soft drinks and ice, a couple of loaves
of bread and ingredients for a variety
of sandwiches. The parents had
agreed to underwrite lunches at the
barn and Betty Miller philosophically
assumed the role of commissary
officer. She paused only to say hello
and to ask how we were progressing
with our organization meeting.
I'd forgotten all about organization,
and that, according to all the
articles I had perused, is most important
to such groups. It's standard practice
for every member of the group
to be a company officer. Of course a
young boy who doesn't know any better,
may wind up a sales manager.
Over the sandwiches, then, I suggested
nominating company officers,
but they seemed not to be interested.
Peter Cope waved it off by remarking
that they'd each do what came
naturally. On the other hand, they
pondered at some length about a
name for the organization, without
reaching any conclusions, so we returned
to the problem of what to
make.
It was Mary, finally, who advanced
the thought of kites. At first there
was little enthusiasm, then Peter said,
"You know, we could work up something
new. Has anybody ever seen a
kite made like a wind sock?"
Nobody had. Pete drew figures in
the air with his hands. "How about
the hole at the small end?"
"I'll make one tonight," said Doris,
"and think about the small end.
It'll work out all right."
I wished that the youngsters weren't
starting out by inventing a new
article to manufacture, and risking an
almost certain disappointment, but to
hold my guidance to the minimum, I
said nothing, knowing that later I
could help them redesign it along
standard lines.
At supper I reviewed the day's
happenings with Marjorie and tried
to recall all of the ideas which had
been propounded. Most of them were
impractical, of course, for a group of
children to attempt, but several of
them appeared quite attractive.
Tommy, for example, wanted to
put tooth powder into tablets that
one would chew before brushing the
teeth. He thought there should be
two colors in the same bottle—orange
for morning and blue for night,
the blue ones designed to leave the
mouth alkaline at bed time.
Pete wanted to make a combination
nail and wood screw. You'd
drive it in with a hammer up to the
threaded part, then send it home with
a few turns of a screwdriver.
Hilary, reluctantly forsaking his
ideas on detergents, suggested we
make black plastic discs, like poker
chips but thinner and as cheap as
possible, to scatter on a snowy sidewalk
where they would pick up extra
heat from the sun and melt the
snow more rapidly. Afterward one
would sweep up and collect the discs.
Doris added to this that if you
could make the discs light enough to
float, they might be colored white
and spread on the surface of a reservoir
to reduce evaporation.
These latter ideas had made unknowing
use of some basic physics,
and I'm afraid I relapsed for a few
minutes into the role of teacher and
told them a little bit about the laws
of radiation and absorption of heat.
"My," said Marjorie, "they're really
smart boys and girls. Tommy Miller
does sound like a born salesman.
Somehow I don't think you're going
to have to call in Mr. Wells."
I do feel just a little embarrassed
about the kite, even now. The fact
that it flew surprised me. That it flew
so confoundedly well was humiliating.
Four of them were at the barn
when I arrived next morning; or
rather on the rise of ground just beyond
it, and the kite hung motionless
and almost out of sight in the pale
sky. I stood and watched for a moment,
then they saw me.
"Hello, Mr. Henderson," Mary said,
and proffered the cord which was
wound on a fishing reel. I played the
kite up and down for a few minutes,
then reeled it in. It was, almost exactly,
a wind sock, but the hole at the
small end was shaped—by wire—into
the general form of a kidney bean.
It was beautifully made, and had a
sort of professional look about it.
"It flies too well," Mary told Doris.
"A kite ought to get caught in a tree
sometimes."
"You're right," Doris agreed. "Let's
see it." She gave the wire at the small
end the slightest of twists. "There, it
ought to swoop."
Sure enough, in the moderate
breeze of that morning, the kite
swooped and yawed to Mary's entire
satisfaction. As we trailed back to the
barn I asked Doris, "How did you
know that flattening the lower edge
of the hole would create instability?"
She looked doubtful.
"Why it would have to, wouldn't
it? It changed the pattern of air pressures."
She glanced at me quickly.
"Of course, I tried a lot of different
shapes while I was making it."
"Naturally," I said, and let it go at
that. "Where's Tommy?"
"He stopped off at the bank," Pete
Cope told me, "to borrow some money.
We'll want to buy materials to
make some of these kites."
"But I said yesterday that Mr. McCormack
and I were going to advance
some cash to get started."
"Oh, sure, but don't you think it
would be better to borrow from a
bank? More businesslike?"
"Doubtless," I said, "but banks generally
want some security." I would
have gone on and explained matters
further, except that Tommy walked
in and handed me a pocket check
book.
"I got two hundred and fifty," he
volunteered—not without a hint of
complacency in his voice. "It didn't
take long, but they sure made it out
a big deal. Half the guys in the bank
had to be called in to listen to the
proposition. The account's in your
name, Mr. Henderson, and you'll have
to make out the checks. And they
want you to stop in at the bank and
give them a specimen signature. Oh,
yes, and cosign the note."
My heart sank. I'd never had any
dealings with banks except in the
matter of mortgages, and bank people
make me most uneasy. To say
nothing of finding myself responsible
for a two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar
note—over two weeks salary. I made
a mental vow to sign very few checks.
"So then I stopped by at Apex
Stationers," Tommy went on, "and ordered
some paper and envelopes. We
hadn't picked a name yesterday, but I
figured what's to lose, and picked one.
Ridge Industries, how's that?" Everybody
nodded.
"Just three lines on the letterhead,"
he explained. "Ridge Industries—Ridgeville—Montana."
I got my voice back and said, "Engraved,
I trust."
"Well, sure," he replied. "You can't
afford to look chintzy."
My appetite was not at its best
that evening, and Marjorie recognized
that something was concerning
me, but she asked no questions, and
I only told her about the success of
the kite, and the youngsters embarking
on a shopping trip for paper, glue
and wood splints. There was no use
in both of us worrying.
On Friday we all got down to work,
and presently had a regular production
line under way; stapling the
wood splints, then wetting them with
a resin solution and shaping them
over a mandrel to stiffen, cutting the
plastic film around a pattern, assembling
and hanging the finished kites
from an overhead beam until the cement
had set. Pete Cope had located
a big roll of red plastic film from
somewhere, and it made a wonderful-looking
kite. Happily, I didn't know
what the film cost until the first kites
were sold.
By Wednesday of the following
week we had almost three hundred
kites finished and packed into flat
cardboard boxes, and frankly I didn't
care if I never saw another. Tommy,
who by mutual consent, was our
authority on sales, didn't want to sell
any until we had, as he put it, enough
to meet the demand, but this quantity
seemed to satisfy him. He said he
would sell them the next week and
Mary McCready, with a fine burst of
confidence, asked him in all seriousness
to be sure to hold out a dozen.
Three other things occurred that
day, two of which I knew about immediately.
Mary brought a portable
typewriter from home and spent part
of the afternoon banging away at
what seemed to me, since I use two
fingers only, a very creditable speed.
And Hilary brought in a bottle of
his new detergent. It was a syrupy
yellow liquid with a nice collar of
suds. He'd been busy in his home
laboratory after all, it seemed.
"What is it?" I asked. "You never
told us."
Hilary grinned. "Lauryl benzyl
phosphonic acid, dipotassium salt, in
20% solution."
"Goodness." I protested, "it's been
twenty-five years since my last course
in chemistry. Perhaps if I saw the
formula—."
He gave me a singularly adult
smile and jotted down a scrawl of
symbols and lines. It meant little to
me.
"Is it good?"
For answer he seized the ice bucket,
now empty of its soda bottles,
trickled in a few drops from the bottle
and swished the contents. Foam
mounted to the rim and spilled over.
"And that's our best grade of Ridgeville
water," he pointed out. "Hardest
in the country."
The third event of Wednesday
came to my ears on Thursday morning.
I was a little late arriving at the
barn, and was taken a bit aback to
find the roadway leading to it rather
full of parked automobiles, and the
barn itself rather full of people, including
two policemen. Our Ridgeville
police are quite young men, but
in uniform they still look ominous
and I was relieved to see that they
were laughing and evidently enjoying
themselves.
"Well, now," I demanded, in my
best classroom voice. "What is all
this?"
"Are you Henderson?" the larger
policeman asked.
"I am indeed," I said, and a flash
bulb went off. A young lady grasped
my arm.
"Oh, please, Mr. Henderson, come
outside where it's quieter and tell me
all about it."
"Perhaps," I countered, "somebody
should tell me."
"You mean you don't know, honestly?
Oh, it's fabulous. Best story I've
had for ages. It'll make the city papers."
She led me around the corner
of the barn to a spot of comparative
quiet.
"You didn't know that one of your
junior whatsisnames poured detergent
in the Memorial Fountain basin
last night?"
I shook my head numbly.
"It was priceless. Just before rush
hour. Suds built up in the basin and
overflowed, and down the library
steps and covered the whole street.
And the funniest part was they kept
right on coming. You couldn't imagine
so much suds coming from that
little pool of water. There was a
three-block traffic jam and Harry got
us some marvelous pictures—men
rolling up their trousers to wade
across the street. And this morning,"
she chortled, "somebody phoned in
an anonymous tip to the police—of
course it was the same boy that did
it—Tommy—Miller?—and so here
we are. And we just saw a demonstration
of that fabulous kite and saw
all those simply captivating mice."
"Mice?"
"Yes, of course. Who would ever
have thought you could breed mice
with those cute furry tails?"
Well, after a while things quieted
down. They had to. The police left
after sobering up long enough to
give me a serious warning against
letting such a thing happen again.
Mr. Miller, who had come home to
see what all the excitement was, went
back to work and Mrs. Miller went
back to the house and the reporter
and photographer drifted off to file
their story, or whatever it is they do.
Tommy was jubilant.
"Did you hear what she said? It'll
make the city papers. I wish we had
a thousand kites. Ten thousand. Oh
boy, selling is fun. Hilary, when can
you make some more of that stuff?
And Doris, how many mice do you
have?"
Those mice! I have always kept
my enthusiasm for rodents within
bounds, but I must admit they were
charming little beasts, with tails as
bushy as miniature squirrels.
"How many generations?" I asked
Doris.
"Seventeen. No, eighteen, now.
Want to see the genetic charts?"
I won't try to explain it as she did
to me, but it was quite evident that
the new mice were breeding true.
Presently we asked Betty Miller to
come back down to the barn for a
conference. She listened and asked
questions. At last she said, "Well, all
right, if you promise me they can't
get out of their cages. But heaven
knows what you'll do when fall
comes. They won't live in an unheated
barn and you can't bring them
into the house."
"We'll be out of the mouse business
by then," Doris predicted. "Every pet
shop in the country will have
them and they'll be down to nothing
apiece."
Doris was right, of course, in spite
of our efforts to protect the market.
Anyhow that ushered in our cage
building phase, and for the next
week—with a few interruptions—we
built cages, hundreds of them, a good
many for breeding, but mostly for
shipping.
It was rather regrettable that, after
the
Courier
gave us most of the third
page, including photographs, we rarely
had a day without a few visitors.
Many of them wanted to buy mice or
kites, but Tommy refused to sell any
mice at retail and we soon had to disappoint
those who wanted kites. The
Supermarket took all we had—except
a dozen—and at a dollar fifty
each. Tommy's ideas of pricing rather
frightened me, but he set the value
of the mice at ten dollars a pair
and got it without any arguments.
Our beautiful stationery arrived,
and we had some invoice forms printed
up in a hurry—not engraved, for
a wonder.
It was on Tuesday—following the
Thursday—that a lanky young man
disentangled himself from his car
and strolled into the barn. I looked
up from the floor where I was tacking
squares of screening onto wooden
frames.
"Hi," he said. "You're Donald
Henderson, right? My name is McCord—Jeff
McCord—and I work in
the Patent Section at the Commission's
downtown office. My boss sent
me over here, but if he hadn't, I
think I'd have come anyway. What
are you doing to get patent protection
on Ridge Industries' new developments?"
I got my back unkinked and dusted
off my knees. "Well, now," I said,
"I've been wondering whether something
shouldn't be done, but I know
very little about such matters—."
"Exactly," he broke in, "we guessed
that might be the case, and there are
three patent men in our office who'd
like to chip in and contribute some
time. Partly for the kicks and partly
because we think you may have some
things worth protecting. How about
it? You worry about the filing and
final fees. That's sixty bucks per
brainstorm. We'll worry about everything
else."
"What's to lose," Tommy interjected.
And so we acquired a patent attorney,
several of them, in fact.
The day that our application on
the kite design went to Washington,
Mary wrote a dozen toy manufacturers
scattered from New York to Los
Angeles, sent a kite to each one and
offered to license the design. Result,
one licensee with a thousand dollar
advance against next season's royalties.
It was a rainy morning about three
weeks later that I arrived at the barn.
Jeff McCord was there, and the whole
team except Tommy. Jeff lowered his
feet from the picnic table and said,
"Hi."
"Hi yourself," I told him. "You
look pleased."
"I am," he replied, "in a cautious
legal sense, of course. Hilary and I
were just going over the situation on
his phosphonate detergent. I've spent
the last three nights studying the patent
literature and a few standard
texts touching on phosphonates.
There are a zillion patents on synthetic
detergents and a good round
fifty on phosphonates, but it looks"—he
held up a long admonitory hand—"it
just looks as though we had a clear
spot. If we do get protection, you've
got a real salable property."
"That's fine, Mr. McCord," Hilary
said, "but it's not very important."
"No?" Jeff tilted an inquiring eyebrow
at me, and I handed him a small
bottle. He opened and sniffed at it
gingerly. "What gives?"
"Before-shave lotion," Hilary told
him. "You've shaved this morning,
but try some anyway."
Jeff looked momentarily dubious,
then puddled some in his palm and
moistened his jaw line. "Smells
good," he noted, "and feels nice and
cool. Now what?"
"Wipe your face." Jeff located a
handkerchief and wiped, looked at
the cloth, wiped again, and stared.
"What is it?"
"A whisker stiffener. It makes each
hair brittle enough to break off right
at the surface of your skin."
"So I perceive. What is it?"
"Oh, just a mixture of stuff. Cookbook
chemistry. Cysteine thiolactone
and a fat-soluble magnesium compound."
"I see. Just a mixture of stuff. And
do your whiskers grow back the next
day?"
"Right on schedule," I said.
McCord unfolded his length and
stood staring out into the rain. Presently
he said, "Henderson, Hilary
and I are heading for my office. We
can work there better than here, and
if we're going to break the hearts of
the razor industry, there's no better
time to start than now."
When they had driven off I turned
and said, "Let's talk a while. We can
always clean mouse cages later.
Where's Tommy?"
"Oh, he stopped at the bank to get
a loan."
"What on earth for? We have over
six thousand in the account."
"Well," Peter said, looking a little
embarrassed, "we were planning to
buy a hydraulic press. You see, Doris
put some embroidery on that scheme
of mine for making ball bearings."
He grabbed a sheet of paper. "Look,
we make a roller bearing, this shape
only it's a permanent magnet. Then
you see—." And he was off.
"What did they do today, dear?"
Marge asked as she refilled my coffee
cup.
"Thanks," I said. "Let's see, it was
a big day. We picked out a hydraulic
press, Doris read us the first chapter
of the book she's starting, and we
found a place over a garage on
Fourth Street that we can rent for
winter quarters. Oh, yes, and Jeff is
starting action to get the company
incorporated."
"Winter quarters," Marge repeated.
"You mean you're going to try to
keep the group going after school
starts?"
"Why not? The kids can sail
through their courses without thinking
about them, and actually they
won't put in more than a few hours
a week during the school year."
"Even so, it's child labor, isn't it?"
"Child labor nothing. They're the
employers. Jeff McCord and I will
be the only employees—just at first,
anyway."
Marge choked on something. "Did
you say you'd be an employee?"
"Sure," I told her. "They've offered
me a small share of the company,
and I'd be crazy to turn it down. After
all, what's to lose?"
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog Science Fact & Fiction
July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The parents of the children work for the Commission and Henderson is scared of the Commission. | He needs the money to pay for his mortgage. | He does not want to work for the children. The children will work for Mr. Henderson. | The children are incredibly successful. | 3 |
24192_35VUFWCR_1 | Why are they throwing a parade for Hank? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | Hank is back from a mission to Mars. | Hank is back from an experimental continent-to-continent flight. | Hank is back from the dead. | Hank is back from beyond the Great Frontier. | 2 |
24192_35VUFWCR_2 | What was Hank's mission? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | Hank's mission was to touch down on Mars in preparation for a future colony. | Hank's mission was to experience death and be brought back to life. | Hank's mission was to build a colony on the moon. | Hank's mission was to pilot an experimental continent-to-continent flight. | 3 |
24192_35VUFWCR_3 | How did Hank die? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | Hank's spacecraft exploded when it hit Earth's atmosphere on the way home from Mars. | Hank's experimental continent-to-continent flight vessel exploded. | Hank died when he crashed his car on the way to the mission launch. | Hank's spacecraft exploded when it hit Earth's atmosphere on the way home from the moon. | 1 |
24192_35VUFWCR_4 | Why was Hank lying down for months? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | Hank's body was lying in a cryostasis tank while the doctors figured out how to bring him back to life. | Hank was lying in a stasis tank on the way back from the moon. | Hank was lying in a stasis tank on the way back from Mars. | Hank's body was lying in a tank designed to regenerate his body processes. | 3 |
24192_35VUFWCR_5 | Who invented the regenerative brain and organ process? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | General Carlisle | Captain Davidson | Vasco De Gama | Corporal Berringer | 0 |
24192_35VUFWCR_6 | Why does Hank wait for Edith to leave before he changes clothes? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | Edith bought separate beds while he was gone. Undressing in front of her may make her uncomfortable. | The new bedroom arrangement put them in separate beds. He doesn't want Edith to feel uncomfortable by his undressing. | He doesn't want Edith to see the scars on his body. It will just remind her he died. | He doesn't want Edith to see the scars on his body. Scars may put a damper on the romance. | 2 |
24192_35VUFWCR_7 | How does Edith feel about Hank's return? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | Edith is happy that Hank has returned, but she is scared he might have changed. | Edith is happy that Hank has returned if he is Hank. He may be a Martian shapeshifter. | Edith is happy that Hank has returned, but she is scared that he may be a zombie or a vampire. | Edith is happy that Hank has returned if he is Hank. He may be an experimental android developed by the Air Force. | 0 |
24192_35VUFWCR_8 | Why does Hank want to eat alone? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | Aunt Lucille won't shut up about the Ladies' Garden Club. | His family is not treating him like a normal person. Hank just wants to feel normal. | His family is talking too loudly at dinner, and there are too many people in the room. Hank is experiencing sensory overload. | His family was watching him eat like an animal in a zoo. Hank just wants to feel normal. | 1 |
24192_35VUFWCR_9 | Why does Edith want Hank to go out on the town? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | Edith promised Hank's mother that she would make an effort to return to normalcy, as death had not parted them after all. | Edith is making an effort to return to normalcy, even though she is scared. She loves Hank. | Edith promised General Carlisle that she would make an effort to return to normalcy. She was aware of the new return-to-life policy before Hank left on the mission. | Edith wants to get Hank out of the house so Ralphie can have his friends over. Ralphie's friends don't want to visit while Hank is at the house. | 1 |
24192_35VUFWCR_10 | Why do people keep asking Hank what he saw? | THE FIRST ONE
By HERBERT D. KASTLE
Illustrated by von Dongen
The first man to return from beyond the Great Frontier may be
welcomed ... but will it be as a curiosity, rather than as a
hero...?
There was the usual welcoming crowd for a celebrity, and the usual
speeches by the usual politicians who met him at the airport which had
once been twenty miles outside of Croton, but which the growing city had
since engulfed and placed well within its boundaries. But everything
wasn't usual. The crowd was quiet, and the mayor didn't seem quite as
at-ease as he'd been on his last big welcoming—for Corporal Berringer,
one of the crew of the spaceship
Washington
, first to set Americans
upon Mars. His Honor's handclasp was somewhat moist and cold. His
Honor's eyes held a trace of remoteness.
Still, he was the honored home-comer, the successful returnee, the
hometown boy who had made good in a big way, and they took the triumphal
tour up Main Street to the new square and the grandstand. There he sat
between the mayor and a nervous young coed chosen as homecoming queen,
and looked out at the police and fire department bands, the National
Guard, the boy scouts and girl scouts, the Elks and Masons. Several of
the churches in town had shown indecision as to how to instruct their
parishioners to treat him. But they had all come around. The tremendous
national interest, the fact that he was the First One, had made them
come around. It was obvious by now that they would have to adjust as
they'd adjusted to all the other firsts taking place in these—as the
newspapers had dubbed the start of the Twenty-first Century—the
Galloping Twenties.
He was glad when the official greeting was over. He was a very tired man
and he had come farther, traveled longer and over darker country, than
any man who'd ever lived before. He wanted a meal at his own table, a
kiss from his wife, a word from his son, and later to see some old
friends and a relative or two. He didn't want to talk about the journey.
He wanted to forget the immediacy, the urgency, the terror; then perhaps
he would talk.
Or would he? For he had very little to tell. He had traveled and he had
returned and his voyage was very much like the voyages of the great
mariners, from Columbus onward—long, dull periods of time passing,
passing, and then the arrival.
The house had changed. He saw that as soon as the official car let him
off at 45 Roosevelt Street. The change was, he knew, for the better.
They had put a porch in front. They had rehabilitated, spruced up,
almost rebuilt the entire outside and grounds. But he was sorry. He had
wanted it to be as before.
The head of the American Legion and the chief of police, who had
escorted him on this trip from the square, didn't ask to go in with him.
He was glad. He'd had enough of strangers. Not that he was through with
strangers. There were dozens of them up and down the street, standing
beside parked cars, looking at him. But when he looked back at them,
their eyes dropped, they turned away, they began moving off. He was
still too much the First One to have his gaze met.
He walked up what had once been a concrete path and was now an ornate
flagstone path. He climbed the new porch and raised the ornamental
knocker on the new door and heard the soft music sound within. He was
surprised that he'd had to do this. He'd thought Edith would be watching
at a window.
And perhaps she
had
been watching ... but she hadn't opened the door.
The door opened; he looked at her. It hadn't been too long and she
hadn't changed at all. She was still the small, slender girl he'd loved
in high school, the small, slender woman he'd married twelve years ago.
Ralphie was with her. They held onto each other as if seeking mutual
support, the thirty-three-year old woman and ten-year-old boy. They
looked at him, and then both moved forward, still together. He said,
"It's good to be home!"
Edith nodded and, still holding to Ralphie with one hand, put the other
arm around him. He kissed her—her neck, her cheek—and all the old
jokes came to mind, the jokes of travel-weary, battle-weary men, the
and-
then
-I'll-put-my-pack-aside jokes that spoke of terrible hunger.
She was trembling, and even as her lips came up to touch his he felt the
difference, and because of this difference he turned with urgency to
Ralphie and picked him up and hugged him and said, because he could
think of nothing else to say, "What a big fella, what a big fella."
Ralphie stood in his arms as if his feet were still planted on the
floor, and he didn't look at his father but somewhere beyond him. "I
didn't grow much while you were gone, Dad, Mom says I don't eat enough."
So he put him down and told himself that it would all change, that
everything would loosen up just as his commanding officer, General
Carlisle, had said it would early this morning before he left
Washington.
"Give it some time," Carlisle had said. "You need the time; they need
the time. And for the love of heaven, don't be sensitive."
Edith was leading him into the living room, her hand lying still in his,
a cool, dead bird lying still in his. He sat down on the couch, she sat
down beside him—but she had hesitated. He
wasn't
being sensitive; she
had hesitated. His wife had hesitated before sitting down beside him.
Carlisle had said his position was analogous to Columbus', to Vasco De
Gama's, to Preshoff's when the Russian returned from the Moon—but more
so. Carlisle had said lots of things, but even Carlisle who had worked
with him all the way, who had engineered the entire fantastic
journey—even Carlisle the Nobel prize winner, the multi-degreed genius
in uniform, had not actually spoken to him as one man to another.
The eyes. It always showed in their eyes.
He looked across the room at Ralphie, standing in the doorway, a boy
already tall, already widening in the shoulders, already large of
feature. It was like looking into the mirror and seeing himself
twenty-five years ago. But Ralphie's face was drawn, was worried in a
way that few ten-year-old faces are.
"How's it going in school?" he asked.
"Gee, Dad, it's the second month of summer vacation."
"Well, then, before summer vacation?"
"Pretty good."
Edith said, "He made top forum the six-month period before vacation, and
he made top forum the six-month period you went away, Hank."
He nodded, remembering that, remembering everything, remembering the
warmth of her farewell, the warmth of Ralphie's farewell, their tears as
he left for the experimental flight station in the Aleutians. They had
feared for him, having read of the many launchings gone wrong even in
continent-to-continent experimental flight.
They had been right to worry. He had suffered much after that blow-up.
But now they should be rejoicing, because he had survived and made the
long journey. Ralphie suddenly said, "I got to go, Dad. I promised Walt
and the others I'd pitch. It's Inter-Town Little League, you know. It's
Harmon, you know. I got to keep my word." Without waiting for an answer,
he waved his hand—it shook; a ten-year-old boy's hand that shook—and
ran from the room and from the house.
He and Edith sat beside each other, and he wanted badly to take her in
his arms, and yet he didn't want to oppress her. He stood up. "I'm very
tired. I'd like to lie down a while." Which wasn't true, because he'd
been lying down all the months of the way back.
She said, "Of course. How stupid of me, expecting you to sit around and
make small talk and pick up just where you left off."
He nodded. But that was exactly what he wanted to do—make small talk
and pick up just where he'd left off. But they didn't expect it of him;
they wouldn't let him; they felt he had changed too much.
She led him upstairs and along the foyer past Ralphie's room and past
the small guest room to their bedroom. This, too, had changed. It was
newly painted and it had new furniture. He saw twin beds separated by an
ornate little table with an ornate little lamp, and this looked more
ominous a barrier to him than the twelve-foot concrete-and-barbed-wire
fence around the experimental station.
"Which one is mine," he asked, and tried to smile.
She also tried to smile. "The one near the window. You always liked the
fresh air, the sunshine in the morning. You always said it helped you
to get up on time when you were stationed at the base outside of town.
You always said it reminded you—being able to see the sky—that you
were going to go up in it, and that you were going to come down from it
to this bed again."
"Not this bed," he murmured, and was a little sorry afterward.
"No, not this bed," she said quickly. "Your lodge donated the bedroom
set and I really didn't know—" She waved her hand, her face white.
He was sure then that she
had
known, and that the beds and the barrier
between them were her own choice, if only an unconscious choice. He went
to the bed near the window, stripped off his Air Force blue jacket,
began to take off his shirt, but then remembered that some arm scars
still showed. He waited for her to leave the room.
She said, "Well then, rest up, dear," and went out.
He took off his shirt and saw himself in the mirror on the opposite
wall; and then took off his under-shirt. The body scars were faint, the
scars running in long lines, one dissecting his chest, the other slicing
diagonally across his upper abdomen to disappear under his trousers.
There were several more on his back, and one on his right thigh. They'd
been treated properly and would soon disappear. But she had never seen
them.
Perhaps she never would. Perhaps pajamas and robes and dark rooms would
keep them from her until they were gone.
Which was not what he'd considered at all important on leaving Walter
Reed Hospital early this morning; which was something he found
distasteful, something he felt beneath them both. And, at the same time,
he began to understand that there would be many things, previously
beneath them both, which would have to be considered. She had changed;
Ralphie had changed; all the people he knew had probably
changed—because they thought
he
had changed.
He was tired of thinking. He lay down and closed his eyes. He let
himself taste bitterness, unhappiness, a loneliness he had never known
before.
But sometime later, as he was dozing off, a sense of reassurance began
filtering into his mind. After all, he was still Henry Devers, the same
man who had left home eleven months ago, with a love for family and
friends which was, if anything, stronger than before. Once he could
communicate this, the strangeness would disappear and the First One
would again become good old Hank. It was little enough to ask for—a
return to old values, old relationships, the normalcies of the backwash
instead of the freneticisms of the lime-light. It would certainly be
granted to him.
He slept.
Dinner was at seven
p.m.
His mother came; his Uncle Joe and Aunt Lucille
came. Together with Edith, Ralphie and himself, they made six, and ate
in the dining room at the big table.
Before he'd become the First One, it would have been a noisy affair. His
family had never been noted for a lack of ebullience, a lack of
talkativeness, and Ralphie had always chosen mealtimes—especially with
company present—to describe everything and anything that had happened
to him during the day. And Edith herself had always chatted, especially
with his mother, though they didn't agree about much. Still, it had been
good-natured; the general tone of their lives had been good-natured.
This wasn't good-natured. Exactly what it was he wasn't sure. "Stiff"
was perhaps the word.
They began with grapefruit, Edith and Mother serving quickly,
efficiently from the kitchen, then sitting down at the table. He looked
at Mother as he raised his first spoonful of chilled fruit, and said,
"Younger than ever." It was nothing new; he'd said it many many times
before, but his mother had always reacted with a bright smile and a quip
something like, "Young for the Golden Age Center, you mean." This time
she burst into tears. It shocked him. But what shocked him even more was
the fact that no one looked up, commented, made any attempt to comfort
her; no one indicated in any way that a woman was sobbing at the table.
He was sitting directly across from Mother, and reached out and touched
her left hand which lay limply beside the silverware. She didn't move
it—she hadn't touched him once beyond that first, quick, strangely-cool
embrace at the door—then a few seconds later she withdrew it and let it
drop out of sight.
So there he was, Henry Devers, at home with the family. So there he was,
the hero returned, waiting to be treated as a human being.
The grapefruit shells were cleaned away and the soup served. Uncle Joe
began to talk. "The greatest little development of circular uniform
houses you ever did see," he boomed in his powerful salesman's voice.
"Still going like sixty. We'll sell out before—" At that point he
looked at Hank, and Hank nodded encouragement, desperately interested in
this normalcy, and Joe's voice died away. He looked down at his plate,
mumbled, "Soup's getting cold," and began to eat. His hand shook a
little; his ruddy face was not quite as ruddy as Hank remembered it.
Aunt Lucille made a few quavering statements about the Ladies' Tuesday
Garden Club, and Hank looked across the table to where she sat between
Joe and Mother—his wife and son bracketed him, and yet he felt
alone—and said, "I've missed fooling around with the lawn and the rose
bushes. Here it is August and I haven't had my hand to a mower or
trowel."
Aunt Lucille smiled, if you could call it that—a pitiful twitching of
the lips—and nodded. She threw her eyes in his direction, and past him,
and then down to her plate. Mother, who was still sniffling, said, "I
have a dismal headache. I'm going to lie down in the guest room a
while." She touched his shoulder in passing—his affectionate, effusive
mother who would kiss stray dogs and strange children, who had often
irritated him with an excess of physical and verbal caresses—she barely
touched his shoulder and fled.
So now five of them sat at the table. The meat was served—thin, rare
slices of beef, the pink blood-juice oozing warmly from the center. He
cut into it and raised a forkful to his mouth, then glanced at Ralphie
and said, "Looks fresh enough to have been killed in the back yard."
Ralphie said, "Yeah, Dad." Aunt Lucille put down her knife and fork and
murmured something to her husband. Joe cleared his throat and said
Lucille was rapidly becoming a vegetarian and he guessed she was going
into the living room for a while. "She'll be back for dessert, of
course," he said, his laugh sounding forced.
Hank looked at Edith; Edith was busy with her plate. Hank looked at
Ralphie; Ralphie was busy with his plate. Hank looked at Joe; Joe was
chewing, gazing out over their heads to the kitchen. Hank looked at
Lucille; she was disappearing into the living room.
He brought his fist down on the table. The settings jumped; a glass
overturned, spilling water. He brought it down again and again. They
were all standing now. He sat there and pounded the table with his big
right fist—Henry Devers, who would never have thought of making such a
scene before, but who was now so sick and tired of being treated as the
First One, of being stood back from, looked at in awe of, felt in fear
of, that he could have smashed more than a table.
Edith said, "Hank!"
He said, voice hoarse, "Shut up. Go away. Let me eat alone. I'm sick of
the lot of you."
Mother and Joe returned a few minutes later where he sat forcing food
down his throat. Mother said, "Henry dear—" He didn't answer. She began
to cry, and he was glad she left the house then. He had never said
anything really bad to his mother. He was afraid this would have been
the time. Joe merely cleared his throat and mumbled something about
getting together again soon and "drop out and see the new development"
and he, too, was gone. Lucille never did manage to speak to him.
He finished his beef and waited. Soon Edith came in with the special
dessert she'd been preparing half the day—a magnificent English trifle.
She served him, and spooned out a portion for herself and Ralphie. She
hesitated near his chair, and when he made no comment she called the
boy. Then the three of them were sitting, facing the empty side of the
table. They ate the trifle. Ralphie finished first and got up and said,
"Hey, I promised—"
"You promised the boys you'd play baseball or football or handball or
something; anything to get away from your father."
Ralphie's head dropped and he muttered, "Aw, no, Dad."
Edith said, "He'll stay home, Hank. We'll spend an evening
together—talking, watching TV, playing Monopoly."
Ralphie said, "Gee, sure, Dad, if you want to."
Hank stood up. "The question is not whether I want to. You both know I
want to. The question is whether
you
want to."
They answered together that of course they wanted to. But their
eyes—his wife's and son's eyes—could not meet his, and so he said he
was going to his room because he was, after all, very tired and would in
all probability continue to be very tired for a long, long time and that
they shouldn't count on him for normal social life.
He fell asleep quickly, lying there in his clothes.
But he didn't sleep long. Edith shook him and he opened his eyes to a
lighted room. "Phil and Rhona are here." He blinked at her. She smiled,
and it seemed her old smile. "They're so anxious to see you, Hank. I
could barely keep Phil from coming up and waking you himself. They want
to go out and do the town. Please, Hank, say you will."
He sat up. "Phil," he muttered. "Phil and Rhona." They'd had wonderful
times together, from grammar school on. Phil and Rhona, their oldest and
closest friends. Perhaps this would begin his real homecoming.
Do the town? They'd paint it and then tear it down!
It didn't turn out that way. He was disappointed; but then again, he'd
also expected it. This entire first day at home had conditioned him to
expect nothing good. They went to the bowling alleys, and Phil sounded
very much the way he always had—soft spoken and full of laughter and
full of jokes. He patted Edith on the head the way he always had, and
clapped Hank on the shoulder (but not the way he always had—so much
more gently, almost remotely), and insisted they all drink more than was
good for them as he always had. And for once, Hank was ready to go along
on the drinking. For once, he matched Phil shot for shot, beer for beer.
They didn't bowl very long. At ten o'clock they crossed the road to
Manfred's Tavern, where Phil and the girls ordered sandwiches and coffee
and Hank went right on drinking. Edith said something to him, but he
merely smiled and waved his hand and gulped another ounce of nirvana.
There was dancing to a juke box in Manfred's Tavern. He'd been there
many times before, and he was sure several of the couples recognized
him. But except for a few abortive glances in his direction, it was as
if he were a stranger in a city halfway around the world.
At midnight, he was still drinking. The others wanted to leave, but he
said, "I haven't danced with my girl Rhona." His tongue was thick, his
mind was blurred, and yet he could read the strange expression on her
face—pretty Rhona, who'd always flirted with him, who'd made a ritual
of flirting with him. Pretty Rhona, who now looked as if she were going
to be sick.
"So let's rock," he said and stood up.
They were on the dance floor. He held her close, and hummed and chatted.
And through the alcoholic haze saw she was a stiff-smiled, stiff-bodied,
mechanical dancing doll.
The number finished; they walked back to the booth. Phil said,
"Beddy-bye time."
Hank said, "First one dance with my loving wife."
He and Edith danced. He didn't hold her close as he had Rhona. He waited
for her to come close on her own, and she did, and yet she didn't.
Because while she put herself against him, there was something in her
face—no, in her eyes; it always showed in the eyes—that made him know
she was trying to be the old Edith and not succeeding. This time when
the music ended, he was ready to go home.
They rode back to town along Route Nine, he and Edith in the rear of
Phil's car, Rhona driving because Phil had drunk just a little too much,
Phil singing and telling an occasional bad joke, and somehow not his old
self. No one was his old self. No one would ever be his old self with
the First One.
They turned left, to take the short cut along Hallowed Hill Road, and
Phil finished a story about a Martian and a Hollywood sex queen and
looked at his wife and then past her at the long, cast-iron fence
paralleling the road. "Hey," he said, pointing, "do you know why that's
the most popular place on earth?"
Rhona glanced to the left, and so did Hank and Edith. Rhona made a
little sound, and Edith seemed to stop breathing, but Phil went on a
while longer, not yet aware of his supposed
faux pas
.
"You know why?" he repeated, turning to the back seat, the laughter
rumbling up from his chest. "You know why, folks?"
Rhona said, "Did you notice Carl Braken and his wife at—"
Hank said, "No, Phil, why is it the most popular place on earth?"
Phil said, "Because people are—" And then he caught himself and waved
his hand and muttered, "I forgot the punch line."
"Because people are dying to get in," Hank said, and looked through the
window, past the iron fence, into the large cemetery at the fleeting
tombstones.
The car was filled with horrified silence when there should have been
nothing but laughter, or irritation at a too-old joke. "Maybe you should
let me out right here," Hank said. "I'm home—or that's what everyone
seems to think. Maybe I should lie down in an open grave. Maybe that
would satisfy people. Maybe that's the only way to act, like Dracula or
another monster from the movies."
Edith said, "Oh, Hank, don't, don't!"
The car raced along the road, crossed a macadam highway, went four
blocks and pulled to a stop. He didn't bother saying good night. He
didn't wait for Edith. He just got out and walked up the flagstone path
and entered the house.
"Hank," Edith whispered from the guest room doorway, "I'm so sorry—"
"There's nothing to be sorry about. It's just a matter of time. It'll
all work out in time."
"Yes," she said quickly, "that's it. I need a little time. We all need a
little time. Because it's so strange, Hank. Because it's so frightening.
I should have told you that the moment you walked in. I think I've hurt
you terribly, we've all hurt you terribly, by trying to hide that we're
frightened."
"I'm going to stay in the guest room," he said, "for as long as
necessary. For good if need be."
"How could it be for good? How, Hank?"
That question was perhaps the first firm basis for hope he'd had since
returning. And there was something else; what Carlisle had told him,
even as Carlisle himself had reacted as all men did.
"There are others coming, Edith. Eight that I know of in the tanks right
now. My superior, Captain Davidson, who died at the same moment I
did—seven months ago next Wednesday—he's going to be next. He was
smashed up worse than I was, so it took a little longer, but he's almost
ready. And there'll be many more, Edith. The government is going to save
all they possibly can from now on. Every time a young and healthy man
loses his life by accident, by violence, and his body can be recovered,
he'll go into the tanks and they'll start the regenerative brain and
organ process—the process that made it all possible. So people have to
get used to us. And the old stories, the old terrors, the ugly old
superstitions have to die, because in time each place will have some of
us; because in time it'll be an ordinary thing."
Edith said, "Yes, and I'm so grateful that you're here, Hank. Please
believe that. Please be patient with me and Ralphie and—" She paused.
"There's one question."
He knew what the question was. It had been the first asked him by
everyone from the president of the United States on down.
"I saw nothing," he said. "It was as if I slept those six and a half
months—slept without dreaming."
She came to him and touched his face with her lips, and he was
satisfied.
Later, half asleep, he heard a dog howling, and remembered stories of
how they announced death and the presence of monsters. He shivered and
pulled the covers closer to him and luxuriated in being safe in his own
home.
THE END | Hank was dead for months. People want to know about the afterlife. | Hank was on the moon for months. People want to know what life was like there. | Hank was dead for months. People want to know which religion got it right. | Hank was out in space for months. People want to know what he saw on Mars. | 0 |
24278_LON5P1ZP_1 | Why does the UN want to arrest Umluana? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Analog, January 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE
GREEN
BERET
By TOM PURDOM
It's not so much the decisions a man does make that mark
him as a Man—but the ones he refrains from making. Like the
decision "I've had enough!"
Illustrated by Schoenherr
Read locked the door and drew his pistol. Sergeant Rashid handed
Premier Umluana the warrant.
"We're from the UN Inspector Corps," Sergeant Rashid said. "I'm
very sorry, but we have to arrest you and bring you in for trial
by the World Court."
If Umluana noticed Read's gun, he didn't show it. He read the
warrant carefully. When he finished, he said something in Dutch.
"I don't know your language," Rashid said.
"Then I'll speak English." Umluana was a small man with wrinkled
brow, glasses and a mustache. His skin was a shade lighter than
Read's. "The Inspector General doesn't have the power to arrest a
head of state—especially the Premier of Belderkan. Now, if
you'll excuse me, I must return to my party."
In the other room people laughed and talked. Glasses clinked in
the late afternoon. Read knew two armed men stood just outside
the door. "If you leave, Premier, I'll have to shoot you."
"I don't think so," Umluana said. "No, if you kill me, all Africa
will rise against the world. You don't want me dead. You want me
in court."
Read clicked off the safety.
"Corporal Read is very young," Rashid said, "but he's a crack
shot. That's why I brought him with me. I think he
likes
to
shoot, too."
Umluana turned back to Rashid a second too soon. He saw the
sergeant's upraised hand before it collided with his neck.
"Help!
Kidnap.
"
Rashid judo chopped him and swung the inert body over his
shoulders. Read pulled a flat grenade from his vest pocket. He
dropped it and yellow psycho gas hissed from the valve.
"Let's be off," Rashid said.
The door lock snapped as they went out the window. Two men with
rifles plunged into the gas; sighing, they fell to the floor in a
catatonic trance.
A little car skimmed across the lawn. Bearing the Scourge of
Africa, Rashid struggled toward it. Read walked backward,
covering their retreat.
The car stopped, whirling blades holding it a few inches off the
lawn. They climbed in.
"How did it go?" The driver and another inspector occupied the
front seat.
"They'll be after us in half a minute."
The other inspector carried a light machine gun and a box of
grenades. "I better cover," he said.
"Thanks," Rashid said.
The inspector slid out of the car and ran to a clump of bushes.
The driver pushed in the accelerator. As they swerved toward the
south, Read saw a dozen armed men run out of the house. A grenade
arced from the bushes and the pursuers recoiled from the cloud
that rose before them.
"Is he all right?" the driver asked.
"I don't think I hurt him." Rashid took a syrette from his vest
pocket. "Well, Read, it looks like we're in for a fight. In a few
minutes Miaka Station will know we're coming. And God knows what
will happen at the Game Preserve."
Read wanted to jump out of the car. He could die any minute. But
he had set his life on a well-oiled track and he couldn't get off
until they reached Geneva.
"They don't know who's coming," he said. "They don't make them
tough enough to stop this boy."
Staring straight ahead, he didn't see the sergeant smile.
Two types of recruits are accepted by the UN Inspector Corps:
those with a fanatic loyalty to the ideals of peace and world
order, and those who are loyal to nothing but themselves. Read
was the second type.
A tall, lanky Negro he had spent his school days in one of the
drab suburbs that ring every prosperous American city. It was the
home of factory workers, clerks, semiskilled technicians, all who
do the drudge work of civilization and know they will never do
more. The adults spent their days with television, alcohol and
drugs; the young spent their days with gangs, sex, television and
alcohol. What else was there? Those who could have told him
neither studied nor taught at his schools. What he saw on the
concrete fields between the tall apartment houses marked the
limits of life's possibilities.
He had belonged to a gang called The Golden Spacemen. "Nobody
fools with me," he bragged. "When Harry Read's out, there's a
tiger running loose." No one knew how many times he nearly ran
from other clubs, how carefully he picked the safest spot on the
battle line.
"A man ought to be a man," he once told a girl. "He ought to do a
man's work. Did you ever notice how our fathers look, how they
sleep so much? I don't want to be like that. I want to be
something proud."
He joined the UN Inspector Corps at eighteen, in 1978. The
international cops wore green berets, high buttonless boots, bush
jackets. They were very special men.
For the first time in his life, his father said something about
his ambitions.
"Don't you like America, Harry? Do you
want
to be without a
country? This is the best country in the world. All my life I've
made a good living. Haven't you had everything you ever wanted?
I've been a king compared to people overseas. Why, you stay here
and go to trade school and in two years you'll be living just
like me."
"I don't want that," Read said.
"What do you mean, you don't want that?"
"You could join the American Army," his mother said. "That's as
good as a trade school. If you have to be a soldier."
"I want to be a UN man. I've already enlisted. I'm in! What do
you care what I do?"
The UN Inspector Corps had been founded to enforce the Nuclear
Disarmament Treaty of 1966. Through the years it had acquired
other jobs. UN men no longer went unarmed. Trained to use small
arms and gas weapons, they guarded certain borders, bodyguarded
diplomats and UN officials, even put down riots that threatened
international peace. As the UN evolved into a strong world
government, the UN Inspector Corps steadily acquired new powers.
Read went through six months training on Madagascar.
Twice he nearly got expelled for picking fights with smaller men.
Rather than resign, he accepted punishment which assigned him to
weeks of dull, filthy extra labor. He hated the restrictions and
the iron fence of regulations. He hated boredom, loneliness and
isolation.
And yet he responded with enthusiasm. They had given him a job. A
job many people considered important.
He took his turn guarding the still disputed borders of Korea. He
served on the rescue teams that patrol the busy Polar routes. He
mounted guard at the 1980 World's Fair in Rangoon.
"I liked Rangoon," he even told a friend. "I even liked Korea.
But I think I liked the Pole job best. You sit around playing
cards and shooting the bull and then there's a plane crash or
something and you go out and win a medal. That's great for me.
I'm lazy and I like excitement."
One power implied in the UN Charter no Secretary General or
Inspector General had ever tried to use. The power to arrest any
head of state whose country violated international law. Could the
World Court try and imprison a politician who had conspired to
attack another nation?
For years Africa had been called "The South America of the Old
World." Revolution followed revolution. Colonies became
democracies. Democracies became dictatorships or dissolved in
civil war. Men planted bases on the moon and in four years,
1978-82, ringed the world with matter transmitters; but the black
population of Africa still struggled toward political equality.
Umluana took control of Belderkan in 1979. The tiny, former Dutch
colony, had been a tottering democracy for ten years. The very
day he took control the new dictator and his African party began
to build up the Belderkan Army. For years he had preached a new
Africa, united, free of white masters, the home of a vigorous and
perfect Negro society. His critics called him a hypocritical
racist, an opportunist using the desires of the African people to
build himself an empire.
He began a propaganda war against neighboring South Africa,
promising the liberation of that strife-torn land. Most Negro
leaders, having just won representation in the South African
Parliament, told him to liberate his own country. They believed
they could use their first small voice in the government to win
true freedom for their people.
But the radio assault and the arms buildup continued. Early in
1982, South Africa claimed the Belderkan Army exceeded the size
agreed to in the Disarmament Treaty. The European countries and
some African nations joined in the accusation. China called the
uproar a vicious slur on a new African nation. The United States
and Russia, trying not to get entangled, asked for more
investigation by the UN.
But the evidence was clear. Umluana was defying world law. If he
got away with it, some larger and more dangerous nation might
follow his precedent. And the arms race would begin again.
The Inspector General decided. They would enter Belderkan, arrest
Umluana and try him by due process before the World Court. If the
plan succeeded, mankind would be a long step farther from nuclear
war.
Read didn't know much about the complicated political reasons for
the arrest. He liked the Corp and he liked being in the Corp. He
went where they sent him and did what they told him to do.
The car skimmed above the tree-tops. The driver and his two
passengers scanned the sky.
A plane would have been a faster way to get out of the country.
But then they would have spent hours flying over Africa, with
Belderkan fighters in hot pursuit, other nations joining the
chase and the world uproar gaining volume. By transmitter, if all
went well, they could have Umluana in Geneva in an hour.
They were racing toward Miaka, a branch transmitter station. From
Miaka they would transmit to the Belderkan Preserve, a famous
tourist attraction whose station could transmit to any point on
the globe. Even now a dozen inspectors were taking over the Game
Preserve station and manning its controls.
They had made no plans to take over Miaka. They planned to get
there before it could be defended.
"There's no military base near Miaka," Rashid said. "We might get
there before the Belderkans."
"Here comes our escort," Read said.
A big car rose from the jungle. This one had a recoilless rifle
mounted on the roof. The driver and the gunner waved and fell in
behind them.
"One thing," Read said, "I don't think they'll shoot at us while
he's
in the car."
"Don't be certain, corporal. All these strong-arm movements are
alike. I'll bet Umluana's lieutenants are hoping he'll become a
dead legend. Then they can become live conquerors."
Sergeant Rashid came from Cairo. He had degrees in science and
history from Cambridge but only the Corp gave him work that
satisfied his conscience. He hated war. It was that simple.
Read looked back. He saw three spots of sunlight about two
hundred feet up and a good mile behind.
"Here they come, Sarge."
Rashid turned his head. He waved frantically. The two men in the
other car waved back.
"Shall I duck under the trees?" the driver asked.
"Not yet. Not until we have to."
Read fingered the machine gun he had picked up when he got in the
car. He had never been shot at. Twice he had faced an unarmed
mob, but a few shots had sent them running.
Birds flew screaming from their nests. Monkeys screeched and
threw things at the noisy, speeding cars. A little cloud of birds
surrounded each vehicle.
The escort car made a sharp turn and charged their pursuers. The
big rifle fired twice. Read saw the Belderkan cars scatter.
Suddenly machine-gun bullets cracked and whined beside him.
"Evade," Rashid said. "Don't go down."
Without losing any forward speed, the driver took them straight
up. Read's stomach bounced.
A shell exploded above them. The car rocked. He raised his eyes
and saw a long crack in the roof.
"Hit the floor," Rashid said.
They knelt on the cramped floor. Rashid put on his gas mask and
Read copied him. Umluana breathed like a furnace, still
unconscious from the injection Rashid had given him.
I can't do anything
, Read thought.
They're too far away to
shoot back. All we can do is run.
The sky was clear and blue. The jungle was a noisy bazaar of
color. In the distance guns crashed. He listened to shells
whistle by and the whipcrack of machine-gun bullets. The car
roller-coastered up and down. Every time a shell passed, he
crawled in waves down his own back.
Another explosion, this time very loud.
Rashid raised his eyes above the seat and looked out the rear
window. "Two left. Keep down, Read."
"Can't we go down?" Read said.
"They'll get to Miaka before us."
He shut his eyes when he heard another loud explosion.
Sergeant Rashid looked out the window again. He swore bitterly in
English and Egyptian. Read raised his head. The two cars behind
them weren't fighting each other. A long way back the tree-tops
burned.
"How much farther?" Rashid said. The masks muffled their voices.
"There it is now. Shall I take us right in?"
"I think you'd better."
The station was a glass diamond in a small clearing. The driver
slowed down, then crashed through the glass walls and hovered by
the transmitter booth.
Rashid opened the door and threw out two grenades. Read jumped
out and the two of them struggled toward the booth with Umluana.
The driver, pistol in hand, ran for the control panel.
There were three technicians in the station and no passengers.
All three panicked when the psycho gas enveloped them. They ran
howling for the jungle.
Through the window of his mask, Read saw their pursuers land in
the clearing. Machine-gun bullets raked the building. They got
Umluana in the booth and hit the floor. Read took aim and opened
fire on the largest car.
"Now, I can shoot back," he said. "Now we'll see what they do."
"Are you ready, Rashid?" yelled the driver.
"Man, get us out of here!"
The booth door shut. When it opened, they were at the Game
Preserve.
The station jutted from the side of a hill. A glass-walled
waiting room surrounded the bank of transmitter booths. Read
looked out the door and saw his first battlefield.
Directly in front of him, his head shattered by a bullet, a dead
inspector lay behind an overturned couch.
Read had seen dozens of training films taken during actual
battles or after atomic attacks. He had laughed when other
recruits complained. "That's the way this world is. You people
with the weak stomachs better get used to it."
Now he slid against the rear wall of the transmitter booth.
A wounded inspector crawled across the floor to the booth. Read
couldn't see his wound, only the pain scratched on his face and
the blood he deposited on the floor.
"Did you get Umluana?" he asked Sergeant Rashid.
"He's in the booth. What's going on?" Rashid's Middle East Oxford
seemed more clipped than ever.
"They hit us with two companies of troops a few minutes ago. I
think half our men are wounded."
"Can we get out of here?"
"They machine-gunned the controls."
Rashid swore. "You heard him, Read! Get out there and help those
men."
He heard the screams of the wounded, the crack of rifles and
machine guns, all the terrifying noise of war. But since his
eighteenth year he had done everything his superiors told him to
do.
He started crawling toward an easy-chair that looked like good
cover. A bullet cracked above his head, so close he felt the
shock wave. He got up, ran panicky, crouched, and dove behind the
chair.
An inspector cracked the valve on a smoke grenade. A white fog
spread through the building. They could see anyone who tried to
rush them but the besiegers couldn't pick out targets.
Above the noise, he heard Rashid.
"I'm calling South Africa Station for a copter. It's the only way
out of here. Until it comes, we've got to hold them back."
Read thought of the green beret he had stuffed in his pocket that
morning. He stuck it on his head and cocked it. He didn't need
plain clothes anymore and he wanted to wear at least a part of
his uniform.
Bullets had completely shattered the wall in front of him. He
stared through the murk, across the broken glass. He was Corporal
Harry Read, UN Inspector Corps—a very special man. If he didn't
do a good job here, he wasn't the man he claimed to be. This
might be the only real test he would ever face.
He heard a shout in rapid French. He turned to his right. Men in
red loincloths ran zigzagging toward the station. They carried
light automatic rifles. Half of them wore gas masks.
"Shoot the masks," he yelled. "Aim for the masks."
The machine gun kicked and chattered on his shoulder. He picked a
target and squeezed off a burst. Tensely, he hunted for another
mask. Three grenades arced through the air and yellow gas spread
across the battlefield. The attackers ran through it. A few yards
beyond the gas, some of them turned and ran for their own lines.
In a moment only half a dozen masked men still advanced. The
inspectors fired a long, noisy volley. When they stopped only
four attackers remained on their feet. And they were running for
cover.
The attackers had come straight up a road that led from the Game
Preserve to the station. They had not expected any resistance.
The UN men had already taken over the station, chased out the
passengers and technicians and taken up defense positions; they
had met the Belderkans with a dozen grenades and sent them
scurrying for cover. The fight so far had been vicious but
disorganized. But the Belderkans had a few hundred men and knew
they had wrecked the transmitter controls.
The first direct attack had been repulsed. They could attack many
more times and continue to spray the building with bullets. They
could also try to go around the hill and attack the station from
above; if they did, the inspectors had a good view of the hill
and should see them going up.
The inspectors had taken up good defensive positions. In spite of
their losses, they still had enough firepower to cover the area
surrounding the station.
Read surveyed his sector of fire. About two hundred yards to his
left, he saw the top of a small ditch. Using the ditch for cover,
the Belderkans could sneak to the top of the hill.
Gas grenades are only three inches long. They hold cubic yards of
gas under high pressure. Read unclipped a telescoping rod from
his vest pocket. He opened it and a pair of sights flipped up. A
thin track ran down one side.
He had about a dozen grenades left, three self-propelling. He
slid an SP grenade into the rod's track and estimated windage and
range. Sighting carefully, not breathing, muscles relaxed, the
rod rock steady, he fired and lobbed the little grenade into the
ditch. He dropped another grenade beside it.
The heavy gas would lie there for hours.
Sergeant Rashid ran crouched from man to man. He did what he
could to shield the wounded.
"Well, corporal, how are you?"
"Not too bad, sergeant. See that ditch out there? I put a little
gas in it."
"Good work. How's your ammunition?"
"A dozen grenades. Half a barrel of shells."
"The copter will be here in half an hour. We'll put Umluana on,
then try to save ourselves. Once he's gone, I think we ought to
surrender."
"How do you think they'll treat us?"
"That we'll have to see."
An occasional bullet cracked and whined through the misty room.
Near him a man gasped frantically for air. On the sunny field a
wounded man screamed for help.
"There's a garage downstairs," Rashid said. "In case the copter
doesn't get here on time, I've got a man filling wine bottles
with gasoline."
"We'll stop them, Sarge. Don't worry."
Rashid ran off. Read stared across the green land and listened to
the pound of his heart. What were the Belderkans planning? A mass
frontal attack? To sneak in over the top of the hill?
He didn't think, anymore than a rabbit thinks when it lies hiding
from the fox or a panther thinks when it crouches on a branch
above the trail. His skin tightened and relaxed on his body.
"Listen," said a German.
Far down the hill he heard the deep-throated rumble of a big
motor.
"Armor," the German said.
The earth shook. The tank rounded the bend. Read watched the
squat, angular monster until its stubby gun pointed at the
station. It stopped less than two hundred yards away.
A loud-speaker blared.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
YOU MAY THINK US SAVAGES
BUT WE HAVE MODERN WEAPONS.
WE HAVE ATOMIC WARHEADS,
ALL GASES, ROCKETS
AND FLAME THROWERS. IF
YOU DO NOT SURRENDER
OUR PREMIER, WE WILL DESTROY YOU.
"They know we don't have any big weapons," Read said. "They know
we have only gas grenades and small arms."
He looked nervously from side to side. They couldn't bring the
copter in with that thing squatting out there.
A few feet away, sprawled behind a barricade of tables, lay a man
in advanced shock. His deadly white skin shone like ivory. They
wouldn't even look like that. One nuclear shell from that gun and
they'd be vaporized. Or perhaps the tank had sonic projectors;
then the skin would peel off their bones. Or they might be
burned, or cut up by shrapnel, or gassed with some new mist their
masks couldn't filter.
Read shut his eyes. All around him he heard heavy breathing,
mumbled comments, curses. Clothes rustled as men moved restlessly.
But already the voice of Sergeant Rashid resounded in the murky
room.
"We've got to knock that thing out before the copter comes.
Otherwise, he can't land. I have six Molotov cocktails here. Who
wants to go hunting with me?"
For two years Read had served under Sergeant Rashid. To him, the
sergeant was everything a UN inspector should be. Rashid's
devotion to peace had no limits.
Read's psych tests said pride alone drove him on. That was good
enough for the UN; they only rejected men whose loyalties might
conflict with their duties. But an assault on the tank required
something more than a hunger for self-respect.
Read had seen the inspector who covered their getaway. He had
watched their escort charge three-to-one odds. He had seen
another inspector stay behind at Miaka Station. And here, in this
building, lay battered men and dead men.
All UN inspectors. All part of his life.
And he was part of their life. Their blood, their sacrifice, and
pain, had become a part of him.
"I'll take a cocktail, Sarge."
"Is that Read?"
"Who else did you expect?"
"Nobody. Anybody else?"
"I'll go," the Frenchman said. "Three should be enough. Give us a
good smoke screen."
Rashid snapped orders. He put the German inspector in charge of
Umluana. Read, the Frenchman and himself, he stationed at
thirty-foot intervals along the floor.
"Remember," Rashid said. "We have to knock out that gun."
Read had given away his machine gun. He held a gas-filled bottle
in each hand. His automatic nestled in its shoulder holster.
Rashid whistled.
Dozens of smoke grenades tumbled through the air. Thick mist
engulfed the tank. Read stood up and ran forward. He crouched but
didn't zigzag. Speed counted most here.
Gunfire shook the hill. The Belderkans couldn't see them but they
knew what was going on and they fired systematically into the
smoke.
Bullets ploughed the ground beside him. He raised his head and
found the dim silhouette of the tank. He tried not to think about
bullets ploughing through his flesh.
A bullet slammed into his hip. He fell on his back, screaming.
"Sarge.
Sarge.
"
"I'm hit, too," Rashid said. "Don't stop if you can move."
Listen to him. What's he got, a sprained ankle?
But he didn't feel any pain. He closed his eyes and threw himself
onto his stomach. And nearly fainted from pain. He screamed and
quivered. The pain stopped. He stretched out his hands, gripping
the wine bottles, and inched forward. Pain stabbed him from
stomach to knee.
"I can't move, Sarge."
"Read, you've got to. I think you're the only—"
"What?"
Guns clattered. Bullets cracked.
"Sergeant Rashid! Answer me."
He heard nothing but the lonely passage of the bullets in the
mist.
"I'm a UN man," he mumbled. "You people up there know what a UN
man is? You know what happens when you meet one?"
When he reached the tank, he had another bullet in his right arm.
But they didn't know he was coming and when you get within ten
feet of a tank, the men inside can't see you.
He just had to stand up and drop the bottle down the gun barrel.
That was all—with a broken hip and a wounded right arm.
He knew they would see him when he stood up but he didn't think
about that. He didn't think about Sergeant Rashid, about the
complicated politics of Africa, about crowded market streets. He
had to kill the tank. That was all he thought about. He had
decided something in the world was more important than himself,
but he didn't know it or realize the psychologists would be
surprised to see him do this. He had made many decisions in the
last few minutes. He had ceased to think about them or anything
else.
With his cigarette lighter, he lit the rag stuffed in the end of
the bottle.
Biting his tongue, he pulled himself up the front of the tank.
His long arm stretched for the muzzle of the gun. He tossed the
bottle down the dark throat.
As he fell, the machine-gun bullets hit him in the chest, then in
the neck. He didn't feel them. He had fainted the moment he felt
the bottle leave his hand.
The copter landed ten minutes later. Umluana left in a shower of
bullets. A Russian private, the ranking man alive in the station,
surrendered the survivors to the Belderkans.
His mother hung the Global Medal above the television set.
"He must have been brave," she said. "We had a fine son."
"He was our only son," her husband said. "What did he volunteer
for? Couldn't somebody else have done it?"
His wife started to cry. Awkwardly, he embraced her. He wondered
what his son had wanted that he couldn't get at home.
THE END | Umluana conspired to attack Belderkan. | Umluana conspired to attack another nation. | Umluana has violated the Nuclear Disarmament Treaty. | Umluana is the head of a gang called The Golden Spacemen. | 2 |
24278_LON5P1ZP_2 | Why don't Harry's parents want him to join the UN? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Analog, January 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE
GREEN
BERET
By TOM PURDOM
It's not so much the decisions a man does make that mark
him as a Man—but the ones he refrains from making. Like the
decision "I've had enough!"
Illustrated by Schoenherr
Read locked the door and drew his pistol. Sergeant Rashid handed
Premier Umluana the warrant.
"We're from the UN Inspector Corps," Sergeant Rashid said. "I'm
very sorry, but we have to arrest you and bring you in for trial
by the World Court."
If Umluana noticed Read's gun, he didn't show it. He read the
warrant carefully. When he finished, he said something in Dutch.
"I don't know your language," Rashid said.
"Then I'll speak English." Umluana was a small man with wrinkled
brow, glasses and a mustache. His skin was a shade lighter than
Read's. "The Inspector General doesn't have the power to arrest a
head of state—especially the Premier of Belderkan. Now, if
you'll excuse me, I must return to my party."
In the other room people laughed and talked. Glasses clinked in
the late afternoon. Read knew two armed men stood just outside
the door. "If you leave, Premier, I'll have to shoot you."
"I don't think so," Umluana said. "No, if you kill me, all Africa
will rise against the world. You don't want me dead. You want me
in court."
Read clicked off the safety.
"Corporal Read is very young," Rashid said, "but he's a crack
shot. That's why I brought him with me. I think he
likes
to
shoot, too."
Umluana turned back to Rashid a second too soon. He saw the
sergeant's upraised hand before it collided with his neck.
"Help!
Kidnap.
"
Rashid judo chopped him and swung the inert body over his
shoulders. Read pulled a flat grenade from his vest pocket. He
dropped it and yellow psycho gas hissed from the valve.
"Let's be off," Rashid said.
The door lock snapped as they went out the window. Two men with
rifles plunged into the gas; sighing, they fell to the floor in a
catatonic trance.
A little car skimmed across the lawn. Bearing the Scourge of
Africa, Rashid struggled toward it. Read walked backward,
covering their retreat.
The car stopped, whirling blades holding it a few inches off the
lawn. They climbed in.
"How did it go?" The driver and another inspector occupied the
front seat.
"They'll be after us in half a minute."
The other inspector carried a light machine gun and a box of
grenades. "I better cover," he said.
"Thanks," Rashid said.
The inspector slid out of the car and ran to a clump of bushes.
The driver pushed in the accelerator. As they swerved toward the
south, Read saw a dozen armed men run out of the house. A grenade
arced from the bushes and the pursuers recoiled from the cloud
that rose before them.
"Is he all right?" the driver asked.
"I don't think I hurt him." Rashid took a syrette from his vest
pocket. "Well, Read, it looks like we're in for a fight. In a few
minutes Miaka Station will know we're coming. And God knows what
will happen at the Game Preserve."
Read wanted to jump out of the car. He could die any minute. But
he had set his life on a well-oiled track and he couldn't get off
until they reached Geneva.
"They don't know who's coming," he said. "They don't make them
tough enough to stop this boy."
Staring straight ahead, he didn't see the sergeant smile.
Two types of recruits are accepted by the UN Inspector Corps:
those with a fanatic loyalty to the ideals of peace and world
order, and those who are loyal to nothing but themselves. Read
was the second type.
A tall, lanky Negro he had spent his school days in one of the
drab suburbs that ring every prosperous American city. It was the
home of factory workers, clerks, semiskilled technicians, all who
do the drudge work of civilization and know they will never do
more. The adults spent their days with television, alcohol and
drugs; the young spent their days with gangs, sex, television and
alcohol. What else was there? Those who could have told him
neither studied nor taught at his schools. What he saw on the
concrete fields between the tall apartment houses marked the
limits of life's possibilities.
He had belonged to a gang called The Golden Spacemen. "Nobody
fools with me," he bragged. "When Harry Read's out, there's a
tiger running loose." No one knew how many times he nearly ran
from other clubs, how carefully he picked the safest spot on the
battle line.
"A man ought to be a man," he once told a girl. "He ought to do a
man's work. Did you ever notice how our fathers look, how they
sleep so much? I don't want to be like that. I want to be
something proud."
He joined the UN Inspector Corps at eighteen, in 1978. The
international cops wore green berets, high buttonless boots, bush
jackets. They were very special men.
For the first time in his life, his father said something about
his ambitions.
"Don't you like America, Harry? Do you
want
to be without a
country? This is the best country in the world. All my life I've
made a good living. Haven't you had everything you ever wanted?
I've been a king compared to people overseas. Why, you stay here
and go to trade school and in two years you'll be living just
like me."
"I don't want that," Read said.
"What do you mean, you don't want that?"
"You could join the American Army," his mother said. "That's as
good as a trade school. If you have to be a soldier."
"I want to be a UN man. I've already enlisted. I'm in! What do
you care what I do?"
The UN Inspector Corps had been founded to enforce the Nuclear
Disarmament Treaty of 1966. Through the years it had acquired
other jobs. UN men no longer went unarmed. Trained to use small
arms and gas weapons, they guarded certain borders, bodyguarded
diplomats and UN officials, even put down riots that threatened
international peace. As the UN evolved into a strong world
government, the UN Inspector Corps steadily acquired new powers.
Read went through six months training on Madagascar.
Twice he nearly got expelled for picking fights with smaller men.
Rather than resign, he accepted punishment which assigned him to
weeks of dull, filthy extra labor. He hated the restrictions and
the iron fence of regulations. He hated boredom, loneliness and
isolation.
And yet he responded with enthusiasm. They had given him a job. A
job many people considered important.
He took his turn guarding the still disputed borders of Korea. He
served on the rescue teams that patrol the busy Polar routes. He
mounted guard at the 1980 World's Fair in Rangoon.
"I liked Rangoon," he even told a friend. "I even liked Korea.
But I think I liked the Pole job best. You sit around playing
cards and shooting the bull and then there's a plane crash or
something and you go out and win a medal. That's great for me.
I'm lazy and I like excitement."
One power implied in the UN Charter no Secretary General or
Inspector General had ever tried to use. The power to arrest any
head of state whose country violated international law. Could the
World Court try and imprison a politician who had conspired to
attack another nation?
For years Africa had been called "The South America of the Old
World." Revolution followed revolution. Colonies became
democracies. Democracies became dictatorships or dissolved in
civil war. Men planted bases on the moon and in four years,
1978-82, ringed the world with matter transmitters; but the black
population of Africa still struggled toward political equality.
Umluana took control of Belderkan in 1979. The tiny, former Dutch
colony, had been a tottering democracy for ten years. The very
day he took control the new dictator and his African party began
to build up the Belderkan Army. For years he had preached a new
Africa, united, free of white masters, the home of a vigorous and
perfect Negro society. His critics called him a hypocritical
racist, an opportunist using the desires of the African people to
build himself an empire.
He began a propaganda war against neighboring South Africa,
promising the liberation of that strife-torn land. Most Negro
leaders, having just won representation in the South African
Parliament, told him to liberate his own country. They believed
they could use their first small voice in the government to win
true freedom for their people.
But the radio assault and the arms buildup continued. Early in
1982, South Africa claimed the Belderkan Army exceeded the size
agreed to in the Disarmament Treaty. The European countries and
some African nations joined in the accusation. China called the
uproar a vicious slur on a new African nation. The United States
and Russia, trying not to get entangled, asked for more
investigation by the UN.
But the evidence was clear. Umluana was defying world law. If he
got away with it, some larger and more dangerous nation might
follow his precedent. And the arms race would begin again.
The Inspector General decided. They would enter Belderkan, arrest
Umluana and try him by due process before the World Court. If the
plan succeeded, mankind would be a long step farther from nuclear
war.
Read didn't know much about the complicated political reasons for
the arrest. He liked the Corp and he liked being in the Corp. He
went where they sent him and did what they told him to do.
The car skimmed above the tree-tops. The driver and his two
passengers scanned the sky.
A plane would have been a faster way to get out of the country.
But then they would have spent hours flying over Africa, with
Belderkan fighters in hot pursuit, other nations joining the
chase and the world uproar gaining volume. By transmitter, if all
went well, they could have Umluana in Geneva in an hour.
They were racing toward Miaka, a branch transmitter station. From
Miaka they would transmit to the Belderkan Preserve, a famous
tourist attraction whose station could transmit to any point on
the globe. Even now a dozen inspectors were taking over the Game
Preserve station and manning its controls.
They had made no plans to take over Miaka. They planned to get
there before it could be defended.
"There's no military base near Miaka," Rashid said. "We might get
there before the Belderkans."
"Here comes our escort," Read said.
A big car rose from the jungle. This one had a recoilless rifle
mounted on the roof. The driver and the gunner waved and fell in
behind them.
"One thing," Read said, "I don't think they'll shoot at us while
he's
in the car."
"Don't be certain, corporal. All these strong-arm movements are
alike. I'll bet Umluana's lieutenants are hoping he'll become a
dead legend. Then they can become live conquerors."
Sergeant Rashid came from Cairo. He had degrees in science and
history from Cambridge but only the Corp gave him work that
satisfied his conscience. He hated war. It was that simple.
Read looked back. He saw three spots of sunlight about two
hundred feet up and a good mile behind.
"Here they come, Sarge."
Rashid turned his head. He waved frantically. The two men in the
other car waved back.
"Shall I duck under the trees?" the driver asked.
"Not yet. Not until we have to."
Read fingered the machine gun he had picked up when he got in the
car. He had never been shot at. Twice he had faced an unarmed
mob, but a few shots had sent them running.
Birds flew screaming from their nests. Monkeys screeched and
threw things at the noisy, speeding cars. A little cloud of birds
surrounded each vehicle.
The escort car made a sharp turn and charged their pursuers. The
big rifle fired twice. Read saw the Belderkan cars scatter.
Suddenly machine-gun bullets cracked and whined beside him.
"Evade," Rashid said. "Don't go down."
Without losing any forward speed, the driver took them straight
up. Read's stomach bounced.
A shell exploded above them. The car rocked. He raised his eyes
and saw a long crack in the roof.
"Hit the floor," Rashid said.
They knelt on the cramped floor. Rashid put on his gas mask and
Read copied him. Umluana breathed like a furnace, still
unconscious from the injection Rashid had given him.
I can't do anything
, Read thought.
They're too far away to
shoot back. All we can do is run.
The sky was clear and blue. The jungle was a noisy bazaar of
color. In the distance guns crashed. He listened to shells
whistle by and the whipcrack of machine-gun bullets. The car
roller-coastered up and down. Every time a shell passed, he
crawled in waves down his own back.
Another explosion, this time very loud.
Rashid raised his eyes above the seat and looked out the rear
window. "Two left. Keep down, Read."
"Can't we go down?" Read said.
"They'll get to Miaka before us."
He shut his eyes when he heard another loud explosion.
Sergeant Rashid looked out the window again. He swore bitterly in
English and Egyptian. Read raised his head. The two cars behind
them weren't fighting each other. A long way back the tree-tops
burned.
"How much farther?" Rashid said. The masks muffled their voices.
"There it is now. Shall I take us right in?"
"I think you'd better."
The station was a glass diamond in a small clearing. The driver
slowed down, then crashed through the glass walls and hovered by
the transmitter booth.
Rashid opened the door and threw out two grenades. Read jumped
out and the two of them struggled toward the booth with Umluana.
The driver, pistol in hand, ran for the control panel.
There were three technicians in the station and no passengers.
All three panicked when the psycho gas enveloped them. They ran
howling for the jungle.
Through the window of his mask, Read saw their pursuers land in
the clearing. Machine-gun bullets raked the building. They got
Umluana in the booth and hit the floor. Read took aim and opened
fire on the largest car.
"Now, I can shoot back," he said. "Now we'll see what they do."
"Are you ready, Rashid?" yelled the driver.
"Man, get us out of here!"
The booth door shut. When it opened, they were at the Game
Preserve.
The station jutted from the side of a hill. A glass-walled
waiting room surrounded the bank of transmitter booths. Read
looked out the door and saw his first battlefield.
Directly in front of him, his head shattered by a bullet, a dead
inspector lay behind an overturned couch.
Read had seen dozens of training films taken during actual
battles or after atomic attacks. He had laughed when other
recruits complained. "That's the way this world is. You people
with the weak stomachs better get used to it."
Now he slid against the rear wall of the transmitter booth.
A wounded inspector crawled across the floor to the booth. Read
couldn't see his wound, only the pain scratched on his face and
the blood he deposited on the floor.
"Did you get Umluana?" he asked Sergeant Rashid.
"He's in the booth. What's going on?" Rashid's Middle East Oxford
seemed more clipped than ever.
"They hit us with two companies of troops a few minutes ago. I
think half our men are wounded."
"Can we get out of here?"
"They machine-gunned the controls."
Rashid swore. "You heard him, Read! Get out there and help those
men."
He heard the screams of the wounded, the crack of rifles and
machine guns, all the terrifying noise of war. But since his
eighteenth year he had done everything his superiors told him to
do.
He started crawling toward an easy-chair that looked like good
cover. A bullet cracked above his head, so close he felt the
shock wave. He got up, ran panicky, crouched, and dove behind the
chair.
An inspector cracked the valve on a smoke grenade. A white fog
spread through the building. They could see anyone who tried to
rush them but the besiegers couldn't pick out targets.
Above the noise, he heard Rashid.
"I'm calling South Africa Station for a copter. It's the only way
out of here. Until it comes, we've got to hold them back."
Read thought of the green beret he had stuffed in his pocket that
morning. He stuck it on his head and cocked it. He didn't need
plain clothes anymore and he wanted to wear at least a part of
his uniform.
Bullets had completely shattered the wall in front of him. He
stared through the murk, across the broken glass. He was Corporal
Harry Read, UN Inspector Corps—a very special man. If he didn't
do a good job here, he wasn't the man he claimed to be. This
might be the only real test he would ever face.
He heard a shout in rapid French. He turned to his right. Men in
red loincloths ran zigzagging toward the station. They carried
light automatic rifles. Half of them wore gas masks.
"Shoot the masks," he yelled. "Aim for the masks."
The machine gun kicked and chattered on his shoulder. He picked a
target and squeezed off a burst. Tensely, he hunted for another
mask. Three grenades arced through the air and yellow gas spread
across the battlefield. The attackers ran through it. A few yards
beyond the gas, some of them turned and ran for their own lines.
In a moment only half a dozen masked men still advanced. The
inspectors fired a long, noisy volley. When they stopped only
four attackers remained on their feet. And they were running for
cover.
The attackers had come straight up a road that led from the Game
Preserve to the station. They had not expected any resistance.
The UN men had already taken over the station, chased out the
passengers and technicians and taken up defense positions; they
had met the Belderkans with a dozen grenades and sent them
scurrying for cover. The fight so far had been vicious but
disorganized. But the Belderkans had a few hundred men and knew
they had wrecked the transmitter controls.
The first direct attack had been repulsed. They could attack many
more times and continue to spray the building with bullets. They
could also try to go around the hill and attack the station from
above; if they did, the inspectors had a good view of the hill
and should see them going up.
The inspectors had taken up good defensive positions. In spite of
their losses, they still had enough firepower to cover the area
surrounding the station.
Read surveyed his sector of fire. About two hundred yards to his
left, he saw the top of a small ditch. Using the ditch for cover,
the Belderkans could sneak to the top of the hill.
Gas grenades are only three inches long. They hold cubic yards of
gas under high pressure. Read unclipped a telescoping rod from
his vest pocket. He opened it and a pair of sights flipped up. A
thin track ran down one side.
He had about a dozen grenades left, three self-propelling. He
slid an SP grenade into the rod's track and estimated windage and
range. Sighting carefully, not breathing, muscles relaxed, the
rod rock steady, he fired and lobbed the little grenade into the
ditch. He dropped another grenade beside it.
The heavy gas would lie there for hours.
Sergeant Rashid ran crouched from man to man. He did what he
could to shield the wounded.
"Well, corporal, how are you?"
"Not too bad, sergeant. See that ditch out there? I put a little
gas in it."
"Good work. How's your ammunition?"
"A dozen grenades. Half a barrel of shells."
"The copter will be here in half an hour. We'll put Umluana on,
then try to save ourselves. Once he's gone, I think we ought to
surrender."
"How do you think they'll treat us?"
"That we'll have to see."
An occasional bullet cracked and whined through the misty room.
Near him a man gasped frantically for air. On the sunny field a
wounded man screamed for help.
"There's a garage downstairs," Rashid said. "In case the copter
doesn't get here on time, I've got a man filling wine bottles
with gasoline."
"We'll stop them, Sarge. Don't worry."
Rashid ran off. Read stared across the green land and listened to
the pound of his heart. What were the Belderkans planning? A mass
frontal attack? To sneak in over the top of the hill?
He didn't think, anymore than a rabbit thinks when it lies hiding
from the fox or a panther thinks when it crouches on a branch
above the trail. His skin tightened and relaxed on his body.
"Listen," said a German.
Far down the hill he heard the deep-throated rumble of a big
motor.
"Armor," the German said.
The earth shook. The tank rounded the bend. Read watched the
squat, angular monster until its stubby gun pointed at the
station. It stopped less than two hundred yards away.
A loud-speaker blared.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
YOU MAY THINK US SAVAGES
BUT WE HAVE MODERN WEAPONS.
WE HAVE ATOMIC WARHEADS,
ALL GASES, ROCKETS
AND FLAME THROWERS. IF
YOU DO NOT SURRENDER
OUR PREMIER, WE WILL DESTROY YOU.
"They know we don't have any big weapons," Read said. "They know
we have only gas grenades and small arms."
He looked nervously from side to side. They couldn't bring the
copter in with that thing squatting out there.
A few feet away, sprawled behind a barricade of tables, lay a man
in advanced shock. His deadly white skin shone like ivory. They
wouldn't even look like that. One nuclear shell from that gun and
they'd be vaporized. Or perhaps the tank had sonic projectors;
then the skin would peel off their bones. Or they might be
burned, or cut up by shrapnel, or gassed with some new mist their
masks couldn't filter.
Read shut his eyes. All around him he heard heavy breathing,
mumbled comments, curses. Clothes rustled as men moved restlessly.
But already the voice of Sergeant Rashid resounded in the murky
room.
"We've got to knock that thing out before the copter comes.
Otherwise, he can't land. I have six Molotov cocktails here. Who
wants to go hunting with me?"
For two years Read had served under Sergeant Rashid. To him, the
sergeant was everything a UN inspector should be. Rashid's
devotion to peace had no limits.
Read's psych tests said pride alone drove him on. That was good
enough for the UN; they only rejected men whose loyalties might
conflict with their duties. But an assault on the tank required
something more than a hunger for self-respect.
Read had seen the inspector who covered their getaway. He had
watched their escort charge three-to-one odds. He had seen
another inspector stay behind at Miaka Station. And here, in this
building, lay battered men and dead men.
All UN inspectors. All part of his life.
And he was part of their life. Their blood, their sacrifice, and
pain, had become a part of him.
"I'll take a cocktail, Sarge."
"Is that Read?"
"Who else did you expect?"
"Nobody. Anybody else?"
"I'll go," the Frenchman said. "Three should be enough. Give us a
good smoke screen."
Rashid snapped orders. He put the German inspector in charge of
Umluana. Read, the Frenchman and himself, he stationed at
thirty-foot intervals along the floor.
"Remember," Rashid said. "We have to knock out that gun."
Read had given away his machine gun. He held a gas-filled bottle
in each hand. His automatic nestled in its shoulder holster.
Rashid whistled.
Dozens of smoke grenades tumbled through the air. Thick mist
engulfed the tank. Read stood up and ran forward. He crouched but
didn't zigzag. Speed counted most here.
Gunfire shook the hill. The Belderkans couldn't see them but they
knew what was going on and they fired systematically into the
smoke.
Bullets ploughed the ground beside him. He raised his head and
found the dim silhouette of the tank. He tried not to think about
bullets ploughing through his flesh.
A bullet slammed into his hip. He fell on his back, screaming.
"Sarge.
Sarge.
"
"I'm hit, too," Rashid said. "Don't stop if you can move."
Listen to him. What's he got, a sprained ankle?
But he didn't feel any pain. He closed his eyes and threw himself
onto his stomach. And nearly fainted from pain. He screamed and
quivered. The pain stopped. He stretched out his hands, gripping
the wine bottles, and inched forward. Pain stabbed him from
stomach to knee.
"I can't move, Sarge."
"Read, you've got to. I think you're the only—"
"What?"
Guns clattered. Bullets cracked.
"Sergeant Rashid! Answer me."
He heard nothing but the lonely passage of the bullets in the
mist.
"I'm a UN man," he mumbled. "You people up there know what a UN
man is? You know what happens when you meet one?"
When he reached the tank, he had another bullet in his right arm.
But they didn't know he was coming and when you get within ten
feet of a tank, the men inside can't see you.
He just had to stand up and drop the bottle down the gun barrel.
That was all—with a broken hip and a wounded right arm.
He knew they would see him when he stood up but he didn't think
about that. He didn't think about Sergeant Rashid, about the
complicated politics of Africa, about crowded market streets. He
had to kill the tank. That was all he thought about. He had
decided something in the world was more important than himself,
but he didn't know it or realize the psychologists would be
surprised to see him do this. He had made many decisions in the
last few minutes. He had ceased to think about them or anything
else.
With his cigarette lighter, he lit the rag stuffed in the end of
the bottle.
Biting his tongue, he pulled himself up the front of the tank.
His long arm stretched for the muzzle of the gun. He tossed the
bottle down the dark throat.
As he fell, the machine-gun bullets hit him in the chest, then in
the neck. He didn't feel them. He had fainted the moment he felt
the bottle leave his hand.
The copter landed ten minutes later. Umluana left in a shower of
bullets. A Russian private, the ranking man alive in the station,
surrendered the survivors to the Belderkans.
His mother hung the Global Medal above the television set.
"He must have been brave," she said. "We had a fine son."
"He was our only son," her husband said. "What did he volunteer
for? Couldn't somebody else have done it?"
His wife started to cry. Awkwardly, he embraced her. He wondered
what his son had wanted that he couldn't get at home.
THE END | Harry's parents think he is too lazy to succeed in the UN. | Harry's parents want him to go to trade school. | Harry's parents feel that joining the UN means he is turning his back on America. | Harry's parents don't want him to be a soldier. | 2 |
24278_LON5P1ZP_3 | Why did Rashid join the UN? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Analog, January 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE
GREEN
BERET
By TOM PURDOM
It's not so much the decisions a man does make that mark
him as a Man—but the ones he refrains from making. Like the
decision "I've had enough!"
Illustrated by Schoenherr
Read locked the door and drew his pistol. Sergeant Rashid handed
Premier Umluana the warrant.
"We're from the UN Inspector Corps," Sergeant Rashid said. "I'm
very sorry, but we have to arrest you and bring you in for trial
by the World Court."
If Umluana noticed Read's gun, he didn't show it. He read the
warrant carefully. When he finished, he said something in Dutch.
"I don't know your language," Rashid said.
"Then I'll speak English." Umluana was a small man with wrinkled
brow, glasses and a mustache. His skin was a shade lighter than
Read's. "The Inspector General doesn't have the power to arrest a
head of state—especially the Premier of Belderkan. Now, if
you'll excuse me, I must return to my party."
In the other room people laughed and talked. Glasses clinked in
the late afternoon. Read knew two armed men stood just outside
the door. "If you leave, Premier, I'll have to shoot you."
"I don't think so," Umluana said. "No, if you kill me, all Africa
will rise against the world. You don't want me dead. You want me
in court."
Read clicked off the safety.
"Corporal Read is very young," Rashid said, "but he's a crack
shot. That's why I brought him with me. I think he
likes
to
shoot, too."
Umluana turned back to Rashid a second too soon. He saw the
sergeant's upraised hand before it collided with his neck.
"Help!
Kidnap.
"
Rashid judo chopped him and swung the inert body over his
shoulders. Read pulled a flat grenade from his vest pocket. He
dropped it and yellow psycho gas hissed from the valve.
"Let's be off," Rashid said.
The door lock snapped as they went out the window. Two men with
rifles plunged into the gas; sighing, they fell to the floor in a
catatonic trance.
A little car skimmed across the lawn. Bearing the Scourge of
Africa, Rashid struggled toward it. Read walked backward,
covering their retreat.
The car stopped, whirling blades holding it a few inches off the
lawn. They climbed in.
"How did it go?" The driver and another inspector occupied the
front seat.
"They'll be after us in half a minute."
The other inspector carried a light machine gun and a box of
grenades. "I better cover," he said.
"Thanks," Rashid said.
The inspector slid out of the car and ran to a clump of bushes.
The driver pushed in the accelerator. As they swerved toward the
south, Read saw a dozen armed men run out of the house. A grenade
arced from the bushes and the pursuers recoiled from the cloud
that rose before them.
"Is he all right?" the driver asked.
"I don't think I hurt him." Rashid took a syrette from his vest
pocket. "Well, Read, it looks like we're in for a fight. In a few
minutes Miaka Station will know we're coming. And God knows what
will happen at the Game Preserve."
Read wanted to jump out of the car. He could die any minute. But
he had set his life on a well-oiled track and he couldn't get off
until they reached Geneva.
"They don't know who's coming," he said. "They don't make them
tough enough to stop this boy."
Staring straight ahead, he didn't see the sergeant smile.
Two types of recruits are accepted by the UN Inspector Corps:
those with a fanatic loyalty to the ideals of peace and world
order, and those who are loyal to nothing but themselves. Read
was the second type.
A tall, lanky Negro he had spent his school days in one of the
drab suburbs that ring every prosperous American city. It was the
home of factory workers, clerks, semiskilled technicians, all who
do the drudge work of civilization and know they will never do
more. The adults spent their days with television, alcohol and
drugs; the young spent their days with gangs, sex, television and
alcohol. What else was there? Those who could have told him
neither studied nor taught at his schools. What he saw on the
concrete fields between the tall apartment houses marked the
limits of life's possibilities.
He had belonged to a gang called The Golden Spacemen. "Nobody
fools with me," he bragged. "When Harry Read's out, there's a
tiger running loose." No one knew how many times he nearly ran
from other clubs, how carefully he picked the safest spot on the
battle line.
"A man ought to be a man," he once told a girl. "He ought to do a
man's work. Did you ever notice how our fathers look, how they
sleep so much? I don't want to be like that. I want to be
something proud."
He joined the UN Inspector Corps at eighteen, in 1978. The
international cops wore green berets, high buttonless boots, bush
jackets. They were very special men.
For the first time in his life, his father said something about
his ambitions.
"Don't you like America, Harry? Do you
want
to be without a
country? This is the best country in the world. All my life I've
made a good living. Haven't you had everything you ever wanted?
I've been a king compared to people overseas. Why, you stay here
and go to trade school and in two years you'll be living just
like me."
"I don't want that," Read said.
"What do you mean, you don't want that?"
"You could join the American Army," his mother said. "That's as
good as a trade school. If you have to be a soldier."
"I want to be a UN man. I've already enlisted. I'm in! What do
you care what I do?"
The UN Inspector Corps had been founded to enforce the Nuclear
Disarmament Treaty of 1966. Through the years it had acquired
other jobs. UN men no longer went unarmed. Trained to use small
arms and gas weapons, they guarded certain borders, bodyguarded
diplomats and UN officials, even put down riots that threatened
international peace. As the UN evolved into a strong world
government, the UN Inspector Corps steadily acquired new powers.
Read went through six months training on Madagascar.
Twice he nearly got expelled for picking fights with smaller men.
Rather than resign, he accepted punishment which assigned him to
weeks of dull, filthy extra labor. He hated the restrictions and
the iron fence of regulations. He hated boredom, loneliness and
isolation.
And yet he responded with enthusiasm. They had given him a job. A
job many people considered important.
He took his turn guarding the still disputed borders of Korea. He
served on the rescue teams that patrol the busy Polar routes. He
mounted guard at the 1980 World's Fair in Rangoon.
"I liked Rangoon," he even told a friend. "I even liked Korea.
But I think I liked the Pole job best. You sit around playing
cards and shooting the bull and then there's a plane crash or
something and you go out and win a medal. That's great for me.
I'm lazy and I like excitement."
One power implied in the UN Charter no Secretary General or
Inspector General had ever tried to use. The power to arrest any
head of state whose country violated international law. Could the
World Court try and imprison a politician who had conspired to
attack another nation?
For years Africa had been called "The South America of the Old
World." Revolution followed revolution. Colonies became
democracies. Democracies became dictatorships or dissolved in
civil war. Men planted bases on the moon and in four years,
1978-82, ringed the world with matter transmitters; but the black
population of Africa still struggled toward political equality.
Umluana took control of Belderkan in 1979. The tiny, former Dutch
colony, had been a tottering democracy for ten years. The very
day he took control the new dictator and his African party began
to build up the Belderkan Army. For years he had preached a new
Africa, united, free of white masters, the home of a vigorous and
perfect Negro society. His critics called him a hypocritical
racist, an opportunist using the desires of the African people to
build himself an empire.
He began a propaganda war against neighboring South Africa,
promising the liberation of that strife-torn land. Most Negro
leaders, having just won representation in the South African
Parliament, told him to liberate his own country. They believed
they could use their first small voice in the government to win
true freedom for their people.
But the radio assault and the arms buildup continued. Early in
1982, South Africa claimed the Belderkan Army exceeded the size
agreed to in the Disarmament Treaty. The European countries and
some African nations joined in the accusation. China called the
uproar a vicious slur on a new African nation. The United States
and Russia, trying not to get entangled, asked for more
investigation by the UN.
But the evidence was clear. Umluana was defying world law. If he
got away with it, some larger and more dangerous nation might
follow his precedent. And the arms race would begin again.
The Inspector General decided. They would enter Belderkan, arrest
Umluana and try him by due process before the World Court. If the
plan succeeded, mankind would be a long step farther from nuclear
war.
Read didn't know much about the complicated political reasons for
the arrest. He liked the Corp and he liked being in the Corp. He
went where they sent him and did what they told him to do.
The car skimmed above the tree-tops. The driver and his two
passengers scanned the sky.
A plane would have been a faster way to get out of the country.
But then they would have spent hours flying over Africa, with
Belderkan fighters in hot pursuit, other nations joining the
chase and the world uproar gaining volume. By transmitter, if all
went well, they could have Umluana in Geneva in an hour.
They were racing toward Miaka, a branch transmitter station. From
Miaka they would transmit to the Belderkan Preserve, a famous
tourist attraction whose station could transmit to any point on
the globe. Even now a dozen inspectors were taking over the Game
Preserve station and manning its controls.
They had made no plans to take over Miaka. They planned to get
there before it could be defended.
"There's no military base near Miaka," Rashid said. "We might get
there before the Belderkans."
"Here comes our escort," Read said.
A big car rose from the jungle. This one had a recoilless rifle
mounted on the roof. The driver and the gunner waved and fell in
behind them.
"One thing," Read said, "I don't think they'll shoot at us while
he's
in the car."
"Don't be certain, corporal. All these strong-arm movements are
alike. I'll bet Umluana's lieutenants are hoping he'll become a
dead legend. Then they can become live conquerors."
Sergeant Rashid came from Cairo. He had degrees in science and
history from Cambridge but only the Corp gave him work that
satisfied his conscience. He hated war. It was that simple.
Read looked back. He saw three spots of sunlight about two
hundred feet up and a good mile behind.
"Here they come, Sarge."
Rashid turned his head. He waved frantically. The two men in the
other car waved back.
"Shall I duck under the trees?" the driver asked.
"Not yet. Not until we have to."
Read fingered the machine gun he had picked up when he got in the
car. He had never been shot at. Twice he had faced an unarmed
mob, but a few shots had sent them running.
Birds flew screaming from their nests. Monkeys screeched and
threw things at the noisy, speeding cars. A little cloud of birds
surrounded each vehicle.
The escort car made a sharp turn and charged their pursuers. The
big rifle fired twice. Read saw the Belderkan cars scatter.
Suddenly machine-gun bullets cracked and whined beside him.
"Evade," Rashid said. "Don't go down."
Without losing any forward speed, the driver took them straight
up. Read's stomach bounced.
A shell exploded above them. The car rocked. He raised his eyes
and saw a long crack in the roof.
"Hit the floor," Rashid said.
They knelt on the cramped floor. Rashid put on his gas mask and
Read copied him. Umluana breathed like a furnace, still
unconscious from the injection Rashid had given him.
I can't do anything
, Read thought.
They're too far away to
shoot back. All we can do is run.
The sky was clear and blue. The jungle was a noisy bazaar of
color. In the distance guns crashed. He listened to shells
whistle by and the whipcrack of machine-gun bullets. The car
roller-coastered up and down. Every time a shell passed, he
crawled in waves down his own back.
Another explosion, this time very loud.
Rashid raised his eyes above the seat and looked out the rear
window. "Two left. Keep down, Read."
"Can't we go down?" Read said.
"They'll get to Miaka before us."
He shut his eyes when he heard another loud explosion.
Sergeant Rashid looked out the window again. He swore bitterly in
English and Egyptian. Read raised his head. The two cars behind
them weren't fighting each other. A long way back the tree-tops
burned.
"How much farther?" Rashid said. The masks muffled their voices.
"There it is now. Shall I take us right in?"
"I think you'd better."
The station was a glass diamond in a small clearing. The driver
slowed down, then crashed through the glass walls and hovered by
the transmitter booth.
Rashid opened the door and threw out two grenades. Read jumped
out and the two of them struggled toward the booth with Umluana.
The driver, pistol in hand, ran for the control panel.
There were three technicians in the station and no passengers.
All three panicked when the psycho gas enveloped them. They ran
howling for the jungle.
Through the window of his mask, Read saw their pursuers land in
the clearing. Machine-gun bullets raked the building. They got
Umluana in the booth and hit the floor. Read took aim and opened
fire on the largest car.
"Now, I can shoot back," he said. "Now we'll see what they do."
"Are you ready, Rashid?" yelled the driver.
"Man, get us out of here!"
The booth door shut. When it opened, they were at the Game
Preserve.
The station jutted from the side of a hill. A glass-walled
waiting room surrounded the bank of transmitter booths. Read
looked out the door and saw his first battlefield.
Directly in front of him, his head shattered by a bullet, a dead
inspector lay behind an overturned couch.
Read had seen dozens of training films taken during actual
battles or after atomic attacks. He had laughed when other
recruits complained. "That's the way this world is. You people
with the weak stomachs better get used to it."
Now he slid against the rear wall of the transmitter booth.
A wounded inspector crawled across the floor to the booth. Read
couldn't see his wound, only the pain scratched on his face and
the blood he deposited on the floor.
"Did you get Umluana?" he asked Sergeant Rashid.
"He's in the booth. What's going on?" Rashid's Middle East Oxford
seemed more clipped than ever.
"They hit us with two companies of troops a few minutes ago. I
think half our men are wounded."
"Can we get out of here?"
"They machine-gunned the controls."
Rashid swore. "You heard him, Read! Get out there and help those
men."
He heard the screams of the wounded, the crack of rifles and
machine guns, all the terrifying noise of war. But since his
eighteenth year he had done everything his superiors told him to
do.
He started crawling toward an easy-chair that looked like good
cover. A bullet cracked above his head, so close he felt the
shock wave. He got up, ran panicky, crouched, and dove behind the
chair.
An inspector cracked the valve on a smoke grenade. A white fog
spread through the building. They could see anyone who tried to
rush them but the besiegers couldn't pick out targets.
Above the noise, he heard Rashid.
"I'm calling South Africa Station for a copter. It's the only way
out of here. Until it comes, we've got to hold them back."
Read thought of the green beret he had stuffed in his pocket that
morning. He stuck it on his head and cocked it. He didn't need
plain clothes anymore and he wanted to wear at least a part of
his uniform.
Bullets had completely shattered the wall in front of him. He
stared through the murk, across the broken glass. He was Corporal
Harry Read, UN Inspector Corps—a very special man. If he didn't
do a good job here, he wasn't the man he claimed to be. This
might be the only real test he would ever face.
He heard a shout in rapid French. He turned to his right. Men in
red loincloths ran zigzagging toward the station. They carried
light automatic rifles. Half of them wore gas masks.
"Shoot the masks," he yelled. "Aim for the masks."
The machine gun kicked and chattered on his shoulder. He picked a
target and squeezed off a burst. Tensely, he hunted for another
mask. Three grenades arced through the air and yellow gas spread
across the battlefield. The attackers ran through it. A few yards
beyond the gas, some of them turned and ran for their own lines.
In a moment only half a dozen masked men still advanced. The
inspectors fired a long, noisy volley. When they stopped only
four attackers remained on their feet. And they were running for
cover.
The attackers had come straight up a road that led from the Game
Preserve to the station. They had not expected any resistance.
The UN men had already taken over the station, chased out the
passengers and technicians and taken up defense positions; they
had met the Belderkans with a dozen grenades and sent them
scurrying for cover. The fight so far had been vicious but
disorganized. But the Belderkans had a few hundred men and knew
they had wrecked the transmitter controls.
The first direct attack had been repulsed. They could attack many
more times and continue to spray the building with bullets. They
could also try to go around the hill and attack the station from
above; if they did, the inspectors had a good view of the hill
and should see them going up.
The inspectors had taken up good defensive positions. In spite of
their losses, they still had enough firepower to cover the area
surrounding the station.
Read surveyed his sector of fire. About two hundred yards to his
left, he saw the top of a small ditch. Using the ditch for cover,
the Belderkans could sneak to the top of the hill.
Gas grenades are only three inches long. They hold cubic yards of
gas under high pressure. Read unclipped a telescoping rod from
his vest pocket. He opened it and a pair of sights flipped up. A
thin track ran down one side.
He had about a dozen grenades left, three self-propelling. He
slid an SP grenade into the rod's track and estimated windage and
range. Sighting carefully, not breathing, muscles relaxed, the
rod rock steady, he fired and lobbed the little grenade into the
ditch. He dropped another grenade beside it.
The heavy gas would lie there for hours.
Sergeant Rashid ran crouched from man to man. He did what he
could to shield the wounded.
"Well, corporal, how are you?"
"Not too bad, sergeant. See that ditch out there? I put a little
gas in it."
"Good work. How's your ammunition?"
"A dozen grenades. Half a barrel of shells."
"The copter will be here in half an hour. We'll put Umluana on,
then try to save ourselves. Once he's gone, I think we ought to
surrender."
"How do you think they'll treat us?"
"That we'll have to see."
An occasional bullet cracked and whined through the misty room.
Near him a man gasped frantically for air. On the sunny field a
wounded man screamed for help.
"There's a garage downstairs," Rashid said. "In case the copter
doesn't get here on time, I've got a man filling wine bottles
with gasoline."
"We'll stop them, Sarge. Don't worry."
Rashid ran off. Read stared across the green land and listened to
the pound of his heart. What were the Belderkans planning? A mass
frontal attack? To sneak in over the top of the hill?
He didn't think, anymore than a rabbit thinks when it lies hiding
from the fox or a panther thinks when it crouches on a branch
above the trail. His skin tightened and relaxed on his body.
"Listen," said a German.
Far down the hill he heard the deep-throated rumble of a big
motor.
"Armor," the German said.
The earth shook. The tank rounded the bend. Read watched the
squat, angular monster until its stubby gun pointed at the
station. It stopped less than two hundred yards away.
A loud-speaker blared.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
YOU MAY THINK US SAVAGES
BUT WE HAVE MODERN WEAPONS.
WE HAVE ATOMIC WARHEADS,
ALL GASES, ROCKETS
AND FLAME THROWERS. IF
YOU DO NOT SURRENDER
OUR PREMIER, WE WILL DESTROY YOU.
"They know we don't have any big weapons," Read said. "They know
we have only gas grenades and small arms."
He looked nervously from side to side. They couldn't bring the
copter in with that thing squatting out there.
A few feet away, sprawled behind a barricade of tables, lay a man
in advanced shock. His deadly white skin shone like ivory. They
wouldn't even look like that. One nuclear shell from that gun and
they'd be vaporized. Or perhaps the tank had sonic projectors;
then the skin would peel off their bones. Or they might be
burned, or cut up by shrapnel, or gassed with some new mist their
masks couldn't filter.
Read shut his eyes. All around him he heard heavy breathing,
mumbled comments, curses. Clothes rustled as men moved restlessly.
But already the voice of Sergeant Rashid resounded in the murky
room.
"We've got to knock that thing out before the copter comes.
Otherwise, he can't land. I have six Molotov cocktails here. Who
wants to go hunting with me?"
For two years Read had served under Sergeant Rashid. To him, the
sergeant was everything a UN inspector should be. Rashid's
devotion to peace had no limits.
Read's psych tests said pride alone drove him on. That was good
enough for the UN; they only rejected men whose loyalties might
conflict with their duties. But an assault on the tank required
something more than a hunger for self-respect.
Read had seen the inspector who covered their getaway. He had
watched their escort charge three-to-one odds. He had seen
another inspector stay behind at Miaka Station. And here, in this
building, lay battered men and dead men.
All UN inspectors. All part of his life.
And he was part of their life. Their blood, their sacrifice, and
pain, had become a part of him.
"I'll take a cocktail, Sarge."
"Is that Read?"
"Who else did you expect?"
"Nobody. Anybody else?"
"I'll go," the Frenchman said. "Three should be enough. Give us a
good smoke screen."
Rashid snapped orders. He put the German inspector in charge of
Umluana. Read, the Frenchman and himself, he stationed at
thirty-foot intervals along the floor.
"Remember," Rashid said. "We have to knock out that gun."
Read had given away his machine gun. He held a gas-filled bottle
in each hand. His automatic nestled in its shoulder holster.
Rashid whistled.
Dozens of smoke grenades tumbled through the air. Thick mist
engulfed the tank. Read stood up and ran forward. He crouched but
didn't zigzag. Speed counted most here.
Gunfire shook the hill. The Belderkans couldn't see them but they
knew what was going on and they fired systematically into the
smoke.
Bullets ploughed the ground beside him. He raised his head and
found the dim silhouette of the tank. He tried not to think about
bullets ploughing through his flesh.
A bullet slammed into his hip. He fell on his back, screaming.
"Sarge.
Sarge.
"
"I'm hit, too," Rashid said. "Don't stop if you can move."
Listen to him. What's he got, a sprained ankle?
But he didn't feel any pain. He closed his eyes and threw himself
onto his stomach. And nearly fainted from pain. He screamed and
quivered. The pain stopped. He stretched out his hands, gripping
the wine bottles, and inched forward. Pain stabbed him from
stomach to knee.
"I can't move, Sarge."
"Read, you've got to. I think you're the only—"
"What?"
Guns clattered. Bullets cracked.
"Sergeant Rashid! Answer me."
He heard nothing but the lonely passage of the bullets in the
mist.
"I'm a UN man," he mumbled. "You people up there know what a UN
man is? You know what happens when you meet one?"
When he reached the tank, he had another bullet in his right arm.
But they didn't know he was coming and when you get within ten
feet of a tank, the men inside can't see you.
He just had to stand up and drop the bottle down the gun barrel.
That was all—with a broken hip and a wounded right arm.
He knew they would see him when he stood up but he didn't think
about that. He didn't think about Sergeant Rashid, about the
complicated politics of Africa, about crowded market streets. He
had to kill the tank. That was all he thought about. He had
decided something in the world was more important than himself,
but he didn't know it or realize the psychologists would be
surprised to see him do this. He had made many decisions in the
last few minutes. He had ceased to think about them or anything
else.
With his cigarette lighter, he lit the rag stuffed in the end of
the bottle.
Biting his tongue, he pulled himself up the front of the tank.
His long arm stretched for the muzzle of the gun. He tossed the
bottle down the dark throat.
As he fell, the machine-gun bullets hit him in the chest, then in
the neck. He didn't feel them. He had fainted the moment he felt
the bottle leave his hand.
The copter landed ten minutes later. Umluana left in a shower of
bullets. A Russian private, the ranking man alive in the station,
surrendered the survivors to the Belderkans.
His mother hung the Global Medal above the television set.
"He must have been brave," she said. "We had a fine son."
"He was our only son," her husband said. "What did he volunteer
for? Couldn't somebody else have done it?"
His wife started to cry. Awkwardly, he embraced her. He wondered
what his son had wanted that he couldn't get at home.
THE END | Rashid joined the UN to get away from a gang called The Golden Spacemen. | Rashid joined the UN because he wants world peace at any cost. | Rashid joined the UN after he was fired from Cambridge. | Rashid joined the UN because he wanted to go to war. | 1 |
24278_LON5P1ZP_4 | How does Read feel about Rashid? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Analog, January 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE
GREEN
BERET
By TOM PURDOM
It's not so much the decisions a man does make that mark
him as a Man—but the ones he refrains from making. Like the
decision "I've had enough!"
Illustrated by Schoenherr
Read locked the door and drew his pistol. Sergeant Rashid handed
Premier Umluana the warrant.
"We're from the UN Inspector Corps," Sergeant Rashid said. "I'm
very sorry, but we have to arrest you and bring you in for trial
by the World Court."
If Umluana noticed Read's gun, he didn't show it. He read the
warrant carefully. When he finished, he said something in Dutch.
"I don't know your language," Rashid said.
"Then I'll speak English." Umluana was a small man with wrinkled
brow, glasses and a mustache. His skin was a shade lighter than
Read's. "The Inspector General doesn't have the power to arrest a
head of state—especially the Premier of Belderkan. Now, if
you'll excuse me, I must return to my party."
In the other room people laughed and talked. Glasses clinked in
the late afternoon. Read knew two armed men stood just outside
the door. "If you leave, Premier, I'll have to shoot you."
"I don't think so," Umluana said. "No, if you kill me, all Africa
will rise against the world. You don't want me dead. You want me
in court."
Read clicked off the safety.
"Corporal Read is very young," Rashid said, "but he's a crack
shot. That's why I brought him with me. I think he
likes
to
shoot, too."
Umluana turned back to Rashid a second too soon. He saw the
sergeant's upraised hand before it collided with his neck.
"Help!
Kidnap.
"
Rashid judo chopped him and swung the inert body over his
shoulders. Read pulled a flat grenade from his vest pocket. He
dropped it and yellow psycho gas hissed from the valve.
"Let's be off," Rashid said.
The door lock snapped as they went out the window. Two men with
rifles plunged into the gas; sighing, they fell to the floor in a
catatonic trance.
A little car skimmed across the lawn. Bearing the Scourge of
Africa, Rashid struggled toward it. Read walked backward,
covering their retreat.
The car stopped, whirling blades holding it a few inches off the
lawn. They climbed in.
"How did it go?" The driver and another inspector occupied the
front seat.
"They'll be after us in half a minute."
The other inspector carried a light machine gun and a box of
grenades. "I better cover," he said.
"Thanks," Rashid said.
The inspector slid out of the car and ran to a clump of bushes.
The driver pushed in the accelerator. As they swerved toward the
south, Read saw a dozen armed men run out of the house. A grenade
arced from the bushes and the pursuers recoiled from the cloud
that rose before them.
"Is he all right?" the driver asked.
"I don't think I hurt him." Rashid took a syrette from his vest
pocket. "Well, Read, it looks like we're in for a fight. In a few
minutes Miaka Station will know we're coming. And God knows what
will happen at the Game Preserve."
Read wanted to jump out of the car. He could die any minute. But
he had set his life on a well-oiled track and he couldn't get off
until they reached Geneva.
"They don't know who's coming," he said. "They don't make them
tough enough to stop this boy."
Staring straight ahead, he didn't see the sergeant smile.
Two types of recruits are accepted by the UN Inspector Corps:
those with a fanatic loyalty to the ideals of peace and world
order, and those who are loyal to nothing but themselves. Read
was the second type.
A tall, lanky Negro he had spent his school days in one of the
drab suburbs that ring every prosperous American city. It was the
home of factory workers, clerks, semiskilled technicians, all who
do the drudge work of civilization and know they will never do
more. The adults spent their days with television, alcohol and
drugs; the young spent their days with gangs, sex, television and
alcohol. What else was there? Those who could have told him
neither studied nor taught at his schools. What he saw on the
concrete fields between the tall apartment houses marked the
limits of life's possibilities.
He had belonged to a gang called The Golden Spacemen. "Nobody
fools with me," he bragged. "When Harry Read's out, there's a
tiger running loose." No one knew how many times he nearly ran
from other clubs, how carefully he picked the safest spot on the
battle line.
"A man ought to be a man," he once told a girl. "He ought to do a
man's work. Did you ever notice how our fathers look, how they
sleep so much? I don't want to be like that. I want to be
something proud."
He joined the UN Inspector Corps at eighteen, in 1978. The
international cops wore green berets, high buttonless boots, bush
jackets. They were very special men.
For the first time in his life, his father said something about
his ambitions.
"Don't you like America, Harry? Do you
want
to be without a
country? This is the best country in the world. All my life I've
made a good living. Haven't you had everything you ever wanted?
I've been a king compared to people overseas. Why, you stay here
and go to trade school and in two years you'll be living just
like me."
"I don't want that," Read said.
"What do you mean, you don't want that?"
"You could join the American Army," his mother said. "That's as
good as a trade school. If you have to be a soldier."
"I want to be a UN man. I've already enlisted. I'm in! What do
you care what I do?"
The UN Inspector Corps had been founded to enforce the Nuclear
Disarmament Treaty of 1966. Through the years it had acquired
other jobs. UN men no longer went unarmed. Trained to use small
arms and gas weapons, they guarded certain borders, bodyguarded
diplomats and UN officials, even put down riots that threatened
international peace. As the UN evolved into a strong world
government, the UN Inspector Corps steadily acquired new powers.
Read went through six months training on Madagascar.
Twice he nearly got expelled for picking fights with smaller men.
Rather than resign, he accepted punishment which assigned him to
weeks of dull, filthy extra labor. He hated the restrictions and
the iron fence of regulations. He hated boredom, loneliness and
isolation.
And yet he responded with enthusiasm. They had given him a job. A
job many people considered important.
He took his turn guarding the still disputed borders of Korea. He
served on the rescue teams that patrol the busy Polar routes. He
mounted guard at the 1980 World's Fair in Rangoon.
"I liked Rangoon," he even told a friend. "I even liked Korea.
But I think I liked the Pole job best. You sit around playing
cards and shooting the bull and then there's a plane crash or
something and you go out and win a medal. That's great for me.
I'm lazy and I like excitement."
One power implied in the UN Charter no Secretary General or
Inspector General had ever tried to use. The power to arrest any
head of state whose country violated international law. Could the
World Court try and imprison a politician who had conspired to
attack another nation?
For years Africa had been called "The South America of the Old
World." Revolution followed revolution. Colonies became
democracies. Democracies became dictatorships or dissolved in
civil war. Men planted bases on the moon and in four years,
1978-82, ringed the world with matter transmitters; but the black
population of Africa still struggled toward political equality.
Umluana took control of Belderkan in 1979. The tiny, former Dutch
colony, had been a tottering democracy for ten years. The very
day he took control the new dictator and his African party began
to build up the Belderkan Army. For years he had preached a new
Africa, united, free of white masters, the home of a vigorous and
perfect Negro society. His critics called him a hypocritical
racist, an opportunist using the desires of the African people to
build himself an empire.
He began a propaganda war against neighboring South Africa,
promising the liberation of that strife-torn land. Most Negro
leaders, having just won representation in the South African
Parliament, told him to liberate his own country. They believed
they could use their first small voice in the government to win
true freedom for their people.
But the radio assault and the arms buildup continued. Early in
1982, South Africa claimed the Belderkan Army exceeded the size
agreed to in the Disarmament Treaty. The European countries and
some African nations joined in the accusation. China called the
uproar a vicious slur on a new African nation. The United States
and Russia, trying not to get entangled, asked for more
investigation by the UN.
But the evidence was clear. Umluana was defying world law. If he
got away with it, some larger and more dangerous nation might
follow his precedent. And the arms race would begin again.
The Inspector General decided. They would enter Belderkan, arrest
Umluana and try him by due process before the World Court. If the
plan succeeded, mankind would be a long step farther from nuclear
war.
Read didn't know much about the complicated political reasons for
the arrest. He liked the Corp and he liked being in the Corp. He
went where they sent him and did what they told him to do.
The car skimmed above the tree-tops. The driver and his two
passengers scanned the sky.
A plane would have been a faster way to get out of the country.
But then they would have spent hours flying over Africa, with
Belderkan fighters in hot pursuit, other nations joining the
chase and the world uproar gaining volume. By transmitter, if all
went well, they could have Umluana in Geneva in an hour.
They were racing toward Miaka, a branch transmitter station. From
Miaka they would transmit to the Belderkan Preserve, a famous
tourist attraction whose station could transmit to any point on
the globe. Even now a dozen inspectors were taking over the Game
Preserve station and manning its controls.
They had made no plans to take over Miaka. They planned to get
there before it could be defended.
"There's no military base near Miaka," Rashid said. "We might get
there before the Belderkans."
"Here comes our escort," Read said.
A big car rose from the jungle. This one had a recoilless rifle
mounted on the roof. The driver and the gunner waved and fell in
behind them.
"One thing," Read said, "I don't think they'll shoot at us while
he's
in the car."
"Don't be certain, corporal. All these strong-arm movements are
alike. I'll bet Umluana's lieutenants are hoping he'll become a
dead legend. Then they can become live conquerors."
Sergeant Rashid came from Cairo. He had degrees in science and
history from Cambridge but only the Corp gave him work that
satisfied his conscience. He hated war. It was that simple.
Read looked back. He saw three spots of sunlight about two
hundred feet up and a good mile behind.
"Here they come, Sarge."
Rashid turned his head. He waved frantically. The two men in the
other car waved back.
"Shall I duck under the trees?" the driver asked.
"Not yet. Not until we have to."
Read fingered the machine gun he had picked up when he got in the
car. He had never been shot at. Twice he had faced an unarmed
mob, but a few shots had sent them running.
Birds flew screaming from their nests. Monkeys screeched and
threw things at the noisy, speeding cars. A little cloud of birds
surrounded each vehicle.
The escort car made a sharp turn and charged their pursuers. The
big rifle fired twice. Read saw the Belderkan cars scatter.
Suddenly machine-gun bullets cracked and whined beside him.
"Evade," Rashid said. "Don't go down."
Without losing any forward speed, the driver took them straight
up. Read's stomach bounced.
A shell exploded above them. The car rocked. He raised his eyes
and saw a long crack in the roof.
"Hit the floor," Rashid said.
They knelt on the cramped floor. Rashid put on his gas mask and
Read copied him. Umluana breathed like a furnace, still
unconscious from the injection Rashid had given him.
I can't do anything
, Read thought.
They're too far away to
shoot back. All we can do is run.
The sky was clear and blue. The jungle was a noisy bazaar of
color. In the distance guns crashed. He listened to shells
whistle by and the whipcrack of machine-gun bullets. The car
roller-coastered up and down. Every time a shell passed, he
crawled in waves down his own back.
Another explosion, this time very loud.
Rashid raised his eyes above the seat and looked out the rear
window. "Two left. Keep down, Read."
"Can't we go down?" Read said.
"They'll get to Miaka before us."
He shut his eyes when he heard another loud explosion.
Sergeant Rashid looked out the window again. He swore bitterly in
English and Egyptian. Read raised his head. The two cars behind
them weren't fighting each other. A long way back the tree-tops
burned.
"How much farther?" Rashid said. The masks muffled their voices.
"There it is now. Shall I take us right in?"
"I think you'd better."
The station was a glass diamond in a small clearing. The driver
slowed down, then crashed through the glass walls and hovered by
the transmitter booth.
Rashid opened the door and threw out two grenades. Read jumped
out and the two of them struggled toward the booth with Umluana.
The driver, pistol in hand, ran for the control panel.
There were three technicians in the station and no passengers.
All three panicked when the psycho gas enveloped them. They ran
howling for the jungle.
Through the window of his mask, Read saw their pursuers land in
the clearing. Machine-gun bullets raked the building. They got
Umluana in the booth and hit the floor. Read took aim and opened
fire on the largest car.
"Now, I can shoot back," he said. "Now we'll see what they do."
"Are you ready, Rashid?" yelled the driver.
"Man, get us out of here!"
The booth door shut. When it opened, they were at the Game
Preserve.
The station jutted from the side of a hill. A glass-walled
waiting room surrounded the bank of transmitter booths. Read
looked out the door and saw his first battlefield.
Directly in front of him, his head shattered by a bullet, a dead
inspector lay behind an overturned couch.
Read had seen dozens of training films taken during actual
battles or after atomic attacks. He had laughed when other
recruits complained. "That's the way this world is. You people
with the weak stomachs better get used to it."
Now he slid against the rear wall of the transmitter booth.
A wounded inspector crawled across the floor to the booth. Read
couldn't see his wound, only the pain scratched on his face and
the blood he deposited on the floor.
"Did you get Umluana?" he asked Sergeant Rashid.
"He's in the booth. What's going on?" Rashid's Middle East Oxford
seemed more clipped than ever.
"They hit us with two companies of troops a few minutes ago. I
think half our men are wounded."
"Can we get out of here?"
"They machine-gunned the controls."
Rashid swore. "You heard him, Read! Get out there and help those
men."
He heard the screams of the wounded, the crack of rifles and
machine guns, all the terrifying noise of war. But since his
eighteenth year he had done everything his superiors told him to
do.
He started crawling toward an easy-chair that looked like good
cover. A bullet cracked above his head, so close he felt the
shock wave. He got up, ran panicky, crouched, and dove behind the
chair.
An inspector cracked the valve on a smoke grenade. A white fog
spread through the building. They could see anyone who tried to
rush them but the besiegers couldn't pick out targets.
Above the noise, he heard Rashid.
"I'm calling South Africa Station for a copter. It's the only way
out of here. Until it comes, we've got to hold them back."
Read thought of the green beret he had stuffed in his pocket that
morning. He stuck it on his head and cocked it. He didn't need
plain clothes anymore and he wanted to wear at least a part of
his uniform.
Bullets had completely shattered the wall in front of him. He
stared through the murk, across the broken glass. He was Corporal
Harry Read, UN Inspector Corps—a very special man. If he didn't
do a good job here, he wasn't the man he claimed to be. This
might be the only real test he would ever face.
He heard a shout in rapid French. He turned to his right. Men in
red loincloths ran zigzagging toward the station. They carried
light automatic rifles. Half of them wore gas masks.
"Shoot the masks," he yelled. "Aim for the masks."
The machine gun kicked and chattered on his shoulder. He picked a
target and squeezed off a burst. Tensely, he hunted for another
mask. Three grenades arced through the air and yellow gas spread
across the battlefield. The attackers ran through it. A few yards
beyond the gas, some of them turned and ran for their own lines.
In a moment only half a dozen masked men still advanced. The
inspectors fired a long, noisy volley. When they stopped only
four attackers remained on their feet. And they were running for
cover.
The attackers had come straight up a road that led from the Game
Preserve to the station. They had not expected any resistance.
The UN men had already taken over the station, chased out the
passengers and technicians and taken up defense positions; they
had met the Belderkans with a dozen grenades and sent them
scurrying for cover. The fight so far had been vicious but
disorganized. But the Belderkans had a few hundred men and knew
they had wrecked the transmitter controls.
The first direct attack had been repulsed. They could attack many
more times and continue to spray the building with bullets. They
could also try to go around the hill and attack the station from
above; if they did, the inspectors had a good view of the hill
and should see them going up.
The inspectors had taken up good defensive positions. In spite of
their losses, they still had enough firepower to cover the area
surrounding the station.
Read surveyed his sector of fire. About two hundred yards to his
left, he saw the top of a small ditch. Using the ditch for cover,
the Belderkans could sneak to the top of the hill.
Gas grenades are only three inches long. They hold cubic yards of
gas under high pressure. Read unclipped a telescoping rod from
his vest pocket. He opened it and a pair of sights flipped up. A
thin track ran down one side.
He had about a dozen grenades left, three self-propelling. He
slid an SP grenade into the rod's track and estimated windage and
range. Sighting carefully, not breathing, muscles relaxed, the
rod rock steady, he fired and lobbed the little grenade into the
ditch. He dropped another grenade beside it.
The heavy gas would lie there for hours.
Sergeant Rashid ran crouched from man to man. He did what he
could to shield the wounded.
"Well, corporal, how are you?"
"Not too bad, sergeant. See that ditch out there? I put a little
gas in it."
"Good work. How's your ammunition?"
"A dozen grenades. Half a barrel of shells."
"The copter will be here in half an hour. We'll put Umluana on,
then try to save ourselves. Once he's gone, I think we ought to
surrender."
"How do you think they'll treat us?"
"That we'll have to see."
An occasional bullet cracked and whined through the misty room.
Near him a man gasped frantically for air. On the sunny field a
wounded man screamed for help.
"There's a garage downstairs," Rashid said. "In case the copter
doesn't get here on time, I've got a man filling wine bottles
with gasoline."
"We'll stop them, Sarge. Don't worry."
Rashid ran off. Read stared across the green land and listened to
the pound of his heart. What were the Belderkans planning? A mass
frontal attack? To sneak in over the top of the hill?
He didn't think, anymore than a rabbit thinks when it lies hiding
from the fox or a panther thinks when it crouches on a branch
above the trail. His skin tightened and relaxed on his body.
"Listen," said a German.
Far down the hill he heard the deep-throated rumble of a big
motor.
"Armor," the German said.
The earth shook. The tank rounded the bend. Read watched the
squat, angular monster until its stubby gun pointed at the
station. It stopped less than two hundred yards away.
A loud-speaker blared.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
YOU MAY THINK US SAVAGES
BUT WE HAVE MODERN WEAPONS.
WE HAVE ATOMIC WARHEADS,
ALL GASES, ROCKETS
AND FLAME THROWERS. IF
YOU DO NOT SURRENDER
OUR PREMIER, WE WILL DESTROY YOU.
"They know we don't have any big weapons," Read said. "They know
we have only gas grenades and small arms."
He looked nervously from side to side. They couldn't bring the
copter in with that thing squatting out there.
A few feet away, sprawled behind a barricade of tables, lay a man
in advanced shock. His deadly white skin shone like ivory. They
wouldn't even look like that. One nuclear shell from that gun and
they'd be vaporized. Or perhaps the tank had sonic projectors;
then the skin would peel off their bones. Or they might be
burned, or cut up by shrapnel, or gassed with some new mist their
masks couldn't filter.
Read shut his eyes. All around him he heard heavy breathing,
mumbled comments, curses. Clothes rustled as men moved restlessly.
But already the voice of Sergeant Rashid resounded in the murky
room.
"We've got to knock that thing out before the copter comes.
Otherwise, he can't land. I have six Molotov cocktails here. Who
wants to go hunting with me?"
For two years Read had served under Sergeant Rashid. To him, the
sergeant was everything a UN inspector should be. Rashid's
devotion to peace had no limits.
Read's psych tests said pride alone drove him on. That was good
enough for the UN; they only rejected men whose loyalties might
conflict with their duties. But an assault on the tank required
something more than a hunger for self-respect.
Read had seen the inspector who covered their getaway. He had
watched their escort charge three-to-one odds. He had seen
another inspector stay behind at Miaka Station. And here, in this
building, lay battered men and dead men.
All UN inspectors. All part of his life.
And he was part of their life. Their blood, their sacrifice, and
pain, had become a part of him.
"I'll take a cocktail, Sarge."
"Is that Read?"
"Who else did you expect?"
"Nobody. Anybody else?"
"I'll go," the Frenchman said. "Three should be enough. Give us a
good smoke screen."
Rashid snapped orders. He put the German inspector in charge of
Umluana. Read, the Frenchman and himself, he stationed at
thirty-foot intervals along the floor.
"Remember," Rashid said. "We have to knock out that gun."
Read had given away his machine gun. He held a gas-filled bottle
in each hand. His automatic nestled in its shoulder holster.
Rashid whistled.
Dozens of smoke grenades tumbled through the air. Thick mist
engulfed the tank. Read stood up and ran forward. He crouched but
didn't zigzag. Speed counted most here.
Gunfire shook the hill. The Belderkans couldn't see them but they
knew what was going on and they fired systematically into the
smoke.
Bullets ploughed the ground beside him. He raised his head and
found the dim silhouette of the tank. He tried not to think about
bullets ploughing through his flesh.
A bullet slammed into his hip. He fell on his back, screaming.
"Sarge.
Sarge.
"
"I'm hit, too," Rashid said. "Don't stop if you can move."
Listen to him. What's he got, a sprained ankle?
But he didn't feel any pain. He closed his eyes and threw himself
onto his stomach. And nearly fainted from pain. He screamed and
quivered. The pain stopped. He stretched out his hands, gripping
the wine bottles, and inched forward. Pain stabbed him from
stomach to knee.
"I can't move, Sarge."
"Read, you've got to. I think you're the only—"
"What?"
Guns clattered. Bullets cracked.
"Sergeant Rashid! Answer me."
He heard nothing but the lonely passage of the bullets in the
mist.
"I'm a UN man," he mumbled. "You people up there know what a UN
man is? You know what happens when you meet one?"
When he reached the tank, he had another bullet in his right arm.
But they didn't know he was coming and when you get within ten
feet of a tank, the men inside can't see you.
He just had to stand up and drop the bottle down the gun barrel.
That was all—with a broken hip and a wounded right arm.
He knew they would see him when he stood up but he didn't think
about that. He didn't think about Sergeant Rashid, about the
complicated politics of Africa, about crowded market streets. He
had to kill the tank. That was all he thought about. He had
decided something in the world was more important than himself,
but he didn't know it or realize the psychologists would be
surprised to see him do this. He had made many decisions in the
last few minutes. He had ceased to think about them or anything
else.
With his cigarette lighter, he lit the rag stuffed in the end of
the bottle.
Biting his tongue, he pulled himself up the front of the tank.
His long arm stretched for the muzzle of the gun. He tossed the
bottle down the dark throat.
As he fell, the machine-gun bullets hit him in the chest, then in
the neck. He didn't feel them. He had fainted the moment he felt
the bottle leave his hand.
The copter landed ten minutes later. Umluana left in a shower of
bullets. A Russian private, the ranking man alive in the station,
surrendered the survivors to the Belderkans.
His mother hung the Global Medal above the television set.
"He must have been brave," she said. "We had a fine son."
"He was our only son," her husband said. "What did he volunteer
for? Couldn't somebody else have done it?"
His wife started to cry. Awkwardly, he embraced her. He wondered
what his son had wanted that he couldn't get at home.
THE END | Read thinks Rashid is a very special man. | Read thinks Sergeant Rashid is the ideal UN soldier. Rashid is completely devoted to world peace at any cost. | Read thinks Rashid is weak because Rashid wants to help the wounded. | Read thinks Rashid is crazy for using Molotov cocktails. | 1 |
24278_LON5P1ZP_5 | Why wasn't Read wearing his green beret when arrested Umluana? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Analog, January 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE
GREEN
BERET
By TOM PURDOM
It's not so much the decisions a man does make that mark
him as a Man—but the ones he refrains from making. Like the
decision "I've had enough!"
Illustrated by Schoenherr
Read locked the door and drew his pistol. Sergeant Rashid handed
Premier Umluana the warrant.
"We're from the UN Inspector Corps," Sergeant Rashid said. "I'm
very sorry, but we have to arrest you and bring you in for trial
by the World Court."
If Umluana noticed Read's gun, he didn't show it. He read the
warrant carefully. When he finished, he said something in Dutch.
"I don't know your language," Rashid said.
"Then I'll speak English." Umluana was a small man with wrinkled
brow, glasses and a mustache. His skin was a shade lighter than
Read's. "The Inspector General doesn't have the power to arrest a
head of state—especially the Premier of Belderkan. Now, if
you'll excuse me, I must return to my party."
In the other room people laughed and talked. Glasses clinked in
the late afternoon. Read knew two armed men stood just outside
the door. "If you leave, Premier, I'll have to shoot you."
"I don't think so," Umluana said. "No, if you kill me, all Africa
will rise against the world. You don't want me dead. You want me
in court."
Read clicked off the safety.
"Corporal Read is very young," Rashid said, "but he's a crack
shot. That's why I brought him with me. I think he
likes
to
shoot, too."
Umluana turned back to Rashid a second too soon. He saw the
sergeant's upraised hand before it collided with his neck.
"Help!
Kidnap.
"
Rashid judo chopped him and swung the inert body over his
shoulders. Read pulled a flat grenade from his vest pocket. He
dropped it and yellow psycho gas hissed from the valve.
"Let's be off," Rashid said.
The door lock snapped as they went out the window. Two men with
rifles plunged into the gas; sighing, they fell to the floor in a
catatonic trance.
A little car skimmed across the lawn. Bearing the Scourge of
Africa, Rashid struggled toward it. Read walked backward,
covering their retreat.
The car stopped, whirling blades holding it a few inches off the
lawn. They climbed in.
"How did it go?" The driver and another inspector occupied the
front seat.
"They'll be after us in half a minute."
The other inspector carried a light machine gun and a box of
grenades. "I better cover," he said.
"Thanks," Rashid said.
The inspector slid out of the car and ran to a clump of bushes.
The driver pushed in the accelerator. As they swerved toward the
south, Read saw a dozen armed men run out of the house. A grenade
arced from the bushes and the pursuers recoiled from the cloud
that rose before them.
"Is he all right?" the driver asked.
"I don't think I hurt him." Rashid took a syrette from his vest
pocket. "Well, Read, it looks like we're in for a fight. In a few
minutes Miaka Station will know we're coming. And God knows what
will happen at the Game Preserve."
Read wanted to jump out of the car. He could die any minute. But
he had set his life on a well-oiled track and he couldn't get off
until they reached Geneva.
"They don't know who's coming," he said. "They don't make them
tough enough to stop this boy."
Staring straight ahead, he didn't see the sergeant smile.
Two types of recruits are accepted by the UN Inspector Corps:
those with a fanatic loyalty to the ideals of peace and world
order, and those who are loyal to nothing but themselves. Read
was the second type.
A tall, lanky Negro he had spent his school days in one of the
drab suburbs that ring every prosperous American city. It was the
home of factory workers, clerks, semiskilled technicians, all who
do the drudge work of civilization and know they will never do
more. The adults spent their days with television, alcohol and
drugs; the young spent their days with gangs, sex, television and
alcohol. What else was there? Those who could have told him
neither studied nor taught at his schools. What he saw on the
concrete fields between the tall apartment houses marked the
limits of life's possibilities.
He had belonged to a gang called The Golden Spacemen. "Nobody
fools with me," he bragged. "When Harry Read's out, there's a
tiger running loose." No one knew how many times he nearly ran
from other clubs, how carefully he picked the safest spot on the
battle line.
"A man ought to be a man," he once told a girl. "He ought to do a
man's work. Did you ever notice how our fathers look, how they
sleep so much? I don't want to be like that. I want to be
something proud."
He joined the UN Inspector Corps at eighteen, in 1978. The
international cops wore green berets, high buttonless boots, bush
jackets. They were very special men.
For the first time in his life, his father said something about
his ambitions.
"Don't you like America, Harry? Do you
want
to be without a
country? This is the best country in the world. All my life I've
made a good living. Haven't you had everything you ever wanted?
I've been a king compared to people overseas. Why, you stay here
and go to trade school and in two years you'll be living just
like me."
"I don't want that," Read said.
"What do you mean, you don't want that?"
"You could join the American Army," his mother said. "That's as
good as a trade school. If you have to be a soldier."
"I want to be a UN man. I've already enlisted. I'm in! What do
you care what I do?"
The UN Inspector Corps had been founded to enforce the Nuclear
Disarmament Treaty of 1966. Through the years it had acquired
other jobs. UN men no longer went unarmed. Trained to use small
arms and gas weapons, they guarded certain borders, bodyguarded
diplomats and UN officials, even put down riots that threatened
international peace. As the UN evolved into a strong world
government, the UN Inspector Corps steadily acquired new powers.
Read went through six months training on Madagascar.
Twice he nearly got expelled for picking fights with smaller men.
Rather than resign, he accepted punishment which assigned him to
weeks of dull, filthy extra labor. He hated the restrictions and
the iron fence of regulations. He hated boredom, loneliness and
isolation.
And yet he responded with enthusiasm. They had given him a job. A
job many people considered important.
He took his turn guarding the still disputed borders of Korea. He
served on the rescue teams that patrol the busy Polar routes. He
mounted guard at the 1980 World's Fair in Rangoon.
"I liked Rangoon," he even told a friend. "I even liked Korea.
But I think I liked the Pole job best. You sit around playing
cards and shooting the bull and then there's a plane crash or
something and you go out and win a medal. That's great for me.
I'm lazy and I like excitement."
One power implied in the UN Charter no Secretary General or
Inspector General had ever tried to use. The power to arrest any
head of state whose country violated international law. Could the
World Court try and imprison a politician who had conspired to
attack another nation?
For years Africa had been called "The South America of the Old
World." Revolution followed revolution. Colonies became
democracies. Democracies became dictatorships or dissolved in
civil war. Men planted bases on the moon and in four years,
1978-82, ringed the world with matter transmitters; but the black
population of Africa still struggled toward political equality.
Umluana took control of Belderkan in 1979. The tiny, former Dutch
colony, had been a tottering democracy for ten years. The very
day he took control the new dictator and his African party began
to build up the Belderkan Army. For years he had preached a new
Africa, united, free of white masters, the home of a vigorous and
perfect Negro society. His critics called him a hypocritical
racist, an opportunist using the desires of the African people to
build himself an empire.
He began a propaganda war against neighboring South Africa,
promising the liberation of that strife-torn land. Most Negro
leaders, having just won representation in the South African
Parliament, told him to liberate his own country. They believed
they could use their first small voice in the government to win
true freedom for their people.
But the radio assault and the arms buildup continued. Early in
1982, South Africa claimed the Belderkan Army exceeded the size
agreed to in the Disarmament Treaty. The European countries and
some African nations joined in the accusation. China called the
uproar a vicious slur on a new African nation. The United States
and Russia, trying not to get entangled, asked for more
investigation by the UN.
But the evidence was clear. Umluana was defying world law. If he
got away with it, some larger and more dangerous nation might
follow his precedent. And the arms race would begin again.
The Inspector General decided. They would enter Belderkan, arrest
Umluana and try him by due process before the World Court. If the
plan succeeded, mankind would be a long step farther from nuclear
war.
Read didn't know much about the complicated political reasons for
the arrest. He liked the Corp and he liked being in the Corp. He
went where they sent him and did what they told him to do.
The car skimmed above the tree-tops. The driver and his two
passengers scanned the sky.
A plane would have been a faster way to get out of the country.
But then they would have spent hours flying over Africa, with
Belderkan fighters in hot pursuit, other nations joining the
chase and the world uproar gaining volume. By transmitter, if all
went well, they could have Umluana in Geneva in an hour.
They were racing toward Miaka, a branch transmitter station. From
Miaka they would transmit to the Belderkan Preserve, a famous
tourist attraction whose station could transmit to any point on
the globe. Even now a dozen inspectors were taking over the Game
Preserve station and manning its controls.
They had made no plans to take over Miaka. They planned to get
there before it could be defended.
"There's no military base near Miaka," Rashid said. "We might get
there before the Belderkans."
"Here comes our escort," Read said.
A big car rose from the jungle. This one had a recoilless rifle
mounted on the roof. The driver and the gunner waved and fell in
behind them.
"One thing," Read said, "I don't think they'll shoot at us while
he's
in the car."
"Don't be certain, corporal. All these strong-arm movements are
alike. I'll bet Umluana's lieutenants are hoping he'll become a
dead legend. Then they can become live conquerors."
Sergeant Rashid came from Cairo. He had degrees in science and
history from Cambridge but only the Corp gave him work that
satisfied his conscience. He hated war. It was that simple.
Read looked back. He saw three spots of sunlight about two
hundred feet up and a good mile behind.
"Here they come, Sarge."
Rashid turned his head. He waved frantically. The two men in the
other car waved back.
"Shall I duck under the trees?" the driver asked.
"Not yet. Not until we have to."
Read fingered the machine gun he had picked up when he got in the
car. He had never been shot at. Twice he had faced an unarmed
mob, but a few shots had sent them running.
Birds flew screaming from their nests. Monkeys screeched and
threw things at the noisy, speeding cars. A little cloud of birds
surrounded each vehicle.
The escort car made a sharp turn and charged their pursuers. The
big rifle fired twice. Read saw the Belderkan cars scatter.
Suddenly machine-gun bullets cracked and whined beside him.
"Evade," Rashid said. "Don't go down."
Without losing any forward speed, the driver took them straight
up. Read's stomach bounced.
A shell exploded above them. The car rocked. He raised his eyes
and saw a long crack in the roof.
"Hit the floor," Rashid said.
They knelt on the cramped floor. Rashid put on his gas mask and
Read copied him. Umluana breathed like a furnace, still
unconscious from the injection Rashid had given him.
I can't do anything
, Read thought.
They're too far away to
shoot back. All we can do is run.
The sky was clear and blue. The jungle was a noisy bazaar of
color. In the distance guns crashed. He listened to shells
whistle by and the whipcrack of machine-gun bullets. The car
roller-coastered up and down. Every time a shell passed, he
crawled in waves down his own back.
Another explosion, this time very loud.
Rashid raised his eyes above the seat and looked out the rear
window. "Two left. Keep down, Read."
"Can't we go down?" Read said.
"They'll get to Miaka before us."
He shut his eyes when he heard another loud explosion.
Sergeant Rashid looked out the window again. He swore bitterly in
English and Egyptian. Read raised his head. The two cars behind
them weren't fighting each other. A long way back the tree-tops
burned.
"How much farther?" Rashid said. The masks muffled their voices.
"There it is now. Shall I take us right in?"
"I think you'd better."
The station was a glass diamond in a small clearing. The driver
slowed down, then crashed through the glass walls and hovered by
the transmitter booth.
Rashid opened the door and threw out two grenades. Read jumped
out and the two of them struggled toward the booth with Umluana.
The driver, pistol in hand, ran for the control panel.
There were three technicians in the station and no passengers.
All three panicked when the psycho gas enveloped them. They ran
howling for the jungle.
Through the window of his mask, Read saw their pursuers land in
the clearing. Machine-gun bullets raked the building. They got
Umluana in the booth and hit the floor. Read took aim and opened
fire on the largest car.
"Now, I can shoot back," he said. "Now we'll see what they do."
"Are you ready, Rashid?" yelled the driver.
"Man, get us out of here!"
The booth door shut. When it opened, they were at the Game
Preserve.
The station jutted from the side of a hill. A glass-walled
waiting room surrounded the bank of transmitter booths. Read
looked out the door and saw his first battlefield.
Directly in front of him, his head shattered by a bullet, a dead
inspector lay behind an overturned couch.
Read had seen dozens of training films taken during actual
battles or after atomic attacks. He had laughed when other
recruits complained. "That's the way this world is. You people
with the weak stomachs better get used to it."
Now he slid against the rear wall of the transmitter booth.
A wounded inspector crawled across the floor to the booth. Read
couldn't see his wound, only the pain scratched on his face and
the blood he deposited on the floor.
"Did you get Umluana?" he asked Sergeant Rashid.
"He's in the booth. What's going on?" Rashid's Middle East Oxford
seemed more clipped than ever.
"They hit us with two companies of troops a few minutes ago. I
think half our men are wounded."
"Can we get out of here?"
"They machine-gunned the controls."
Rashid swore. "You heard him, Read! Get out there and help those
men."
He heard the screams of the wounded, the crack of rifles and
machine guns, all the terrifying noise of war. But since his
eighteenth year he had done everything his superiors told him to
do.
He started crawling toward an easy-chair that looked like good
cover. A bullet cracked above his head, so close he felt the
shock wave. He got up, ran panicky, crouched, and dove behind the
chair.
An inspector cracked the valve on a smoke grenade. A white fog
spread through the building. They could see anyone who tried to
rush them but the besiegers couldn't pick out targets.
Above the noise, he heard Rashid.
"I'm calling South Africa Station for a copter. It's the only way
out of here. Until it comes, we've got to hold them back."
Read thought of the green beret he had stuffed in his pocket that
morning. He stuck it on his head and cocked it. He didn't need
plain clothes anymore and he wanted to wear at least a part of
his uniform.
Bullets had completely shattered the wall in front of him. He
stared through the murk, across the broken glass. He was Corporal
Harry Read, UN Inspector Corps—a very special man. If he didn't
do a good job here, he wasn't the man he claimed to be. This
might be the only real test he would ever face.
He heard a shout in rapid French. He turned to his right. Men in
red loincloths ran zigzagging toward the station. They carried
light automatic rifles. Half of them wore gas masks.
"Shoot the masks," he yelled. "Aim for the masks."
The machine gun kicked and chattered on his shoulder. He picked a
target and squeezed off a burst. Tensely, he hunted for another
mask. Three grenades arced through the air and yellow gas spread
across the battlefield. The attackers ran through it. A few yards
beyond the gas, some of them turned and ran for their own lines.
In a moment only half a dozen masked men still advanced. The
inspectors fired a long, noisy volley. When they stopped only
four attackers remained on their feet. And they were running for
cover.
The attackers had come straight up a road that led from the Game
Preserve to the station. They had not expected any resistance.
The UN men had already taken over the station, chased out the
passengers and technicians and taken up defense positions; they
had met the Belderkans with a dozen grenades and sent them
scurrying for cover. The fight so far had been vicious but
disorganized. But the Belderkans had a few hundred men and knew
they had wrecked the transmitter controls.
The first direct attack had been repulsed. They could attack many
more times and continue to spray the building with bullets. They
could also try to go around the hill and attack the station from
above; if they did, the inspectors had a good view of the hill
and should see them going up.
The inspectors had taken up good defensive positions. In spite of
their losses, they still had enough firepower to cover the area
surrounding the station.
Read surveyed his sector of fire. About two hundred yards to his
left, he saw the top of a small ditch. Using the ditch for cover,
the Belderkans could sneak to the top of the hill.
Gas grenades are only three inches long. They hold cubic yards of
gas under high pressure. Read unclipped a telescoping rod from
his vest pocket. He opened it and a pair of sights flipped up. A
thin track ran down one side.
He had about a dozen grenades left, three self-propelling. He
slid an SP grenade into the rod's track and estimated windage and
range. Sighting carefully, not breathing, muscles relaxed, the
rod rock steady, he fired and lobbed the little grenade into the
ditch. He dropped another grenade beside it.
The heavy gas would lie there for hours.
Sergeant Rashid ran crouched from man to man. He did what he
could to shield the wounded.
"Well, corporal, how are you?"
"Not too bad, sergeant. See that ditch out there? I put a little
gas in it."
"Good work. How's your ammunition?"
"A dozen grenades. Half a barrel of shells."
"The copter will be here in half an hour. We'll put Umluana on,
then try to save ourselves. Once he's gone, I think we ought to
surrender."
"How do you think they'll treat us?"
"That we'll have to see."
An occasional bullet cracked and whined through the misty room.
Near him a man gasped frantically for air. On the sunny field a
wounded man screamed for help.
"There's a garage downstairs," Rashid said. "In case the copter
doesn't get here on time, I've got a man filling wine bottles
with gasoline."
"We'll stop them, Sarge. Don't worry."
Rashid ran off. Read stared across the green land and listened to
the pound of his heart. What were the Belderkans planning? A mass
frontal attack? To sneak in over the top of the hill?
He didn't think, anymore than a rabbit thinks when it lies hiding
from the fox or a panther thinks when it crouches on a branch
above the trail. His skin tightened and relaxed on his body.
"Listen," said a German.
Far down the hill he heard the deep-throated rumble of a big
motor.
"Armor," the German said.
The earth shook. The tank rounded the bend. Read watched the
squat, angular monster until its stubby gun pointed at the
station. It stopped less than two hundred yards away.
A loud-speaker blared.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
YOU MAY THINK US SAVAGES
BUT WE HAVE MODERN WEAPONS.
WE HAVE ATOMIC WARHEADS,
ALL GASES, ROCKETS
AND FLAME THROWERS. IF
YOU DO NOT SURRENDER
OUR PREMIER, WE WILL DESTROY YOU.
"They know we don't have any big weapons," Read said. "They know
we have only gas grenades and small arms."
He looked nervously from side to side. They couldn't bring the
copter in with that thing squatting out there.
A few feet away, sprawled behind a barricade of tables, lay a man
in advanced shock. His deadly white skin shone like ivory. They
wouldn't even look like that. One nuclear shell from that gun and
they'd be vaporized. Or perhaps the tank had sonic projectors;
then the skin would peel off their bones. Or they might be
burned, or cut up by shrapnel, or gassed with some new mist their
masks couldn't filter.
Read shut his eyes. All around him he heard heavy breathing,
mumbled comments, curses. Clothes rustled as men moved restlessly.
But already the voice of Sergeant Rashid resounded in the murky
room.
"We've got to knock that thing out before the copter comes.
Otherwise, he can't land. I have six Molotov cocktails here. Who
wants to go hunting with me?"
For two years Read had served under Sergeant Rashid. To him, the
sergeant was everything a UN inspector should be. Rashid's
devotion to peace had no limits.
Read's psych tests said pride alone drove him on. That was good
enough for the UN; they only rejected men whose loyalties might
conflict with their duties. But an assault on the tank required
something more than a hunger for self-respect.
Read had seen the inspector who covered their getaway. He had
watched their escort charge three-to-one odds. He had seen
another inspector stay behind at Miaka Station. And here, in this
building, lay battered men and dead men.
All UN inspectors. All part of his life.
And he was part of their life. Their blood, their sacrifice, and
pain, had become a part of him.
"I'll take a cocktail, Sarge."
"Is that Read?"
"Who else did you expect?"
"Nobody. Anybody else?"
"I'll go," the Frenchman said. "Three should be enough. Give us a
good smoke screen."
Rashid snapped orders. He put the German inspector in charge of
Umluana. Read, the Frenchman and himself, he stationed at
thirty-foot intervals along the floor.
"Remember," Rashid said. "We have to knock out that gun."
Read had given away his machine gun. He held a gas-filled bottle
in each hand. His automatic nestled in its shoulder holster.
Rashid whistled.
Dozens of smoke grenades tumbled through the air. Thick mist
engulfed the tank. Read stood up and ran forward. He crouched but
didn't zigzag. Speed counted most here.
Gunfire shook the hill. The Belderkans couldn't see them but they
knew what was going on and they fired systematically into the
smoke.
Bullets ploughed the ground beside him. He raised his head and
found the dim silhouette of the tank. He tried not to think about
bullets ploughing through his flesh.
A bullet slammed into his hip. He fell on his back, screaming.
"Sarge.
Sarge.
"
"I'm hit, too," Rashid said. "Don't stop if you can move."
Listen to him. What's he got, a sprained ankle?
But he didn't feel any pain. He closed his eyes and threw himself
onto his stomach. And nearly fainted from pain. He screamed and
quivered. The pain stopped. He stretched out his hands, gripping
the wine bottles, and inched forward. Pain stabbed him from
stomach to knee.
"I can't move, Sarge."
"Read, you've got to. I think you're the only—"
"What?"
Guns clattered. Bullets cracked.
"Sergeant Rashid! Answer me."
He heard nothing but the lonely passage of the bullets in the
mist.
"I'm a UN man," he mumbled. "You people up there know what a UN
man is? You know what happens when you meet one?"
When he reached the tank, he had another bullet in his right arm.
But they didn't know he was coming and when you get within ten
feet of a tank, the men inside can't see you.
He just had to stand up and drop the bottle down the gun barrel.
That was all—with a broken hip and a wounded right arm.
He knew they would see him when he stood up but he didn't think
about that. He didn't think about Sergeant Rashid, about the
complicated politics of Africa, about crowded market streets. He
had to kill the tank. That was all he thought about. He had
decided something in the world was more important than himself,
but he didn't know it or realize the psychologists would be
surprised to see him do this. He had made many decisions in the
last few minutes. He had ceased to think about them or anything
else.
With his cigarette lighter, he lit the rag stuffed in the end of
the bottle.
Biting his tongue, he pulled himself up the front of the tank.
His long arm stretched for the muzzle of the gun. He tossed the
bottle down the dark throat.
As he fell, the machine-gun bullets hit him in the chest, then in
the neck. He didn't feel them. He had fainted the moment he felt
the bottle leave his hand.
The copter landed ten minutes later. Umluana left in a shower of
bullets. A Russian private, the ranking man alive in the station,
surrendered the survivors to the Belderkans.
His mother hung the Global Medal above the television set.
"He must have been brave," she said. "We had a fine son."
"He was our only son," her husband said. "What did he volunteer
for? Couldn't somebody else have done it?"
His wife started to cry. Awkwardly, he embraced her. He wondered
what his son had wanted that he couldn't get at home.
THE END | His beret was knocked off his head in the scuffle. | Read doesn't really like wearing hats. | Read was in plain clothes. They were undercover. | Read forgot that he placed it in his pocket earlier. | 2 |
24278_LON5P1ZP_6 | Why can't they transmit Umluana as planned? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Analog, January 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE
GREEN
BERET
By TOM PURDOM
It's not so much the decisions a man does make that mark
him as a Man—but the ones he refrains from making. Like the
decision "I've had enough!"
Illustrated by Schoenherr
Read locked the door and drew his pistol. Sergeant Rashid handed
Premier Umluana the warrant.
"We're from the UN Inspector Corps," Sergeant Rashid said. "I'm
very sorry, but we have to arrest you and bring you in for trial
by the World Court."
If Umluana noticed Read's gun, he didn't show it. He read the
warrant carefully. When he finished, he said something in Dutch.
"I don't know your language," Rashid said.
"Then I'll speak English." Umluana was a small man with wrinkled
brow, glasses and a mustache. His skin was a shade lighter than
Read's. "The Inspector General doesn't have the power to arrest a
head of state—especially the Premier of Belderkan. Now, if
you'll excuse me, I must return to my party."
In the other room people laughed and talked. Glasses clinked in
the late afternoon. Read knew two armed men stood just outside
the door. "If you leave, Premier, I'll have to shoot you."
"I don't think so," Umluana said. "No, if you kill me, all Africa
will rise against the world. You don't want me dead. You want me
in court."
Read clicked off the safety.
"Corporal Read is very young," Rashid said, "but he's a crack
shot. That's why I brought him with me. I think he
likes
to
shoot, too."
Umluana turned back to Rashid a second too soon. He saw the
sergeant's upraised hand before it collided with his neck.
"Help!
Kidnap.
"
Rashid judo chopped him and swung the inert body over his
shoulders. Read pulled a flat grenade from his vest pocket. He
dropped it and yellow psycho gas hissed from the valve.
"Let's be off," Rashid said.
The door lock snapped as they went out the window. Two men with
rifles plunged into the gas; sighing, they fell to the floor in a
catatonic trance.
A little car skimmed across the lawn. Bearing the Scourge of
Africa, Rashid struggled toward it. Read walked backward,
covering their retreat.
The car stopped, whirling blades holding it a few inches off the
lawn. They climbed in.
"How did it go?" The driver and another inspector occupied the
front seat.
"They'll be after us in half a minute."
The other inspector carried a light machine gun and a box of
grenades. "I better cover," he said.
"Thanks," Rashid said.
The inspector slid out of the car and ran to a clump of bushes.
The driver pushed in the accelerator. As they swerved toward the
south, Read saw a dozen armed men run out of the house. A grenade
arced from the bushes and the pursuers recoiled from the cloud
that rose before them.
"Is he all right?" the driver asked.
"I don't think I hurt him." Rashid took a syrette from his vest
pocket. "Well, Read, it looks like we're in for a fight. In a few
minutes Miaka Station will know we're coming. And God knows what
will happen at the Game Preserve."
Read wanted to jump out of the car. He could die any minute. But
he had set his life on a well-oiled track and he couldn't get off
until they reached Geneva.
"They don't know who's coming," he said. "They don't make them
tough enough to stop this boy."
Staring straight ahead, he didn't see the sergeant smile.
Two types of recruits are accepted by the UN Inspector Corps:
those with a fanatic loyalty to the ideals of peace and world
order, and those who are loyal to nothing but themselves. Read
was the second type.
A tall, lanky Negro he had spent his school days in one of the
drab suburbs that ring every prosperous American city. It was the
home of factory workers, clerks, semiskilled technicians, all who
do the drudge work of civilization and know they will never do
more. The adults spent their days with television, alcohol and
drugs; the young spent their days with gangs, sex, television and
alcohol. What else was there? Those who could have told him
neither studied nor taught at his schools. What he saw on the
concrete fields between the tall apartment houses marked the
limits of life's possibilities.
He had belonged to a gang called The Golden Spacemen. "Nobody
fools with me," he bragged. "When Harry Read's out, there's a
tiger running loose." No one knew how many times he nearly ran
from other clubs, how carefully he picked the safest spot on the
battle line.
"A man ought to be a man," he once told a girl. "He ought to do a
man's work. Did you ever notice how our fathers look, how they
sleep so much? I don't want to be like that. I want to be
something proud."
He joined the UN Inspector Corps at eighteen, in 1978. The
international cops wore green berets, high buttonless boots, bush
jackets. They were very special men.
For the first time in his life, his father said something about
his ambitions.
"Don't you like America, Harry? Do you
want
to be without a
country? This is the best country in the world. All my life I've
made a good living. Haven't you had everything you ever wanted?
I've been a king compared to people overseas. Why, you stay here
and go to trade school and in two years you'll be living just
like me."
"I don't want that," Read said.
"What do you mean, you don't want that?"
"You could join the American Army," his mother said. "That's as
good as a trade school. If you have to be a soldier."
"I want to be a UN man. I've already enlisted. I'm in! What do
you care what I do?"
The UN Inspector Corps had been founded to enforce the Nuclear
Disarmament Treaty of 1966. Through the years it had acquired
other jobs. UN men no longer went unarmed. Trained to use small
arms and gas weapons, they guarded certain borders, bodyguarded
diplomats and UN officials, even put down riots that threatened
international peace. As the UN evolved into a strong world
government, the UN Inspector Corps steadily acquired new powers.
Read went through six months training on Madagascar.
Twice he nearly got expelled for picking fights with smaller men.
Rather than resign, he accepted punishment which assigned him to
weeks of dull, filthy extra labor. He hated the restrictions and
the iron fence of regulations. He hated boredom, loneliness and
isolation.
And yet he responded with enthusiasm. They had given him a job. A
job many people considered important.
He took his turn guarding the still disputed borders of Korea. He
served on the rescue teams that patrol the busy Polar routes. He
mounted guard at the 1980 World's Fair in Rangoon.
"I liked Rangoon," he even told a friend. "I even liked Korea.
But I think I liked the Pole job best. You sit around playing
cards and shooting the bull and then there's a plane crash or
something and you go out and win a medal. That's great for me.
I'm lazy and I like excitement."
One power implied in the UN Charter no Secretary General or
Inspector General had ever tried to use. The power to arrest any
head of state whose country violated international law. Could the
World Court try and imprison a politician who had conspired to
attack another nation?
For years Africa had been called "The South America of the Old
World." Revolution followed revolution. Colonies became
democracies. Democracies became dictatorships or dissolved in
civil war. Men planted bases on the moon and in four years,
1978-82, ringed the world with matter transmitters; but the black
population of Africa still struggled toward political equality.
Umluana took control of Belderkan in 1979. The tiny, former Dutch
colony, had been a tottering democracy for ten years. The very
day he took control the new dictator and his African party began
to build up the Belderkan Army. For years he had preached a new
Africa, united, free of white masters, the home of a vigorous and
perfect Negro society. His critics called him a hypocritical
racist, an opportunist using the desires of the African people to
build himself an empire.
He began a propaganda war against neighboring South Africa,
promising the liberation of that strife-torn land. Most Negro
leaders, having just won representation in the South African
Parliament, told him to liberate his own country. They believed
they could use their first small voice in the government to win
true freedom for their people.
But the radio assault and the arms buildup continued. Early in
1982, South Africa claimed the Belderkan Army exceeded the size
agreed to in the Disarmament Treaty. The European countries and
some African nations joined in the accusation. China called the
uproar a vicious slur on a new African nation. The United States
and Russia, trying not to get entangled, asked for more
investigation by the UN.
But the evidence was clear. Umluana was defying world law. If he
got away with it, some larger and more dangerous nation might
follow his precedent. And the arms race would begin again.
The Inspector General decided. They would enter Belderkan, arrest
Umluana and try him by due process before the World Court. If the
plan succeeded, mankind would be a long step farther from nuclear
war.
Read didn't know much about the complicated political reasons for
the arrest. He liked the Corp and he liked being in the Corp. He
went where they sent him and did what they told him to do.
The car skimmed above the tree-tops. The driver and his two
passengers scanned the sky.
A plane would have been a faster way to get out of the country.
But then they would have spent hours flying over Africa, with
Belderkan fighters in hot pursuit, other nations joining the
chase and the world uproar gaining volume. By transmitter, if all
went well, they could have Umluana in Geneva in an hour.
They were racing toward Miaka, a branch transmitter station. From
Miaka they would transmit to the Belderkan Preserve, a famous
tourist attraction whose station could transmit to any point on
the globe. Even now a dozen inspectors were taking over the Game
Preserve station and manning its controls.
They had made no plans to take over Miaka. They planned to get
there before it could be defended.
"There's no military base near Miaka," Rashid said. "We might get
there before the Belderkans."
"Here comes our escort," Read said.
A big car rose from the jungle. This one had a recoilless rifle
mounted on the roof. The driver and the gunner waved and fell in
behind them.
"One thing," Read said, "I don't think they'll shoot at us while
he's
in the car."
"Don't be certain, corporal. All these strong-arm movements are
alike. I'll bet Umluana's lieutenants are hoping he'll become a
dead legend. Then they can become live conquerors."
Sergeant Rashid came from Cairo. He had degrees in science and
history from Cambridge but only the Corp gave him work that
satisfied his conscience. He hated war. It was that simple.
Read looked back. He saw three spots of sunlight about two
hundred feet up and a good mile behind.
"Here they come, Sarge."
Rashid turned his head. He waved frantically. The two men in the
other car waved back.
"Shall I duck under the trees?" the driver asked.
"Not yet. Not until we have to."
Read fingered the machine gun he had picked up when he got in the
car. He had never been shot at. Twice he had faced an unarmed
mob, but a few shots had sent them running.
Birds flew screaming from their nests. Monkeys screeched and
threw things at the noisy, speeding cars. A little cloud of birds
surrounded each vehicle.
The escort car made a sharp turn and charged their pursuers. The
big rifle fired twice. Read saw the Belderkan cars scatter.
Suddenly machine-gun bullets cracked and whined beside him.
"Evade," Rashid said. "Don't go down."
Without losing any forward speed, the driver took them straight
up. Read's stomach bounced.
A shell exploded above them. The car rocked. He raised his eyes
and saw a long crack in the roof.
"Hit the floor," Rashid said.
They knelt on the cramped floor. Rashid put on his gas mask and
Read copied him. Umluana breathed like a furnace, still
unconscious from the injection Rashid had given him.
I can't do anything
, Read thought.
They're too far away to
shoot back. All we can do is run.
The sky was clear and blue. The jungle was a noisy bazaar of
color. In the distance guns crashed. He listened to shells
whistle by and the whipcrack of machine-gun bullets. The car
roller-coastered up and down. Every time a shell passed, he
crawled in waves down his own back.
Another explosion, this time very loud.
Rashid raised his eyes above the seat and looked out the rear
window. "Two left. Keep down, Read."
"Can't we go down?" Read said.
"They'll get to Miaka before us."
He shut his eyes when he heard another loud explosion.
Sergeant Rashid looked out the window again. He swore bitterly in
English and Egyptian. Read raised his head. The two cars behind
them weren't fighting each other. A long way back the tree-tops
burned.
"How much farther?" Rashid said. The masks muffled their voices.
"There it is now. Shall I take us right in?"
"I think you'd better."
The station was a glass diamond in a small clearing. The driver
slowed down, then crashed through the glass walls and hovered by
the transmitter booth.
Rashid opened the door and threw out two grenades. Read jumped
out and the two of them struggled toward the booth with Umluana.
The driver, pistol in hand, ran for the control panel.
There were three technicians in the station and no passengers.
All three panicked when the psycho gas enveloped them. They ran
howling for the jungle.
Through the window of his mask, Read saw their pursuers land in
the clearing. Machine-gun bullets raked the building. They got
Umluana in the booth and hit the floor. Read took aim and opened
fire on the largest car.
"Now, I can shoot back," he said. "Now we'll see what they do."
"Are you ready, Rashid?" yelled the driver.
"Man, get us out of here!"
The booth door shut. When it opened, they were at the Game
Preserve.
The station jutted from the side of a hill. A glass-walled
waiting room surrounded the bank of transmitter booths. Read
looked out the door and saw his first battlefield.
Directly in front of him, his head shattered by a bullet, a dead
inspector lay behind an overturned couch.
Read had seen dozens of training films taken during actual
battles or after atomic attacks. He had laughed when other
recruits complained. "That's the way this world is. You people
with the weak stomachs better get used to it."
Now he slid against the rear wall of the transmitter booth.
A wounded inspector crawled across the floor to the booth. Read
couldn't see his wound, only the pain scratched on his face and
the blood he deposited on the floor.
"Did you get Umluana?" he asked Sergeant Rashid.
"He's in the booth. What's going on?" Rashid's Middle East Oxford
seemed more clipped than ever.
"They hit us with two companies of troops a few minutes ago. I
think half our men are wounded."
"Can we get out of here?"
"They machine-gunned the controls."
Rashid swore. "You heard him, Read! Get out there and help those
men."
He heard the screams of the wounded, the crack of rifles and
machine guns, all the terrifying noise of war. But since his
eighteenth year he had done everything his superiors told him to
do.
He started crawling toward an easy-chair that looked like good
cover. A bullet cracked above his head, so close he felt the
shock wave. He got up, ran panicky, crouched, and dove behind the
chair.
An inspector cracked the valve on a smoke grenade. A white fog
spread through the building. They could see anyone who tried to
rush them but the besiegers couldn't pick out targets.
Above the noise, he heard Rashid.
"I'm calling South Africa Station for a copter. It's the only way
out of here. Until it comes, we've got to hold them back."
Read thought of the green beret he had stuffed in his pocket that
morning. He stuck it on his head and cocked it. He didn't need
plain clothes anymore and he wanted to wear at least a part of
his uniform.
Bullets had completely shattered the wall in front of him. He
stared through the murk, across the broken glass. He was Corporal
Harry Read, UN Inspector Corps—a very special man. If he didn't
do a good job here, he wasn't the man he claimed to be. This
might be the only real test he would ever face.
He heard a shout in rapid French. He turned to his right. Men in
red loincloths ran zigzagging toward the station. They carried
light automatic rifles. Half of them wore gas masks.
"Shoot the masks," he yelled. "Aim for the masks."
The machine gun kicked and chattered on his shoulder. He picked a
target and squeezed off a burst. Tensely, he hunted for another
mask. Three grenades arced through the air and yellow gas spread
across the battlefield. The attackers ran through it. A few yards
beyond the gas, some of them turned and ran for their own lines.
In a moment only half a dozen masked men still advanced. The
inspectors fired a long, noisy volley. When they stopped only
four attackers remained on their feet. And they were running for
cover.
The attackers had come straight up a road that led from the Game
Preserve to the station. They had not expected any resistance.
The UN men had already taken over the station, chased out the
passengers and technicians and taken up defense positions; they
had met the Belderkans with a dozen grenades and sent them
scurrying for cover. The fight so far had been vicious but
disorganized. But the Belderkans had a few hundred men and knew
they had wrecked the transmitter controls.
The first direct attack had been repulsed. They could attack many
more times and continue to spray the building with bullets. They
could also try to go around the hill and attack the station from
above; if they did, the inspectors had a good view of the hill
and should see them going up.
The inspectors had taken up good defensive positions. In spite of
their losses, they still had enough firepower to cover the area
surrounding the station.
Read surveyed his sector of fire. About two hundred yards to his
left, he saw the top of a small ditch. Using the ditch for cover,
the Belderkans could sneak to the top of the hill.
Gas grenades are only three inches long. They hold cubic yards of
gas under high pressure. Read unclipped a telescoping rod from
his vest pocket. He opened it and a pair of sights flipped up. A
thin track ran down one side.
He had about a dozen grenades left, three self-propelling. He
slid an SP grenade into the rod's track and estimated windage and
range. Sighting carefully, not breathing, muscles relaxed, the
rod rock steady, he fired and lobbed the little grenade into the
ditch. He dropped another grenade beside it.
The heavy gas would lie there for hours.
Sergeant Rashid ran crouched from man to man. He did what he
could to shield the wounded.
"Well, corporal, how are you?"
"Not too bad, sergeant. See that ditch out there? I put a little
gas in it."
"Good work. How's your ammunition?"
"A dozen grenades. Half a barrel of shells."
"The copter will be here in half an hour. We'll put Umluana on,
then try to save ourselves. Once he's gone, I think we ought to
surrender."
"How do you think they'll treat us?"
"That we'll have to see."
An occasional bullet cracked and whined through the misty room.
Near him a man gasped frantically for air. On the sunny field a
wounded man screamed for help.
"There's a garage downstairs," Rashid said. "In case the copter
doesn't get here on time, I've got a man filling wine bottles
with gasoline."
"We'll stop them, Sarge. Don't worry."
Rashid ran off. Read stared across the green land and listened to
the pound of his heart. What were the Belderkans planning? A mass
frontal attack? To sneak in over the top of the hill?
He didn't think, anymore than a rabbit thinks when it lies hiding
from the fox or a panther thinks when it crouches on a branch
above the trail. His skin tightened and relaxed on his body.
"Listen," said a German.
Far down the hill he heard the deep-throated rumble of a big
motor.
"Armor," the German said.
The earth shook. The tank rounded the bend. Read watched the
squat, angular monster until its stubby gun pointed at the
station. It stopped less than two hundred yards away.
A loud-speaker blared.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
YOU MAY THINK US SAVAGES
BUT WE HAVE MODERN WEAPONS.
WE HAVE ATOMIC WARHEADS,
ALL GASES, ROCKETS
AND FLAME THROWERS. IF
YOU DO NOT SURRENDER
OUR PREMIER, WE WILL DESTROY YOU.
"They know we don't have any big weapons," Read said. "They know
we have only gas grenades and small arms."
He looked nervously from side to side. They couldn't bring the
copter in with that thing squatting out there.
A few feet away, sprawled behind a barricade of tables, lay a man
in advanced shock. His deadly white skin shone like ivory. They
wouldn't even look like that. One nuclear shell from that gun and
they'd be vaporized. Or perhaps the tank had sonic projectors;
then the skin would peel off their bones. Or they might be
burned, or cut up by shrapnel, or gassed with some new mist their
masks couldn't filter.
Read shut his eyes. All around him he heard heavy breathing,
mumbled comments, curses. Clothes rustled as men moved restlessly.
But already the voice of Sergeant Rashid resounded in the murky
room.
"We've got to knock that thing out before the copter comes.
Otherwise, he can't land. I have six Molotov cocktails here. Who
wants to go hunting with me?"
For two years Read had served under Sergeant Rashid. To him, the
sergeant was everything a UN inspector should be. Rashid's
devotion to peace had no limits.
Read's psych tests said pride alone drove him on. That was good
enough for the UN; they only rejected men whose loyalties might
conflict with their duties. But an assault on the tank required
something more than a hunger for self-respect.
Read had seen the inspector who covered their getaway. He had
watched their escort charge three-to-one odds. He had seen
another inspector stay behind at Miaka Station. And here, in this
building, lay battered men and dead men.
All UN inspectors. All part of his life.
And he was part of their life. Their blood, their sacrifice, and
pain, had become a part of him.
"I'll take a cocktail, Sarge."
"Is that Read?"
"Who else did you expect?"
"Nobody. Anybody else?"
"I'll go," the Frenchman said. "Three should be enough. Give us a
good smoke screen."
Rashid snapped orders. He put the German inspector in charge of
Umluana. Read, the Frenchman and himself, he stationed at
thirty-foot intervals along the floor.
"Remember," Rashid said. "We have to knock out that gun."
Read had given away his machine gun. He held a gas-filled bottle
in each hand. His automatic nestled in its shoulder holster.
Rashid whistled.
Dozens of smoke grenades tumbled through the air. Thick mist
engulfed the tank. Read stood up and ran forward. He crouched but
didn't zigzag. Speed counted most here.
Gunfire shook the hill. The Belderkans couldn't see them but they
knew what was going on and they fired systematically into the
smoke.
Bullets ploughed the ground beside him. He raised his head and
found the dim silhouette of the tank. He tried not to think about
bullets ploughing through his flesh.
A bullet slammed into his hip. He fell on his back, screaming.
"Sarge.
Sarge.
"
"I'm hit, too," Rashid said. "Don't stop if you can move."
Listen to him. What's he got, a sprained ankle?
But he didn't feel any pain. He closed his eyes and threw himself
onto his stomach. And nearly fainted from pain. He screamed and
quivered. The pain stopped. He stretched out his hands, gripping
the wine bottles, and inched forward. Pain stabbed him from
stomach to knee.
"I can't move, Sarge."
"Read, you've got to. I think you're the only—"
"What?"
Guns clattered. Bullets cracked.
"Sergeant Rashid! Answer me."
He heard nothing but the lonely passage of the bullets in the
mist.
"I'm a UN man," he mumbled. "You people up there know what a UN
man is? You know what happens when you meet one?"
When he reached the tank, he had another bullet in his right arm.
But they didn't know he was coming and when you get within ten
feet of a tank, the men inside can't see you.
He just had to stand up and drop the bottle down the gun barrel.
That was all—with a broken hip and a wounded right arm.
He knew they would see him when he stood up but he didn't think
about that. He didn't think about Sergeant Rashid, about the
complicated politics of Africa, about crowded market streets. He
had to kill the tank. That was all he thought about. He had
decided something in the world was more important than himself,
but he didn't know it or realize the psychologists would be
surprised to see him do this. He had made many decisions in the
last few minutes. He had ceased to think about them or anything
else.
With his cigarette lighter, he lit the rag stuffed in the end of
the bottle.
Biting his tongue, he pulled himself up the front of the tank.
His long arm stretched for the muzzle of the gun. He tossed the
bottle down the dark throat.
As he fell, the machine-gun bullets hit him in the chest, then in
the neck. He didn't feel them. He had fainted the moment he felt
the bottle leave his hand.
The copter landed ten minutes later. Umluana left in a shower of
bullets. A Russian private, the ranking man alive in the station,
surrendered the survivors to the Belderkans.
His mother hung the Global Medal above the television set.
"He must have been brave," she said. "We had a fine son."
"He was our only son," her husband said. "What did he volunteer
for? Couldn't somebody else have done it?"
His wife started to cry. Awkwardly, he embraced her. He wondered
what his son had wanted that he couldn't get at home.
THE END | The controls at the Geneva receiving station have been destroyed. | The controls at the Miaka station have been destroyed. | The controls at the UN receiving station have been destroyed. | The controls at the Belderkan Preserve have been destroyed. | 3 |
24278_LON5P1ZP_7 | Why are the Belderkans shooting if they might hit Umlauna? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Analog, January 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE
GREEN
BERET
By TOM PURDOM
It's not so much the decisions a man does make that mark
him as a Man—but the ones he refrains from making. Like the
decision "I've had enough!"
Illustrated by Schoenherr
Read locked the door and drew his pistol. Sergeant Rashid handed
Premier Umluana the warrant.
"We're from the UN Inspector Corps," Sergeant Rashid said. "I'm
very sorry, but we have to arrest you and bring you in for trial
by the World Court."
If Umluana noticed Read's gun, he didn't show it. He read the
warrant carefully. When he finished, he said something in Dutch.
"I don't know your language," Rashid said.
"Then I'll speak English." Umluana was a small man with wrinkled
brow, glasses and a mustache. His skin was a shade lighter than
Read's. "The Inspector General doesn't have the power to arrest a
head of state—especially the Premier of Belderkan. Now, if
you'll excuse me, I must return to my party."
In the other room people laughed and talked. Glasses clinked in
the late afternoon. Read knew two armed men stood just outside
the door. "If you leave, Premier, I'll have to shoot you."
"I don't think so," Umluana said. "No, if you kill me, all Africa
will rise against the world. You don't want me dead. You want me
in court."
Read clicked off the safety.
"Corporal Read is very young," Rashid said, "but he's a crack
shot. That's why I brought him with me. I think he
likes
to
shoot, too."
Umluana turned back to Rashid a second too soon. He saw the
sergeant's upraised hand before it collided with his neck.
"Help!
Kidnap.
"
Rashid judo chopped him and swung the inert body over his
shoulders. Read pulled a flat grenade from his vest pocket. He
dropped it and yellow psycho gas hissed from the valve.
"Let's be off," Rashid said.
The door lock snapped as they went out the window. Two men with
rifles plunged into the gas; sighing, they fell to the floor in a
catatonic trance.
A little car skimmed across the lawn. Bearing the Scourge of
Africa, Rashid struggled toward it. Read walked backward,
covering their retreat.
The car stopped, whirling blades holding it a few inches off the
lawn. They climbed in.
"How did it go?" The driver and another inspector occupied the
front seat.
"They'll be after us in half a minute."
The other inspector carried a light machine gun and a box of
grenades. "I better cover," he said.
"Thanks," Rashid said.
The inspector slid out of the car and ran to a clump of bushes.
The driver pushed in the accelerator. As they swerved toward the
south, Read saw a dozen armed men run out of the house. A grenade
arced from the bushes and the pursuers recoiled from the cloud
that rose before them.
"Is he all right?" the driver asked.
"I don't think I hurt him." Rashid took a syrette from his vest
pocket. "Well, Read, it looks like we're in for a fight. In a few
minutes Miaka Station will know we're coming. And God knows what
will happen at the Game Preserve."
Read wanted to jump out of the car. He could die any minute. But
he had set his life on a well-oiled track and he couldn't get off
until they reached Geneva.
"They don't know who's coming," he said. "They don't make them
tough enough to stop this boy."
Staring straight ahead, he didn't see the sergeant smile.
Two types of recruits are accepted by the UN Inspector Corps:
those with a fanatic loyalty to the ideals of peace and world
order, and those who are loyal to nothing but themselves. Read
was the second type.
A tall, lanky Negro he had spent his school days in one of the
drab suburbs that ring every prosperous American city. It was the
home of factory workers, clerks, semiskilled technicians, all who
do the drudge work of civilization and know they will never do
more. The adults spent their days with television, alcohol and
drugs; the young spent their days with gangs, sex, television and
alcohol. What else was there? Those who could have told him
neither studied nor taught at his schools. What he saw on the
concrete fields between the tall apartment houses marked the
limits of life's possibilities.
He had belonged to a gang called The Golden Spacemen. "Nobody
fools with me," he bragged. "When Harry Read's out, there's a
tiger running loose." No one knew how many times he nearly ran
from other clubs, how carefully he picked the safest spot on the
battle line.
"A man ought to be a man," he once told a girl. "He ought to do a
man's work. Did you ever notice how our fathers look, how they
sleep so much? I don't want to be like that. I want to be
something proud."
He joined the UN Inspector Corps at eighteen, in 1978. The
international cops wore green berets, high buttonless boots, bush
jackets. They were very special men.
For the first time in his life, his father said something about
his ambitions.
"Don't you like America, Harry? Do you
want
to be without a
country? This is the best country in the world. All my life I've
made a good living. Haven't you had everything you ever wanted?
I've been a king compared to people overseas. Why, you stay here
and go to trade school and in two years you'll be living just
like me."
"I don't want that," Read said.
"What do you mean, you don't want that?"
"You could join the American Army," his mother said. "That's as
good as a trade school. If you have to be a soldier."
"I want to be a UN man. I've already enlisted. I'm in! What do
you care what I do?"
The UN Inspector Corps had been founded to enforce the Nuclear
Disarmament Treaty of 1966. Through the years it had acquired
other jobs. UN men no longer went unarmed. Trained to use small
arms and gas weapons, they guarded certain borders, bodyguarded
diplomats and UN officials, even put down riots that threatened
international peace. As the UN evolved into a strong world
government, the UN Inspector Corps steadily acquired new powers.
Read went through six months training on Madagascar.
Twice he nearly got expelled for picking fights with smaller men.
Rather than resign, he accepted punishment which assigned him to
weeks of dull, filthy extra labor. He hated the restrictions and
the iron fence of regulations. He hated boredom, loneliness and
isolation.
And yet he responded with enthusiasm. They had given him a job. A
job many people considered important.
He took his turn guarding the still disputed borders of Korea. He
served on the rescue teams that patrol the busy Polar routes. He
mounted guard at the 1980 World's Fair in Rangoon.
"I liked Rangoon," he even told a friend. "I even liked Korea.
But I think I liked the Pole job best. You sit around playing
cards and shooting the bull and then there's a plane crash or
something and you go out and win a medal. That's great for me.
I'm lazy and I like excitement."
One power implied in the UN Charter no Secretary General or
Inspector General had ever tried to use. The power to arrest any
head of state whose country violated international law. Could the
World Court try and imprison a politician who had conspired to
attack another nation?
For years Africa had been called "The South America of the Old
World." Revolution followed revolution. Colonies became
democracies. Democracies became dictatorships or dissolved in
civil war. Men planted bases on the moon and in four years,
1978-82, ringed the world with matter transmitters; but the black
population of Africa still struggled toward political equality.
Umluana took control of Belderkan in 1979. The tiny, former Dutch
colony, had been a tottering democracy for ten years. The very
day he took control the new dictator and his African party began
to build up the Belderkan Army. For years he had preached a new
Africa, united, free of white masters, the home of a vigorous and
perfect Negro society. His critics called him a hypocritical
racist, an opportunist using the desires of the African people to
build himself an empire.
He began a propaganda war against neighboring South Africa,
promising the liberation of that strife-torn land. Most Negro
leaders, having just won representation in the South African
Parliament, told him to liberate his own country. They believed
they could use their first small voice in the government to win
true freedom for their people.
But the radio assault and the arms buildup continued. Early in
1982, South Africa claimed the Belderkan Army exceeded the size
agreed to in the Disarmament Treaty. The European countries and
some African nations joined in the accusation. China called the
uproar a vicious slur on a new African nation. The United States
and Russia, trying not to get entangled, asked for more
investigation by the UN.
But the evidence was clear. Umluana was defying world law. If he
got away with it, some larger and more dangerous nation might
follow his precedent. And the arms race would begin again.
The Inspector General decided. They would enter Belderkan, arrest
Umluana and try him by due process before the World Court. If the
plan succeeded, mankind would be a long step farther from nuclear
war.
Read didn't know much about the complicated political reasons for
the arrest. He liked the Corp and he liked being in the Corp. He
went where they sent him and did what they told him to do.
The car skimmed above the tree-tops. The driver and his two
passengers scanned the sky.
A plane would have been a faster way to get out of the country.
But then they would have spent hours flying over Africa, with
Belderkan fighters in hot pursuit, other nations joining the
chase and the world uproar gaining volume. By transmitter, if all
went well, they could have Umluana in Geneva in an hour.
They were racing toward Miaka, a branch transmitter station. From
Miaka they would transmit to the Belderkan Preserve, a famous
tourist attraction whose station could transmit to any point on
the globe. Even now a dozen inspectors were taking over the Game
Preserve station and manning its controls.
They had made no plans to take over Miaka. They planned to get
there before it could be defended.
"There's no military base near Miaka," Rashid said. "We might get
there before the Belderkans."
"Here comes our escort," Read said.
A big car rose from the jungle. This one had a recoilless rifle
mounted on the roof. The driver and the gunner waved and fell in
behind them.
"One thing," Read said, "I don't think they'll shoot at us while
he's
in the car."
"Don't be certain, corporal. All these strong-arm movements are
alike. I'll bet Umluana's lieutenants are hoping he'll become a
dead legend. Then they can become live conquerors."
Sergeant Rashid came from Cairo. He had degrees in science and
history from Cambridge but only the Corp gave him work that
satisfied his conscience. He hated war. It was that simple.
Read looked back. He saw three spots of sunlight about two
hundred feet up and a good mile behind.
"Here they come, Sarge."
Rashid turned his head. He waved frantically. The two men in the
other car waved back.
"Shall I duck under the trees?" the driver asked.
"Not yet. Not until we have to."
Read fingered the machine gun he had picked up when he got in the
car. He had never been shot at. Twice he had faced an unarmed
mob, but a few shots had sent them running.
Birds flew screaming from their nests. Monkeys screeched and
threw things at the noisy, speeding cars. A little cloud of birds
surrounded each vehicle.
The escort car made a sharp turn and charged their pursuers. The
big rifle fired twice. Read saw the Belderkan cars scatter.
Suddenly machine-gun bullets cracked and whined beside him.
"Evade," Rashid said. "Don't go down."
Without losing any forward speed, the driver took them straight
up. Read's stomach bounced.
A shell exploded above them. The car rocked. He raised his eyes
and saw a long crack in the roof.
"Hit the floor," Rashid said.
They knelt on the cramped floor. Rashid put on his gas mask and
Read copied him. Umluana breathed like a furnace, still
unconscious from the injection Rashid had given him.
I can't do anything
, Read thought.
They're too far away to
shoot back. All we can do is run.
The sky was clear and blue. The jungle was a noisy bazaar of
color. In the distance guns crashed. He listened to shells
whistle by and the whipcrack of machine-gun bullets. The car
roller-coastered up and down. Every time a shell passed, he
crawled in waves down his own back.
Another explosion, this time very loud.
Rashid raised his eyes above the seat and looked out the rear
window. "Two left. Keep down, Read."
"Can't we go down?" Read said.
"They'll get to Miaka before us."
He shut his eyes when he heard another loud explosion.
Sergeant Rashid looked out the window again. He swore bitterly in
English and Egyptian. Read raised his head. The two cars behind
them weren't fighting each other. A long way back the tree-tops
burned.
"How much farther?" Rashid said. The masks muffled their voices.
"There it is now. Shall I take us right in?"
"I think you'd better."
The station was a glass diamond in a small clearing. The driver
slowed down, then crashed through the glass walls and hovered by
the transmitter booth.
Rashid opened the door and threw out two grenades. Read jumped
out and the two of them struggled toward the booth with Umluana.
The driver, pistol in hand, ran for the control panel.
There were three technicians in the station and no passengers.
All three panicked when the psycho gas enveloped them. They ran
howling for the jungle.
Through the window of his mask, Read saw their pursuers land in
the clearing. Machine-gun bullets raked the building. They got
Umluana in the booth and hit the floor. Read took aim and opened
fire on the largest car.
"Now, I can shoot back," he said. "Now we'll see what they do."
"Are you ready, Rashid?" yelled the driver.
"Man, get us out of here!"
The booth door shut. When it opened, they were at the Game
Preserve.
The station jutted from the side of a hill. A glass-walled
waiting room surrounded the bank of transmitter booths. Read
looked out the door and saw his first battlefield.
Directly in front of him, his head shattered by a bullet, a dead
inspector lay behind an overturned couch.
Read had seen dozens of training films taken during actual
battles or after atomic attacks. He had laughed when other
recruits complained. "That's the way this world is. You people
with the weak stomachs better get used to it."
Now he slid against the rear wall of the transmitter booth.
A wounded inspector crawled across the floor to the booth. Read
couldn't see his wound, only the pain scratched on his face and
the blood he deposited on the floor.
"Did you get Umluana?" he asked Sergeant Rashid.
"He's in the booth. What's going on?" Rashid's Middle East Oxford
seemed more clipped than ever.
"They hit us with two companies of troops a few minutes ago. I
think half our men are wounded."
"Can we get out of here?"
"They machine-gunned the controls."
Rashid swore. "You heard him, Read! Get out there and help those
men."
He heard the screams of the wounded, the crack of rifles and
machine guns, all the terrifying noise of war. But since his
eighteenth year he had done everything his superiors told him to
do.
He started crawling toward an easy-chair that looked like good
cover. A bullet cracked above his head, so close he felt the
shock wave. He got up, ran panicky, crouched, and dove behind the
chair.
An inspector cracked the valve on a smoke grenade. A white fog
spread through the building. They could see anyone who tried to
rush them but the besiegers couldn't pick out targets.
Above the noise, he heard Rashid.
"I'm calling South Africa Station for a copter. It's the only way
out of here. Until it comes, we've got to hold them back."
Read thought of the green beret he had stuffed in his pocket that
morning. He stuck it on his head and cocked it. He didn't need
plain clothes anymore and he wanted to wear at least a part of
his uniform.
Bullets had completely shattered the wall in front of him. He
stared through the murk, across the broken glass. He was Corporal
Harry Read, UN Inspector Corps—a very special man. If he didn't
do a good job here, he wasn't the man he claimed to be. This
might be the only real test he would ever face.
He heard a shout in rapid French. He turned to his right. Men in
red loincloths ran zigzagging toward the station. They carried
light automatic rifles. Half of them wore gas masks.
"Shoot the masks," he yelled. "Aim for the masks."
The machine gun kicked and chattered on his shoulder. He picked a
target and squeezed off a burst. Tensely, he hunted for another
mask. Three grenades arced through the air and yellow gas spread
across the battlefield. The attackers ran through it. A few yards
beyond the gas, some of them turned and ran for their own lines.
In a moment only half a dozen masked men still advanced. The
inspectors fired a long, noisy volley. When they stopped only
four attackers remained on their feet. And they were running for
cover.
The attackers had come straight up a road that led from the Game
Preserve to the station. They had not expected any resistance.
The UN men had already taken over the station, chased out the
passengers and technicians and taken up defense positions; they
had met the Belderkans with a dozen grenades and sent them
scurrying for cover. The fight so far had been vicious but
disorganized. But the Belderkans had a few hundred men and knew
they had wrecked the transmitter controls.
The first direct attack had been repulsed. They could attack many
more times and continue to spray the building with bullets. They
could also try to go around the hill and attack the station from
above; if they did, the inspectors had a good view of the hill
and should see them going up.
The inspectors had taken up good defensive positions. In spite of
their losses, they still had enough firepower to cover the area
surrounding the station.
Read surveyed his sector of fire. About two hundred yards to his
left, he saw the top of a small ditch. Using the ditch for cover,
the Belderkans could sneak to the top of the hill.
Gas grenades are only three inches long. They hold cubic yards of
gas under high pressure. Read unclipped a telescoping rod from
his vest pocket. He opened it and a pair of sights flipped up. A
thin track ran down one side.
He had about a dozen grenades left, three self-propelling. He
slid an SP grenade into the rod's track and estimated windage and
range. Sighting carefully, not breathing, muscles relaxed, the
rod rock steady, he fired and lobbed the little grenade into the
ditch. He dropped another grenade beside it.
The heavy gas would lie there for hours.
Sergeant Rashid ran crouched from man to man. He did what he
could to shield the wounded.
"Well, corporal, how are you?"
"Not too bad, sergeant. See that ditch out there? I put a little
gas in it."
"Good work. How's your ammunition?"
"A dozen grenades. Half a barrel of shells."
"The copter will be here in half an hour. We'll put Umluana on,
then try to save ourselves. Once he's gone, I think we ought to
surrender."
"How do you think they'll treat us?"
"That we'll have to see."
An occasional bullet cracked and whined through the misty room.
Near him a man gasped frantically for air. On the sunny field a
wounded man screamed for help.
"There's a garage downstairs," Rashid said. "In case the copter
doesn't get here on time, I've got a man filling wine bottles
with gasoline."
"We'll stop them, Sarge. Don't worry."
Rashid ran off. Read stared across the green land and listened to
the pound of his heart. What were the Belderkans planning? A mass
frontal attack? To sneak in over the top of the hill?
He didn't think, anymore than a rabbit thinks when it lies hiding
from the fox or a panther thinks when it crouches on a branch
above the trail. His skin tightened and relaxed on his body.
"Listen," said a German.
Far down the hill he heard the deep-throated rumble of a big
motor.
"Armor," the German said.
The earth shook. The tank rounded the bend. Read watched the
squat, angular monster until its stubby gun pointed at the
station. It stopped less than two hundred yards away.
A loud-speaker blared.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
YOU MAY THINK US SAVAGES
BUT WE HAVE MODERN WEAPONS.
WE HAVE ATOMIC WARHEADS,
ALL GASES, ROCKETS
AND FLAME THROWERS. IF
YOU DO NOT SURRENDER
OUR PREMIER, WE WILL DESTROY YOU.
"They know we don't have any big weapons," Read said. "They know
we have only gas grenades and small arms."
He looked nervously from side to side. They couldn't bring the
copter in with that thing squatting out there.
A few feet away, sprawled behind a barricade of tables, lay a man
in advanced shock. His deadly white skin shone like ivory. They
wouldn't even look like that. One nuclear shell from that gun and
they'd be vaporized. Or perhaps the tank had sonic projectors;
then the skin would peel off their bones. Or they might be
burned, or cut up by shrapnel, or gassed with some new mist their
masks couldn't filter.
Read shut his eyes. All around him he heard heavy breathing,
mumbled comments, curses. Clothes rustled as men moved restlessly.
But already the voice of Sergeant Rashid resounded in the murky
room.
"We've got to knock that thing out before the copter comes.
Otherwise, he can't land. I have six Molotov cocktails here. Who
wants to go hunting with me?"
For two years Read had served under Sergeant Rashid. To him, the
sergeant was everything a UN inspector should be. Rashid's
devotion to peace had no limits.
Read's psych tests said pride alone drove him on. That was good
enough for the UN; they only rejected men whose loyalties might
conflict with their duties. But an assault on the tank required
something more than a hunger for self-respect.
Read had seen the inspector who covered their getaway. He had
watched their escort charge three-to-one odds. He had seen
another inspector stay behind at Miaka Station. And here, in this
building, lay battered men and dead men.
All UN inspectors. All part of his life.
And he was part of their life. Their blood, their sacrifice, and
pain, had become a part of him.
"I'll take a cocktail, Sarge."
"Is that Read?"
"Who else did you expect?"
"Nobody. Anybody else?"
"I'll go," the Frenchman said. "Three should be enough. Give us a
good smoke screen."
Rashid snapped orders. He put the German inspector in charge of
Umluana. Read, the Frenchman and himself, he stationed at
thirty-foot intervals along the floor.
"Remember," Rashid said. "We have to knock out that gun."
Read had given away his machine gun. He held a gas-filled bottle
in each hand. His automatic nestled in its shoulder holster.
Rashid whistled.
Dozens of smoke grenades tumbled through the air. Thick mist
engulfed the tank. Read stood up and ran forward. He crouched but
didn't zigzag. Speed counted most here.
Gunfire shook the hill. The Belderkans couldn't see them but they
knew what was going on and they fired systematically into the
smoke.
Bullets ploughed the ground beside him. He raised his head and
found the dim silhouette of the tank. He tried not to think about
bullets ploughing through his flesh.
A bullet slammed into his hip. He fell on his back, screaming.
"Sarge.
Sarge.
"
"I'm hit, too," Rashid said. "Don't stop if you can move."
Listen to him. What's he got, a sprained ankle?
But he didn't feel any pain. He closed his eyes and threw himself
onto his stomach. And nearly fainted from pain. He screamed and
quivered. The pain stopped. He stretched out his hands, gripping
the wine bottles, and inched forward. Pain stabbed him from
stomach to knee.
"I can't move, Sarge."
"Read, you've got to. I think you're the only—"
"What?"
Guns clattered. Bullets cracked.
"Sergeant Rashid! Answer me."
He heard nothing but the lonely passage of the bullets in the
mist.
"I'm a UN man," he mumbled. "You people up there know what a UN
man is? You know what happens when you meet one?"
When he reached the tank, he had another bullet in his right arm.
But they didn't know he was coming and when you get within ten
feet of a tank, the men inside can't see you.
He just had to stand up and drop the bottle down the gun barrel.
That was all—with a broken hip and a wounded right arm.
He knew they would see him when he stood up but he didn't think
about that. He didn't think about Sergeant Rashid, about the
complicated politics of Africa, about crowded market streets. He
had to kill the tank. That was all he thought about. He had
decided something in the world was more important than himself,
but he didn't know it or realize the psychologists would be
surprised to see him do this. He had made many decisions in the
last few minutes. He had ceased to think about them or anything
else.
With his cigarette lighter, he lit the rag stuffed in the end of
the bottle.
Biting his tongue, he pulled himself up the front of the tank.
His long arm stretched for the muzzle of the gun. He tossed the
bottle down the dark throat.
As he fell, the machine-gun bullets hit him in the chest, then in
the neck. He didn't feel them. He had fainted the moment he felt
the bottle leave his hand.
The copter landed ten minutes later. Umluana left in a shower of
bullets. A Russian private, the ranking man alive in the station,
surrendered the survivors to the Belderkans.
His mother hung the Global Medal above the television set.
"He must have been brave," she said. "We had a fine son."
"He was our only son," her husband said. "What did he volunteer
for? Couldn't somebody else have done it?"
His wife started to cry. Awkwardly, he embraced her. He wondered
what his son had wanted that he couldn't get at home.
THE END | The Belderkans don't like Umlauna. He tried to invade their country. | The Belderkans want Umlauna dead. That's why Read and Rashid are rescuing him. | If they shoot Umlauna, he'll be a martyr for their cause. That is okay. | The Belderkans don't realize that Umlauna is with Read and Rashid. | 2 |
24278_LON5P1ZP_8 | Why would the psychologists be surprised to see Read blow up the tank? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Analog, January 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE
GREEN
BERET
By TOM PURDOM
It's not so much the decisions a man does make that mark
him as a Man—but the ones he refrains from making. Like the
decision "I've had enough!"
Illustrated by Schoenherr
Read locked the door and drew his pistol. Sergeant Rashid handed
Premier Umluana the warrant.
"We're from the UN Inspector Corps," Sergeant Rashid said. "I'm
very sorry, but we have to arrest you and bring you in for trial
by the World Court."
If Umluana noticed Read's gun, he didn't show it. He read the
warrant carefully. When he finished, he said something in Dutch.
"I don't know your language," Rashid said.
"Then I'll speak English." Umluana was a small man with wrinkled
brow, glasses and a mustache. His skin was a shade lighter than
Read's. "The Inspector General doesn't have the power to arrest a
head of state—especially the Premier of Belderkan. Now, if
you'll excuse me, I must return to my party."
In the other room people laughed and talked. Glasses clinked in
the late afternoon. Read knew two armed men stood just outside
the door. "If you leave, Premier, I'll have to shoot you."
"I don't think so," Umluana said. "No, if you kill me, all Africa
will rise against the world. You don't want me dead. You want me
in court."
Read clicked off the safety.
"Corporal Read is very young," Rashid said, "but he's a crack
shot. That's why I brought him with me. I think he
likes
to
shoot, too."
Umluana turned back to Rashid a second too soon. He saw the
sergeant's upraised hand before it collided with his neck.
"Help!
Kidnap.
"
Rashid judo chopped him and swung the inert body over his
shoulders. Read pulled a flat grenade from his vest pocket. He
dropped it and yellow psycho gas hissed from the valve.
"Let's be off," Rashid said.
The door lock snapped as they went out the window. Two men with
rifles plunged into the gas; sighing, they fell to the floor in a
catatonic trance.
A little car skimmed across the lawn. Bearing the Scourge of
Africa, Rashid struggled toward it. Read walked backward,
covering their retreat.
The car stopped, whirling blades holding it a few inches off the
lawn. They climbed in.
"How did it go?" The driver and another inspector occupied the
front seat.
"They'll be after us in half a minute."
The other inspector carried a light machine gun and a box of
grenades. "I better cover," he said.
"Thanks," Rashid said.
The inspector slid out of the car and ran to a clump of bushes.
The driver pushed in the accelerator. As they swerved toward the
south, Read saw a dozen armed men run out of the house. A grenade
arced from the bushes and the pursuers recoiled from the cloud
that rose before them.
"Is he all right?" the driver asked.
"I don't think I hurt him." Rashid took a syrette from his vest
pocket. "Well, Read, it looks like we're in for a fight. In a few
minutes Miaka Station will know we're coming. And God knows what
will happen at the Game Preserve."
Read wanted to jump out of the car. He could die any minute. But
he had set his life on a well-oiled track and he couldn't get off
until they reached Geneva.
"They don't know who's coming," he said. "They don't make them
tough enough to stop this boy."
Staring straight ahead, he didn't see the sergeant smile.
Two types of recruits are accepted by the UN Inspector Corps:
those with a fanatic loyalty to the ideals of peace and world
order, and those who are loyal to nothing but themselves. Read
was the second type.
A tall, lanky Negro he had spent his school days in one of the
drab suburbs that ring every prosperous American city. It was the
home of factory workers, clerks, semiskilled technicians, all who
do the drudge work of civilization and know they will never do
more. The adults spent their days with television, alcohol and
drugs; the young spent their days with gangs, sex, television and
alcohol. What else was there? Those who could have told him
neither studied nor taught at his schools. What he saw on the
concrete fields between the tall apartment houses marked the
limits of life's possibilities.
He had belonged to a gang called The Golden Spacemen. "Nobody
fools with me," he bragged. "When Harry Read's out, there's a
tiger running loose." No one knew how many times he nearly ran
from other clubs, how carefully he picked the safest spot on the
battle line.
"A man ought to be a man," he once told a girl. "He ought to do a
man's work. Did you ever notice how our fathers look, how they
sleep so much? I don't want to be like that. I want to be
something proud."
He joined the UN Inspector Corps at eighteen, in 1978. The
international cops wore green berets, high buttonless boots, bush
jackets. They were very special men.
For the first time in his life, his father said something about
his ambitions.
"Don't you like America, Harry? Do you
want
to be without a
country? This is the best country in the world. All my life I've
made a good living. Haven't you had everything you ever wanted?
I've been a king compared to people overseas. Why, you stay here
and go to trade school and in two years you'll be living just
like me."
"I don't want that," Read said.
"What do you mean, you don't want that?"
"You could join the American Army," his mother said. "That's as
good as a trade school. If you have to be a soldier."
"I want to be a UN man. I've already enlisted. I'm in! What do
you care what I do?"
The UN Inspector Corps had been founded to enforce the Nuclear
Disarmament Treaty of 1966. Through the years it had acquired
other jobs. UN men no longer went unarmed. Trained to use small
arms and gas weapons, they guarded certain borders, bodyguarded
diplomats and UN officials, even put down riots that threatened
international peace. As the UN evolved into a strong world
government, the UN Inspector Corps steadily acquired new powers.
Read went through six months training on Madagascar.
Twice he nearly got expelled for picking fights with smaller men.
Rather than resign, he accepted punishment which assigned him to
weeks of dull, filthy extra labor. He hated the restrictions and
the iron fence of regulations. He hated boredom, loneliness and
isolation.
And yet he responded with enthusiasm. They had given him a job. A
job many people considered important.
He took his turn guarding the still disputed borders of Korea. He
served on the rescue teams that patrol the busy Polar routes. He
mounted guard at the 1980 World's Fair in Rangoon.
"I liked Rangoon," he even told a friend. "I even liked Korea.
But I think I liked the Pole job best. You sit around playing
cards and shooting the bull and then there's a plane crash or
something and you go out and win a medal. That's great for me.
I'm lazy and I like excitement."
One power implied in the UN Charter no Secretary General or
Inspector General had ever tried to use. The power to arrest any
head of state whose country violated international law. Could the
World Court try and imprison a politician who had conspired to
attack another nation?
For years Africa had been called "The South America of the Old
World." Revolution followed revolution. Colonies became
democracies. Democracies became dictatorships or dissolved in
civil war. Men planted bases on the moon and in four years,
1978-82, ringed the world with matter transmitters; but the black
population of Africa still struggled toward political equality.
Umluana took control of Belderkan in 1979. The tiny, former Dutch
colony, had been a tottering democracy for ten years. The very
day he took control the new dictator and his African party began
to build up the Belderkan Army. For years he had preached a new
Africa, united, free of white masters, the home of a vigorous and
perfect Negro society. His critics called him a hypocritical
racist, an opportunist using the desires of the African people to
build himself an empire.
He began a propaganda war against neighboring South Africa,
promising the liberation of that strife-torn land. Most Negro
leaders, having just won representation in the South African
Parliament, told him to liberate his own country. They believed
they could use their first small voice in the government to win
true freedom for their people.
But the radio assault and the arms buildup continued. Early in
1982, South Africa claimed the Belderkan Army exceeded the size
agreed to in the Disarmament Treaty. The European countries and
some African nations joined in the accusation. China called the
uproar a vicious slur on a new African nation. The United States
and Russia, trying not to get entangled, asked for more
investigation by the UN.
But the evidence was clear. Umluana was defying world law. If he
got away with it, some larger and more dangerous nation might
follow his precedent. And the arms race would begin again.
The Inspector General decided. They would enter Belderkan, arrest
Umluana and try him by due process before the World Court. If the
plan succeeded, mankind would be a long step farther from nuclear
war.
Read didn't know much about the complicated political reasons for
the arrest. He liked the Corp and he liked being in the Corp. He
went where they sent him and did what they told him to do.
The car skimmed above the tree-tops. The driver and his two
passengers scanned the sky.
A plane would have been a faster way to get out of the country.
But then they would have spent hours flying over Africa, with
Belderkan fighters in hot pursuit, other nations joining the
chase and the world uproar gaining volume. By transmitter, if all
went well, they could have Umluana in Geneva in an hour.
They were racing toward Miaka, a branch transmitter station. From
Miaka they would transmit to the Belderkan Preserve, a famous
tourist attraction whose station could transmit to any point on
the globe. Even now a dozen inspectors were taking over the Game
Preserve station and manning its controls.
They had made no plans to take over Miaka. They planned to get
there before it could be defended.
"There's no military base near Miaka," Rashid said. "We might get
there before the Belderkans."
"Here comes our escort," Read said.
A big car rose from the jungle. This one had a recoilless rifle
mounted on the roof. The driver and the gunner waved and fell in
behind them.
"One thing," Read said, "I don't think they'll shoot at us while
he's
in the car."
"Don't be certain, corporal. All these strong-arm movements are
alike. I'll bet Umluana's lieutenants are hoping he'll become a
dead legend. Then they can become live conquerors."
Sergeant Rashid came from Cairo. He had degrees in science and
history from Cambridge but only the Corp gave him work that
satisfied his conscience. He hated war. It was that simple.
Read looked back. He saw three spots of sunlight about two
hundred feet up and a good mile behind.
"Here they come, Sarge."
Rashid turned his head. He waved frantically. The two men in the
other car waved back.
"Shall I duck under the trees?" the driver asked.
"Not yet. Not until we have to."
Read fingered the machine gun he had picked up when he got in the
car. He had never been shot at. Twice he had faced an unarmed
mob, but a few shots had sent them running.
Birds flew screaming from their nests. Monkeys screeched and
threw things at the noisy, speeding cars. A little cloud of birds
surrounded each vehicle.
The escort car made a sharp turn and charged their pursuers. The
big rifle fired twice. Read saw the Belderkan cars scatter.
Suddenly machine-gun bullets cracked and whined beside him.
"Evade," Rashid said. "Don't go down."
Without losing any forward speed, the driver took them straight
up. Read's stomach bounced.
A shell exploded above them. The car rocked. He raised his eyes
and saw a long crack in the roof.
"Hit the floor," Rashid said.
They knelt on the cramped floor. Rashid put on his gas mask and
Read copied him. Umluana breathed like a furnace, still
unconscious from the injection Rashid had given him.
I can't do anything
, Read thought.
They're too far away to
shoot back. All we can do is run.
The sky was clear and blue. The jungle was a noisy bazaar of
color. In the distance guns crashed. He listened to shells
whistle by and the whipcrack of machine-gun bullets. The car
roller-coastered up and down. Every time a shell passed, he
crawled in waves down his own back.
Another explosion, this time very loud.
Rashid raised his eyes above the seat and looked out the rear
window. "Two left. Keep down, Read."
"Can't we go down?" Read said.
"They'll get to Miaka before us."
He shut his eyes when he heard another loud explosion.
Sergeant Rashid looked out the window again. He swore bitterly in
English and Egyptian. Read raised his head. The two cars behind
them weren't fighting each other. A long way back the tree-tops
burned.
"How much farther?" Rashid said. The masks muffled their voices.
"There it is now. Shall I take us right in?"
"I think you'd better."
The station was a glass diamond in a small clearing. The driver
slowed down, then crashed through the glass walls and hovered by
the transmitter booth.
Rashid opened the door and threw out two grenades. Read jumped
out and the two of them struggled toward the booth with Umluana.
The driver, pistol in hand, ran for the control panel.
There were three technicians in the station and no passengers.
All three panicked when the psycho gas enveloped them. They ran
howling for the jungle.
Through the window of his mask, Read saw their pursuers land in
the clearing. Machine-gun bullets raked the building. They got
Umluana in the booth and hit the floor. Read took aim and opened
fire on the largest car.
"Now, I can shoot back," he said. "Now we'll see what they do."
"Are you ready, Rashid?" yelled the driver.
"Man, get us out of here!"
The booth door shut. When it opened, they were at the Game
Preserve.
The station jutted from the side of a hill. A glass-walled
waiting room surrounded the bank of transmitter booths. Read
looked out the door and saw his first battlefield.
Directly in front of him, his head shattered by a bullet, a dead
inspector lay behind an overturned couch.
Read had seen dozens of training films taken during actual
battles or after atomic attacks. He had laughed when other
recruits complained. "That's the way this world is. You people
with the weak stomachs better get used to it."
Now he slid against the rear wall of the transmitter booth.
A wounded inspector crawled across the floor to the booth. Read
couldn't see his wound, only the pain scratched on his face and
the blood he deposited on the floor.
"Did you get Umluana?" he asked Sergeant Rashid.
"He's in the booth. What's going on?" Rashid's Middle East Oxford
seemed more clipped than ever.
"They hit us with two companies of troops a few minutes ago. I
think half our men are wounded."
"Can we get out of here?"
"They machine-gunned the controls."
Rashid swore. "You heard him, Read! Get out there and help those
men."
He heard the screams of the wounded, the crack of rifles and
machine guns, all the terrifying noise of war. But since his
eighteenth year he had done everything his superiors told him to
do.
He started crawling toward an easy-chair that looked like good
cover. A bullet cracked above his head, so close he felt the
shock wave. He got up, ran panicky, crouched, and dove behind the
chair.
An inspector cracked the valve on a smoke grenade. A white fog
spread through the building. They could see anyone who tried to
rush them but the besiegers couldn't pick out targets.
Above the noise, he heard Rashid.
"I'm calling South Africa Station for a copter. It's the only way
out of here. Until it comes, we've got to hold them back."
Read thought of the green beret he had stuffed in his pocket that
morning. He stuck it on his head and cocked it. He didn't need
plain clothes anymore and he wanted to wear at least a part of
his uniform.
Bullets had completely shattered the wall in front of him. He
stared through the murk, across the broken glass. He was Corporal
Harry Read, UN Inspector Corps—a very special man. If he didn't
do a good job here, he wasn't the man he claimed to be. This
might be the only real test he would ever face.
He heard a shout in rapid French. He turned to his right. Men in
red loincloths ran zigzagging toward the station. They carried
light automatic rifles. Half of them wore gas masks.
"Shoot the masks," he yelled. "Aim for the masks."
The machine gun kicked and chattered on his shoulder. He picked a
target and squeezed off a burst. Tensely, he hunted for another
mask. Three grenades arced through the air and yellow gas spread
across the battlefield. The attackers ran through it. A few yards
beyond the gas, some of them turned and ran for their own lines.
In a moment only half a dozen masked men still advanced. The
inspectors fired a long, noisy volley. When they stopped only
four attackers remained on their feet. And they were running for
cover.
The attackers had come straight up a road that led from the Game
Preserve to the station. They had not expected any resistance.
The UN men had already taken over the station, chased out the
passengers and technicians and taken up defense positions; they
had met the Belderkans with a dozen grenades and sent them
scurrying for cover. The fight so far had been vicious but
disorganized. But the Belderkans had a few hundred men and knew
they had wrecked the transmitter controls.
The first direct attack had been repulsed. They could attack many
more times and continue to spray the building with bullets. They
could also try to go around the hill and attack the station from
above; if they did, the inspectors had a good view of the hill
and should see them going up.
The inspectors had taken up good defensive positions. In spite of
their losses, they still had enough firepower to cover the area
surrounding the station.
Read surveyed his sector of fire. About two hundred yards to his
left, he saw the top of a small ditch. Using the ditch for cover,
the Belderkans could sneak to the top of the hill.
Gas grenades are only three inches long. They hold cubic yards of
gas under high pressure. Read unclipped a telescoping rod from
his vest pocket. He opened it and a pair of sights flipped up. A
thin track ran down one side.
He had about a dozen grenades left, three self-propelling. He
slid an SP grenade into the rod's track and estimated windage and
range. Sighting carefully, not breathing, muscles relaxed, the
rod rock steady, he fired and lobbed the little grenade into the
ditch. He dropped another grenade beside it.
The heavy gas would lie there for hours.
Sergeant Rashid ran crouched from man to man. He did what he
could to shield the wounded.
"Well, corporal, how are you?"
"Not too bad, sergeant. See that ditch out there? I put a little
gas in it."
"Good work. How's your ammunition?"
"A dozen grenades. Half a barrel of shells."
"The copter will be here in half an hour. We'll put Umluana on,
then try to save ourselves. Once he's gone, I think we ought to
surrender."
"How do you think they'll treat us?"
"That we'll have to see."
An occasional bullet cracked and whined through the misty room.
Near him a man gasped frantically for air. On the sunny field a
wounded man screamed for help.
"There's a garage downstairs," Rashid said. "In case the copter
doesn't get here on time, I've got a man filling wine bottles
with gasoline."
"We'll stop them, Sarge. Don't worry."
Rashid ran off. Read stared across the green land and listened to
the pound of his heart. What were the Belderkans planning? A mass
frontal attack? To sneak in over the top of the hill?
He didn't think, anymore than a rabbit thinks when it lies hiding
from the fox or a panther thinks when it crouches on a branch
above the trail. His skin tightened and relaxed on his body.
"Listen," said a German.
Far down the hill he heard the deep-throated rumble of a big
motor.
"Armor," the German said.
The earth shook. The tank rounded the bend. Read watched the
squat, angular monster until its stubby gun pointed at the
station. It stopped less than two hundred yards away.
A loud-speaker blared.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
ATTENTION UN SOLDIERS.
YOU MAY THINK US SAVAGES
BUT WE HAVE MODERN WEAPONS.
WE HAVE ATOMIC WARHEADS,
ALL GASES, ROCKETS
AND FLAME THROWERS. IF
YOU DO NOT SURRENDER
OUR PREMIER, WE WILL DESTROY YOU.
"They know we don't have any big weapons," Read said. "They know
we have only gas grenades and small arms."
He looked nervously from side to side. They couldn't bring the
copter in with that thing squatting out there.
A few feet away, sprawled behind a barricade of tables, lay a man
in advanced shock. His deadly white skin shone like ivory. They
wouldn't even look like that. One nuclear shell from that gun and
they'd be vaporized. Or perhaps the tank had sonic projectors;
then the skin would peel off their bones. Or they might be
burned, or cut up by shrapnel, or gassed with some new mist their
masks couldn't filter.
Read shut his eyes. All around him he heard heavy breathing,
mumbled comments, curses. Clothes rustled as men moved restlessly.
But already the voice of Sergeant Rashid resounded in the murky
room.
"We've got to knock that thing out before the copter comes.
Otherwise, he can't land. I have six Molotov cocktails here. Who
wants to go hunting with me?"
For two years Read had served under Sergeant Rashid. To him, the
sergeant was everything a UN inspector should be. Rashid's
devotion to peace had no limits.
Read's psych tests said pride alone drove him on. That was good
enough for the UN; they only rejected men whose loyalties might
conflict with their duties. But an assault on the tank required
something more than a hunger for self-respect.
Read had seen the inspector who covered their getaway. He had
watched their escort charge three-to-one odds. He had seen
another inspector stay behind at Miaka Station. And here, in this
building, lay battered men and dead men.
All UN inspectors. All part of his life.
And he was part of their life. Their blood, their sacrifice, and
pain, had become a part of him.
"I'll take a cocktail, Sarge."
"Is that Read?"
"Who else did you expect?"
"Nobody. Anybody else?"
"I'll go," the Frenchman said. "Three should be enough. Give us a
good smoke screen."
Rashid snapped orders. He put the German inspector in charge of
Umluana. Read, the Frenchman and himself, he stationed at
thirty-foot intervals along the floor.
"Remember," Rashid said. "We have to knock out that gun."
Read had given away his machine gun. He held a gas-filled bottle
in each hand. His automatic nestled in its shoulder holster.
Rashid whistled.
Dozens of smoke grenades tumbled through the air. Thick mist
engulfed the tank. Read stood up and ran forward. He crouched but
didn't zigzag. Speed counted most here.
Gunfire shook the hill. The Belderkans couldn't see them but they
knew what was going on and they fired systematically into the
smoke.
Bullets ploughed the ground beside him. He raised his head and
found the dim silhouette of the tank. He tried not to think about
bullets ploughing through his flesh.
A bullet slammed into his hip. He fell on his back, screaming.
"Sarge.
Sarge.
"
"I'm hit, too," Rashid said. "Don't stop if you can move."
Listen to him. What's he got, a sprained ankle?
But he didn't feel any pain. He closed his eyes and threw himself
onto his stomach. And nearly fainted from pain. He screamed and
quivered. The pain stopped. He stretched out his hands, gripping
the wine bottles, and inched forward. Pain stabbed him from
stomach to knee.
"I can't move, Sarge."
"Read, you've got to. I think you're the only—"
"What?"
Guns clattered. Bullets cracked.
"Sergeant Rashid! Answer me."
He heard nothing but the lonely passage of the bullets in the
mist.
"I'm a UN man," he mumbled. "You people up there know what a UN
man is? You know what happens when you meet one?"
When he reached the tank, he had another bullet in his right arm.
But they didn't know he was coming and when you get within ten
feet of a tank, the men inside can't see you.
He just had to stand up and drop the bottle down the gun barrel.
That was all—with a broken hip and a wounded right arm.
He knew they would see him when he stood up but he didn't think
about that. He didn't think about Sergeant Rashid, about the
complicated politics of Africa, about crowded market streets. He
had to kill the tank. That was all he thought about. He had
decided something in the world was more important than himself,
but he didn't know it or realize the psychologists would be
surprised to see him do this. He had made many decisions in the
last few minutes. He had ceased to think about them or anything
else.
With his cigarette lighter, he lit the rag stuffed in the end of
the bottle.
Biting his tongue, he pulled himself up the front of the tank.
His long arm stretched for the muzzle of the gun. He tossed the
bottle down the dark throat.
As he fell, the machine-gun bullets hit him in the chest, then in
the neck. He didn't feel them. He had fainted the moment he felt
the bottle leave his hand.
The copter landed ten minutes later. Umluana left in a shower of
bullets. A Russian private, the ranking man alive in the station,
surrendered the survivors to the Belderkans.
His mother hung the Global Medal above the television set.
"He must have been brave," she said. "We had a fine son."
"He was our only son," her husband said. "What did he volunteer
for? Couldn't somebody else have done it?"
His wife started to cry. Awkwardly, he embraced her. He wondered
what his son had wanted that he couldn't get at home.
THE END | Read's psych tests said he only cared about himself. | Read's psych tests said he would likely fall apart under pressure. | Read's psych tests said he was only driven by pride. | Read's psych tests said he was a coward. | 2 |
24517_4BTC7S62_1 | Who are the Chingsi? | ACCIDENTAL DEATH
BY PETER BAILY
The most
dangerous of weapons
is the one you don't know is loaded.
Illustrated by Schoenherr
The
wind howled out of
the northwest, blind
with snow and barbed
with ice crystals. All
the way up the half-mile
precipice it fingered and wrenched
away at groaning ice-slabs. It
screamed over the top, whirled snow
in a dervish dance around the hollow
there, piled snow into the long furrow
plowed ruler-straight through
streamlined hummocks of snow.
The sun glinted on black rock
glazed by ice, chasms and ridges and
bridges of ice. It lit the snow slope
to a frozen glare, penciled black
shadow down the long furrow, and
flashed at the furrow's end on a
thing of metal and plastics, an artifact
thrown down in the dead wilderness.
Nothing grew, nothing flew, nothing
walked, nothing talked. But the
thing in the hollow was stirring in
stiff jerks like a snake with its back
broken or a clockwork toy running
down. When the movements stopped,
there was a click and a strange
sound began. Thin, scratchy, inaudible
more than a yard away, weary
but still cocky, there leaked from the
shape in the hollow the sound of a
human voice.
"I've tried my hands and arms
and they seem to work," it began.
"I've wiggled my toes with entire
success. It's well on the cards that
I'm all in one piece and not broken
up at all, though I don't see how it
could happen. Right now I don't
feel like struggling up and finding
out. I'm fine where I am. I'll just lie
here for a while and relax, and get
some of the story on tape. This suit's
got a built-in recorder, I might as
well use it. That way even if I'm not
as well as I feel, I'll leave a message.
You probably know we're back
and wonder what went wrong.
"I suppose I'm in a state of shock.
That's why I can't seem to get up.
Who wouldn't be shocked after luck
like that?
"I've always been lucky, I guess.
Luck got me a place in the
Whale
.
Sure I'm a good astronomer but so
are lots of other guys. If I were ten
years older, it would have been an
honor, being picked for the first long
jump in the first starship ever. At my
age it was luck.
"You'll want to know if the ship
worked. Well, she did. Went like a
bomb. We got lined up between
Earth and Mars, you'll remember,
and James pushed the button marked
'Jump'. Took his finger off the button
and there we were:
Alpha Centauri
.
Two months later your time,
one second later by us. We covered
our whole survey assignment like
that, smooth as a pint of old and
mild which right now I could certainly
use. Better yet would be a pint
of hot black coffee with sugar in.
Failing that, I could even go for a
long drink of cold water. There was
never anything wrong with the
Whale
till right at the end and even then I
doubt if it was the ship itself that
fouled things up.
"That was some survey assignment.
We astronomers really lived.
Wait till you see—but of course you
won't. I could weep when I think of
those miles of lovely color film, all
gone up in smoke.
"I'm shocked all right. I never said
who I was. Matt Hennessy, from Farside
Observatory, back of the Moon,
just back from a proving flight
cum
astronomical survey in the starship
Whale
. Whoever you are who finds
this tape, you're made. Take it to
any radio station or newspaper office.
You'll find you can name your price
and don't take any wooden nickels.
"Where had I got to? I'd told you
how we happened to find Chang,
hadn't I? That's what the natives called
it. Walking, talking natives on a
blue sky planet with 1.1 g gravity
and a twenty per cent oxygen atmosphere
at fifteen p.s.i. The odds
against finding Chang on a six-sun
survey on the first star jump ever
must be up in the googols. We certainly
were lucky.
"The Chang natives aren't very
technical—haven't got space travel
for instance. They're good astronomers,
though. We were able to show
them our sun, in their telescopes. In
their way, they're a highly civilized
people. Look more like cats than
people, but they're people all right.
If you doubt it, chew these facts
over.
"One, they learned our language
in four weeks. When I say they, I
mean a ten-man team of them.
"Two, they brew a near-beer that's
a lot nearer than the canned stuff we
had aboard the
Whale
.
"Three, they've a great sense of
humor. Ran rather to silly practical
jokes, but still. Can't say I care for
that hot-foot and belly-laugh stuff
myself, but tastes differ.
"Four, the ten-man language team
also learned chess and table tennis.
"But why go on? People who talk
English, drink beer, like jokes and
beat me at chess or table-tennis are
people for my money, even if they
look like tigers in trousers.
"It was funny the way they won
all the time at table tennis. They certainly
weren't so hot at it. Maybe
that ten per cent extra gravity put us
off our strokes. As for chess, Svendlov
was our champion. He won
sometimes. The rest of us seemed to
lose whichever Chingsi we played.
There again it wasn't so much that
they were good. How could they be,
in the time? It was more that we all
seemed to make silly mistakes when
we played them and that's fatal in
chess. Of course it's a screwy situation,
playing chess with something
that grows its own fur coat, has yellow
eyes an inch and a half long
and long white whiskers. Could
you
have kept your mind on the game?
"And don't think I fell victim to
their feline charm. The children were
pets, but you didn't feel like patting
the adults on their big grinning
heads. Personally I didn't like the one
I knew best. He was called—well, we
called him Charley, and he was the
ethnologist, ambassador, contact man,
or whatever you like to call him, who
came back with us. Why I disliked
him was because he was always trying
to get the edge on you. All the
time he had to be top. Great sense
of humor, of course. I nearly broke
my neck on that butter-slide he fixed
up in the metal alleyway to the
Whale's
engine room. Charley laughed
fit to bust, everyone laughed, I
even laughed myself though doing it
hurt me more than the tumble had.
Yes, life and soul of the party, old
Charley ...
"My last sight of the
Minnow
was
a cabin full of dead and dying men,
the sweetish stink of burned flesh
and the choking reek of scorching insulation,
the boat jolting and shuddering
and beginning to break up,
and in the middle of the flames, still
unhurt, was Charley. He was laughing ...
"My God, it's dark out here. Wonder
how high I am. Must be all of
fifty miles, and doing eight hundred
miles an hour at least. I'll be doing
more than that when I land. What's
final velocity for a fifty-mile fall?
Same as a fifty thousand mile fall, I
suppose; same as escape; twenty-four
thousand miles an hour. I'll make a
mess ...
"That's better. Why didn't I close
my eyes before? Those star streaks
made me dizzy. I'll make a nice
shooting star when I hit air. Come to
think of it, I must be deep in air
now. Let's take a look.
"It's getting lighter. Look at those
peaks down there! Like great knives.
I don't seem to be falling as fast as
I expected though. Almost seem to be
floating. Let's switch on the radio
and tell the world hello. Hello, earth
... hello, again ... and good-by ...
"Sorry about that. I passed out. I
don't know what I said, if anything,
and the suit recorder has no playback
or eraser. What must have happened
is that the suit ran out of
oxygen, and I lost consciousness due
to anoxia. I dreamed I switched on
the radio, but I actually switched on
the emergency tank, thank the Lord,
and that brought me round.
"Come to think of it, why not
crack the suit and breath fresh air
instead of bottled?
"No. I'd have to get up to do that.
I think I'll just lie here a little bit
longer and get properly rested up
before I try anything big like standing
up.
"I was telling about the return
journey, wasn't I? The long jump
back home, which should have dumped
us between the orbits of Earth
and Mars. Instead of which, when
James took his finger off the button,
the mass-detector showed nothing
except the noise-level of the universe.
"We were out in that no place for
a day. We astronomers had to establish
our exact position relative to the
solar system. The crew had to find
out exactly what went wrong. The
physicists had to make mystic passes
in front of meters and mutter about
residual folds in stress-free space.
Our task was easy, because we were
about half a light-year from the sun.
The crew's job was also easy: they
found what went wrong in less than
half an hour.
"It still seems incredible. To program
the ship for a star-jump, you
merely told it where you were and
where you wanted to go. In practical
terms, that entailed first a series of
exact measurements which had to be
translated into the somewhat abstruse
co-ordinate system we used based on
the topological order of mass-points
in the galaxy. Then you cut a tape on
the computer and hit the button.
Nothing was wrong with the computer.
Nothing was wrong with the
engines. We'd hit the right button
and we'd gone to the place we'd aimed
for. All we'd done was aim for
the wrong place. It hurts me to tell
you this and I'm just attached personnel
with no space-flight tradition. In
practical terms, one highly trained
crew member had punched a wrong
pattern of holes on the tape. Another
equally skilled had failed to notice
this when reading back. A childish
error, highly improbable; twice repeated,
thus squaring the improbability.
Incredible, but that's what
happened.
"Anyway, we took good care with
the next lot of measurements. That's
why we were out there so long. They
were cross-checked about five times.
I got sick so I climbed into a spacesuit
and went outside and took some
photographs of the Sun which I hoped
would help to determine hydrogen
density in the outer regions. When
I got back everything was ready. We
disposed ourselves about the control
room and relaxed for all we were
worth. We were all praying that this
time nothing would go wrong, and
all looking forward to seeing Earth
again after four months subjective
time away, except for Charley, who
was still chuckling and shaking his
head, and Captain James who was
glaring at Charley and obviously
wishing human dignity permitted him
to tear Charley limb from limb. Then
James pressed the button.
"Everything twanged like a bowstring.
I felt myself turned inside out,
passed through a small sieve, and
poured back into shape. The entire
bow wall-screen was full of Earth.
Something was wrong all right, and
this time it was much, much worse.
We'd come out of the jump about
two hundred miles above the Pacific,
pointed straight down, traveling at a
relative speed of about two thousand
miles an hour.
"It was a fantastic situation. Here
was the
Whale
, the most powerful
ship ever built, which could cover
fifty light-years in a subjective time
of one second, and it was helpless.
For, as of course you know, the
star-drive couldn't be used again for
at least two hours.
"The
Whale
also had ion rockets
of course, the standard deuterium-fusion
thing with direct conversion.
As again you know, this is good for
interplanetary flight because you can
run it continuously and it has extremely
high exhaust velocity. But in
our situation it was no good because
it has rather a low thrust. It would
have taken more time than we had to
deflect us enough to avoid a smash.
We had five minutes to abandon
ship.
"James got us all into the
Minnow
at a dead run. There was no time to
take anything at all except the clothes
we stood in. The
Minnow
was meant
for short heavy hops to planets or
asteroids. In addition to the ion drive
it had emergency atomic rockets,
using steam for reaction mass. We
thanked God for that when Cazamian
canceled our downwards velocity
with them in a few seconds. We
curved away up over China and from
about fifty miles high we saw the
Whale
hit the Pacific. Six hundred
tons of mass at well over two thousand
miles an hour make an almighty
splash. By now you'll have divers
down, but I doubt they'll salvage
much you can use.
"I wonder why James went down
with the ship, as the saying is? Not
that it made any difference. It must
have broken his heart to know that
his lovely ship was getting the chopper.
Or did he suspect another human
error?
"We didn't have time to think
about that, or even to get the radio
working. The steam rockets blew
up. Poor Cazamian was burnt to a
crisp. Only thing that saved me was
the spacesuit I was still wearing. I
snapped the face plate down because
the cabin was filling with fumes. I
saw Charley coming out of the toilet—that's
how he'd escaped—and I
saw him beginning to laugh. Then
the port side collapsed and I fell out.
"I saw the launch spinning away,
glowing red against a purplish black
sky. I tumbled head over heels towards
the huge curved shield of
earth fifty miles below. I shut my
eyes and that's about all I remember.
I don't see how any of us could have
survived. I think we're all dead.
"I'll have to get up and crack this
suit and let some air in. But I can't.
I fell fifty miles without a parachute.
I'm dead so I can't stand up."
There was silence for a while except
for the vicious howl of the wind.
Then snow began to shift on the
ledge. A man crawled stiffly out and
came shakily to his feet. He moved
slowly around for some time. After
about two hours he returned to the
hollow, squatted down and switched
on the recorder. The voice began
again, considerably wearier.
"Hello there. I'm in the bleakest
wilderness I've ever seen. This place
makes the moon look cozy. There's
precipice around me every way but
one and that's up. So it's up I'll have
to go till I find a way to go down.
I've been chewing snow to quench
my thirst but I could eat a horse. I
picked up a short-wave broadcast on
my suit but couldn't understand a
word. Not English, not French, and
there I stick. Listened to it for fifteen
minutes just to hear a human voice
again. I haven't much hope of reaching
anyone with my five milliwatt
suit transmitter but I'll keep trying.
"Just before I start the climb there
are two things I want to get on tape.
The first is how I got here. I've remembered
something from my military
training, when I did some parachute
jumps. Terminal velocity for a
human body falling through air is
about one hundred twenty m.p.h.
Falling fifty miles is no worse than
falling five hundred feet. You'd be
lucky to live through a five hundred
foot fall, true, but I've been lucky.
The suit is bulky but light and probably
slowed my fall. I hit a sixty mile
an hour updraft this side of the
mountain, skidded downhill through
about half a mile of snow and fetched
up in a drift. The suit is part
worn but still operational. I'm fine.
"The second thing I want to say is
about the Chingsi, and here it is:
watch out for them. Those jokers are
dangerous. I'm not telling how because
I've got a scientific reputation
to watch. You'll have to figure it out
for yourselves. Here are the clues:
(1) The Chingsi talk and laugh but
after all they aren't human. On
an alien world a hundred light-years
away, why shouldn't alien
talents develop? A talent that's
so uncertain and rudimentary
here that most people don't believe
it, might be highly developed
out there.
(2) The
Whale
expedition did fine
till it found Chang. Then it hit
a seam of bad luck. Real stinking
bad luck that went on and
on till it looks fishy. We lost
the ship, we lost the launch, all
but one of us lost our lives. We
couldn't even win a game of
ping-pong.
"So what is luck, good or bad?
Scientifically speaking, future chance
events are by definition chance. They
can turn out favorable or not. When
a preponderance of chance events has
occurred unfavorably, you've got bad
luck. It's a fancy name for a lot of
chance results that didn't go your
way. But the gambler defines it differently.
For him, luck refers to the
future, and you've got bad luck when
future chance events won't go your
way. Scientific investigations into this
have been inconclusive, but everyone
knows that some people are lucky and
others aren't. All we've got are hints
and glimmers, the fumbling touch of
a rudimentary talent. There's the evil
eye legend and the Jonah, bad luck
bringers. Superstition? Maybe; but
ask the insurance companies about
accident prones. What's in a name?
Call a man unlucky and you're superstitious.
Call him accident prone and
that's sound business sense. I've said
enough.
"All the same, search the space-flight
records, talk to the actuaries.
When a ship is working perfectly
and is operated by a hand-picked
crew of highly trained men in perfect
condition, how often is it wrecked
by a series of silly errors happening
one after another in defiance of
probability?
"I'll sign off with two thoughts,
one depressing and one cheering. A
single Chingsi wrecked our ship and
our launch. What could a whole
planetful of them do?
"On the other hand, a talent that
manipulates chance events is bound
to be chancy. No matter how highly
developed it can't be surefire. The
proof is that I've survived to tell the
tale."
At twenty below zero and fifty
miles an hour the wind ravaged the
mountain. Peering through his polarized
vizor at the white waste and the
snow-filled air howling over it, sliding
and stumbling with every step
on a slope that got gradually steeper
and seemed to go on forever, Matt
Hennessy began to inch his way up
the north face of Mount Everest.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
February 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The Chingsi are the inhabitants of Alpha Centauri. | A race of cat-like humanoids from the planet Chang. | Chingsi is what the people of China call themselves in this story. | The Chingsi are genetically mutated cats. | 1 |
24517_4BTC7S62_2 | What happened to the Whale? | ACCIDENTAL DEATH
BY PETER BAILY
The most
dangerous of weapons
is the one you don't know is loaded.
Illustrated by Schoenherr
The
wind howled out of
the northwest, blind
with snow and barbed
with ice crystals. All
the way up the half-mile
precipice it fingered and wrenched
away at groaning ice-slabs. It
screamed over the top, whirled snow
in a dervish dance around the hollow
there, piled snow into the long furrow
plowed ruler-straight through
streamlined hummocks of snow.
The sun glinted on black rock
glazed by ice, chasms and ridges and
bridges of ice. It lit the snow slope
to a frozen glare, penciled black
shadow down the long furrow, and
flashed at the furrow's end on a
thing of metal and plastics, an artifact
thrown down in the dead wilderness.
Nothing grew, nothing flew, nothing
walked, nothing talked. But the
thing in the hollow was stirring in
stiff jerks like a snake with its back
broken or a clockwork toy running
down. When the movements stopped,
there was a click and a strange
sound began. Thin, scratchy, inaudible
more than a yard away, weary
but still cocky, there leaked from the
shape in the hollow the sound of a
human voice.
"I've tried my hands and arms
and they seem to work," it began.
"I've wiggled my toes with entire
success. It's well on the cards that
I'm all in one piece and not broken
up at all, though I don't see how it
could happen. Right now I don't
feel like struggling up and finding
out. I'm fine where I am. I'll just lie
here for a while and relax, and get
some of the story on tape. This suit's
got a built-in recorder, I might as
well use it. That way even if I'm not
as well as I feel, I'll leave a message.
You probably know we're back
and wonder what went wrong.
"I suppose I'm in a state of shock.
That's why I can't seem to get up.
Who wouldn't be shocked after luck
like that?
"I've always been lucky, I guess.
Luck got me a place in the
Whale
.
Sure I'm a good astronomer but so
are lots of other guys. If I were ten
years older, it would have been an
honor, being picked for the first long
jump in the first starship ever. At my
age it was luck.
"You'll want to know if the ship
worked. Well, she did. Went like a
bomb. We got lined up between
Earth and Mars, you'll remember,
and James pushed the button marked
'Jump'. Took his finger off the button
and there we were:
Alpha Centauri
.
Two months later your time,
one second later by us. We covered
our whole survey assignment like
that, smooth as a pint of old and
mild which right now I could certainly
use. Better yet would be a pint
of hot black coffee with sugar in.
Failing that, I could even go for a
long drink of cold water. There was
never anything wrong with the
Whale
till right at the end and even then I
doubt if it was the ship itself that
fouled things up.
"That was some survey assignment.
We astronomers really lived.
Wait till you see—but of course you
won't. I could weep when I think of
those miles of lovely color film, all
gone up in smoke.
"I'm shocked all right. I never said
who I was. Matt Hennessy, from Farside
Observatory, back of the Moon,
just back from a proving flight
cum
astronomical survey in the starship
Whale
. Whoever you are who finds
this tape, you're made. Take it to
any radio station or newspaper office.
You'll find you can name your price
and don't take any wooden nickels.
"Where had I got to? I'd told you
how we happened to find Chang,
hadn't I? That's what the natives called
it. Walking, talking natives on a
blue sky planet with 1.1 g gravity
and a twenty per cent oxygen atmosphere
at fifteen p.s.i. The odds
against finding Chang on a six-sun
survey on the first star jump ever
must be up in the googols. We certainly
were lucky.
"The Chang natives aren't very
technical—haven't got space travel
for instance. They're good astronomers,
though. We were able to show
them our sun, in their telescopes. In
their way, they're a highly civilized
people. Look more like cats than
people, but they're people all right.
If you doubt it, chew these facts
over.
"One, they learned our language
in four weeks. When I say they, I
mean a ten-man team of them.
"Two, they brew a near-beer that's
a lot nearer than the canned stuff we
had aboard the
Whale
.
"Three, they've a great sense of
humor. Ran rather to silly practical
jokes, but still. Can't say I care for
that hot-foot and belly-laugh stuff
myself, but tastes differ.
"Four, the ten-man language team
also learned chess and table tennis.
"But why go on? People who talk
English, drink beer, like jokes and
beat me at chess or table-tennis are
people for my money, even if they
look like tigers in trousers.
"It was funny the way they won
all the time at table tennis. They certainly
weren't so hot at it. Maybe
that ten per cent extra gravity put us
off our strokes. As for chess, Svendlov
was our champion. He won
sometimes. The rest of us seemed to
lose whichever Chingsi we played.
There again it wasn't so much that
they were good. How could they be,
in the time? It was more that we all
seemed to make silly mistakes when
we played them and that's fatal in
chess. Of course it's a screwy situation,
playing chess with something
that grows its own fur coat, has yellow
eyes an inch and a half long
and long white whiskers. Could
you
have kept your mind on the game?
"And don't think I fell victim to
their feline charm. The children were
pets, but you didn't feel like patting
the adults on their big grinning
heads. Personally I didn't like the one
I knew best. He was called—well, we
called him Charley, and he was the
ethnologist, ambassador, contact man,
or whatever you like to call him, who
came back with us. Why I disliked
him was because he was always trying
to get the edge on you. All the
time he had to be top. Great sense
of humor, of course. I nearly broke
my neck on that butter-slide he fixed
up in the metal alleyway to the
Whale's
engine room. Charley laughed
fit to bust, everyone laughed, I
even laughed myself though doing it
hurt me more than the tumble had.
Yes, life and soul of the party, old
Charley ...
"My last sight of the
Minnow
was
a cabin full of dead and dying men,
the sweetish stink of burned flesh
and the choking reek of scorching insulation,
the boat jolting and shuddering
and beginning to break up,
and in the middle of the flames, still
unhurt, was Charley. He was laughing ...
"My God, it's dark out here. Wonder
how high I am. Must be all of
fifty miles, and doing eight hundred
miles an hour at least. I'll be doing
more than that when I land. What's
final velocity for a fifty-mile fall?
Same as a fifty thousand mile fall, I
suppose; same as escape; twenty-four
thousand miles an hour. I'll make a
mess ...
"That's better. Why didn't I close
my eyes before? Those star streaks
made me dizzy. I'll make a nice
shooting star when I hit air. Come to
think of it, I must be deep in air
now. Let's take a look.
"It's getting lighter. Look at those
peaks down there! Like great knives.
I don't seem to be falling as fast as
I expected though. Almost seem to be
floating. Let's switch on the radio
and tell the world hello. Hello, earth
... hello, again ... and good-by ...
"Sorry about that. I passed out. I
don't know what I said, if anything,
and the suit recorder has no playback
or eraser. What must have happened
is that the suit ran out of
oxygen, and I lost consciousness due
to anoxia. I dreamed I switched on
the radio, but I actually switched on
the emergency tank, thank the Lord,
and that brought me round.
"Come to think of it, why not
crack the suit and breath fresh air
instead of bottled?
"No. I'd have to get up to do that.
I think I'll just lie here a little bit
longer and get properly rested up
before I try anything big like standing
up.
"I was telling about the return
journey, wasn't I? The long jump
back home, which should have dumped
us between the orbits of Earth
and Mars. Instead of which, when
James took his finger off the button,
the mass-detector showed nothing
except the noise-level of the universe.
"We were out in that no place for
a day. We astronomers had to establish
our exact position relative to the
solar system. The crew had to find
out exactly what went wrong. The
physicists had to make mystic passes
in front of meters and mutter about
residual folds in stress-free space.
Our task was easy, because we were
about half a light-year from the sun.
The crew's job was also easy: they
found what went wrong in less than
half an hour.
"It still seems incredible. To program
the ship for a star-jump, you
merely told it where you were and
where you wanted to go. In practical
terms, that entailed first a series of
exact measurements which had to be
translated into the somewhat abstruse
co-ordinate system we used based on
the topological order of mass-points
in the galaxy. Then you cut a tape on
the computer and hit the button.
Nothing was wrong with the computer.
Nothing was wrong with the
engines. We'd hit the right button
and we'd gone to the place we'd aimed
for. All we'd done was aim for
the wrong place. It hurts me to tell
you this and I'm just attached personnel
with no space-flight tradition. In
practical terms, one highly trained
crew member had punched a wrong
pattern of holes on the tape. Another
equally skilled had failed to notice
this when reading back. A childish
error, highly improbable; twice repeated,
thus squaring the improbability.
Incredible, but that's what
happened.
"Anyway, we took good care with
the next lot of measurements. That's
why we were out there so long. They
were cross-checked about five times.
I got sick so I climbed into a spacesuit
and went outside and took some
photographs of the Sun which I hoped
would help to determine hydrogen
density in the outer regions. When
I got back everything was ready. We
disposed ourselves about the control
room and relaxed for all we were
worth. We were all praying that this
time nothing would go wrong, and
all looking forward to seeing Earth
again after four months subjective
time away, except for Charley, who
was still chuckling and shaking his
head, and Captain James who was
glaring at Charley and obviously
wishing human dignity permitted him
to tear Charley limb from limb. Then
James pressed the button.
"Everything twanged like a bowstring.
I felt myself turned inside out,
passed through a small sieve, and
poured back into shape. The entire
bow wall-screen was full of Earth.
Something was wrong all right, and
this time it was much, much worse.
We'd come out of the jump about
two hundred miles above the Pacific,
pointed straight down, traveling at a
relative speed of about two thousand
miles an hour.
"It was a fantastic situation. Here
was the
Whale
, the most powerful
ship ever built, which could cover
fifty light-years in a subjective time
of one second, and it was helpless.
For, as of course you know, the
star-drive couldn't be used again for
at least two hours.
"The
Whale
also had ion rockets
of course, the standard deuterium-fusion
thing with direct conversion.
As again you know, this is good for
interplanetary flight because you can
run it continuously and it has extremely
high exhaust velocity. But in
our situation it was no good because
it has rather a low thrust. It would
have taken more time than we had to
deflect us enough to avoid a smash.
We had five minutes to abandon
ship.
"James got us all into the
Minnow
at a dead run. There was no time to
take anything at all except the clothes
we stood in. The
Minnow
was meant
for short heavy hops to planets or
asteroids. In addition to the ion drive
it had emergency atomic rockets,
using steam for reaction mass. We
thanked God for that when Cazamian
canceled our downwards velocity
with them in a few seconds. We
curved away up over China and from
about fifty miles high we saw the
Whale
hit the Pacific. Six hundred
tons of mass at well over two thousand
miles an hour make an almighty
splash. By now you'll have divers
down, but I doubt they'll salvage
much you can use.
"I wonder why James went down
with the ship, as the saying is? Not
that it made any difference. It must
have broken his heart to know that
his lovely ship was getting the chopper.
Or did he suspect another human
error?
"We didn't have time to think
about that, or even to get the radio
working. The steam rockets blew
up. Poor Cazamian was burnt to a
crisp. Only thing that saved me was
the spacesuit I was still wearing. I
snapped the face plate down because
the cabin was filling with fumes. I
saw Charley coming out of the toilet—that's
how he'd escaped—and I
saw him beginning to laugh. Then
the port side collapsed and I fell out.
"I saw the launch spinning away,
glowing red against a purplish black
sky. I tumbled head over heels towards
the huge curved shield of
earth fifty miles below. I shut my
eyes and that's about all I remember.
I don't see how any of us could have
survived. I think we're all dead.
"I'll have to get up and crack this
suit and let some air in. But I can't.
I fell fifty miles without a parachute.
I'm dead so I can't stand up."
There was silence for a while except
for the vicious howl of the wind.
Then snow began to shift on the
ledge. A man crawled stiffly out and
came shakily to his feet. He moved
slowly around for some time. After
about two hours he returned to the
hollow, squatted down and switched
on the recorder. The voice began
again, considerably wearier.
"Hello there. I'm in the bleakest
wilderness I've ever seen. This place
makes the moon look cozy. There's
precipice around me every way but
one and that's up. So it's up I'll have
to go till I find a way to go down.
I've been chewing snow to quench
my thirst but I could eat a horse. I
picked up a short-wave broadcast on
my suit but couldn't understand a
word. Not English, not French, and
there I stick. Listened to it for fifteen
minutes just to hear a human voice
again. I haven't much hope of reaching
anyone with my five milliwatt
suit transmitter but I'll keep trying.
"Just before I start the climb there
are two things I want to get on tape.
The first is how I got here. I've remembered
something from my military
training, when I did some parachute
jumps. Terminal velocity for a
human body falling through air is
about one hundred twenty m.p.h.
Falling fifty miles is no worse than
falling five hundred feet. You'd be
lucky to live through a five hundred
foot fall, true, but I've been lucky.
The suit is bulky but light and probably
slowed my fall. I hit a sixty mile
an hour updraft this side of the
mountain, skidded downhill through
about half a mile of snow and fetched
up in a drift. The suit is part
worn but still operational. I'm fine.
"The second thing I want to say is
about the Chingsi, and here it is:
watch out for them. Those jokers are
dangerous. I'm not telling how because
I've got a scientific reputation
to watch. You'll have to figure it out
for yourselves. Here are the clues:
(1) The Chingsi talk and laugh but
after all they aren't human. On
an alien world a hundred light-years
away, why shouldn't alien
talents develop? A talent that's
so uncertain and rudimentary
here that most people don't believe
it, might be highly developed
out there.
(2) The
Whale
expedition did fine
till it found Chang. Then it hit
a seam of bad luck. Real stinking
bad luck that went on and
on till it looks fishy. We lost
the ship, we lost the launch, all
but one of us lost our lives. We
couldn't even win a game of
ping-pong.
"So what is luck, good or bad?
Scientifically speaking, future chance
events are by definition chance. They
can turn out favorable or not. When
a preponderance of chance events has
occurred unfavorably, you've got bad
luck. It's a fancy name for a lot of
chance results that didn't go your
way. But the gambler defines it differently.
For him, luck refers to the
future, and you've got bad luck when
future chance events won't go your
way. Scientific investigations into this
have been inconclusive, but everyone
knows that some people are lucky and
others aren't. All we've got are hints
and glimmers, the fumbling touch of
a rudimentary talent. There's the evil
eye legend and the Jonah, bad luck
bringers. Superstition? Maybe; but
ask the insurance companies about
accident prones. What's in a name?
Call a man unlucky and you're superstitious.
Call him accident prone and
that's sound business sense. I've said
enough.
"All the same, search the space-flight
records, talk to the actuaries.
When a ship is working perfectly
and is operated by a hand-picked
crew of highly trained men in perfect
condition, how often is it wrecked
by a series of silly errors happening
one after another in defiance of
probability?
"I'll sign off with two thoughts,
one depressing and one cheering. A
single Chingsi wrecked our ship and
our launch. What could a whole
planetful of them do?
"On the other hand, a talent that
manipulates chance events is bound
to be chancy. No matter how highly
developed it can't be surefire. The
proof is that I've survived to tell the
tale."
At twenty below zero and fifty
miles an hour the wind ravaged the
mountain. Peering through his polarized
vizor at the white waste and the
snow-filled air howling over it, sliding
and stumbling with every step
on a slope that got gradually steeper
and seemed to go on forever, Matt
Hennessy began to inch his way up
the north face of Mount Everest.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
February 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Charlie sabotaged the deuterium fusion drive. The drive shut down, and the Whale crashed into the Pacific. | The ion rockets on the Whale exploded. It then crashed into the Pacific. | The Cazamian laser exploded, causing the Whale to crash down into the Pacific. | The Whale came out of its star-jump in the wrong position. It then crashed into the Pacific. | 3 |
24517_4BTC7S62_3 | What is the Minnow? | ACCIDENTAL DEATH
BY PETER BAILY
The most
dangerous of weapons
is the one you don't know is loaded.
Illustrated by Schoenherr
The
wind howled out of
the northwest, blind
with snow and barbed
with ice crystals. All
the way up the half-mile
precipice it fingered and wrenched
away at groaning ice-slabs. It
screamed over the top, whirled snow
in a dervish dance around the hollow
there, piled snow into the long furrow
plowed ruler-straight through
streamlined hummocks of snow.
The sun glinted on black rock
glazed by ice, chasms and ridges and
bridges of ice. It lit the snow slope
to a frozen glare, penciled black
shadow down the long furrow, and
flashed at the furrow's end on a
thing of metal and plastics, an artifact
thrown down in the dead wilderness.
Nothing grew, nothing flew, nothing
walked, nothing talked. But the
thing in the hollow was stirring in
stiff jerks like a snake with its back
broken or a clockwork toy running
down. When the movements stopped,
there was a click and a strange
sound began. Thin, scratchy, inaudible
more than a yard away, weary
but still cocky, there leaked from the
shape in the hollow the sound of a
human voice.
"I've tried my hands and arms
and they seem to work," it began.
"I've wiggled my toes with entire
success. It's well on the cards that
I'm all in one piece and not broken
up at all, though I don't see how it
could happen. Right now I don't
feel like struggling up and finding
out. I'm fine where I am. I'll just lie
here for a while and relax, and get
some of the story on tape. This suit's
got a built-in recorder, I might as
well use it. That way even if I'm not
as well as I feel, I'll leave a message.
You probably know we're back
and wonder what went wrong.
"I suppose I'm in a state of shock.
That's why I can't seem to get up.
Who wouldn't be shocked after luck
like that?
"I've always been lucky, I guess.
Luck got me a place in the
Whale
.
Sure I'm a good astronomer but so
are lots of other guys. If I were ten
years older, it would have been an
honor, being picked for the first long
jump in the first starship ever. At my
age it was luck.
"You'll want to know if the ship
worked. Well, she did. Went like a
bomb. We got lined up between
Earth and Mars, you'll remember,
and James pushed the button marked
'Jump'. Took his finger off the button
and there we were:
Alpha Centauri
.
Two months later your time,
one second later by us. We covered
our whole survey assignment like
that, smooth as a pint of old and
mild which right now I could certainly
use. Better yet would be a pint
of hot black coffee with sugar in.
Failing that, I could even go for a
long drink of cold water. There was
never anything wrong with the
Whale
till right at the end and even then I
doubt if it was the ship itself that
fouled things up.
"That was some survey assignment.
We astronomers really lived.
Wait till you see—but of course you
won't. I could weep when I think of
those miles of lovely color film, all
gone up in smoke.
"I'm shocked all right. I never said
who I was. Matt Hennessy, from Farside
Observatory, back of the Moon,
just back from a proving flight
cum
astronomical survey in the starship
Whale
. Whoever you are who finds
this tape, you're made. Take it to
any radio station or newspaper office.
You'll find you can name your price
and don't take any wooden nickels.
"Where had I got to? I'd told you
how we happened to find Chang,
hadn't I? That's what the natives called
it. Walking, talking natives on a
blue sky planet with 1.1 g gravity
and a twenty per cent oxygen atmosphere
at fifteen p.s.i. The odds
against finding Chang on a six-sun
survey on the first star jump ever
must be up in the googols. We certainly
were lucky.
"The Chang natives aren't very
technical—haven't got space travel
for instance. They're good astronomers,
though. We were able to show
them our sun, in their telescopes. In
their way, they're a highly civilized
people. Look more like cats than
people, but they're people all right.
If you doubt it, chew these facts
over.
"One, they learned our language
in four weeks. When I say they, I
mean a ten-man team of them.
"Two, they brew a near-beer that's
a lot nearer than the canned stuff we
had aboard the
Whale
.
"Three, they've a great sense of
humor. Ran rather to silly practical
jokes, but still. Can't say I care for
that hot-foot and belly-laugh stuff
myself, but tastes differ.
"Four, the ten-man language team
also learned chess and table tennis.
"But why go on? People who talk
English, drink beer, like jokes and
beat me at chess or table-tennis are
people for my money, even if they
look like tigers in trousers.
"It was funny the way they won
all the time at table tennis. They certainly
weren't so hot at it. Maybe
that ten per cent extra gravity put us
off our strokes. As for chess, Svendlov
was our champion. He won
sometimes. The rest of us seemed to
lose whichever Chingsi we played.
There again it wasn't so much that
they were good. How could they be,
in the time? It was more that we all
seemed to make silly mistakes when
we played them and that's fatal in
chess. Of course it's a screwy situation,
playing chess with something
that grows its own fur coat, has yellow
eyes an inch and a half long
and long white whiskers. Could
you
have kept your mind on the game?
"And don't think I fell victim to
their feline charm. The children were
pets, but you didn't feel like patting
the adults on their big grinning
heads. Personally I didn't like the one
I knew best. He was called—well, we
called him Charley, and he was the
ethnologist, ambassador, contact man,
or whatever you like to call him, who
came back with us. Why I disliked
him was because he was always trying
to get the edge on you. All the
time he had to be top. Great sense
of humor, of course. I nearly broke
my neck on that butter-slide he fixed
up in the metal alleyway to the
Whale's
engine room. Charley laughed
fit to bust, everyone laughed, I
even laughed myself though doing it
hurt me more than the tumble had.
Yes, life and soul of the party, old
Charley ...
"My last sight of the
Minnow
was
a cabin full of dead and dying men,
the sweetish stink of burned flesh
and the choking reek of scorching insulation,
the boat jolting and shuddering
and beginning to break up,
and in the middle of the flames, still
unhurt, was Charley. He was laughing ...
"My God, it's dark out here. Wonder
how high I am. Must be all of
fifty miles, and doing eight hundred
miles an hour at least. I'll be doing
more than that when I land. What's
final velocity for a fifty-mile fall?
Same as a fifty thousand mile fall, I
suppose; same as escape; twenty-four
thousand miles an hour. I'll make a
mess ...
"That's better. Why didn't I close
my eyes before? Those star streaks
made me dizzy. I'll make a nice
shooting star when I hit air. Come to
think of it, I must be deep in air
now. Let's take a look.
"It's getting lighter. Look at those
peaks down there! Like great knives.
I don't seem to be falling as fast as
I expected though. Almost seem to be
floating. Let's switch on the radio
and tell the world hello. Hello, earth
... hello, again ... and good-by ...
"Sorry about that. I passed out. I
don't know what I said, if anything,
and the suit recorder has no playback
or eraser. What must have happened
is that the suit ran out of
oxygen, and I lost consciousness due
to anoxia. I dreamed I switched on
the radio, but I actually switched on
the emergency tank, thank the Lord,
and that brought me round.
"Come to think of it, why not
crack the suit and breath fresh air
instead of bottled?
"No. I'd have to get up to do that.
I think I'll just lie here a little bit
longer and get properly rested up
before I try anything big like standing
up.
"I was telling about the return
journey, wasn't I? The long jump
back home, which should have dumped
us between the orbits of Earth
and Mars. Instead of which, when
James took his finger off the button,
the mass-detector showed nothing
except the noise-level of the universe.
"We were out in that no place for
a day. We astronomers had to establish
our exact position relative to the
solar system. The crew had to find
out exactly what went wrong. The
physicists had to make mystic passes
in front of meters and mutter about
residual folds in stress-free space.
Our task was easy, because we were
about half a light-year from the sun.
The crew's job was also easy: they
found what went wrong in less than
half an hour.
"It still seems incredible. To program
the ship for a star-jump, you
merely told it where you were and
where you wanted to go. In practical
terms, that entailed first a series of
exact measurements which had to be
translated into the somewhat abstruse
co-ordinate system we used based on
the topological order of mass-points
in the galaxy. Then you cut a tape on
the computer and hit the button.
Nothing was wrong with the computer.
Nothing was wrong with the
engines. We'd hit the right button
and we'd gone to the place we'd aimed
for. All we'd done was aim for
the wrong place. It hurts me to tell
you this and I'm just attached personnel
with no space-flight tradition. In
practical terms, one highly trained
crew member had punched a wrong
pattern of holes on the tape. Another
equally skilled had failed to notice
this when reading back. A childish
error, highly improbable; twice repeated,
thus squaring the improbability.
Incredible, but that's what
happened.
"Anyway, we took good care with
the next lot of measurements. That's
why we were out there so long. They
were cross-checked about five times.
I got sick so I climbed into a spacesuit
and went outside and took some
photographs of the Sun which I hoped
would help to determine hydrogen
density in the outer regions. When
I got back everything was ready. We
disposed ourselves about the control
room and relaxed for all we were
worth. We were all praying that this
time nothing would go wrong, and
all looking forward to seeing Earth
again after four months subjective
time away, except for Charley, who
was still chuckling and shaking his
head, and Captain James who was
glaring at Charley and obviously
wishing human dignity permitted him
to tear Charley limb from limb. Then
James pressed the button.
"Everything twanged like a bowstring.
I felt myself turned inside out,
passed through a small sieve, and
poured back into shape. The entire
bow wall-screen was full of Earth.
Something was wrong all right, and
this time it was much, much worse.
We'd come out of the jump about
two hundred miles above the Pacific,
pointed straight down, traveling at a
relative speed of about two thousand
miles an hour.
"It was a fantastic situation. Here
was the
Whale
, the most powerful
ship ever built, which could cover
fifty light-years in a subjective time
of one second, and it was helpless.
For, as of course you know, the
star-drive couldn't be used again for
at least two hours.
"The
Whale
also had ion rockets
of course, the standard deuterium-fusion
thing with direct conversion.
As again you know, this is good for
interplanetary flight because you can
run it continuously and it has extremely
high exhaust velocity. But in
our situation it was no good because
it has rather a low thrust. It would
have taken more time than we had to
deflect us enough to avoid a smash.
We had five minutes to abandon
ship.
"James got us all into the
Minnow
at a dead run. There was no time to
take anything at all except the clothes
we stood in. The
Minnow
was meant
for short heavy hops to planets or
asteroids. In addition to the ion drive
it had emergency atomic rockets,
using steam for reaction mass. We
thanked God for that when Cazamian
canceled our downwards velocity
with them in a few seconds. We
curved away up over China and from
about fifty miles high we saw the
Whale
hit the Pacific. Six hundred
tons of mass at well over two thousand
miles an hour make an almighty
splash. By now you'll have divers
down, but I doubt they'll salvage
much you can use.
"I wonder why James went down
with the ship, as the saying is? Not
that it made any difference. It must
have broken his heart to know that
his lovely ship was getting the chopper.
Or did he suspect another human
error?
"We didn't have time to think
about that, or even to get the radio
working. The steam rockets blew
up. Poor Cazamian was burnt to a
crisp. Only thing that saved me was
the spacesuit I was still wearing. I
snapped the face plate down because
the cabin was filling with fumes. I
saw Charley coming out of the toilet—that's
how he'd escaped—and I
saw him beginning to laugh. Then
the port side collapsed and I fell out.
"I saw the launch spinning away,
glowing red against a purplish black
sky. I tumbled head over heels towards
the huge curved shield of
earth fifty miles below. I shut my
eyes and that's about all I remember.
I don't see how any of us could have
survived. I think we're all dead.
"I'll have to get up and crack this
suit and let some air in. But I can't.
I fell fifty miles without a parachute.
I'm dead so I can't stand up."
There was silence for a while except
for the vicious howl of the wind.
Then snow began to shift on the
ledge. A man crawled stiffly out and
came shakily to his feet. He moved
slowly around for some time. After
about two hours he returned to the
hollow, squatted down and switched
on the recorder. The voice began
again, considerably wearier.
"Hello there. I'm in the bleakest
wilderness I've ever seen. This place
makes the moon look cozy. There's
precipice around me every way but
one and that's up. So it's up I'll have
to go till I find a way to go down.
I've been chewing snow to quench
my thirst but I could eat a horse. I
picked up a short-wave broadcast on
my suit but couldn't understand a
word. Not English, not French, and
there I stick. Listened to it for fifteen
minutes just to hear a human voice
again. I haven't much hope of reaching
anyone with my five milliwatt
suit transmitter but I'll keep trying.
"Just before I start the climb there
are two things I want to get on tape.
The first is how I got here. I've remembered
something from my military
training, when I did some parachute
jumps. Terminal velocity for a
human body falling through air is
about one hundred twenty m.p.h.
Falling fifty miles is no worse than
falling five hundred feet. You'd be
lucky to live through a five hundred
foot fall, true, but I've been lucky.
The suit is bulky but light and probably
slowed my fall. I hit a sixty mile
an hour updraft this side of the
mountain, skidded downhill through
about half a mile of snow and fetched
up in a drift. The suit is part
worn but still operational. I'm fine.
"The second thing I want to say is
about the Chingsi, and here it is:
watch out for them. Those jokers are
dangerous. I'm not telling how because
I've got a scientific reputation
to watch. You'll have to figure it out
for yourselves. Here are the clues:
(1) The Chingsi talk and laugh but
after all they aren't human. On
an alien world a hundred light-years
away, why shouldn't alien
talents develop? A talent that's
so uncertain and rudimentary
here that most people don't believe
it, might be highly developed
out there.
(2) The
Whale
expedition did fine
till it found Chang. Then it hit
a seam of bad luck. Real stinking
bad luck that went on and
on till it looks fishy. We lost
the ship, we lost the launch, all
but one of us lost our lives. We
couldn't even win a game of
ping-pong.
"So what is luck, good or bad?
Scientifically speaking, future chance
events are by definition chance. They
can turn out favorable or not. When
a preponderance of chance events has
occurred unfavorably, you've got bad
luck. It's a fancy name for a lot of
chance results that didn't go your
way. But the gambler defines it differently.
For him, luck refers to the
future, and you've got bad luck when
future chance events won't go your
way. Scientific investigations into this
have been inconclusive, but everyone
knows that some people are lucky and
others aren't. All we've got are hints
and glimmers, the fumbling touch of
a rudimentary talent. There's the evil
eye legend and the Jonah, bad luck
bringers. Superstition? Maybe; but
ask the insurance companies about
accident prones. What's in a name?
Call a man unlucky and you're superstitious.
Call him accident prone and
that's sound business sense. I've said
enough.
"All the same, search the space-flight
records, talk to the actuaries.
When a ship is working perfectly
and is operated by a hand-picked
crew of highly trained men in perfect
condition, how often is it wrecked
by a series of silly errors happening
one after another in defiance of
probability?
"I'll sign off with two thoughts,
one depressing and one cheering. A
single Chingsi wrecked our ship and
our launch. What could a whole
planetful of them do?
"On the other hand, a talent that
manipulates chance events is bound
to be chancy. No matter how highly
developed it can't be surefire. The
proof is that I've survived to tell the
tale."
At twenty below zero and fifty
miles an hour the wind ravaged the
mountain. Peering through his polarized
vizor at the white waste and the
snow-filled air howling over it, sliding
and stumbling with every step
on a slope that got gradually steeper
and seemed to go on forever, Matt
Hennessy began to inch his way up
the north face of Mount Everest.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
February 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The Minnow is Charlie's spaceship. | The Minnow is the most powerful ship ever built. | The Minnow is a shuttlecraft. | The Minnow is an escape pod. | 2 |
24517_4BTC7S62_4 | Who is James? | ACCIDENTAL DEATH
BY PETER BAILY
The most
dangerous of weapons
is the one you don't know is loaded.
Illustrated by Schoenherr
The
wind howled out of
the northwest, blind
with snow and barbed
with ice crystals. All
the way up the half-mile
precipice it fingered and wrenched
away at groaning ice-slabs. It
screamed over the top, whirled snow
in a dervish dance around the hollow
there, piled snow into the long furrow
plowed ruler-straight through
streamlined hummocks of snow.
The sun glinted on black rock
glazed by ice, chasms and ridges and
bridges of ice. It lit the snow slope
to a frozen glare, penciled black
shadow down the long furrow, and
flashed at the furrow's end on a
thing of metal and plastics, an artifact
thrown down in the dead wilderness.
Nothing grew, nothing flew, nothing
walked, nothing talked. But the
thing in the hollow was stirring in
stiff jerks like a snake with its back
broken or a clockwork toy running
down. When the movements stopped,
there was a click and a strange
sound began. Thin, scratchy, inaudible
more than a yard away, weary
but still cocky, there leaked from the
shape in the hollow the sound of a
human voice.
"I've tried my hands and arms
and they seem to work," it began.
"I've wiggled my toes with entire
success. It's well on the cards that
I'm all in one piece and not broken
up at all, though I don't see how it
could happen. Right now I don't
feel like struggling up and finding
out. I'm fine where I am. I'll just lie
here for a while and relax, and get
some of the story on tape. This suit's
got a built-in recorder, I might as
well use it. That way even if I'm not
as well as I feel, I'll leave a message.
You probably know we're back
and wonder what went wrong.
"I suppose I'm in a state of shock.
That's why I can't seem to get up.
Who wouldn't be shocked after luck
like that?
"I've always been lucky, I guess.
Luck got me a place in the
Whale
.
Sure I'm a good astronomer but so
are lots of other guys. If I were ten
years older, it would have been an
honor, being picked for the first long
jump in the first starship ever. At my
age it was luck.
"You'll want to know if the ship
worked. Well, she did. Went like a
bomb. We got lined up between
Earth and Mars, you'll remember,
and James pushed the button marked
'Jump'. Took his finger off the button
and there we were:
Alpha Centauri
.
Two months later your time,
one second later by us. We covered
our whole survey assignment like
that, smooth as a pint of old and
mild which right now I could certainly
use. Better yet would be a pint
of hot black coffee with sugar in.
Failing that, I could even go for a
long drink of cold water. There was
never anything wrong with the
Whale
till right at the end and even then I
doubt if it was the ship itself that
fouled things up.
"That was some survey assignment.
We astronomers really lived.
Wait till you see—but of course you
won't. I could weep when I think of
those miles of lovely color film, all
gone up in smoke.
"I'm shocked all right. I never said
who I was. Matt Hennessy, from Farside
Observatory, back of the Moon,
just back from a proving flight
cum
astronomical survey in the starship
Whale
. Whoever you are who finds
this tape, you're made. Take it to
any radio station or newspaper office.
You'll find you can name your price
and don't take any wooden nickels.
"Where had I got to? I'd told you
how we happened to find Chang,
hadn't I? That's what the natives called
it. Walking, talking natives on a
blue sky planet with 1.1 g gravity
and a twenty per cent oxygen atmosphere
at fifteen p.s.i. The odds
against finding Chang on a six-sun
survey on the first star jump ever
must be up in the googols. We certainly
were lucky.
"The Chang natives aren't very
technical—haven't got space travel
for instance. They're good astronomers,
though. We were able to show
them our sun, in their telescopes. In
their way, they're a highly civilized
people. Look more like cats than
people, but they're people all right.
If you doubt it, chew these facts
over.
"One, they learned our language
in four weeks. When I say they, I
mean a ten-man team of them.
"Two, they brew a near-beer that's
a lot nearer than the canned stuff we
had aboard the
Whale
.
"Three, they've a great sense of
humor. Ran rather to silly practical
jokes, but still. Can't say I care for
that hot-foot and belly-laugh stuff
myself, but tastes differ.
"Four, the ten-man language team
also learned chess and table tennis.
"But why go on? People who talk
English, drink beer, like jokes and
beat me at chess or table-tennis are
people for my money, even if they
look like tigers in trousers.
"It was funny the way they won
all the time at table tennis. They certainly
weren't so hot at it. Maybe
that ten per cent extra gravity put us
off our strokes. As for chess, Svendlov
was our champion. He won
sometimes. The rest of us seemed to
lose whichever Chingsi we played.
There again it wasn't so much that
they were good. How could they be,
in the time? It was more that we all
seemed to make silly mistakes when
we played them and that's fatal in
chess. Of course it's a screwy situation,
playing chess with something
that grows its own fur coat, has yellow
eyes an inch and a half long
and long white whiskers. Could
you
have kept your mind on the game?
"And don't think I fell victim to
their feline charm. The children were
pets, but you didn't feel like patting
the adults on their big grinning
heads. Personally I didn't like the one
I knew best. He was called—well, we
called him Charley, and he was the
ethnologist, ambassador, contact man,
or whatever you like to call him, who
came back with us. Why I disliked
him was because he was always trying
to get the edge on you. All the
time he had to be top. Great sense
of humor, of course. I nearly broke
my neck on that butter-slide he fixed
up in the metal alleyway to the
Whale's
engine room. Charley laughed
fit to bust, everyone laughed, I
even laughed myself though doing it
hurt me more than the tumble had.
Yes, life and soul of the party, old
Charley ...
"My last sight of the
Minnow
was
a cabin full of dead and dying men,
the sweetish stink of burned flesh
and the choking reek of scorching insulation,
the boat jolting and shuddering
and beginning to break up,
and in the middle of the flames, still
unhurt, was Charley. He was laughing ...
"My God, it's dark out here. Wonder
how high I am. Must be all of
fifty miles, and doing eight hundred
miles an hour at least. I'll be doing
more than that when I land. What's
final velocity for a fifty-mile fall?
Same as a fifty thousand mile fall, I
suppose; same as escape; twenty-four
thousand miles an hour. I'll make a
mess ...
"That's better. Why didn't I close
my eyes before? Those star streaks
made me dizzy. I'll make a nice
shooting star when I hit air. Come to
think of it, I must be deep in air
now. Let's take a look.
"It's getting lighter. Look at those
peaks down there! Like great knives.
I don't seem to be falling as fast as
I expected though. Almost seem to be
floating. Let's switch on the radio
and tell the world hello. Hello, earth
... hello, again ... and good-by ...
"Sorry about that. I passed out. I
don't know what I said, if anything,
and the suit recorder has no playback
or eraser. What must have happened
is that the suit ran out of
oxygen, and I lost consciousness due
to anoxia. I dreamed I switched on
the radio, but I actually switched on
the emergency tank, thank the Lord,
and that brought me round.
"Come to think of it, why not
crack the suit and breath fresh air
instead of bottled?
"No. I'd have to get up to do that.
I think I'll just lie here a little bit
longer and get properly rested up
before I try anything big like standing
up.
"I was telling about the return
journey, wasn't I? The long jump
back home, which should have dumped
us between the orbits of Earth
and Mars. Instead of which, when
James took his finger off the button,
the mass-detector showed nothing
except the noise-level of the universe.
"We were out in that no place for
a day. We astronomers had to establish
our exact position relative to the
solar system. The crew had to find
out exactly what went wrong. The
physicists had to make mystic passes
in front of meters and mutter about
residual folds in stress-free space.
Our task was easy, because we were
about half a light-year from the sun.
The crew's job was also easy: they
found what went wrong in less than
half an hour.
"It still seems incredible. To program
the ship for a star-jump, you
merely told it where you were and
where you wanted to go. In practical
terms, that entailed first a series of
exact measurements which had to be
translated into the somewhat abstruse
co-ordinate system we used based on
the topological order of mass-points
in the galaxy. Then you cut a tape on
the computer and hit the button.
Nothing was wrong with the computer.
Nothing was wrong with the
engines. We'd hit the right button
and we'd gone to the place we'd aimed
for. All we'd done was aim for
the wrong place. It hurts me to tell
you this and I'm just attached personnel
with no space-flight tradition. In
practical terms, one highly trained
crew member had punched a wrong
pattern of holes on the tape. Another
equally skilled had failed to notice
this when reading back. A childish
error, highly improbable; twice repeated,
thus squaring the improbability.
Incredible, but that's what
happened.
"Anyway, we took good care with
the next lot of measurements. That's
why we were out there so long. They
were cross-checked about five times.
I got sick so I climbed into a spacesuit
and went outside and took some
photographs of the Sun which I hoped
would help to determine hydrogen
density in the outer regions. When
I got back everything was ready. We
disposed ourselves about the control
room and relaxed for all we were
worth. We were all praying that this
time nothing would go wrong, and
all looking forward to seeing Earth
again after four months subjective
time away, except for Charley, who
was still chuckling and shaking his
head, and Captain James who was
glaring at Charley and obviously
wishing human dignity permitted him
to tear Charley limb from limb. Then
James pressed the button.
"Everything twanged like a bowstring.
I felt myself turned inside out,
passed through a small sieve, and
poured back into shape. The entire
bow wall-screen was full of Earth.
Something was wrong all right, and
this time it was much, much worse.
We'd come out of the jump about
two hundred miles above the Pacific,
pointed straight down, traveling at a
relative speed of about two thousand
miles an hour.
"It was a fantastic situation. Here
was the
Whale
, the most powerful
ship ever built, which could cover
fifty light-years in a subjective time
of one second, and it was helpless.
For, as of course you know, the
star-drive couldn't be used again for
at least two hours.
"The
Whale
also had ion rockets
of course, the standard deuterium-fusion
thing with direct conversion.
As again you know, this is good for
interplanetary flight because you can
run it continuously and it has extremely
high exhaust velocity. But in
our situation it was no good because
it has rather a low thrust. It would
have taken more time than we had to
deflect us enough to avoid a smash.
We had five minutes to abandon
ship.
"James got us all into the
Minnow
at a dead run. There was no time to
take anything at all except the clothes
we stood in. The
Minnow
was meant
for short heavy hops to planets or
asteroids. In addition to the ion drive
it had emergency atomic rockets,
using steam for reaction mass. We
thanked God for that when Cazamian
canceled our downwards velocity
with them in a few seconds. We
curved away up over China and from
about fifty miles high we saw the
Whale
hit the Pacific. Six hundred
tons of mass at well over two thousand
miles an hour make an almighty
splash. By now you'll have divers
down, but I doubt they'll salvage
much you can use.
"I wonder why James went down
with the ship, as the saying is? Not
that it made any difference. It must
have broken his heart to know that
his lovely ship was getting the chopper.
Or did he suspect another human
error?
"We didn't have time to think
about that, or even to get the radio
working. The steam rockets blew
up. Poor Cazamian was burnt to a
crisp. Only thing that saved me was
the spacesuit I was still wearing. I
snapped the face plate down because
the cabin was filling with fumes. I
saw Charley coming out of the toilet—that's
how he'd escaped—and I
saw him beginning to laugh. Then
the port side collapsed and I fell out.
"I saw the launch spinning away,
glowing red against a purplish black
sky. I tumbled head over heels towards
the huge curved shield of
earth fifty miles below. I shut my
eyes and that's about all I remember.
I don't see how any of us could have
survived. I think we're all dead.
"I'll have to get up and crack this
suit and let some air in. But I can't.
I fell fifty miles without a parachute.
I'm dead so I can't stand up."
There was silence for a while except
for the vicious howl of the wind.
Then snow began to shift on the
ledge. A man crawled stiffly out and
came shakily to his feet. He moved
slowly around for some time. After
about two hours he returned to the
hollow, squatted down and switched
on the recorder. The voice began
again, considerably wearier.
"Hello there. I'm in the bleakest
wilderness I've ever seen. This place
makes the moon look cozy. There's
precipice around me every way but
one and that's up. So it's up I'll have
to go till I find a way to go down.
I've been chewing snow to quench
my thirst but I could eat a horse. I
picked up a short-wave broadcast on
my suit but couldn't understand a
word. Not English, not French, and
there I stick. Listened to it for fifteen
minutes just to hear a human voice
again. I haven't much hope of reaching
anyone with my five milliwatt
suit transmitter but I'll keep trying.
"Just before I start the climb there
are two things I want to get on tape.
The first is how I got here. I've remembered
something from my military
training, when I did some parachute
jumps. Terminal velocity for a
human body falling through air is
about one hundred twenty m.p.h.
Falling fifty miles is no worse than
falling five hundred feet. You'd be
lucky to live through a five hundred
foot fall, true, but I've been lucky.
The suit is bulky but light and probably
slowed my fall. I hit a sixty mile
an hour updraft this side of the
mountain, skidded downhill through
about half a mile of snow and fetched
up in a drift. The suit is part
worn but still operational. I'm fine.
"The second thing I want to say is
about the Chingsi, and here it is:
watch out for them. Those jokers are
dangerous. I'm not telling how because
I've got a scientific reputation
to watch. You'll have to figure it out
for yourselves. Here are the clues:
(1) The Chingsi talk and laugh but
after all they aren't human. On
an alien world a hundred light-years
away, why shouldn't alien
talents develop? A talent that's
so uncertain and rudimentary
here that most people don't believe
it, might be highly developed
out there.
(2) The
Whale
expedition did fine
till it found Chang. Then it hit
a seam of bad luck. Real stinking
bad luck that went on and
on till it looks fishy. We lost
the ship, we lost the launch, all
but one of us lost our lives. We
couldn't even win a game of
ping-pong.
"So what is luck, good or bad?
Scientifically speaking, future chance
events are by definition chance. They
can turn out favorable or not. When
a preponderance of chance events has
occurred unfavorably, you've got bad
luck. It's a fancy name for a lot of
chance results that didn't go your
way. But the gambler defines it differently.
For him, luck refers to the
future, and you've got bad luck when
future chance events won't go your
way. Scientific investigations into this
have been inconclusive, but everyone
knows that some people are lucky and
others aren't. All we've got are hints
and glimmers, the fumbling touch of
a rudimentary talent. There's the evil
eye legend and the Jonah, bad luck
bringers. Superstition? Maybe; but
ask the insurance companies about
accident prones. What's in a name?
Call a man unlucky and you're superstitious.
Call him accident prone and
that's sound business sense. I've said
enough.
"All the same, search the space-flight
records, talk to the actuaries.
When a ship is working perfectly
and is operated by a hand-picked
crew of highly trained men in perfect
condition, how often is it wrecked
by a series of silly errors happening
one after another in defiance of
probability?
"I'll sign off with two thoughts,
one depressing and one cheering. A
single Chingsi wrecked our ship and
our launch. What could a whole
planetful of them do?
"On the other hand, a talent that
manipulates chance events is bound
to be chancy. No matter how highly
developed it can't be surefire. The
proof is that I've survived to tell the
tale."
At twenty below zero and fifty
miles an hour the wind ravaged the
mountain. Peering through his polarized
vizor at the white waste and the
snow-filled air howling over it, sliding
and stumbling with every step
on a slope that got gradually steeper
and seemed to go on forever, Matt
Hennessy began to inch his way up
the north face of Mount Everest.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
February 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | James is the captain of the Minnow. | James is the ship's navigator. | James is the ship's doctor. | James is the captain of the Whale. | 3 |
24517_4BTC7S62_5 | What was the mission of the Whale? | ACCIDENTAL DEATH
BY PETER BAILY
The most
dangerous of weapons
is the one you don't know is loaded.
Illustrated by Schoenherr
The
wind howled out of
the northwest, blind
with snow and barbed
with ice crystals. All
the way up the half-mile
precipice it fingered and wrenched
away at groaning ice-slabs. It
screamed over the top, whirled snow
in a dervish dance around the hollow
there, piled snow into the long furrow
plowed ruler-straight through
streamlined hummocks of snow.
The sun glinted on black rock
glazed by ice, chasms and ridges and
bridges of ice. It lit the snow slope
to a frozen glare, penciled black
shadow down the long furrow, and
flashed at the furrow's end on a
thing of metal and plastics, an artifact
thrown down in the dead wilderness.
Nothing grew, nothing flew, nothing
walked, nothing talked. But the
thing in the hollow was stirring in
stiff jerks like a snake with its back
broken or a clockwork toy running
down. When the movements stopped,
there was a click and a strange
sound began. Thin, scratchy, inaudible
more than a yard away, weary
but still cocky, there leaked from the
shape in the hollow the sound of a
human voice.
"I've tried my hands and arms
and they seem to work," it began.
"I've wiggled my toes with entire
success. It's well on the cards that
I'm all in one piece and not broken
up at all, though I don't see how it
could happen. Right now I don't
feel like struggling up and finding
out. I'm fine where I am. I'll just lie
here for a while and relax, and get
some of the story on tape. This suit's
got a built-in recorder, I might as
well use it. That way even if I'm not
as well as I feel, I'll leave a message.
You probably know we're back
and wonder what went wrong.
"I suppose I'm in a state of shock.
That's why I can't seem to get up.
Who wouldn't be shocked after luck
like that?
"I've always been lucky, I guess.
Luck got me a place in the
Whale
.
Sure I'm a good astronomer but so
are lots of other guys. If I were ten
years older, it would have been an
honor, being picked for the first long
jump in the first starship ever. At my
age it was luck.
"You'll want to know if the ship
worked. Well, she did. Went like a
bomb. We got lined up between
Earth and Mars, you'll remember,
and James pushed the button marked
'Jump'. Took his finger off the button
and there we were:
Alpha Centauri
.
Two months later your time,
one second later by us. We covered
our whole survey assignment like
that, smooth as a pint of old and
mild which right now I could certainly
use. Better yet would be a pint
of hot black coffee with sugar in.
Failing that, I could even go for a
long drink of cold water. There was
never anything wrong with the
Whale
till right at the end and even then I
doubt if it was the ship itself that
fouled things up.
"That was some survey assignment.
We astronomers really lived.
Wait till you see—but of course you
won't. I could weep when I think of
those miles of lovely color film, all
gone up in smoke.
"I'm shocked all right. I never said
who I was. Matt Hennessy, from Farside
Observatory, back of the Moon,
just back from a proving flight
cum
astronomical survey in the starship
Whale
. Whoever you are who finds
this tape, you're made. Take it to
any radio station or newspaper office.
You'll find you can name your price
and don't take any wooden nickels.
"Where had I got to? I'd told you
how we happened to find Chang,
hadn't I? That's what the natives called
it. Walking, talking natives on a
blue sky planet with 1.1 g gravity
and a twenty per cent oxygen atmosphere
at fifteen p.s.i. The odds
against finding Chang on a six-sun
survey on the first star jump ever
must be up in the googols. We certainly
were lucky.
"The Chang natives aren't very
technical—haven't got space travel
for instance. They're good astronomers,
though. We were able to show
them our sun, in their telescopes. In
their way, they're a highly civilized
people. Look more like cats than
people, but they're people all right.
If you doubt it, chew these facts
over.
"One, they learned our language
in four weeks. When I say they, I
mean a ten-man team of them.
"Two, they brew a near-beer that's
a lot nearer than the canned stuff we
had aboard the
Whale
.
"Three, they've a great sense of
humor. Ran rather to silly practical
jokes, but still. Can't say I care for
that hot-foot and belly-laugh stuff
myself, but tastes differ.
"Four, the ten-man language team
also learned chess and table tennis.
"But why go on? People who talk
English, drink beer, like jokes and
beat me at chess or table-tennis are
people for my money, even if they
look like tigers in trousers.
"It was funny the way they won
all the time at table tennis. They certainly
weren't so hot at it. Maybe
that ten per cent extra gravity put us
off our strokes. As for chess, Svendlov
was our champion. He won
sometimes. The rest of us seemed to
lose whichever Chingsi we played.
There again it wasn't so much that
they were good. How could they be,
in the time? It was more that we all
seemed to make silly mistakes when
we played them and that's fatal in
chess. Of course it's a screwy situation,
playing chess with something
that grows its own fur coat, has yellow
eyes an inch and a half long
and long white whiskers. Could
you
have kept your mind on the game?
"And don't think I fell victim to
their feline charm. The children were
pets, but you didn't feel like patting
the adults on their big grinning
heads. Personally I didn't like the one
I knew best. He was called—well, we
called him Charley, and he was the
ethnologist, ambassador, contact man,
or whatever you like to call him, who
came back with us. Why I disliked
him was because he was always trying
to get the edge on you. All the
time he had to be top. Great sense
of humor, of course. I nearly broke
my neck on that butter-slide he fixed
up in the metal alleyway to the
Whale's
engine room. Charley laughed
fit to bust, everyone laughed, I
even laughed myself though doing it
hurt me more than the tumble had.
Yes, life and soul of the party, old
Charley ...
"My last sight of the
Minnow
was
a cabin full of dead and dying men,
the sweetish stink of burned flesh
and the choking reek of scorching insulation,
the boat jolting and shuddering
and beginning to break up,
and in the middle of the flames, still
unhurt, was Charley. He was laughing ...
"My God, it's dark out here. Wonder
how high I am. Must be all of
fifty miles, and doing eight hundred
miles an hour at least. I'll be doing
more than that when I land. What's
final velocity for a fifty-mile fall?
Same as a fifty thousand mile fall, I
suppose; same as escape; twenty-four
thousand miles an hour. I'll make a
mess ...
"That's better. Why didn't I close
my eyes before? Those star streaks
made me dizzy. I'll make a nice
shooting star when I hit air. Come to
think of it, I must be deep in air
now. Let's take a look.
"It's getting lighter. Look at those
peaks down there! Like great knives.
I don't seem to be falling as fast as
I expected though. Almost seem to be
floating. Let's switch on the radio
and tell the world hello. Hello, earth
... hello, again ... and good-by ...
"Sorry about that. I passed out. I
don't know what I said, if anything,
and the suit recorder has no playback
or eraser. What must have happened
is that the suit ran out of
oxygen, and I lost consciousness due
to anoxia. I dreamed I switched on
the radio, but I actually switched on
the emergency tank, thank the Lord,
and that brought me round.
"Come to think of it, why not
crack the suit and breath fresh air
instead of bottled?
"No. I'd have to get up to do that.
I think I'll just lie here a little bit
longer and get properly rested up
before I try anything big like standing
up.
"I was telling about the return
journey, wasn't I? The long jump
back home, which should have dumped
us between the orbits of Earth
and Mars. Instead of which, when
James took his finger off the button,
the mass-detector showed nothing
except the noise-level of the universe.
"We were out in that no place for
a day. We astronomers had to establish
our exact position relative to the
solar system. The crew had to find
out exactly what went wrong. The
physicists had to make mystic passes
in front of meters and mutter about
residual folds in stress-free space.
Our task was easy, because we were
about half a light-year from the sun.
The crew's job was also easy: they
found what went wrong in less than
half an hour.
"It still seems incredible. To program
the ship for a star-jump, you
merely told it where you were and
where you wanted to go. In practical
terms, that entailed first a series of
exact measurements which had to be
translated into the somewhat abstruse
co-ordinate system we used based on
the topological order of mass-points
in the galaxy. Then you cut a tape on
the computer and hit the button.
Nothing was wrong with the computer.
Nothing was wrong with the
engines. We'd hit the right button
and we'd gone to the place we'd aimed
for. All we'd done was aim for
the wrong place. It hurts me to tell
you this and I'm just attached personnel
with no space-flight tradition. In
practical terms, one highly trained
crew member had punched a wrong
pattern of holes on the tape. Another
equally skilled had failed to notice
this when reading back. A childish
error, highly improbable; twice repeated,
thus squaring the improbability.
Incredible, but that's what
happened.
"Anyway, we took good care with
the next lot of measurements. That's
why we were out there so long. They
were cross-checked about five times.
I got sick so I climbed into a spacesuit
and went outside and took some
photographs of the Sun which I hoped
would help to determine hydrogen
density in the outer regions. When
I got back everything was ready. We
disposed ourselves about the control
room and relaxed for all we were
worth. We were all praying that this
time nothing would go wrong, and
all looking forward to seeing Earth
again after four months subjective
time away, except for Charley, who
was still chuckling and shaking his
head, and Captain James who was
glaring at Charley and obviously
wishing human dignity permitted him
to tear Charley limb from limb. Then
James pressed the button.
"Everything twanged like a bowstring.
I felt myself turned inside out,
passed through a small sieve, and
poured back into shape. The entire
bow wall-screen was full of Earth.
Something was wrong all right, and
this time it was much, much worse.
We'd come out of the jump about
two hundred miles above the Pacific,
pointed straight down, traveling at a
relative speed of about two thousand
miles an hour.
"It was a fantastic situation. Here
was the
Whale
, the most powerful
ship ever built, which could cover
fifty light-years in a subjective time
of one second, and it was helpless.
For, as of course you know, the
star-drive couldn't be used again for
at least two hours.
"The
Whale
also had ion rockets
of course, the standard deuterium-fusion
thing with direct conversion.
As again you know, this is good for
interplanetary flight because you can
run it continuously and it has extremely
high exhaust velocity. But in
our situation it was no good because
it has rather a low thrust. It would
have taken more time than we had to
deflect us enough to avoid a smash.
We had five minutes to abandon
ship.
"James got us all into the
Minnow
at a dead run. There was no time to
take anything at all except the clothes
we stood in. The
Minnow
was meant
for short heavy hops to planets or
asteroids. In addition to the ion drive
it had emergency atomic rockets,
using steam for reaction mass. We
thanked God for that when Cazamian
canceled our downwards velocity
with them in a few seconds. We
curved away up over China and from
about fifty miles high we saw the
Whale
hit the Pacific. Six hundred
tons of mass at well over two thousand
miles an hour make an almighty
splash. By now you'll have divers
down, but I doubt they'll salvage
much you can use.
"I wonder why James went down
with the ship, as the saying is? Not
that it made any difference. It must
have broken his heart to know that
his lovely ship was getting the chopper.
Or did he suspect another human
error?
"We didn't have time to think
about that, or even to get the radio
working. The steam rockets blew
up. Poor Cazamian was burnt to a
crisp. Only thing that saved me was
the spacesuit I was still wearing. I
snapped the face plate down because
the cabin was filling with fumes. I
saw Charley coming out of the toilet—that's
how he'd escaped—and I
saw him beginning to laugh. Then
the port side collapsed and I fell out.
"I saw the launch spinning away,
glowing red against a purplish black
sky. I tumbled head over heels towards
the huge curved shield of
earth fifty miles below. I shut my
eyes and that's about all I remember.
I don't see how any of us could have
survived. I think we're all dead.
"I'll have to get up and crack this
suit and let some air in. But I can't.
I fell fifty miles without a parachute.
I'm dead so I can't stand up."
There was silence for a while except
for the vicious howl of the wind.
Then snow began to shift on the
ledge. A man crawled stiffly out and
came shakily to his feet. He moved
slowly around for some time. After
about two hours he returned to the
hollow, squatted down and switched
on the recorder. The voice began
again, considerably wearier.
"Hello there. I'm in the bleakest
wilderness I've ever seen. This place
makes the moon look cozy. There's
precipice around me every way but
one and that's up. So it's up I'll have
to go till I find a way to go down.
I've been chewing snow to quench
my thirst but I could eat a horse. I
picked up a short-wave broadcast on
my suit but couldn't understand a
word. Not English, not French, and
there I stick. Listened to it for fifteen
minutes just to hear a human voice
again. I haven't much hope of reaching
anyone with my five milliwatt
suit transmitter but I'll keep trying.
"Just before I start the climb there
are two things I want to get on tape.
The first is how I got here. I've remembered
something from my military
training, when I did some parachute
jumps. Terminal velocity for a
human body falling through air is
about one hundred twenty m.p.h.
Falling fifty miles is no worse than
falling five hundred feet. You'd be
lucky to live through a five hundred
foot fall, true, but I've been lucky.
The suit is bulky but light and probably
slowed my fall. I hit a sixty mile
an hour updraft this side of the
mountain, skidded downhill through
about half a mile of snow and fetched
up in a drift. The suit is part
worn but still operational. I'm fine.
"The second thing I want to say is
about the Chingsi, and here it is:
watch out for them. Those jokers are
dangerous. I'm not telling how because
I've got a scientific reputation
to watch. You'll have to figure it out
for yourselves. Here are the clues:
(1) The Chingsi talk and laugh but
after all they aren't human. On
an alien world a hundred light-years
away, why shouldn't alien
talents develop? A talent that's
so uncertain and rudimentary
here that most people don't believe
it, might be highly developed
out there.
(2) The
Whale
expedition did fine
till it found Chang. Then it hit
a seam of bad luck. Real stinking
bad luck that went on and
on till it looks fishy. We lost
the ship, we lost the launch, all
but one of us lost our lives. We
couldn't even win a game of
ping-pong.
"So what is luck, good or bad?
Scientifically speaking, future chance
events are by definition chance. They
can turn out favorable or not. When
a preponderance of chance events has
occurred unfavorably, you've got bad
luck. It's a fancy name for a lot of
chance results that didn't go your
way. But the gambler defines it differently.
For him, luck refers to the
future, and you've got bad luck when
future chance events won't go your
way. Scientific investigations into this
have been inconclusive, but everyone
knows that some people are lucky and
others aren't. All we've got are hints
and glimmers, the fumbling touch of
a rudimentary talent. There's the evil
eye legend and the Jonah, bad luck
bringers. Superstition? Maybe; but
ask the insurance companies about
accident prones. What's in a name?
Call a man unlucky and you're superstitious.
Call him accident prone and
that's sound business sense. I've said
enough.
"All the same, search the space-flight
records, talk to the actuaries.
When a ship is working perfectly
and is operated by a hand-picked
crew of highly trained men in perfect
condition, how often is it wrecked
by a series of silly errors happening
one after another in defiance of
probability?
"I'll sign off with two thoughts,
one depressing and one cheering. A
single Chingsi wrecked our ship and
our launch. What could a whole
planetful of them do?
"On the other hand, a talent that
manipulates chance events is bound
to be chancy. No matter how highly
developed it can't be surefire. The
proof is that I've survived to tell the
tale."
At twenty below zero and fifty
miles an hour the wind ravaged the
mountain. Peering through his polarized
vizor at the white waste and the
snow-filled air howling over it, sliding
and stumbling with every step
on a slope that got gradually steeper
and seemed to go on forever, Matt
Hennessy began to inch his way up
the north face of Mount Everest.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
February 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The mission is to make peace with Alpha Centauri. | The mission is to invade Chang. | The mission is a test flight and astronomical survey. | The mission is to make contact with Chang. | 2 |
24517_4BTC7S62_6 | Why does Matt feel the need to warn people about the Chingsi? | ACCIDENTAL DEATH
BY PETER BAILY
The most
dangerous of weapons
is the one you don't know is loaded.
Illustrated by Schoenherr
The
wind howled out of
the northwest, blind
with snow and barbed
with ice crystals. All
the way up the half-mile
precipice it fingered and wrenched
away at groaning ice-slabs. It
screamed over the top, whirled snow
in a dervish dance around the hollow
there, piled snow into the long furrow
plowed ruler-straight through
streamlined hummocks of snow.
The sun glinted on black rock
glazed by ice, chasms and ridges and
bridges of ice. It lit the snow slope
to a frozen glare, penciled black
shadow down the long furrow, and
flashed at the furrow's end on a
thing of metal and plastics, an artifact
thrown down in the dead wilderness.
Nothing grew, nothing flew, nothing
walked, nothing talked. But the
thing in the hollow was stirring in
stiff jerks like a snake with its back
broken or a clockwork toy running
down. When the movements stopped,
there was a click and a strange
sound began. Thin, scratchy, inaudible
more than a yard away, weary
but still cocky, there leaked from the
shape in the hollow the sound of a
human voice.
"I've tried my hands and arms
and they seem to work," it began.
"I've wiggled my toes with entire
success. It's well on the cards that
I'm all in one piece and not broken
up at all, though I don't see how it
could happen. Right now I don't
feel like struggling up and finding
out. I'm fine where I am. I'll just lie
here for a while and relax, and get
some of the story on tape. This suit's
got a built-in recorder, I might as
well use it. That way even if I'm not
as well as I feel, I'll leave a message.
You probably know we're back
and wonder what went wrong.
"I suppose I'm in a state of shock.
That's why I can't seem to get up.
Who wouldn't be shocked after luck
like that?
"I've always been lucky, I guess.
Luck got me a place in the
Whale
.
Sure I'm a good astronomer but so
are lots of other guys. If I were ten
years older, it would have been an
honor, being picked for the first long
jump in the first starship ever. At my
age it was luck.
"You'll want to know if the ship
worked. Well, she did. Went like a
bomb. We got lined up between
Earth and Mars, you'll remember,
and James pushed the button marked
'Jump'. Took his finger off the button
and there we were:
Alpha Centauri
.
Two months later your time,
one second later by us. We covered
our whole survey assignment like
that, smooth as a pint of old and
mild which right now I could certainly
use. Better yet would be a pint
of hot black coffee with sugar in.
Failing that, I could even go for a
long drink of cold water. There was
never anything wrong with the
Whale
till right at the end and even then I
doubt if it was the ship itself that
fouled things up.
"That was some survey assignment.
We astronomers really lived.
Wait till you see—but of course you
won't. I could weep when I think of
those miles of lovely color film, all
gone up in smoke.
"I'm shocked all right. I never said
who I was. Matt Hennessy, from Farside
Observatory, back of the Moon,
just back from a proving flight
cum
astronomical survey in the starship
Whale
. Whoever you are who finds
this tape, you're made. Take it to
any radio station or newspaper office.
You'll find you can name your price
and don't take any wooden nickels.
"Where had I got to? I'd told you
how we happened to find Chang,
hadn't I? That's what the natives called
it. Walking, talking natives on a
blue sky planet with 1.1 g gravity
and a twenty per cent oxygen atmosphere
at fifteen p.s.i. The odds
against finding Chang on a six-sun
survey on the first star jump ever
must be up in the googols. We certainly
were lucky.
"The Chang natives aren't very
technical—haven't got space travel
for instance. They're good astronomers,
though. We were able to show
them our sun, in their telescopes. In
their way, they're a highly civilized
people. Look more like cats than
people, but they're people all right.
If you doubt it, chew these facts
over.
"One, they learned our language
in four weeks. When I say they, I
mean a ten-man team of them.
"Two, they brew a near-beer that's
a lot nearer than the canned stuff we
had aboard the
Whale
.
"Three, they've a great sense of
humor. Ran rather to silly practical
jokes, but still. Can't say I care for
that hot-foot and belly-laugh stuff
myself, but tastes differ.
"Four, the ten-man language team
also learned chess and table tennis.
"But why go on? People who talk
English, drink beer, like jokes and
beat me at chess or table-tennis are
people for my money, even if they
look like tigers in trousers.
"It was funny the way they won
all the time at table tennis. They certainly
weren't so hot at it. Maybe
that ten per cent extra gravity put us
off our strokes. As for chess, Svendlov
was our champion. He won
sometimes. The rest of us seemed to
lose whichever Chingsi we played.
There again it wasn't so much that
they were good. How could they be,
in the time? It was more that we all
seemed to make silly mistakes when
we played them and that's fatal in
chess. Of course it's a screwy situation,
playing chess with something
that grows its own fur coat, has yellow
eyes an inch and a half long
and long white whiskers. Could
you
have kept your mind on the game?
"And don't think I fell victim to
their feline charm. The children were
pets, but you didn't feel like patting
the adults on their big grinning
heads. Personally I didn't like the one
I knew best. He was called—well, we
called him Charley, and he was the
ethnologist, ambassador, contact man,
or whatever you like to call him, who
came back with us. Why I disliked
him was because he was always trying
to get the edge on you. All the
time he had to be top. Great sense
of humor, of course. I nearly broke
my neck on that butter-slide he fixed
up in the metal alleyway to the
Whale's
engine room. Charley laughed
fit to bust, everyone laughed, I
even laughed myself though doing it
hurt me more than the tumble had.
Yes, life and soul of the party, old
Charley ...
"My last sight of the
Minnow
was
a cabin full of dead and dying men,
the sweetish stink of burned flesh
and the choking reek of scorching insulation,
the boat jolting and shuddering
and beginning to break up,
and in the middle of the flames, still
unhurt, was Charley. He was laughing ...
"My God, it's dark out here. Wonder
how high I am. Must be all of
fifty miles, and doing eight hundred
miles an hour at least. I'll be doing
more than that when I land. What's
final velocity for a fifty-mile fall?
Same as a fifty thousand mile fall, I
suppose; same as escape; twenty-four
thousand miles an hour. I'll make a
mess ...
"That's better. Why didn't I close
my eyes before? Those star streaks
made me dizzy. I'll make a nice
shooting star when I hit air. Come to
think of it, I must be deep in air
now. Let's take a look.
"It's getting lighter. Look at those
peaks down there! Like great knives.
I don't seem to be falling as fast as
I expected though. Almost seem to be
floating. Let's switch on the radio
and tell the world hello. Hello, earth
... hello, again ... and good-by ...
"Sorry about that. I passed out. I
don't know what I said, if anything,
and the suit recorder has no playback
or eraser. What must have happened
is that the suit ran out of
oxygen, and I lost consciousness due
to anoxia. I dreamed I switched on
the radio, but I actually switched on
the emergency tank, thank the Lord,
and that brought me round.
"Come to think of it, why not
crack the suit and breath fresh air
instead of bottled?
"No. I'd have to get up to do that.
I think I'll just lie here a little bit
longer and get properly rested up
before I try anything big like standing
up.
"I was telling about the return
journey, wasn't I? The long jump
back home, which should have dumped
us between the orbits of Earth
and Mars. Instead of which, when
James took his finger off the button,
the mass-detector showed nothing
except the noise-level of the universe.
"We were out in that no place for
a day. We astronomers had to establish
our exact position relative to the
solar system. The crew had to find
out exactly what went wrong. The
physicists had to make mystic passes
in front of meters and mutter about
residual folds in stress-free space.
Our task was easy, because we were
about half a light-year from the sun.
The crew's job was also easy: they
found what went wrong in less than
half an hour.
"It still seems incredible. To program
the ship for a star-jump, you
merely told it where you were and
where you wanted to go. In practical
terms, that entailed first a series of
exact measurements which had to be
translated into the somewhat abstruse
co-ordinate system we used based on
the topological order of mass-points
in the galaxy. Then you cut a tape on
the computer and hit the button.
Nothing was wrong with the computer.
Nothing was wrong with the
engines. We'd hit the right button
and we'd gone to the place we'd aimed
for. All we'd done was aim for
the wrong place. It hurts me to tell
you this and I'm just attached personnel
with no space-flight tradition. In
practical terms, one highly trained
crew member had punched a wrong
pattern of holes on the tape. Another
equally skilled had failed to notice
this when reading back. A childish
error, highly improbable; twice repeated,
thus squaring the improbability.
Incredible, but that's what
happened.
"Anyway, we took good care with
the next lot of measurements. That's
why we were out there so long. They
were cross-checked about five times.
I got sick so I climbed into a spacesuit
and went outside and took some
photographs of the Sun which I hoped
would help to determine hydrogen
density in the outer regions. When
I got back everything was ready. We
disposed ourselves about the control
room and relaxed for all we were
worth. We were all praying that this
time nothing would go wrong, and
all looking forward to seeing Earth
again after four months subjective
time away, except for Charley, who
was still chuckling and shaking his
head, and Captain James who was
glaring at Charley and obviously
wishing human dignity permitted him
to tear Charley limb from limb. Then
James pressed the button.
"Everything twanged like a bowstring.
I felt myself turned inside out,
passed through a small sieve, and
poured back into shape. The entire
bow wall-screen was full of Earth.
Something was wrong all right, and
this time it was much, much worse.
We'd come out of the jump about
two hundred miles above the Pacific,
pointed straight down, traveling at a
relative speed of about two thousand
miles an hour.
"It was a fantastic situation. Here
was the
Whale
, the most powerful
ship ever built, which could cover
fifty light-years in a subjective time
of one second, and it was helpless.
For, as of course you know, the
star-drive couldn't be used again for
at least two hours.
"The
Whale
also had ion rockets
of course, the standard deuterium-fusion
thing with direct conversion.
As again you know, this is good for
interplanetary flight because you can
run it continuously and it has extremely
high exhaust velocity. But in
our situation it was no good because
it has rather a low thrust. It would
have taken more time than we had to
deflect us enough to avoid a smash.
We had five minutes to abandon
ship.
"James got us all into the
Minnow
at a dead run. There was no time to
take anything at all except the clothes
we stood in. The
Minnow
was meant
for short heavy hops to planets or
asteroids. In addition to the ion drive
it had emergency atomic rockets,
using steam for reaction mass. We
thanked God for that when Cazamian
canceled our downwards velocity
with them in a few seconds. We
curved away up over China and from
about fifty miles high we saw the
Whale
hit the Pacific. Six hundred
tons of mass at well over two thousand
miles an hour make an almighty
splash. By now you'll have divers
down, but I doubt they'll salvage
much you can use.
"I wonder why James went down
with the ship, as the saying is? Not
that it made any difference. It must
have broken his heart to know that
his lovely ship was getting the chopper.
Or did he suspect another human
error?
"We didn't have time to think
about that, or even to get the radio
working. The steam rockets blew
up. Poor Cazamian was burnt to a
crisp. Only thing that saved me was
the spacesuit I was still wearing. I
snapped the face plate down because
the cabin was filling with fumes. I
saw Charley coming out of the toilet—that's
how he'd escaped—and I
saw him beginning to laugh. Then
the port side collapsed and I fell out.
"I saw the launch spinning away,
glowing red against a purplish black
sky. I tumbled head over heels towards
the huge curved shield of
earth fifty miles below. I shut my
eyes and that's about all I remember.
I don't see how any of us could have
survived. I think we're all dead.
"I'll have to get up and crack this
suit and let some air in. But I can't.
I fell fifty miles without a parachute.
I'm dead so I can't stand up."
There was silence for a while except
for the vicious howl of the wind.
Then snow began to shift on the
ledge. A man crawled stiffly out and
came shakily to his feet. He moved
slowly around for some time. After
about two hours he returned to the
hollow, squatted down and switched
on the recorder. The voice began
again, considerably wearier.
"Hello there. I'm in the bleakest
wilderness I've ever seen. This place
makes the moon look cozy. There's
precipice around me every way but
one and that's up. So it's up I'll have
to go till I find a way to go down.
I've been chewing snow to quench
my thirst but I could eat a horse. I
picked up a short-wave broadcast on
my suit but couldn't understand a
word. Not English, not French, and
there I stick. Listened to it for fifteen
minutes just to hear a human voice
again. I haven't much hope of reaching
anyone with my five milliwatt
suit transmitter but I'll keep trying.
"Just before I start the climb there
are two things I want to get on tape.
The first is how I got here. I've remembered
something from my military
training, when I did some parachute
jumps. Terminal velocity for a
human body falling through air is
about one hundred twenty m.p.h.
Falling fifty miles is no worse than
falling five hundred feet. You'd be
lucky to live through a five hundred
foot fall, true, but I've been lucky.
The suit is bulky but light and probably
slowed my fall. I hit a sixty mile
an hour updraft this side of the
mountain, skidded downhill through
about half a mile of snow and fetched
up in a drift. The suit is part
worn but still operational. I'm fine.
"The second thing I want to say is
about the Chingsi, and here it is:
watch out for them. Those jokers are
dangerous. I'm not telling how because
I've got a scientific reputation
to watch. You'll have to figure it out
for yourselves. Here are the clues:
(1) The Chingsi talk and laugh but
after all they aren't human. On
an alien world a hundred light-years
away, why shouldn't alien
talents develop? A talent that's
so uncertain and rudimentary
here that most people don't believe
it, might be highly developed
out there.
(2) The
Whale
expedition did fine
till it found Chang. Then it hit
a seam of bad luck. Real stinking
bad luck that went on and
on till it looks fishy. We lost
the ship, we lost the launch, all
but one of us lost our lives. We
couldn't even win a game of
ping-pong.
"So what is luck, good or bad?
Scientifically speaking, future chance
events are by definition chance. They
can turn out favorable or not. When
a preponderance of chance events has
occurred unfavorably, you've got bad
luck. It's a fancy name for a lot of
chance results that didn't go your
way. But the gambler defines it differently.
For him, luck refers to the
future, and you've got bad luck when
future chance events won't go your
way. Scientific investigations into this
have been inconclusive, but everyone
knows that some people are lucky and
others aren't. All we've got are hints
and glimmers, the fumbling touch of
a rudimentary talent. There's the evil
eye legend and the Jonah, bad luck
bringers. Superstition? Maybe; but
ask the insurance companies about
accident prones. What's in a name?
Call a man unlucky and you're superstitious.
Call him accident prone and
that's sound business sense. I've said
enough.
"All the same, search the space-flight
records, talk to the actuaries.
When a ship is working perfectly
and is operated by a hand-picked
crew of highly trained men in perfect
condition, how often is it wrecked
by a series of silly errors happening
one after another in defiance of
probability?
"I'll sign off with two thoughts,
one depressing and one cheering. A
single Chingsi wrecked our ship and
our launch. What could a whole
planetful of them do?
"On the other hand, a talent that
manipulates chance events is bound
to be chancy. No matter how highly
developed it can't be surefire. The
proof is that I've survived to tell the
tale."
At twenty below zero and fifty
miles an hour the wind ravaged the
mountain. Peering through his polarized
vizor at the white waste and the
snow-filled air howling over it, sliding
and stumbling with every step
on a slope that got gradually steeper
and seemed to go on forever, Matt
Hennessy began to inch his way up
the north face of Mount Everest.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
February 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Matt is convinced the Chingsi are bad luck. | Matt is convinced that Charlie deliberately destroyed the Whale. | Matt is convinced the Chingsi are evil. | Matt is convinced that Charlie deliberately destroyed the Minnow. | 0 |
24517_4BTC7S62_7 | Where is Matt from? | ACCIDENTAL DEATH
BY PETER BAILY
The most
dangerous of weapons
is the one you don't know is loaded.
Illustrated by Schoenherr
The
wind howled out of
the northwest, blind
with snow and barbed
with ice crystals. All
the way up the half-mile
precipice it fingered and wrenched
away at groaning ice-slabs. It
screamed over the top, whirled snow
in a dervish dance around the hollow
there, piled snow into the long furrow
plowed ruler-straight through
streamlined hummocks of snow.
The sun glinted on black rock
glazed by ice, chasms and ridges and
bridges of ice. It lit the snow slope
to a frozen glare, penciled black
shadow down the long furrow, and
flashed at the furrow's end on a
thing of metal and plastics, an artifact
thrown down in the dead wilderness.
Nothing grew, nothing flew, nothing
walked, nothing talked. But the
thing in the hollow was stirring in
stiff jerks like a snake with its back
broken or a clockwork toy running
down. When the movements stopped,
there was a click and a strange
sound began. Thin, scratchy, inaudible
more than a yard away, weary
but still cocky, there leaked from the
shape in the hollow the sound of a
human voice.
"I've tried my hands and arms
and they seem to work," it began.
"I've wiggled my toes with entire
success. It's well on the cards that
I'm all in one piece and not broken
up at all, though I don't see how it
could happen. Right now I don't
feel like struggling up and finding
out. I'm fine where I am. I'll just lie
here for a while and relax, and get
some of the story on tape. This suit's
got a built-in recorder, I might as
well use it. That way even if I'm not
as well as I feel, I'll leave a message.
You probably know we're back
and wonder what went wrong.
"I suppose I'm in a state of shock.
That's why I can't seem to get up.
Who wouldn't be shocked after luck
like that?
"I've always been lucky, I guess.
Luck got me a place in the
Whale
.
Sure I'm a good astronomer but so
are lots of other guys. If I were ten
years older, it would have been an
honor, being picked for the first long
jump in the first starship ever. At my
age it was luck.
"You'll want to know if the ship
worked. Well, she did. Went like a
bomb. We got lined up between
Earth and Mars, you'll remember,
and James pushed the button marked
'Jump'. Took his finger off the button
and there we were:
Alpha Centauri
.
Two months later your time,
one second later by us. We covered
our whole survey assignment like
that, smooth as a pint of old and
mild which right now I could certainly
use. Better yet would be a pint
of hot black coffee with sugar in.
Failing that, I could even go for a
long drink of cold water. There was
never anything wrong with the
Whale
till right at the end and even then I
doubt if it was the ship itself that
fouled things up.
"That was some survey assignment.
We astronomers really lived.
Wait till you see—but of course you
won't. I could weep when I think of
those miles of lovely color film, all
gone up in smoke.
"I'm shocked all right. I never said
who I was. Matt Hennessy, from Farside
Observatory, back of the Moon,
just back from a proving flight
cum
astronomical survey in the starship
Whale
. Whoever you are who finds
this tape, you're made. Take it to
any radio station or newspaper office.
You'll find you can name your price
and don't take any wooden nickels.
"Where had I got to? I'd told you
how we happened to find Chang,
hadn't I? That's what the natives called
it. Walking, talking natives on a
blue sky planet with 1.1 g gravity
and a twenty per cent oxygen atmosphere
at fifteen p.s.i. The odds
against finding Chang on a six-sun
survey on the first star jump ever
must be up in the googols. We certainly
were lucky.
"The Chang natives aren't very
technical—haven't got space travel
for instance. They're good astronomers,
though. We were able to show
them our sun, in their telescopes. In
their way, they're a highly civilized
people. Look more like cats than
people, but they're people all right.
If you doubt it, chew these facts
over.
"One, they learned our language
in four weeks. When I say they, I
mean a ten-man team of them.
"Two, they brew a near-beer that's
a lot nearer than the canned stuff we
had aboard the
Whale
.
"Three, they've a great sense of
humor. Ran rather to silly practical
jokes, but still. Can't say I care for
that hot-foot and belly-laugh stuff
myself, but tastes differ.
"Four, the ten-man language team
also learned chess and table tennis.
"But why go on? People who talk
English, drink beer, like jokes and
beat me at chess or table-tennis are
people for my money, even if they
look like tigers in trousers.
"It was funny the way they won
all the time at table tennis. They certainly
weren't so hot at it. Maybe
that ten per cent extra gravity put us
off our strokes. As for chess, Svendlov
was our champion. He won
sometimes. The rest of us seemed to
lose whichever Chingsi we played.
There again it wasn't so much that
they were good. How could they be,
in the time? It was more that we all
seemed to make silly mistakes when
we played them and that's fatal in
chess. Of course it's a screwy situation,
playing chess with something
that grows its own fur coat, has yellow
eyes an inch and a half long
and long white whiskers. Could
you
have kept your mind on the game?
"And don't think I fell victim to
their feline charm. The children were
pets, but you didn't feel like patting
the adults on their big grinning
heads. Personally I didn't like the one
I knew best. He was called—well, we
called him Charley, and he was the
ethnologist, ambassador, contact man,
or whatever you like to call him, who
came back with us. Why I disliked
him was because he was always trying
to get the edge on you. All the
time he had to be top. Great sense
of humor, of course. I nearly broke
my neck on that butter-slide he fixed
up in the metal alleyway to the
Whale's
engine room. Charley laughed
fit to bust, everyone laughed, I
even laughed myself though doing it
hurt me more than the tumble had.
Yes, life and soul of the party, old
Charley ...
"My last sight of the
Minnow
was
a cabin full of dead and dying men,
the sweetish stink of burned flesh
and the choking reek of scorching insulation,
the boat jolting and shuddering
and beginning to break up,
and in the middle of the flames, still
unhurt, was Charley. He was laughing ...
"My God, it's dark out here. Wonder
how high I am. Must be all of
fifty miles, and doing eight hundred
miles an hour at least. I'll be doing
more than that when I land. What's
final velocity for a fifty-mile fall?
Same as a fifty thousand mile fall, I
suppose; same as escape; twenty-four
thousand miles an hour. I'll make a
mess ...
"That's better. Why didn't I close
my eyes before? Those star streaks
made me dizzy. I'll make a nice
shooting star when I hit air. Come to
think of it, I must be deep in air
now. Let's take a look.
"It's getting lighter. Look at those
peaks down there! Like great knives.
I don't seem to be falling as fast as
I expected though. Almost seem to be
floating. Let's switch on the radio
and tell the world hello. Hello, earth
... hello, again ... and good-by ...
"Sorry about that. I passed out. I
don't know what I said, if anything,
and the suit recorder has no playback
or eraser. What must have happened
is that the suit ran out of
oxygen, and I lost consciousness due
to anoxia. I dreamed I switched on
the radio, but I actually switched on
the emergency tank, thank the Lord,
and that brought me round.
"Come to think of it, why not
crack the suit and breath fresh air
instead of bottled?
"No. I'd have to get up to do that.
I think I'll just lie here a little bit
longer and get properly rested up
before I try anything big like standing
up.
"I was telling about the return
journey, wasn't I? The long jump
back home, which should have dumped
us between the orbits of Earth
and Mars. Instead of which, when
James took his finger off the button,
the mass-detector showed nothing
except the noise-level of the universe.
"We were out in that no place for
a day. We astronomers had to establish
our exact position relative to the
solar system. The crew had to find
out exactly what went wrong. The
physicists had to make mystic passes
in front of meters and mutter about
residual folds in stress-free space.
Our task was easy, because we were
about half a light-year from the sun.
The crew's job was also easy: they
found what went wrong in less than
half an hour.
"It still seems incredible. To program
the ship for a star-jump, you
merely told it where you were and
where you wanted to go. In practical
terms, that entailed first a series of
exact measurements which had to be
translated into the somewhat abstruse
co-ordinate system we used based on
the topological order of mass-points
in the galaxy. Then you cut a tape on
the computer and hit the button.
Nothing was wrong with the computer.
Nothing was wrong with the
engines. We'd hit the right button
and we'd gone to the place we'd aimed
for. All we'd done was aim for
the wrong place. It hurts me to tell
you this and I'm just attached personnel
with no space-flight tradition. In
practical terms, one highly trained
crew member had punched a wrong
pattern of holes on the tape. Another
equally skilled had failed to notice
this when reading back. A childish
error, highly improbable; twice repeated,
thus squaring the improbability.
Incredible, but that's what
happened.
"Anyway, we took good care with
the next lot of measurements. That's
why we were out there so long. They
were cross-checked about five times.
I got sick so I climbed into a spacesuit
and went outside and took some
photographs of the Sun which I hoped
would help to determine hydrogen
density in the outer regions. When
I got back everything was ready. We
disposed ourselves about the control
room and relaxed for all we were
worth. We were all praying that this
time nothing would go wrong, and
all looking forward to seeing Earth
again after four months subjective
time away, except for Charley, who
was still chuckling and shaking his
head, and Captain James who was
glaring at Charley and obviously
wishing human dignity permitted him
to tear Charley limb from limb. Then
James pressed the button.
"Everything twanged like a bowstring.
I felt myself turned inside out,
passed through a small sieve, and
poured back into shape. The entire
bow wall-screen was full of Earth.
Something was wrong all right, and
this time it was much, much worse.
We'd come out of the jump about
two hundred miles above the Pacific,
pointed straight down, traveling at a
relative speed of about two thousand
miles an hour.
"It was a fantastic situation. Here
was the
Whale
, the most powerful
ship ever built, which could cover
fifty light-years in a subjective time
of one second, and it was helpless.
For, as of course you know, the
star-drive couldn't be used again for
at least two hours.
"The
Whale
also had ion rockets
of course, the standard deuterium-fusion
thing with direct conversion.
As again you know, this is good for
interplanetary flight because you can
run it continuously and it has extremely
high exhaust velocity. But in
our situation it was no good because
it has rather a low thrust. It would
have taken more time than we had to
deflect us enough to avoid a smash.
We had five minutes to abandon
ship.
"James got us all into the
Minnow
at a dead run. There was no time to
take anything at all except the clothes
we stood in. The
Minnow
was meant
for short heavy hops to planets or
asteroids. In addition to the ion drive
it had emergency atomic rockets,
using steam for reaction mass. We
thanked God for that when Cazamian
canceled our downwards velocity
with them in a few seconds. We
curved away up over China and from
about fifty miles high we saw the
Whale
hit the Pacific. Six hundred
tons of mass at well over two thousand
miles an hour make an almighty
splash. By now you'll have divers
down, but I doubt they'll salvage
much you can use.
"I wonder why James went down
with the ship, as the saying is? Not
that it made any difference. It must
have broken his heart to know that
his lovely ship was getting the chopper.
Or did he suspect another human
error?
"We didn't have time to think
about that, or even to get the radio
working. The steam rockets blew
up. Poor Cazamian was burnt to a
crisp. Only thing that saved me was
the spacesuit I was still wearing. I
snapped the face plate down because
the cabin was filling with fumes. I
saw Charley coming out of the toilet—that's
how he'd escaped—and I
saw him beginning to laugh. Then
the port side collapsed and I fell out.
"I saw the launch spinning away,
glowing red against a purplish black
sky. I tumbled head over heels towards
the huge curved shield of
earth fifty miles below. I shut my
eyes and that's about all I remember.
I don't see how any of us could have
survived. I think we're all dead.
"I'll have to get up and crack this
suit and let some air in. But I can't.
I fell fifty miles without a parachute.
I'm dead so I can't stand up."
There was silence for a while except
for the vicious howl of the wind.
Then snow began to shift on the
ledge. A man crawled stiffly out and
came shakily to his feet. He moved
slowly around for some time. After
about two hours he returned to the
hollow, squatted down and switched
on the recorder. The voice began
again, considerably wearier.
"Hello there. I'm in the bleakest
wilderness I've ever seen. This place
makes the moon look cozy. There's
precipice around me every way but
one and that's up. So it's up I'll have
to go till I find a way to go down.
I've been chewing snow to quench
my thirst but I could eat a horse. I
picked up a short-wave broadcast on
my suit but couldn't understand a
word. Not English, not French, and
there I stick. Listened to it for fifteen
minutes just to hear a human voice
again. I haven't much hope of reaching
anyone with my five milliwatt
suit transmitter but I'll keep trying.
"Just before I start the climb there
are two things I want to get on tape.
The first is how I got here. I've remembered
something from my military
training, when I did some parachute
jumps. Terminal velocity for a
human body falling through air is
about one hundred twenty m.p.h.
Falling fifty miles is no worse than
falling five hundred feet. You'd be
lucky to live through a five hundred
foot fall, true, but I've been lucky.
The suit is bulky but light and probably
slowed my fall. I hit a sixty mile
an hour updraft this side of the
mountain, skidded downhill through
about half a mile of snow and fetched
up in a drift. The suit is part
worn but still operational. I'm fine.
"The second thing I want to say is
about the Chingsi, and here it is:
watch out for them. Those jokers are
dangerous. I'm not telling how because
I've got a scientific reputation
to watch. You'll have to figure it out
for yourselves. Here are the clues:
(1) The Chingsi talk and laugh but
after all they aren't human. On
an alien world a hundred light-years
away, why shouldn't alien
talents develop? A talent that's
so uncertain and rudimentary
here that most people don't believe
it, might be highly developed
out there.
(2) The
Whale
expedition did fine
till it found Chang. Then it hit
a seam of bad luck. Real stinking
bad luck that went on and
on till it looks fishy. We lost
the ship, we lost the launch, all
but one of us lost our lives. We
couldn't even win a game of
ping-pong.
"So what is luck, good or bad?
Scientifically speaking, future chance
events are by definition chance. They
can turn out favorable or not. When
a preponderance of chance events has
occurred unfavorably, you've got bad
luck. It's a fancy name for a lot of
chance results that didn't go your
way. But the gambler defines it differently.
For him, luck refers to the
future, and you've got bad luck when
future chance events won't go your
way. Scientific investigations into this
have been inconclusive, but everyone
knows that some people are lucky and
others aren't. All we've got are hints
and glimmers, the fumbling touch of
a rudimentary talent. There's the evil
eye legend and the Jonah, bad luck
bringers. Superstition? Maybe; but
ask the insurance companies about
accident prones. What's in a name?
Call a man unlucky and you're superstitious.
Call him accident prone and
that's sound business sense. I've said
enough.
"All the same, search the space-flight
records, talk to the actuaries.
When a ship is working perfectly
and is operated by a hand-picked
crew of highly trained men in perfect
condition, how often is it wrecked
by a series of silly errors happening
one after another in defiance of
probability?
"I'll sign off with two thoughts,
one depressing and one cheering. A
single Chingsi wrecked our ship and
our launch. What could a whole
planetful of them do?
"On the other hand, a talent that
manipulates chance events is bound
to be chancy. No matter how highly
developed it can't be surefire. The
proof is that I've survived to tell the
tale."
At twenty below zero and fifty
miles an hour the wind ravaged the
mountain. Peering through his polarized
vizor at the white waste and the
snow-filled air howling over it, sliding
and stumbling with every step
on a slope that got gradually steeper
and seemed to go on forever, Matt
Hennessy began to inch his way up
the north face of Mount Everest.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
February 1959.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Matt is from France. | Matt is from the United States. | Matt is from a colony on Mars. | Matt is from a colony on the Moon. | 3 |
24521_WM4KUPLS_1 | Why does Malloy send James Nordon to the peace talks? | IN CASE OF FIRE
By RANDALL GARRETT
There are times when a broken tool is better
than a sound one, or a twisted personality
more useful than a whole one. For
instance, a whole beer bottle isn't half
the weapon that half a beer bottle is ...
Illustrated by Martinez
In his
office apartment,
on the top floor of the
Terran Embassy Building
in Occeq City, Bertrand
Malloy leafed
casually through the dossiers of the
four new men who had been assigned
to him. They were typical of the kind
of men who were sent to him, he
thought. Which meant, as usual, that
they were atypical. Every man in the
Diplomatic Corps who developed a
twitch or a quirk was shipped to
Saarkkad IV to work under Bertrand
Malloy, Permanent Terran Ambassador
to His Utter Munificence, the
Occeq of Saarkkad.
Take this first one, for instance.
Malloy ran his finger down the columns
of complex symbolism that
showed the complete psychological
analysis of the man. Psychopathic
paranoia. The man wasn't technically
insane; he could be as lucid as the next
man most of the time. But he was
morbidly suspicious that every man's
hand was turned against him. He
trusted no one, and was perpetually
on his guard against imaginary plots
and persecutions.
Number two suffered from some
sort of emotional block that left him
continually on the horns of one dilemma
or another. He was psychologically
incapable of making a decision
if he were faced with two or more
possible alternatives of any major
importance.
Number three ...
Malloy sighed and pushed the dossiers
away from him. No two men
were alike, and yet there sometimes
seemed to be an eternal sameness
about all men. He considered himself
an individual, for instance, but wasn't
the basic similarity there, after all?
He was—how old? He glanced at
the Earth calendar dial that was automatically
correlated with the Saarkkadic
calendar just above it. Fifty-nine
next week. Fifty-nine years old. And
what did he have to show for it besides
flabby muscles, sagging skin, a
wrinkled face, and gray hair?
Well, he had an excellent record in
the Corps, if nothing else. One of the
top men in his field. And he had his
memories of Diane, dead these ten
years, but still beautiful and alive in
his recollections. And—he grinned
softly to himself—he had Saarkkad.
He glanced up at the ceiling, and
mentally allowed his gaze to penetrate
it to the blue sky beyond it.
Out there was the terrible emptiness
of interstellar space—a great, yawning,
infinite chasm capable of swallowing
men, ships, planets, suns, and
whole galaxies without filling its insatiable
void.
Malloy closed his eyes. Somewhere
out there, a war was raging. He
didn't even like to think of that, but
it was necessary to keep it in mind.
Somewhere out there, the ships of
Earth were ranged against the ships
of the alien Karna in the most important
war that Mankind had yet
fought.
And, Malloy knew, his own position
was not unimportant in that war.
He was not in the battle line, nor
even in the major production line, but
it was necessary to keep the drug supply
lines flowing from Saarkkad, and
that meant keeping on good terms
with the Saarkkadic government.
The Saarkkada themselves were humanoid
in physical form—if one allowed
the term to cover a wide range
of differences—but their minds just
didn't function along the same lines.
For nine years, Bertrand Malloy
had been Ambassador to Saarkkad,
and for nine years, no Saarkkada had
ever seen him. To have shown himself
to one of them would have
meant instant loss of prestige.
To their way of thinking, an important
official was aloof. The greater
his importance, the greater must be
his isolation. The Occeq of Saarkkad
himself was never seen except by a
handful of picked nobles, who, themselves,
were never seen except by their
underlings. It was a long, roundabout
way of doing business, but it was the
only way Saarkkad would do any
business at all. To violate the rigid
social setup of Saarkkad would mean
the instant closing off of the supply
of biochemical products that the
Saarkkadic laboratories produced
from native plants and animals—products
that were vitally necessary
to Earth's war, and which could be
duplicated nowhere else in the
known universe.
It was Bertrand Malloy's job to
keep the production output high and
to keep the materiel flowing towards
Earth and her allies and outposts.
The job would have been a snap
cinch in the right circumstances; the
Saarkkada weren't difficult to get
along with. A staff of top-grade men
could have handled them without
half trying.
But Malloy didn't have top-grade
men. They couldn't be spared from
work that required their total capacity.
It's inefficient to waste a man on a
job that he can do without half trying
where there are more important jobs
that will tax his full output.
So Malloy was stuck with the culls.
Not the worst ones, of course; there
were places in the galaxy that were
less important than Saarkkad to the
war effort. Malloy knew that, no matter
what was wrong with a man, as
long as he had the mental ability to
dress himself and get himself to
work, useful work could be found for
him.
Physical handicaps weren't at all
difficult to deal with. A blind man can
work very well in the total darkness
of an infrared-film darkroom. Partial
or total losses of limbs can be compensated
for in one way or another.
The mental disabilities were harder
to deal with, but not totally impossible.
On a world without liquor, a
dipsomaniac could be channeled easily
enough; and he'd better not try fermenting
his own on Saarkkad unless
he brought his own yeast—which
was impossible, in view of the sterilization
regulations.
But Malloy didn't like to stop at
merely thwarting mental quirks; he
liked to find places where they were
useful
.
The phone chimed. Malloy flipped
it on with a practiced hand.
"Malloy here."
"Mr. Malloy?" said a careful voice.
"A special communication for you has
been teletyped in from Earth. Shall I
bring it in?"
"Bring it in, Miss Drayson."
Miss Drayson was a case in point.
She was uncommunicative. She liked
to gather in information, but she
found it difficult to give it up once it
was in her possession.
Malloy had made her his private
secretary. Nothing—but
nothing
—got
out of Malloy's office without his
direct order. It had taken Malloy a
long time to get it into Miss Drayson's
head that it was perfectly all
right—even desirable—for her to
keep secrets from everyone except
Malloy.
She came in through the door,
a rather handsome woman in her middle
thirties, clutching a sheaf of
papers in her right hand as though
someone might at any instant snatch
it from her before she could turn it
over to Malloy.
She laid them carefully on the
desk. "If anything else comes in, I'll
let you know immediately, sir," she
said. "Will there be anything else?"
Malloy let her stand there while he
picked up the communique. She wanted
to know what his reaction was
going to be; it didn't matter because
no one would ever find out from her
what he had done unless she was
ordered to tell someone.
He read the first paragraph, and his
eyes widened involuntarily.
"Armistice," he said in a low
whisper. "There's a chance that the
war may be over."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Drayson in a
hushed voice.
Malloy read the whole thing
through, fighting to keep his emotions
in check. Miss Drayson stood
there calmly, her face a mask; her
emotions were a secret.
Finally, Malloy looked up. "I'll let
you know as soon as I reach a decision,
Miss Drayson. I think I hardly
need say that no news of this is to
leave this office."
"Of course not, sir."
Malloy watched her go out the door
without actually seeing her. The war
was over—at least for a while. He
looked down at the papers again.
The Karna, slowly being beaten
back on every front, were suing for
peace. They wanted an armistice conference—immediately.
Earth was willing. Interstellar war
is too costly to allow it to continue
any longer than necessary, and this
one had been going on for more than
thirteen years now. Peace was necessary.
But not peace at any price.
The trouble was that the Karna had
a reputation for losing wars and winning
at the peace table. They were
clever, persuasive talkers. They could
twist a disadvantage to an advantage,
and make their own strengths look
like weaknesses. If they won the armistice,
they'd be able to retrench and
rearm, and the war would break out
again within a few years.
Now—at this point in time—they
could be beaten. They could be forced
to allow supervision of the production
potential, forced to disarm, rendered
impotent. But if the armistice went to
their own advantage ...
Already, they had taken the offensive
in the matter of the peace talks.
They had sent a full delegation to
Saarkkad V, the next planet out from
the Saarkkad sun, a chilly world inhabited
only by low-intelligence animals.
The Karna considered this to be
fully neutral territory, and Earth
couldn't argue the point very well. In
addition, they demanded that the conference
begin in three days, Terrestrial
time.
The trouble was that interstellar
communication beams travel a devil
of a lot faster than ships. It would
take more than a week for the Earth
government to get a vessel to Saarkkad
V. Earth had been caught unprepared
for an armistice. They
objected.
The Karna pointed out that the
Saarkkad sun was just as far from
Karn as it was from Earth, that it
was only a few million miles from a
planet which was allied with Earth,
and that it was unfair for Earth to
take so much time in preparing for an
armistice. Why hadn't Earth been prepared?
Did they intend to fight to the
utter destruction of Karn?
It wouldn't have been a problem at
all if Earth and Karn had fostered the
only two intelligent races in the galaxy.
The sort of grandstanding the
Karna were putting on had to be
played to an audience. But there were
other intelligent races throughout the
galaxy, most of whom had remained
as neutral as possible during the
Earth-Karn war. They had no intention
of sticking their figurative noses
into a battle between the two most
powerful races in the galaxy.
But whoever won the armistice
would find that some of the now-neutral
races would come in on their
side if war broke out again. If the
Karna played their cards right, their
side would be strong enough next
time to win.
So Earth had to get a delegation to
meet with the Karna representatives
within the three-day limit or lose what
might be a vital point in the negotiations.
And that was where Bertrand Malloy
came in.
He had been appointed Minister
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to
the Earth-Karn peace conference.
He looked up at the ceiling again.
"What
can
I do?" he said softly.
On the second day after the arrival
of the communique, Malloy
made his decision. He flipped on his
intercom and said: "Miss Drayson,
get hold of James Nordon and Kylen
Braynek. I want to see them both immediately.
Send Nordon in first, and
tell Braynek to wait."
"Yes, sir."
"And keep the recorder on. You
can file the tape later."
"Yes, sir."
Malloy knew the woman would
listen in on the intercom anyway, and
it was better to give her permission to
do so.
James Nordon was tall, broad-shouldered,
and thirty-eight. His hair
was graying at the temples, and his
handsome face looked cool and efficient.
Malloy waved him to a seat.
"Nordon, I have a job for you. It's
probably one of the most important
jobs you'll ever have in your life. It
can mean big things for you—promotion
and prestige if you do it well."
Nordon nodded slowly. "Yes, sir."
Malloy explained the problem of
the Karna peace talks.
"We need a man who can outthink
them," Malloy finished, "and judging
from your record, I think you're that
man. It involves risk, of course. If
you make the wrong decisions, your
name will be mud back on Earth. But
I don't think there's much chance of
that, really. Do you want to handle
small-time operations all your life?
Of course not.
"You'll be leaving within an hour
for Saarkkad V."
Nordon nodded again. "Yes, sir;
certainly. Am I to go alone?"
"No," said Malloy, "I'm sending
an assistant with you—a man named
Kylen Braynek. Ever heard of him?"
Nordon shook his head. "Not that
I recall, Mr. Malloy. Should I have?"
"Not necessarily. He's a pretty
shrewd operator, though. He knows a
lot about interstellar law, and he's
capable of spotting a trap a mile away.
You'll be in charge, of course, but I
want you to pay special attention to
his advice."
"I will, sir," Nordon said gratefully.
"A man like that can be useful."
"Right. Now, you go into the anteroom
over there. I've prepared a summary
of the situation, and you'll have
to study it and get it into your head
before the ship leaves. That isn't
much time, but it's the Karna who are
doing the pushing, not us."
As soon as Nordon had left, Malloy
said softly: "Send in Braynek,
Miss Drayson."
Kylen Braynek was a smallish man
with mouse-brown hair that lay flat
against his skull, and hard, penetrating,
dark eyes that were shadowed by
heavy, protruding brows. Malloy asked
him to sit down.
Again Malloy went through the explanation
of the peace conference.
"Naturally, they'll be trying to
trick you every step of the way," Malloy
went on. "They're shrewd and
underhanded; we'll simply have to
be more shrewd and more underhanded.
Nordon's job is to sit
quietly and evaluate the data; yours
will be to find the loopholes they're
laying out for themselves and plug
them. Don't antagonize them, but
don't baby them, either. If you see
anything underhanded going on, let
Nordon know immediately."
"They won't get anything by me,
Mr. Malloy."
By the time the ship from Earth
got there, the peace conference had
been going on for four days. Bertrand
Malloy had full reports on the whole
parley, as relayed to him through the
ship that had taken Nordon and Braynek
to Saarkkad V.
Secretary of State Blendwell stopped
off at Saarkkad IV before going
on to V to take charge of the conference.
He was a tallish, lean man with
a few strands of gray hair on the top
of his otherwise bald scalp, and he
wore a hearty, professional smile that
didn't quite make it to his calculating
eyes.
He took Malloy's hand and shook
it warmly. "How are you, Mr. Ambassador?"
"Fine, Mr. Secretary. How's everything
on Earth?"
"Tense. They're waiting to see
what is going to happen on Five. So
am I, for that matter." His eyes were
curious. "You decided not to go
yourself, eh?"
"I thought it better not to. I sent a
good team, instead. Would you like
to see the reports?"
"I certainly would."
Malloy handed them to the secretary,
and as he read, Malloy watched
him. Blendwell was a political appointee—a
good man, Malloy had to
admit, but he didn't know all the
ins and outs of the Diplomatic Corps.
When Blendwell looked up from
the reports at last, he said: "Amazing!
They've held off the Karna at
every point! They've beaten them
back! They've managed to cope with
and outdo the finest team of negotiators
the Karna could send."
"I thought they would," said Malloy,
trying to appear modest.
The secretary's eyes narrowed.
"I've heard of the work you've been
doing here with ... ah ... sick men.
Is this one of your ... ah ... successes?"
Malloy nodded. "I think so. The
Karna put us in a dilemma, so I
threw a dilemma right back at them."
"How do you mean?"
"Nordon had a mental block
against making decisions. If he took
a girl out on a date, he'd have trouble
making up his mind whether to kiss
her or not until she made up his mind
for him, one way or the other. He's
that kind of guy. Until he's presented
with one, single, clear decision which
admits of no alternatives, he can't
move at all.
"As you can see, the Karna tried
to give us several choices on each
point, and they were all rigged. Until
they backed down to a single point
and proved that it
wasn't
rigged,
Nordon couldn't possibly make up his
mind. I drummed into him how important
this was, and the more importance
there is attached to his decisions,
the more incapable he becomes
of making them."
The Secretary nodded slowly.
"What about Braynek?"
"Paranoid," said Malloy. "He
thinks everyone is plotting against
him. In this case, that's all to the good
because the Karna
are
plotting against
him. No matter what they put forth,
Braynek is convinced that there's a
trap in it somewhere, and he digs to
find out what the trap is. Even if
there isn't a trap, the Karna can't
satisfy Braynek, because he's convinced
that there
has
to be—somewhere.
As a result, all his advice to
Nordon, and all his questioning on
the wildest possibilities, just serves
to keep Nordon from getting unconfused.
"These two men are honestly doing
their best to win at the peace conference,
and they've got the Karna reeling.
The Karna can see that we're not
trying to stall; our men are actually
working at trying to reach a decision.
But what the Karna don't see is that
those men, as a team, are unbeatable
because, in this situation, they're psychologically
incapable of losing."
Again the Secretary of State nodded
his approval, but there was still
a question in his mind. "Since you
know all that, couldn't you have handled
it yourself?"
"Maybe, but I doubt it. They might
have gotten around me someway by
sneaking up on a blind spot. Nordon
and Braynek have blind spots, but
they're covered with armor. No, I'm
glad I couldn't go; it's better this
way."
The Secretary of State raised an
eyebrow. "
Couldn't
go, Mr. Ambassador?"
Malloy looked at him. "Didn't you
know? I wondered why you appointed
me, in the first place. No, I
couldn't go. The reason why I'm here,
cooped up in this office, hiding from
the Saarkkada the way a good Saarkkadic
bigshot should, is because I
like
it that way. I suffer from agoraphobia
and xenophobia.
"I have to be drugged to be put on
a spaceship because I can't take all
that empty space, even if I'm protected
from it by a steel shell." A
look of revulsion came over his face.
"And I can't
stand
aliens!"
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
March 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Nordon has trouble making decisions but will commit once the Karna present him with a choice that is not rigged in the Karna's favor. | Nordon is going to the peace talks to assist Braynek in case of a trap. | Nordon is the best negotiator Earth has to offer. | Nordon is a trained assassin. He will be ready to take out the ambassador from Karn if there is any funny business. | 0 |
24521_WM4KUPLS_2 | Why doesn't Malloy go to the peace talks himself? | IN CASE OF FIRE
By RANDALL GARRETT
There are times when a broken tool is better
than a sound one, or a twisted personality
more useful than a whole one. For
instance, a whole beer bottle isn't half
the weapon that half a beer bottle is ...
Illustrated by Martinez
In his
office apartment,
on the top floor of the
Terran Embassy Building
in Occeq City, Bertrand
Malloy leafed
casually through the dossiers of the
four new men who had been assigned
to him. They were typical of the kind
of men who were sent to him, he
thought. Which meant, as usual, that
they were atypical. Every man in the
Diplomatic Corps who developed a
twitch or a quirk was shipped to
Saarkkad IV to work under Bertrand
Malloy, Permanent Terran Ambassador
to His Utter Munificence, the
Occeq of Saarkkad.
Take this first one, for instance.
Malloy ran his finger down the columns
of complex symbolism that
showed the complete psychological
analysis of the man. Psychopathic
paranoia. The man wasn't technically
insane; he could be as lucid as the next
man most of the time. But he was
morbidly suspicious that every man's
hand was turned against him. He
trusted no one, and was perpetually
on his guard against imaginary plots
and persecutions.
Number two suffered from some
sort of emotional block that left him
continually on the horns of one dilemma
or another. He was psychologically
incapable of making a decision
if he were faced with two or more
possible alternatives of any major
importance.
Number three ...
Malloy sighed and pushed the dossiers
away from him. No two men
were alike, and yet there sometimes
seemed to be an eternal sameness
about all men. He considered himself
an individual, for instance, but wasn't
the basic similarity there, after all?
He was—how old? He glanced at
the Earth calendar dial that was automatically
correlated with the Saarkkadic
calendar just above it. Fifty-nine
next week. Fifty-nine years old. And
what did he have to show for it besides
flabby muscles, sagging skin, a
wrinkled face, and gray hair?
Well, he had an excellent record in
the Corps, if nothing else. One of the
top men in his field. And he had his
memories of Diane, dead these ten
years, but still beautiful and alive in
his recollections. And—he grinned
softly to himself—he had Saarkkad.
He glanced up at the ceiling, and
mentally allowed his gaze to penetrate
it to the blue sky beyond it.
Out there was the terrible emptiness
of interstellar space—a great, yawning,
infinite chasm capable of swallowing
men, ships, planets, suns, and
whole galaxies without filling its insatiable
void.
Malloy closed his eyes. Somewhere
out there, a war was raging. He
didn't even like to think of that, but
it was necessary to keep it in mind.
Somewhere out there, the ships of
Earth were ranged against the ships
of the alien Karna in the most important
war that Mankind had yet
fought.
And, Malloy knew, his own position
was not unimportant in that war.
He was not in the battle line, nor
even in the major production line, but
it was necessary to keep the drug supply
lines flowing from Saarkkad, and
that meant keeping on good terms
with the Saarkkadic government.
The Saarkkada themselves were humanoid
in physical form—if one allowed
the term to cover a wide range
of differences—but their minds just
didn't function along the same lines.
For nine years, Bertrand Malloy
had been Ambassador to Saarkkad,
and for nine years, no Saarkkada had
ever seen him. To have shown himself
to one of them would have
meant instant loss of prestige.
To their way of thinking, an important
official was aloof. The greater
his importance, the greater must be
his isolation. The Occeq of Saarkkad
himself was never seen except by a
handful of picked nobles, who, themselves,
were never seen except by their
underlings. It was a long, roundabout
way of doing business, but it was the
only way Saarkkad would do any
business at all. To violate the rigid
social setup of Saarkkad would mean
the instant closing off of the supply
of biochemical products that the
Saarkkadic laboratories produced
from native plants and animals—products
that were vitally necessary
to Earth's war, and which could be
duplicated nowhere else in the
known universe.
It was Bertrand Malloy's job to
keep the production output high and
to keep the materiel flowing towards
Earth and her allies and outposts.
The job would have been a snap
cinch in the right circumstances; the
Saarkkada weren't difficult to get
along with. A staff of top-grade men
could have handled them without
half trying.
But Malloy didn't have top-grade
men. They couldn't be spared from
work that required their total capacity.
It's inefficient to waste a man on a
job that he can do without half trying
where there are more important jobs
that will tax his full output.
So Malloy was stuck with the culls.
Not the worst ones, of course; there
were places in the galaxy that were
less important than Saarkkad to the
war effort. Malloy knew that, no matter
what was wrong with a man, as
long as he had the mental ability to
dress himself and get himself to
work, useful work could be found for
him.
Physical handicaps weren't at all
difficult to deal with. A blind man can
work very well in the total darkness
of an infrared-film darkroom. Partial
or total losses of limbs can be compensated
for in one way or another.
The mental disabilities were harder
to deal with, but not totally impossible.
On a world without liquor, a
dipsomaniac could be channeled easily
enough; and he'd better not try fermenting
his own on Saarkkad unless
he brought his own yeast—which
was impossible, in view of the sterilization
regulations.
But Malloy didn't like to stop at
merely thwarting mental quirks; he
liked to find places where they were
useful
.
The phone chimed. Malloy flipped
it on with a practiced hand.
"Malloy here."
"Mr. Malloy?" said a careful voice.
"A special communication for you has
been teletyped in from Earth. Shall I
bring it in?"
"Bring it in, Miss Drayson."
Miss Drayson was a case in point.
She was uncommunicative. She liked
to gather in information, but she
found it difficult to give it up once it
was in her possession.
Malloy had made her his private
secretary. Nothing—but
nothing
—got
out of Malloy's office without his
direct order. It had taken Malloy a
long time to get it into Miss Drayson's
head that it was perfectly all
right—even desirable—for her to
keep secrets from everyone except
Malloy.
She came in through the door,
a rather handsome woman in her middle
thirties, clutching a sheaf of
papers in her right hand as though
someone might at any instant snatch
it from her before she could turn it
over to Malloy.
She laid them carefully on the
desk. "If anything else comes in, I'll
let you know immediately, sir," she
said. "Will there be anything else?"
Malloy let her stand there while he
picked up the communique. She wanted
to know what his reaction was
going to be; it didn't matter because
no one would ever find out from her
what he had done unless she was
ordered to tell someone.
He read the first paragraph, and his
eyes widened involuntarily.
"Armistice," he said in a low
whisper. "There's a chance that the
war may be over."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Drayson in a
hushed voice.
Malloy read the whole thing
through, fighting to keep his emotions
in check. Miss Drayson stood
there calmly, her face a mask; her
emotions were a secret.
Finally, Malloy looked up. "I'll let
you know as soon as I reach a decision,
Miss Drayson. I think I hardly
need say that no news of this is to
leave this office."
"Of course not, sir."
Malloy watched her go out the door
without actually seeing her. The war
was over—at least for a while. He
looked down at the papers again.
The Karna, slowly being beaten
back on every front, were suing for
peace. They wanted an armistice conference—immediately.
Earth was willing. Interstellar war
is too costly to allow it to continue
any longer than necessary, and this
one had been going on for more than
thirteen years now. Peace was necessary.
But not peace at any price.
The trouble was that the Karna had
a reputation for losing wars and winning
at the peace table. They were
clever, persuasive talkers. They could
twist a disadvantage to an advantage,
and make their own strengths look
like weaknesses. If they won the armistice,
they'd be able to retrench and
rearm, and the war would break out
again within a few years.
Now—at this point in time—they
could be beaten. They could be forced
to allow supervision of the production
potential, forced to disarm, rendered
impotent. But if the armistice went to
their own advantage ...
Already, they had taken the offensive
in the matter of the peace talks.
They had sent a full delegation to
Saarkkad V, the next planet out from
the Saarkkad sun, a chilly world inhabited
only by low-intelligence animals.
The Karna considered this to be
fully neutral territory, and Earth
couldn't argue the point very well. In
addition, they demanded that the conference
begin in three days, Terrestrial
time.
The trouble was that interstellar
communication beams travel a devil
of a lot faster than ships. It would
take more than a week for the Earth
government to get a vessel to Saarkkad
V. Earth had been caught unprepared
for an armistice. They
objected.
The Karna pointed out that the
Saarkkad sun was just as far from
Karn as it was from Earth, that it
was only a few million miles from a
planet which was allied with Earth,
and that it was unfair for Earth to
take so much time in preparing for an
armistice. Why hadn't Earth been prepared?
Did they intend to fight to the
utter destruction of Karn?
It wouldn't have been a problem at
all if Earth and Karn had fostered the
only two intelligent races in the galaxy.
The sort of grandstanding the
Karna were putting on had to be
played to an audience. But there were
other intelligent races throughout the
galaxy, most of whom had remained
as neutral as possible during the
Earth-Karn war. They had no intention
of sticking their figurative noses
into a battle between the two most
powerful races in the galaxy.
But whoever won the armistice
would find that some of the now-neutral
races would come in on their
side if war broke out again. If the
Karna played their cards right, their
side would be strong enough next
time to win.
So Earth had to get a delegation to
meet with the Karna representatives
within the three-day limit or lose what
might be a vital point in the negotiations.
And that was where Bertrand Malloy
came in.
He had been appointed Minister
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to
the Earth-Karn peace conference.
He looked up at the ceiling again.
"What
can
I do?" he said softly.
On the second day after the arrival
of the communique, Malloy
made his decision. He flipped on his
intercom and said: "Miss Drayson,
get hold of James Nordon and Kylen
Braynek. I want to see them both immediately.
Send Nordon in first, and
tell Braynek to wait."
"Yes, sir."
"And keep the recorder on. You
can file the tape later."
"Yes, sir."
Malloy knew the woman would
listen in on the intercom anyway, and
it was better to give her permission to
do so.
James Nordon was tall, broad-shouldered,
and thirty-eight. His hair
was graying at the temples, and his
handsome face looked cool and efficient.
Malloy waved him to a seat.
"Nordon, I have a job for you. It's
probably one of the most important
jobs you'll ever have in your life. It
can mean big things for you—promotion
and prestige if you do it well."
Nordon nodded slowly. "Yes, sir."
Malloy explained the problem of
the Karna peace talks.
"We need a man who can outthink
them," Malloy finished, "and judging
from your record, I think you're that
man. It involves risk, of course. If
you make the wrong decisions, your
name will be mud back on Earth. But
I don't think there's much chance of
that, really. Do you want to handle
small-time operations all your life?
Of course not.
"You'll be leaving within an hour
for Saarkkad V."
Nordon nodded again. "Yes, sir;
certainly. Am I to go alone?"
"No," said Malloy, "I'm sending
an assistant with you—a man named
Kylen Braynek. Ever heard of him?"
Nordon shook his head. "Not that
I recall, Mr. Malloy. Should I have?"
"Not necessarily. He's a pretty
shrewd operator, though. He knows a
lot about interstellar law, and he's
capable of spotting a trap a mile away.
You'll be in charge, of course, but I
want you to pay special attention to
his advice."
"I will, sir," Nordon said gratefully.
"A man like that can be useful."
"Right. Now, you go into the anteroom
over there. I've prepared a summary
of the situation, and you'll have
to study it and get it into your head
before the ship leaves. That isn't
much time, but it's the Karna who are
doing the pushing, not us."
As soon as Nordon had left, Malloy
said softly: "Send in Braynek,
Miss Drayson."
Kylen Braynek was a smallish man
with mouse-brown hair that lay flat
against his skull, and hard, penetrating,
dark eyes that were shadowed by
heavy, protruding brows. Malloy asked
him to sit down.
Again Malloy went through the explanation
of the peace conference.
"Naturally, they'll be trying to
trick you every step of the way," Malloy
went on. "They're shrewd and
underhanded; we'll simply have to
be more shrewd and more underhanded.
Nordon's job is to sit
quietly and evaluate the data; yours
will be to find the loopholes they're
laying out for themselves and plug
them. Don't antagonize them, but
don't baby them, either. If you see
anything underhanded going on, let
Nordon know immediately."
"They won't get anything by me,
Mr. Malloy."
By the time the ship from Earth
got there, the peace conference had
been going on for four days. Bertrand
Malloy had full reports on the whole
parley, as relayed to him through the
ship that had taken Nordon and Braynek
to Saarkkad V.
Secretary of State Blendwell stopped
off at Saarkkad IV before going
on to V to take charge of the conference.
He was a tallish, lean man with
a few strands of gray hair on the top
of his otherwise bald scalp, and he
wore a hearty, professional smile that
didn't quite make it to his calculating
eyes.
He took Malloy's hand and shook
it warmly. "How are you, Mr. Ambassador?"
"Fine, Mr. Secretary. How's everything
on Earth?"
"Tense. They're waiting to see
what is going to happen on Five. So
am I, for that matter." His eyes were
curious. "You decided not to go
yourself, eh?"
"I thought it better not to. I sent a
good team, instead. Would you like
to see the reports?"
"I certainly would."
Malloy handed them to the secretary,
and as he read, Malloy watched
him. Blendwell was a political appointee—a
good man, Malloy had to
admit, but he didn't know all the
ins and outs of the Diplomatic Corps.
When Blendwell looked up from
the reports at last, he said: "Amazing!
They've held off the Karna at
every point! They've beaten them
back! They've managed to cope with
and outdo the finest team of negotiators
the Karna could send."
"I thought they would," said Malloy,
trying to appear modest.
The secretary's eyes narrowed.
"I've heard of the work you've been
doing here with ... ah ... sick men.
Is this one of your ... ah ... successes?"
Malloy nodded. "I think so. The
Karna put us in a dilemma, so I
threw a dilemma right back at them."
"How do you mean?"
"Nordon had a mental block
against making decisions. If he took
a girl out on a date, he'd have trouble
making up his mind whether to kiss
her or not until she made up his mind
for him, one way or the other. He's
that kind of guy. Until he's presented
with one, single, clear decision which
admits of no alternatives, he can't
move at all.
"As you can see, the Karna tried
to give us several choices on each
point, and they were all rigged. Until
they backed down to a single point
and proved that it
wasn't
rigged,
Nordon couldn't possibly make up his
mind. I drummed into him how important
this was, and the more importance
there is attached to his decisions,
the more incapable he becomes
of making them."
The Secretary nodded slowly.
"What about Braynek?"
"Paranoid," said Malloy. "He
thinks everyone is plotting against
him. In this case, that's all to the good
because the Karna
are
plotting against
him. No matter what they put forth,
Braynek is convinced that there's a
trap in it somewhere, and he digs to
find out what the trap is. Even if
there isn't a trap, the Karna can't
satisfy Braynek, because he's convinced
that there
has
to be—somewhere.
As a result, all his advice to
Nordon, and all his questioning on
the wildest possibilities, just serves
to keep Nordon from getting unconfused.
"These two men are honestly doing
their best to win at the peace conference,
and they've got the Karna reeling.
The Karna can see that we're not
trying to stall; our men are actually
working at trying to reach a decision.
But what the Karna don't see is that
those men, as a team, are unbeatable
because, in this situation, they're psychologically
incapable of losing."
Again the Secretary of State nodded
his approval, but there was still
a question in his mind. "Since you
know all that, couldn't you have handled
it yourself?"
"Maybe, but I doubt it. They might
have gotten around me someway by
sneaking up on a blind spot. Nordon
and Braynek have blind spots, but
they're covered with armor. No, I'm
glad I couldn't go; it's better this
way."
The Secretary of State raised an
eyebrow. "
Couldn't
go, Mr. Ambassador?"
Malloy looked at him. "Didn't you
know? I wondered why you appointed
me, in the first place. No, I
couldn't go. The reason why I'm here,
cooped up in this office, hiding from
the Saarkkada the way a good Saarkkadic
bigshot should, is because I
like
it that way. I suffer from agoraphobia
and xenophobia.
"I have to be drugged to be put on
a spaceship because I can't take all
that empty space, even if I'm protected
from it by a steel shell." A
look of revulsion came over his face.
"And I can't
stand
aliens!"
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
March 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Malloy is too sick to travel to the peace conference. He also hates aliens. | Malloy needs to stay on Saarkkad IV to keep the drug supply lines flowing. | Malloy is too far from Saarkkad V to get to the peace conference on time. He also hates aliens. | Malloy has a psychological disorder that prevents him from leaving the house. He also hates aliens. | 3 |
24521_WM4KUPLS_3 | How does Malloy feel about Miss Drayson? | IN CASE OF FIRE
By RANDALL GARRETT
There are times when a broken tool is better
than a sound one, or a twisted personality
more useful than a whole one. For
instance, a whole beer bottle isn't half
the weapon that half a beer bottle is ...
Illustrated by Martinez
In his
office apartment,
on the top floor of the
Terran Embassy Building
in Occeq City, Bertrand
Malloy leafed
casually through the dossiers of the
four new men who had been assigned
to him. They were typical of the kind
of men who were sent to him, he
thought. Which meant, as usual, that
they were atypical. Every man in the
Diplomatic Corps who developed a
twitch or a quirk was shipped to
Saarkkad IV to work under Bertrand
Malloy, Permanent Terran Ambassador
to His Utter Munificence, the
Occeq of Saarkkad.
Take this first one, for instance.
Malloy ran his finger down the columns
of complex symbolism that
showed the complete psychological
analysis of the man. Psychopathic
paranoia. The man wasn't technically
insane; he could be as lucid as the next
man most of the time. But he was
morbidly suspicious that every man's
hand was turned against him. He
trusted no one, and was perpetually
on his guard against imaginary plots
and persecutions.
Number two suffered from some
sort of emotional block that left him
continually on the horns of one dilemma
or another. He was psychologically
incapable of making a decision
if he were faced with two or more
possible alternatives of any major
importance.
Number three ...
Malloy sighed and pushed the dossiers
away from him. No two men
were alike, and yet there sometimes
seemed to be an eternal sameness
about all men. He considered himself
an individual, for instance, but wasn't
the basic similarity there, after all?
He was—how old? He glanced at
the Earth calendar dial that was automatically
correlated with the Saarkkadic
calendar just above it. Fifty-nine
next week. Fifty-nine years old. And
what did he have to show for it besides
flabby muscles, sagging skin, a
wrinkled face, and gray hair?
Well, he had an excellent record in
the Corps, if nothing else. One of the
top men in his field. And he had his
memories of Diane, dead these ten
years, but still beautiful and alive in
his recollections. And—he grinned
softly to himself—he had Saarkkad.
He glanced up at the ceiling, and
mentally allowed his gaze to penetrate
it to the blue sky beyond it.
Out there was the terrible emptiness
of interstellar space—a great, yawning,
infinite chasm capable of swallowing
men, ships, planets, suns, and
whole galaxies without filling its insatiable
void.
Malloy closed his eyes. Somewhere
out there, a war was raging. He
didn't even like to think of that, but
it was necessary to keep it in mind.
Somewhere out there, the ships of
Earth were ranged against the ships
of the alien Karna in the most important
war that Mankind had yet
fought.
And, Malloy knew, his own position
was not unimportant in that war.
He was not in the battle line, nor
even in the major production line, but
it was necessary to keep the drug supply
lines flowing from Saarkkad, and
that meant keeping on good terms
with the Saarkkadic government.
The Saarkkada themselves were humanoid
in physical form—if one allowed
the term to cover a wide range
of differences—but their minds just
didn't function along the same lines.
For nine years, Bertrand Malloy
had been Ambassador to Saarkkad,
and for nine years, no Saarkkada had
ever seen him. To have shown himself
to one of them would have
meant instant loss of prestige.
To their way of thinking, an important
official was aloof. The greater
his importance, the greater must be
his isolation. The Occeq of Saarkkad
himself was never seen except by a
handful of picked nobles, who, themselves,
were never seen except by their
underlings. It was a long, roundabout
way of doing business, but it was the
only way Saarkkad would do any
business at all. To violate the rigid
social setup of Saarkkad would mean
the instant closing off of the supply
of biochemical products that the
Saarkkadic laboratories produced
from native plants and animals—products
that were vitally necessary
to Earth's war, and which could be
duplicated nowhere else in the
known universe.
It was Bertrand Malloy's job to
keep the production output high and
to keep the materiel flowing towards
Earth and her allies and outposts.
The job would have been a snap
cinch in the right circumstances; the
Saarkkada weren't difficult to get
along with. A staff of top-grade men
could have handled them without
half trying.
But Malloy didn't have top-grade
men. They couldn't be spared from
work that required their total capacity.
It's inefficient to waste a man on a
job that he can do without half trying
where there are more important jobs
that will tax his full output.
So Malloy was stuck with the culls.
Not the worst ones, of course; there
were places in the galaxy that were
less important than Saarkkad to the
war effort. Malloy knew that, no matter
what was wrong with a man, as
long as he had the mental ability to
dress himself and get himself to
work, useful work could be found for
him.
Physical handicaps weren't at all
difficult to deal with. A blind man can
work very well in the total darkness
of an infrared-film darkroom. Partial
or total losses of limbs can be compensated
for in one way or another.
The mental disabilities were harder
to deal with, but not totally impossible.
On a world without liquor, a
dipsomaniac could be channeled easily
enough; and he'd better not try fermenting
his own on Saarkkad unless
he brought his own yeast—which
was impossible, in view of the sterilization
regulations.
But Malloy didn't like to stop at
merely thwarting mental quirks; he
liked to find places where they were
useful
.
The phone chimed. Malloy flipped
it on with a practiced hand.
"Malloy here."
"Mr. Malloy?" said a careful voice.
"A special communication for you has
been teletyped in from Earth. Shall I
bring it in?"
"Bring it in, Miss Drayson."
Miss Drayson was a case in point.
She was uncommunicative. She liked
to gather in information, but she
found it difficult to give it up once it
was in her possession.
Malloy had made her his private
secretary. Nothing—but
nothing
—got
out of Malloy's office without his
direct order. It had taken Malloy a
long time to get it into Miss Drayson's
head that it was perfectly all
right—even desirable—for her to
keep secrets from everyone except
Malloy.
She came in through the door,
a rather handsome woman in her middle
thirties, clutching a sheaf of
papers in her right hand as though
someone might at any instant snatch
it from her before she could turn it
over to Malloy.
She laid them carefully on the
desk. "If anything else comes in, I'll
let you know immediately, sir," she
said. "Will there be anything else?"
Malloy let her stand there while he
picked up the communique. She wanted
to know what his reaction was
going to be; it didn't matter because
no one would ever find out from her
what he had done unless she was
ordered to tell someone.
He read the first paragraph, and his
eyes widened involuntarily.
"Armistice," he said in a low
whisper. "There's a chance that the
war may be over."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Drayson in a
hushed voice.
Malloy read the whole thing
through, fighting to keep his emotions
in check. Miss Drayson stood
there calmly, her face a mask; her
emotions were a secret.
Finally, Malloy looked up. "I'll let
you know as soon as I reach a decision,
Miss Drayson. I think I hardly
need say that no news of this is to
leave this office."
"Of course not, sir."
Malloy watched her go out the door
without actually seeing her. The war
was over—at least for a while. He
looked down at the papers again.
The Karna, slowly being beaten
back on every front, were suing for
peace. They wanted an armistice conference—immediately.
Earth was willing. Interstellar war
is too costly to allow it to continue
any longer than necessary, and this
one had been going on for more than
thirteen years now. Peace was necessary.
But not peace at any price.
The trouble was that the Karna had
a reputation for losing wars and winning
at the peace table. They were
clever, persuasive talkers. They could
twist a disadvantage to an advantage,
and make their own strengths look
like weaknesses. If they won the armistice,
they'd be able to retrench and
rearm, and the war would break out
again within a few years.
Now—at this point in time—they
could be beaten. They could be forced
to allow supervision of the production
potential, forced to disarm, rendered
impotent. But if the armistice went to
their own advantage ...
Already, they had taken the offensive
in the matter of the peace talks.
They had sent a full delegation to
Saarkkad V, the next planet out from
the Saarkkad sun, a chilly world inhabited
only by low-intelligence animals.
The Karna considered this to be
fully neutral territory, and Earth
couldn't argue the point very well. In
addition, they demanded that the conference
begin in three days, Terrestrial
time.
The trouble was that interstellar
communication beams travel a devil
of a lot faster than ships. It would
take more than a week for the Earth
government to get a vessel to Saarkkad
V. Earth had been caught unprepared
for an armistice. They
objected.
The Karna pointed out that the
Saarkkad sun was just as far from
Karn as it was from Earth, that it
was only a few million miles from a
planet which was allied with Earth,
and that it was unfair for Earth to
take so much time in preparing for an
armistice. Why hadn't Earth been prepared?
Did they intend to fight to the
utter destruction of Karn?
It wouldn't have been a problem at
all if Earth and Karn had fostered the
only two intelligent races in the galaxy.
The sort of grandstanding the
Karna were putting on had to be
played to an audience. But there were
other intelligent races throughout the
galaxy, most of whom had remained
as neutral as possible during the
Earth-Karn war. They had no intention
of sticking their figurative noses
into a battle between the two most
powerful races in the galaxy.
But whoever won the armistice
would find that some of the now-neutral
races would come in on their
side if war broke out again. If the
Karna played their cards right, their
side would be strong enough next
time to win.
So Earth had to get a delegation to
meet with the Karna representatives
within the three-day limit or lose what
might be a vital point in the negotiations.
And that was where Bertrand Malloy
came in.
He had been appointed Minister
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to
the Earth-Karn peace conference.
He looked up at the ceiling again.
"What
can
I do?" he said softly.
On the second day after the arrival
of the communique, Malloy
made his decision. He flipped on his
intercom and said: "Miss Drayson,
get hold of James Nordon and Kylen
Braynek. I want to see them both immediately.
Send Nordon in first, and
tell Braynek to wait."
"Yes, sir."
"And keep the recorder on. You
can file the tape later."
"Yes, sir."
Malloy knew the woman would
listen in on the intercom anyway, and
it was better to give her permission to
do so.
James Nordon was tall, broad-shouldered,
and thirty-eight. His hair
was graying at the temples, and his
handsome face looked cool and efficient.
Malloy waved him to a seat.
"Nordon, I have a job for you. It's
probably one of the most important
jobs you'll ever have in your life. It
can mean big things for you—promotion
and prestige if you do it well."
Nordon nodded slowly. "Yes, sir."
Malloy explained the problem of
the Karna peace talks.
"We need a man who can outthink
them," Malloy finished, "and judging
from your record, I think you're that
man. It involves risk, of course. If
you make the wrong decisions, your
name will be mud back on Earth. But
I don't think there's much chance of
that, really. Do you want to handle
small-time operations all your life?
Of course not.
"You'll be leaving within an hour
for Saarkkad V."
Nordon nodded again. "Yes, sir;
certainly. Am I to go alone?"
"No," said Malloy, "I'm sending
an assistant with you—a man named
Kylen Braynek. Ever heard of him?"
Nordon shook his head. "Not that
I recall, Mr. Malloy. Should I have?"
"Not necessarily. He's a pretty
shrewd operator, though. He knows a
lot about interstellar law, and he's
capable of spotting a trap a mile away.
You'll be in charge, of course, but I
want you to pay special attention to
his advice."
"I will, sir," Nordon said gratefully.
"A man like that can be useful."
"Right. Now, you go into the anteroom
over there. I've prepared a summary
of the situation, and you'll have
to study it and get it into your head
before the ship leaves. That isn't
much time, but it's the Karna who are
doing the pushing, not us."
As soon as Nordon had left, Malloy
said softly: "Send in Braynek,
Miss Drayson."
Kylen Braynek was a smallish man
with mouse-brown hair that lay flat
against his skull, and hard, penetrating,
dark eyes that were shadowed by
heavy, protruding brows. Malloy asked
him to sit down.
Again Malloy went through the explanation
of the peace conference.
"Naturally, they'll be trying to
trick you every step of the way," Malloy
went on. "They're shrewd and
underhanded; we'll simply have to
be more shrewd and more underhanded.
Nordon's job is to sit
quietly and evaluate the data; yours
will be to find the loopholes they're
laying out for themselves and plug
them. Don't antagonize them, but
don't baby them, either. If you see
anything underhanded going on, let
Nordon know immediately."
"They won't get anything by me,
Mr. Malloy."
By the time the ship from Earth
got there, the peace conference had
been going on for four days. Bertrand
Malloy had full reports on the whole
parley, as relayed to him through the
ship that had taken Nordon and Braynek
to Saarkkad V.
Secretary of State Blendwell stopped
off at Saarkkad IV before going
on to V to take charge of the conference.
He was a tallish, lean man with
a few strands of gray hair on the top
of his otherwise bald scalp, and he
wore a hearty, professional smile that
didn't quite make it to his calculating
eyes.
He took Malloy's hand and shook
it warmly. "How are you, Mr. Ambassador?"
"Fine, Mr. Secretary. How's everything
on Earth?"
"Tense. They're waiting to see
what is going to happen on Five. So
am I, for that matter." His eyes were
curious. "You decided not to go
yourself, eh?"
"I thought it better not to. I sent a
good team, instead. Would you like
to see the reports?"
"I certainly would."
Malloy handed them to the secretary,
and as he read, Malloy watched
him. Blendwell was a political appointee—a
good man, Malloy had to
admit, but he didn't know all the
ins and outs of the Diplomatic Corps.
When Blendwell looked up from
the reports at last, he said: "Amazing!
They've held off the Karna at
every point! They've beaten them
back! They've managed to cope with
and outdo the finest team of negotiators
the Karna could send."
"I thought they would," said Malloy,
trying to appear modest.
The secretary's eyes narrowed.
"I've heard of the work you've been
doing here with ... ah ... sick men.
Is this one of your ... ah ... successes?"
Malloy nodded. "I think so. The
Karna put us in a dilemma, so I
threw a dilemma right back at them."
"How do you mean?"
"Nordon had a mental block
against making decisions. If he took
a girl out on a date, he'd have trouble
making up his mind whether to kiss
her or not until she made up his mind
for him, one way or the other. He's
that kind of guy. Until he's presented
with one, single, clear decision which
admits of no alternatives, he can't
move at all.
"As you can see, the Karna tried
to give us several choices on each
point, and they were all rigged. Until
they backed down to a single point
and proved that it
wasn't
rigged,
Nordon couldn't possibly make up his
mind. I drummed into him how important
this was, and the more importance
there is attached to his decisions,
the more incapable he becomes
of making them."
The Secretary nodded slowly.
"What about Braynek?"
"Paranoid," said Malloy. "He
thinks everyone is plotting against
him. In this case, that's all to the good
because the Karna
are
plotting against
him. No matter what they put forth,
Braynek is convinced that there's a
trap in it somewhere, and he digs to
find out what the trap is. Even if
there isn't a trap, the Karna can't
satisfy Braynek, because he's convinced
that there
has
to be—somewhere.
As a result, all his advice to
Nordon, and all his questioning on
the wildest possibilities, just serves
to keep Nordon from getting unconfused.
"These two men are honestly doing
their best to win at the peace conference,
and they've got the Karna reeling.
The Karna can see that we're not
trying to stall; our men are actually
working at trying to reach a decision.
But what the Karna don't see is that
those men, as a team, are unbeatable
because, in this situation, they're psychologically
incapable of losing."
Again the Secretary of State nodded
his approval, but there was still
a question in his mind. "Since you
know all that, couldn't you have handled
it yourself?"
"Maybe, but I doubt it. They might
have gotten around me someway by
sneaking up on a blind spot. Nordon
and Braynek have blind spots, but
they're covered with armor. No, I'm
glad I couldn't go; it's better this
way."
The Secretary of State raised an
eyebrow. "
Couldn't
go, Mr. Ambassador?"
Malloy looked at him. "Didn't you
know? I wondered why you appointed
me, in the first place. No, I
couldn't go. The reason why I'm here,
cooped up in this office, hiding from
the Saarkkada the way a good Saarkkadic
bigshot should, is because I
like
it that way. I suffer from agoraphobia
and xenophobia.
"I have to be drugged to be put on
a spaceship because I can't take all
that empty space, even if I'm protected
from it by a steel shell." A
look of revulsion came over his face.
"And I can't
stand
aliens!"
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
March 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Malloy thinks Miss Drayson is a great secretary because she doesn't give away information. | Malloy is getting ready to fire Miss Drayson for not protecting confidential information. | Malloy suspects Miss Drayson may be a spy for Karn. | Malloy is secretly in love with Miss Drayson. | 0 |
24521_WM4KUPLS_4 | Who are the Karna? | IN CASE OF FIRE
By RANDALL GARRETT
There are times when a broken tool is better
than a sound one, or a twisted personality
more useful than a whole one. For
instance, a whole beer bottle isn't half
the weapon that half a beer bottle is ...
Illustrated by Martinez
In his
office apartment,
on the top floor of the
Terran Embassy Building
in Occeq City, Bertrand
Malloy leafed
casually through the dossiers of the
four new men who had been assigned
to him. They were typical of the kind
of men who were sent to him, he
thought. Which meant, as usual, that
they were atypical. Every man in the
Diplomatic Corps who developed a
twitch or a quirk was shipped to
Saarkkad IV to work under Bertrand
Malloy, Permanent Terran Ambassador
to His Utter Munificence, the
Occeq of Saarkkad.
Take this first one, for instance.
Malloy ran his finger down the columns
of complex symbolism that
showed the complete psychological
analysis of the man. Psychopathic
paranoia. The man wasn't technically
insane; he could be as lucid as the next
man most of the time. But he was
morbidly suspicious that every man's
hand was turned against him. He
trusted no one, and was perpetually
on his guard against imaginary plots
and persecutions.
Number two suffered from some
sort of emotional block that left him
continually on the horns of one dilemma
or another. He was psychologically
incapable of making a decision
if he were faced with two or more
possible alternatives of any major
importance.
Number three ...
Malloy sighed and pushed the dossiers
away from him. No two men
were alike, and yet there sometimes
seemed to be an eternal sameness
about all men. He considered himself
an individual, for instance, but wasn't
the basic similarity there, after all?
He was—how old? He glanced at
the Earth calendar dial that was automatically
correlated with the Saarkkadic
calendar just above it. Fifty-nine
next week. Fifty-nine years old. And
what did he have to show for it besides
flabby muscles, sagging skin, a
wrinkled face, and gray hair?
Well, he had an excellent record in
the Corps, if nothing else. One of the
top men in his field. And he had his
memories of Diane, dead these ten
years, but still beautiful and alive in
his recollections. And—he grinned
softly to himself—he had Saarkkad.
He glanced up at the ceiling, and
mentally allowed his gaze to penetrate
it to the blue sky beyond it.
Out there was the terrible emptiness
of interstellar space—a great, yawning,
infinite chasm capable of swallowing
men, ships, planets, suns, and
whole galaxies without filling its insatiable
void.
Malloy closed his eyes. Somewhere
out there, a war was raging. He
didn't even like to think of that, but
it was necessary to keep it in mind.
Somewhere out there, the ships of
Earth were ranged against the ships
of the alien Karna in the most important
war that Mankind had yet
fought.
And, Malloy knew, his own position
was not unimportant in that war.
He was not in the battle line, nor
even in the major production line, but
it was necessary to keep the drug supply
lines flowing from Saarkkad, and
that meant keeping on good terms
with the Saarkkadic government.
The Saarkkada themselves were humanoid
in physical form—if one allowed
the term to cover a wide range
of differences—but their minds just
didn't function along the same lines.
For nine years, Bertrand Malloy
had been Ambassador to Saarkkad,
and for nine years, no Saarkkada had
ever seen him. To have shown himself
to one of them would have
meant instant loss of prestige.
To their way of thinking, an important
official was aloof. The greater
his importance, the greater must be
his isolation. The Occeq of Saarkkad
himself was never seen except by a
handful of picked nobles, who, themselves,
were never seen except by their
underlings. It was a long, roundabout
way of doing business, but it was the
only way Saarkkad would do any
business at all. To violate the rigid
social setup of Saarkkad would mean
the instant closing off of the supply
of biochemical products that the
Saarkkadic laboratories produced
from native plants and animals—products
that were vitally necessary
to Earth's war, and which could be
duplicated nowhere else in the
known universe.
It was Bertrand Malloy's job to
keep the production output high and
to keep the materiel flowing towards
Earth and her allies and outposts.
The job would have been a snap
cinch in the right circumstances; the
Saarkkada weren't difficult to get
along with. A staff of top-grade men
could have handled them without
half trying.
But Malloy didn't have top-grade
men. They couldn't be spared from
work that required their total capacity.
It's inefficient to waste a man on a
job that he can do without half trying
where there are more important jobs
that will tax his full output.
So Malloy was stuck with the culls.
Not the worst ones, of course; there
were places in the galaxy that were
less important than Saarkkad to the
war effort. Malloy knew that, no matter
what was wrong with a man, as
long as he had the mental ability to
dress himself and get himself to
work, useful work could be found for
him.
Physical handicaps weren't at all
difficult to deal with. A blind man can
work very well in the total darkness
of an infrared-film darkroom. Partial
or total losses of limbs can be compensated
for in one way or another.
The mental disabilities were harder
to deal with, but not totally impossible.
On a world without liquor, a
dipsomaniac could be channeled easily
enough; and he'd better not try fermenting
his own on Saarkkad unless
he brought his own yeast—which
was impossible, in view of the sterilization
regulations.
But Malloy didn't like to stop at
merely thwarting mental quirks; he
liked to find places where they were
useful
.
The phone chimed. Malloy flipped
it on with a practiced hand.
"Malloy here."
"Mr. Malloy?" said a careful voice.
"A special communication for you has
been teletyped in from Earth. Shall I
bring it in?"
"Bring it in, Miss Drayson."
Miss Drayson was a case in point.
She was uncommunicative. She liked
to gather in information, but she
found it difficult to give it up once it
was in her possession.
Malloy had made her his private
secretary. Nothing—but
nothing
—got
out of Malloy's office without his
direct order. It had taken Malloy a
long time to get it into Miss Drayson's
head that it was perfectly all
right—even desirable—for her to
keep secrets from everyone except
Malloy.
She came in through the door,
a rather handsome woman in her middle
thirties, clutching a sheaf of
papers in her right hand as though
someone might at any instant snatch
it from her before she could turn it
over to Malloy.
She laid them carefully on the
desk. "If anything else comes in, I'll
let you know immediately, sir," she
said. "Will there be anything else?"
Malloy let her stand there while he
picked up the communique. She wanted
to know what his reaction was
going to be; it didn't matter because
no one would ever find out from her
what he had done unless she was
ordered to tell someone.
He read the first paragraph, and his
eyes widened involuntarily.
"Armistice," he said in a low
whisper. "There's a chance that the
war may be over."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Drayson in a
hushed voice.
Malloy read the whole thing
through, fighting to keep his emotions
in check. Miss Drayson stood
there calmly, her face a mask; her
emotions were a secret.
Finally, Malloy looked up. "I'll let
you know as soon as I reach a decision,
Miss Drayson. I think I hardly
need say that no news of this is to
leave this office."
"Of course not, sir."
Malloy watched her go out the door
without actually seeing her. The war
was over—at least for a while. He
looked down at the papers again.
The Karna, slowly being beaten
back on every front, were suing for
peace. They wanted an armistice conference—immediately.
Earth was willing. Interstellar war
is too costly to allow it to continue
any longer than necessary, and this
one had been going on for more than
thirteen years now. Peace was necessary.
But not peace at any price.
The trouble was that the Karna had
a reputation for losing wars and winning
at the peace table. They were
clever, persuasive talkers. They could
twist a disadvantage to an advantage,
and make their own strengths look
like weaknesses. If they won the armistice,
they'd be able to retrench and
rearm, and the war would break out
again within a few years.
Now—at this point in time—they
could be beaten. They could be forced
to allow supervision of the production
potential, forced to disarm, rendered
impotent. But if the armistice went to
their own advantage ...
Already, they had taken the offensive
in the matter of the peace talks.
They had sent a full delegation to
Saarkkad V, the next planet out from
the Saarkkad sun, a chilly world inhabited
only by low-intelligence animals.
The Karna considered this to be
fully neutral territory, and Earth
couldn't argue the point very well. In
addition, they demanded that the conference
begin in three days, Terrestrial
time.
The trouble was that interstellar
communication beams travel a devil
of a lot faster than ships. It would
take more than a week for the Earth
government to get a vessel to Saarkkad
V. Earth had been caught unprepared
for an armistice. They
objected.
The Karna pointed out that the
Saarkkad sun was just as far from
Karn as it was from Earth, that it
was only a few million miles from a
planet which was allied with Earth,
and that it was unfair for Earth to
take so much time in preparing for an
armistice. Why hadn't Earth been prepared?
Did they intend to fight to the
utter destruction of Karn?
It wouldn't have been a problem at
all if Earth and Karn had fostered the
only two intelligent races in the galaxy.
The sort of grandstanding the
Karna were putting on had to be
played to an audience. But there were
other intelligent races throughout the
galaxy, most of whom had remained
as neutral as possible during the
Earth-Karn war. They had no intention
of sticking their figurative noses
into a battle between the two most
powerful races in the galaxy.
But whoever won the armistice
would find that some of the now-neutral
races would come in on their
side if war broke out again. If the
Karna played their cards right, their
side would be strong enough next
time to win.
So Earth had to get a delegation to
meet with the Karna representatives
within the three-day limit or lose what
might be a vital point in the negotiations.
And that was where Bertrand Malloy
came in.
He had been appointed Minister
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to
the Earth-Karn peace conference.
He looked up at the ceiling again.
"What
can
I do?" he said softly.
On the second day after the arrival
of the communique, Malloy
made his decision. He flipped on his
intercom and said: "Miss Drayson,
get hold of James Nordon and Kylen
Braynek. I want to see them both immediately.
Send Nordon in first, and
tell Braynek to wait."
"Yes, sir."
"And keep the recorder on. You
can file the tape later."
"Yes, sir."
Malloy knew the woman would
listen in on the intercom anyway, and
it was better to give her permission to
do so.
James Nordon was tall, broad-shouldered,
and thirty-eight. His hair
was graying at the temples, and his
handsome face looked cool and efficient.
Malloy waved him to a seat.
"Nordon, I have a job for you. It's
probably one of the most important
jobs you'll ever have in your life. It
can mean big things for you—promotion
and prestige if you do it well."
Nordon nodded slowly. "Yes, sir."
Malloy explained the problem of
the Karna peace talks.
"We need a man who can outthink
them," Malloy finished, "and judging
from your record, I think you're that
man. It involves risk, of course. If
you make the wrong decisions, your
name will be mud back on Earth. But
I don't think there's much chance of
that, really. Do you want to handle
small-time operations all your life?
Of course not.
"You'll be leaving within an hour
for Saarkkad V."
Nordon nodded again. "Yes, sir;
certainly. Am I to go alone?"
"No," said Malloy, "I'm sending
an assistant with you—a man named
Kylen Braynek. Ever heard of him?"
Nordon shook his head. "Not that
I recall, Mr. Malloy. Should I have?"
"Not necessarily. He's a pretty
shrewd operator, though. He knows a
lot about interstellar law, and he's
capable of spotting a trap a mile away.
You'll be in charge, of course, but I
want you to pay special attention to
his advice."
"I will, sir," Nordon said gratefully.
"A man like that can be useful."
"Right. Now, you go into the anteroom
over there. I've prepared a summary
of the situation, and you'll have
to study it and get it into your head
before the ship leaves. That isn't
much time, but it's the Karna who are
doing the pushing, not us."
As soon as Nordon had left, Malloy
said softly: "Send in Braynek,
Miss Drayson."
Kylen Braynek was a smallish man
with mouse-brown hair that lay flat
against his skull, and hard, penetrating,
dark eyes that were shadowed by
heavy, protruding brows. Malloy asked
him to sit down.
Again Malloy went through the explanation
of the peace conference.
"Naturally, they'll be trying to
trick you every step of the way," Malloy
went on. "They're shrewd and
underhanded; we'll simply have to
be more shrewd and more underhanded.
Nordon's job is to sit
quietly and evaluate the data; yours
will be to find the loopholes they're
laying out for themselves and plug
them. Don't antagonize them, but
don't baby them, either. If you see
anything underhanded going on, let
Nordon know immediately."
"They won't get anything by me,
Mr. Malloy."
By the time the ship from Earth
got there, the peace conference had
been going on for four days. Bertrand
Malloy had full reports on the whole
parley, as relayed to him through the
ship that had taken Nordon and Braynek
to Saarkkad V.
Secretary of State Blendwell stopped
off at Saarkkad IV before going
on to V to take charge of the conference.
He was a tallish, lean man with
a few strands of gray hair on the top
of his otherwise bald scalp, and he
wore a hearty, professional smile that
didn't quite make it to his calculating
eyes.
He took Malloy's hand and shook
it warmly. "How are you, Mr. Ambassador?"
"Fine, Mr. Secretary. How's everything
on Earth?"
"Tense. They're waiting to see
what is going to happen on Five. So
am I, for that matter." His eyes were
curious. "You decided not to go
yourself, eh?"
"I thought it better not to. I sent a
good team, instead. Would you like
to see the reports?"
"I certainly would."
Malloy handed them to the secretary,
and as he read, Malloy watched
him. Blendwell was a political appointee—a
good man, Malloy had to
admit, but he didn't know all the
ins and outs of the Diplomatic Corps.
When Blendwell looked up from
the reports at last, he said: "Amazing!
They've held off the Karna at
every point! They've beaten them
back! They've managed to cope with
and outdo the finest team of negotiators
the Karna could send."
"I thought they would," said Malloy,
trying to appear modest.
The secretary's eyes narrowed.
"I've heard of the work you've been
doing here with ... ah ... sick men.
Is this one of your ... ah ... successes?"
Malloy nodded. "I think so. The
Karna put us in a dilemma, so I
threw a dilemma right back at them."
"How do you mean?"
"Nordon had a mental block
against making decisions. If he took
a girl out on a date, he'd have trouble
making up his mind whether to kiss
her or not until she made up his mind
for him, one way or the other. He's
that kind of guy. Until he's presented
with one, single, clear decision which
admits of no alternatives, he can't
move at all.
"As you can see, the Karna tried
to give us several choices on each
point, and they were all rigged. Until
they backed down to a single point
and proved that it
wasn't
rigged,
Nordon couldn't possibly make up his
mind. I drummed into him how important
this was, and the more importance
there is attached to his decisions,
the more incapable he becomes
of making them."
The Secretary nodded slowly.
"What about Braynek?"
"Paranoid," said Malloy. "He
thinks everyone is plotting against
him. In this case, that's all to the good
because the Karna
are
plotting against
him. No matter what they put forth,
Braynek is convinced that there's a
trap in it somewhere, and he digs to
find out what the trap is. Even if
there isn't a trap, the Karna can't
satisfy Braynek, because he's convinced
that there
has
to be—somewhere.
As a result, all his advice to
Nordon, and all his questioning on
the wildest possibilities, just serves
to keep Nordon from getting unconfused.
"These two men are honestly doing
their best to win at the peace conference,
and they've got the Karna reeling.
The Karna can see that we're not
trying to stall; our men are actually
working at trying to reach a decision.
But what the Karna don't see is that
those men, as a team, are unbeatable
because, in this situation, they're psychologically
incapable of losing."
Again the Secretary of State nodded
his approval, but there was still
a question in his mind. "Since you
know all that, couldn't you have handled
it yourself?"
"Maybe, but I doubt it. They might
have gotten around me someway by
sneaking up on a blind spot. Nordon
and Braynek have blind spots, but
they're covered with armor. No, I'm
glad I couldn't go; it's better this
way."
The Secretary of State raised an
eyebrow. "
Couldn't
go, Mr. Ambassador?"
Malloy looked at him. "Didn't you
know? I wondered why you appointed
me, in the first place. No, I
couldn't go. The reason why I'm here,
cooped up in this office, hiding from
the Saarkkada the way a good Saarkkadic
bigshot should, is because I
like
it that way. I suffer from agoraphobia
and xenophobia.
"I have to be drugged to be put on
a spaceship because I can't take all
that empty space, even if I'm protected
from it by a steel shell." A
look of revulsion came over his face.
"And I can't
stand
aliens!"
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
March 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The Karna are the second most powerful race in the galaxy. They are skilled negotiators. | The Karna are a race of warriors bent on destroying the Earth. | The Karna are a peaceful species trying to negotiate a surrender to Earth. | The Karna are a predator race who are trying to invade the Earth, to use humans as a food source. | 0 |
24521_WM4KUPLS_5 | Does Earth want peace with Karn? | IN CASE OF FIRE
By RANDALL GARRETT
There are times when a broken tool is better
than a sound one, or a twisted personality
more useful than a whole one. For
instance, a whole beer bottle isn't half
the weapon that half a beer bottle is ...
Illustrated by Martinez
In his
office apartment,
on the top floor of the
Terran Embassy Building
in Occeq City, Bertrand
Malloy leafed
casually through the dossiers of the
four new men who had been assigned
to him. They were typical of the kind
of men who were sent to him, he
thought. Which meant, as usual, that
they were atypical. Every man in the
Diplomatic Corps who developed a
twitch or a quirk was shipped to
Saarkkad IV to work under Bertrand
Malloy, Permanent Terran Ambassador
to His Utter Munificence, the
Occeq of Saarkkad.
Take this first one, for instance.
Malloy ran his finger down the columns
of complex symbolism that
showed the complete psychological
analysis of the man. Psychopathic
paranoia. The man wasn't technically
insane; he could be as lucid as the next
man most of the time. But he was
morbidly suspicious that every man's
hand was turned against him. He
trusted no one, and was perpetually
on his guard against imaginary plots
and persecutions.
Number two suffered from some
sort of emotional block that left him
continually on the horns of one dilemma
or another. He was psychologically
incapable of making a decision
if he were faced with two or more
possible alternatives of any major
importance.
Number three ...
Malloy sighed and pushed the dossiers
away from him. No two men
were alike, and yet there sometimes
seemed to be an eternal sameness
about all men. He considered himself
an individual, for instance, but wasn't
the basic similarity there, after all?
He was—how old? He glanced at
the Earth calendar dial that was automatically
correlated with the Saarkkadic
calendar just above it. Fifty-nine
next week. Fifty-nine years old. And
what did he have to show for it besides
flabby muscles, sagging skin, a
wrinkled face, and gray hair?
Well, he had an excellent record in
the Corps, if nothing else. One of the
top men in his field. And he had his
memories of Diane, dead these ten
years, but still beautiful and alive in
his recollections. And—he grinned
softly to himself—he had Saarkkad.
He glanced up at the ceiling, and
mentally allowed his gaze to penetrate
it to the blue sky beyond it.
Out there was the terrible emptiness
of interstellar space—a great, yawning,
infinite chasm capable of swallowing
men, ships, planets, suns, and
whole galaxies without filling its insatiable
void.
Malloy closed his eyes. Somewhere
out there, a war was raging. He
didn't even like to think of that, but
it was necessary to keep it in mind.
Somewhere out there, the ships of
Earth were ranged against the ships
of the alien Karna in the most important
war that Mankind had yet
fought.
And, Malloy knew, his own position
was not unimportant in that war.
He was not in the battle line, nor
even in the major production line, but
it was necessary to keep the drug supply
lines flowing from Saarkkad, and
that meant keeping on good terms
with the Saarkkadic government.
The Saarkkada themselves were humanoid
in physical form—if one allowed
the term to cover a wide range
of differences—but their minds just
didn't function along the same lines.
For nine years, Bertrand Malloy
had been Ambassador to Saarkkad,
and for nine years, no Saarkkada had
ever seen him. To have shown himself
to one of them would have
meant instant loss of prestige.
To their way of thinking, an important
official was aloof. The greater
his importance, the greater must be
his isolation. The Occeq of Saarkkad
himself was never seen except by a
handful of picked nobles, who, themselves,
were never seen except by their
underlings. It was a long, roundabout
way of doing business, but it was the
only way Saarkkad would do any
business at all. To violate the rigid
social setup of Saarkkad would mean
the instant closing off of the supply
of biochemical products that the
Saarkkadic laboratories produced
from native plants and animals—products
that were vitally necessary
to Earth's war, and which could be
duplicated nowhere else in the
known universe.
It was Bertrand Malloy's job to
keep the production output high and
to keep the materiel flowing towards
Earth and her allies and outposts.
The job would have been a snap
cinch in the right circumstances; the
Saarkkada weren't difficult to get
along with. A staff of top-grade men
could have handled them without
half trying.
But Malloy didn't have top-grade
men. They couldn't be spared from
work that required their total capacity.
It's inefficient to waste a man on a
job that he can do without half trying
where there are more important jobs
that will tax his full output.
So Malloy was stuck with the culls.
Not the worst ones, of course; there
were places in the galaxy that were
less important than Saarkkad to the
war effort. Malloy knew that, no matter
what was wrong with a man, as
long as he had the mental ability to
dress himself and get himself to
work, useful work could be found for
him.
Physical handicaps weren't at all
difficult to deal with. A blind man can
work very well in the total darkness
of an infrared-film darkroom. Partial
or total losses of limbs can be compensated
for in one way or another.
The mental disabilities were harder
to deal with, but not totally impossible.
On a world without liquor, a
dipsomaniac could be channeled easily
enough; and he'd better not try fermenting
his own on Saarkkad unless
he brought his own yeast—which
was impossible, in view of the sterilization
regulations.
But Malloy didn't like to stop at
merely thwarting mental quirks; he
liked to find places where they were
useful
.
The phone chimed. Malloy flipped
it on with a practiced hand.
"Malloy here."
"Mr. Malloy?" said a careful voice.
"A special communication for you has
been teletyped in from Earth. Shall I
bring it in?"
"Bring it in, Miss Drayson."
Miss Drayson was a case in point.
She was uncommunicative. She liked
to gather in information, but she
found it difficult to give it up once it
was in her possession.
Malloy had made her his private
secretary. Nothing—but
nothing
—got
out of Malloy's office without his
direct order. It had taken Malloy a
long time to get it into Miss Drayson's
head that it was perfectly all
right—even desirable—for her to
keep secrets from everyone except
Malloy.
She came in through the door,
a rather handsome woman in her middle
thirties, clutching a sheaf of
papers in her right hand as though
someone might at any instant snatch
it from her before she could turn it
over to Malloy.
She laid them carefully on the
desk. "If anything else comes in, I'll
let you know immediately, sir," she
said. "Will there be anything else?"
Malloy let her stand there while he
picked up the communique. She wanted
to know what his reaction was
going to be; it didn't matter because
no one would ever find out from her
what he had done unless she was
ordered to tell someone.
He read the first paragraph, and his
eyes widened involuntarily.
"Armistice," he said in a low
whisper. "There's a chance that the
war may be over."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Drayson in a
hushed voice.
Malloy read the whole thing
through, fighting to keep his emotions
in check. Miss Drayson stood
there calmly, her face a mask; her
emotions were a secret.
Finally, Malloy looked up. "I'll let
you know as soon as I reach a decision,
Miss Drayson. I think I hardly
need say that no news of this is to
leave this office."
"Of course not, sir."
Malloy watched her go out the door
without actually seeing her. The war
was over—at least for a while. He
looked down at the papers again.
The Karna, slowly being beaten
back on every front, were suing for
peace. They wanted an armistice conference—immediately.
Earth was willing. Interstellar war
is too costly to allow it to continue
any longer than necessary, and this
one had been going on for more than
thirteen years now. Peace was necessary.
But not peace at any price.
The trouble was that the Karna had
a reputation for losing wars and winning
at the peace table. They were
clever, persuasive talkers. They could
twist a disadvantage to an advantage,
and make their own strengths look
like weaknesses. If they won the armistice,
they'd be able to retrench and
rearm, and the war would break out
again within a few years.
Now—at this point in time—they
could be beaten. They could be forced
to allow supervision of the production
potential, forced to disarm, rendered
impotent. But if the armistice went to
their own advantage ...
Already, they had taken the offensive
in the matter of the peace talks.
They had sent a full delegation to
Saarkkad V, the next planet out from
the Saarkkad sun, a chilly world inhabited
only by low-intelligence animals.
The Karna considered this to be
fully neutral territory, and Earth
couldn't argue the point very well. In
addition, they demanded that the conference
begin in three days, Terrestrial
time.
The trouble was that interstellar
communication beams travel a devil
of a lot faster than ships. It would
take more than a week for the Earth
government to get a vessel to Saarkkad
V. Earth had been caught unprepared
for an armistice. They
objected.
The Karna pointed out that the
Saarkkad sun was just as far from
Karn as it was from Earth, that it
was only a few million miles from a
planet which was allied with Earth,
and that it was unfair for Earth to
take so much time in preparing for an
armistice. Why hadn't Earth been prepared?
Did they intend to fight to the
utter destruction of Karn?
It wouldn't have been a problem at
all if Earth and Karn had fostered the
only two intelligent races in the galaxy.
The sort of grandstanding the
Karna were putting on had to be
played to an audience. But there were
other intelligent races throughout the
galaxy, most of whom had remained
as neutral as possible during the
Earth-Karn war. They had no intention
of sticking their figurative noses
into a battle between the two most
powerful races in the galaxy.
But whoever won the armistice
would find that some of the now-neutral
races would come in on their
side if war broke out again. If the
Karna played their cards right, their
side would be strong enough next
time to win.
So Earth had to get a delegation to
meet with the Karna representatives
within the three-day limit or lose what
might be a vital point in the negotiations.
And that was where Bertrand Malloy
came in.
He had been appointed Minister
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to
the Earth-Karn peace conference.
He looked up at the ceiling again.
"What
can
I do?" he said softly.
On the second day after the arrival
of the communique, Malloy
made his decision. He flipped on his
intercom and said: "Miss Drayson,
get hold of James Nordon and Kylen
Braynek. I want to see them both immediately.
Send Nordon in first, and
tell Braynek to wait."
"Yes, sir."
"And keep the recorder on. You
can file the tape later."
"Yes, sir."
Malloy knew the woman would
listen in on the intercom anyway, and
it was better to give her permission to
do so.
James Nordon was tall, broad-shouldered,
and thirty-eight. His hair
was graying at the temples, and his
handsome face looked cool and efficient.
Malloy waved him to a seat.
"Nordon, I have a job for you. It's
probably one of the most important
jobs you'll ever have in your life. It
can mean big things for you—promotion
and prestige if you do it well."
Nordon nodded slowly. "Yes, sir."
Malloy explained the problem of
the Karna peace talks.
"We need a man who can outthink
them," Malloy finished, "and judging
from your record, I think you're that
man. It involves risk, of course. If
you make the wrong decisions, your
name will be mud back on Earth. But
I don't think there's much chance of
that, really. Do you want to handle
small-time operations all your life?
Of course not.
"You'll be leaving within an hour
for Saarkkad V."
Nordon nodded again. "Yes, sir;
certainly. Am I to go alone?"
"No," said Malloy, "I'm sending
an assistant with you—a man named
Kylen Braynek. Ever heard of him?"
Nordon shook his head. "Not that
I recall, Mr. Malloy. Should I have?"
"Not necessarily. He's a pretty
shrewd operator, though. He knows a
lot about interstellar law, and he's
capable of spotting a trap a mile away.
You'll be in charge, of course, but I
want you to pay special attention to
his advice."
"I will, sir," Nordon said gratefully.
"A man like that can be useful."
"Right. Now, you go into the anteroom
over there. I've prepared a summary
of the situation, and you'll have
to study it and get it into your head
before the ship leaves. That isn't
much time, but it's the Karna who are
doing the pushing, not us."
As soon as Nordon had left, Malloy
said softly: "Send in Braynek,
Miss Drayson."
Kylen Braynek was a smallish man
with mouse-brown hair that lay flat
against his skull, and hard, penetrating,
dark eyes that were shadowed by
heavy, protruding brows. Malloy asked
him to sit down.
Again Malloy went through the explanation
of the peace conference.
"Naturally, they'll be trying to
trick you every step of the way," Malloy
went on. "They're shrewd and
underhanded; we'll simply have to
be more shrewd and more underhanded.
Nordon's job is to sit
quietly and evaluate the data; yours
will be to find the loopholes they're
laying out for themselves and plug
them. Don't antagonize them, but
don't baby them, either. If you see
anything underhanded going on, let
Nordon know immediately."
"They won't get anything by me,
Mr. Malloy."
By the time the ship from Earth
got there, the peace conference had
been going on for four days. Bertrand
Malloy had full reports on the whole
parley, as relayed to him through the
ship that had taken Nordon and Braynek
to Saarkkad V.
Secretary of State Blendwell stopped
off at Saarkkad IV before going
on to V to take charge of the conference.
He was a tallish, lean man with
a few strands of gray hair on the top
of his otherwise bald scalp, and he
wore a hearty, professional smile that
didn't quite make it to his calculating
eyes.
He took Malloy's hand and shook
it warmly. "How are you, Mr. Ambassador?"
"Fine, Mr. Secretary. How's everything
on Earth?"
"Tense. They're waiting to see
what is going to happen on Five. So
am I, for that matter." His eyes were
curious. "You decided not to go
yourself, eh?"
"I thought it better not to. I sent a
good team, instead. Would you like
to see the reports?"
"I certainly would."
Malloy handed them to the secretary,
and as he read, Malloy watched
him. Blendwell was a political appointee—a
good man, Malloy had to
admit, but he didn't know all the
ins and outs of the Diplomatic Corps.
When Blendwell looked up from
the reports at last, he said: "Amazing!
They've held off the Karna at
every point! They've beaten them
back! They've managed to cope with
and outdo the finest team of negotiators
the Karna could send."
"I thought they would," said Malloy,
trying to appear modest.
The secretary's eyes narrowed.
"I've heard of the work you've been
doing here with ... ah ... sick men.
Is this one of your ... ah ... successes?"
Malloy nodded. "I think so. The
Karna put us in a dilemma, so I
threw a dilemma right back at them."
"How do you mean?"
"Nordon had a mental block
against making decisions. If he took
a girl out on a date, he'd have trouble
making up his mind whether to kiss
her or not until she made up his mind
for him, one way or the other. He's
that kind of guy. Until he's presented
with one, single, clear decision which
admits of no alternatives, he can't
move at all.
"As you can see, the Karna tried
to give us several choices on each
point, and they were all rigged. Until
they backed down to a single point
and proved that it
wasn't
rigged,
Nordon couldn't possibly make up his
mind. I drummed into him how important
this was, and the more importance
there is attached to his decisions,
the more incapable he becomes
of making them."
The Secretary nodded slowly.
"What about Braynek?"
"Paranoid," said Malloy. "He
thinks everyone is plotting against
him. In this case, that's all to the good
because the Karna
are
plotting against
him. No matter what they put forth,
Braynek is convinced that there's a
trap in it somewhere, and he digs to
find out what the trap is. Even if
there isn't a trap, the Karna can't
satisfy Braynek, because he's convinced
that there
has
to be—somewhere.
As a result, all his advice to
Nordon, and all his questioning on
the wildest possibilities, just serves
to keep Nordon from getting unconfused.
"These two men are honestly doing
their best to win at the peace conference,
and they've got the Karna reeling.
The Karna can see that we're not
trying to stall; our men are actually
working at trying to reach a decision.
But what the Karna don't see is that
those men, as a team, are unbeatable
because, in this situation, they're psychologically
incapable of losing."
Again the Secretary of State nodded
his approval, but there was still
a question in his mind. "Since you
know all that, couldn't you have handled
it yourself?"
"Maybe, but I doubt it. They might
have gotten around me someway by
sneaking up on a blind spot. Nordon
and Braynek have blind spots, but
they're covered with armor. No, I'm
glad I couldn't go; it's better this
way."
The Secretary of State raised an
eyebrow. "
Couldn't
go, Mr. Ambassador?"
Malloy looked at him. "Didn't you
know? I wondered why you appointed
me, in the first place. No, I
couldn't go. The reason why I'm here,
cooped up in this office, hiding from
the Saarkkada the way a good Saarkkadic
bigshot should, is because I
like
it that way. I suffer from agoraphobia
and xenophobia.
"I have to be drugged to be put on
a spaceship because I can't take all
that empty space, even if I'm protected
from it by a steel shell." A
look of revulsion came over his face.
"And I can't
stand
aliens!"
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
March 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The Earth is ready for peace, as interstellar war is costly. | Earth needs to eliminate the Karna to protect the galaxy. | The Earth does not want peace with the planet Karn. The Karna are an evil race. | The Earth wants peace but doesn't trust the Karna to hold up their end of the bargain. | 0 |
24521_WM4KUPLS_6 | Why are the peace talks on Saarkkad V? | IN CASE OF FIRE
By RANDALL GARRETT
There are times when a broken tool is better
than a sound one, or a twisted personality
more useful than a whole one. For
instance, a whole beer bottle isn't half
the weapon that half a beer bottle is ...
Illustrated by Martinez
In his
office apartment,
on the top floor of the
Terran Embassy Building
in Occeq City, Bertrand
Malloy leafed
casually through the dossiers of the
four new men who had been assigned
to him. They were typical of the kind
of men who were sent to him, he
thought. Which meant, as usual, that
they were atypical. Every man in the
Diplomatic Corps who developed a
twitch or a quirk was shipped to
Saarkkad IV to work under Bertrand
Malloy, Permanent Terran Ambassador
to His Utter Munificence, the
Occeq of Saarkkad.
Take this first one, for instance.
Malloy ran his finger down the columns
of complex symbolism that
showed the complete psychological
analysis of the man. Psychopathic
paranoia. The man wasn't technically
insane; he could be as lucid as the next
man most of the time. But he was
morbidly suspicious that every man's
hand was turned against him. He
trusted no one, and was perpetually
on his guard against imaginary plots
and persecutions.
Number two suffered from some
sort of emotional block that left him
continually on the horns of one dilemma
or another. He was psychologically
incapable of making a decision
if he were faced with two or more
possible alternatives of any major
importance.
Number three ...
Malloy sighed and pushed the dossiers
away from him. No two men
were alike, and yet there sometimes
seemed to be an eternal sameness
about all men. He considered himself
an individual, for instance, but wasn't
the basic similarity there, after all?
He was—how old? He glanced at
the Earth calendar dial that was automatically
correlated with the Saarkkadic
calendar just above it. Fifty-nine
next week. Fifty-nine years old. And
what did he have to show for it besides
flabby muscles, sagging skin, a
wrinkled face, and gray hair?
Well, he had an excellent record in
the Corps, if nothing else. One of the
top men in his field. And he had his
memories of Diane, dead these ten
years, but still beautiful and alive in
his recollections. And—he grinned
softly to himself—he had Saarkkad.
He glanced up at the ceiling, and
mentally allowed his gaze to penetrate
it to the blue sky beyond it.
Out there was the terrible emptiness
of interstellar space—a great, yawning,
infinite chasm capable of swallowing
men, ships, planets, suns, and
whole galaxies without filling its insatiable
void.
Malloy closed his eyes. Somewhere
out there, a war was raging. He
didn't even like to think of that, but
it was necessary to keep it in mind.
Somewhere out there, the ships of
Earth were ranged against the ships
of the alien Karna in the most important
war that Mankind had yet
fought.
And, Malloy knew, his own position
was not unimportant in that war.
He was not in the battle line, nor
even in the major production line, but
it was necessary to keep the drug supply
lines flowing from Saarkkad, and
that meant keeping on good terms
with the Saarkkadic government.
The Saarkkada themselves were humanoid
in physical form—if one allowed
the term to cover a wide range
of differences—but their minds just
didn't function along the same lines.
For nine years, Bertrand Malloy
had been Ambassador to Saarkkad,
and for nine years, no Saarkkada had
ever seen him. To have shown himself
to one of them would have
meant instant loss of prestige.
To their way of thinking, an important
official was aloof. The greater
his importance, the greater must be
his isolation. The Occeq of Saarkkad
himself was never seen except by a
handful of picked nobles, who, themselves,
were never seen except by their
underlings. It was a long, roundabout
way of doing business, but it was the
only way Saarkkad would do any
business at all. To violate the rigid
social setup of Saarkkad would mean
the instant closing off of the supply
of biochemical products that the
Saarkkadic laboratories produced
from native plants and animals—products
that were vitally necessary
to Earth's war, and which could be
duplicated nowhere else in the
known universe.
It was Bertrand Malloy's job to
keep the production output high and
to keep the materiel flowing towards
Earth and her allies and outposts.
The job would have been a snap
cinch in the right circumstances; the
Saarkkada weren't difficult to get
along with. A staff of top-grade men
could have handled them without
half trying.
But Malloy didn't have top-grade
men. They couldn't be spared from
work that required their total capacity.
It's inefficient to waste a man on a
job that he can do without half trying
where there are more important jobs
that will tax his full output.
So Malloy was stuck with the culls.
Not the worst ones, of course; there
were places in the galaxy that were
less important than Saarkkad to the
war effort. Malloy knew that, no matter
what was wrong with a man, as
long as he had the mental ability to
dress himself and get himself to
work, useful work could be found for
him.
Physical handicaps weren't at all
difficult to deal with. A blind man can
work very well in the total darkness
of an infrared-film darkroom. Partial
or total losses of limbs can be compensated
for in one way or another.
The mental disabilities were harder
to deal with, but not totally impossible.
On a world without liquor, a
dipsomaniac could be channeled easily
enough; and he'd better not try fermenting
his own on Saarkkad unless
he brought his own yeast—which
was impossible, in view of the sterilization
regulations.
But Malloy didn't like to stop at
merely thwarting mental quirks; he
liked to find places where they were
useful
.
The phone chimed. Malloy flipped
it on with a practiced hand.
"Malloy here."
"Mr. Malloy?" said a careful voice.
"A special communication for you has
been teletyped in from Earth. Shall I
bring it in?"
"Bring it in, Miss Drayson."
Miss Drayson was a case in point.
She was uncommunicative. She liked
to gather in information, but she
found it difficult to give it up once it
was in her possession.
Malloy had made her his private
secretary. Nothing—but
nothing
—got
out of Malloy's office without his
direct order. It had taken Malloy a
long time to get it into Miss Drayson's
head that it was perfectly all
right—even desirable—for her to
keep secrets from everyone except
Malloy.
She came in through the door,
a rather handsome woman in her middle
thirties, clutching a sheaf of
papers in her right hand as though
someone might at any instant snatch
it from her before she could turn it
over to Malloy.
She laid them carefully on the
desk. "If anything else comes in, I'll
let you know immediately, sir," she
said. "Will there be anything else?"
Malloy let her stand there while he
picked up the communique. She wanted
to know what his reaction was
going to be; it didn't matter because
no one would ever find out from her
what he had done unless she was
ordered to tell someone.
He read the first paragraph, and his
eyes widened involuntarily.
"Armistice," he said in a low
whisper. "There's a chance that the
war may be over."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Drayson in a
hushed voice.
Malloy read the whole thing
through, fighting to keep his emotions
in check. Miss Drayson stood
there calmly, her face a mask; her
emotions were a secret.
Finally, Malloy looked up. "I'll let
you know as soon as I reach a decision,
Miss Drayson. I think I hardly
need say that no news of this is to
leave this office."
"Of course not, sir."
Malloy watched her go out the door
without actually seeing her. The war
was over—at least for a while. He
looked down at the papers again.
The Karna, slowly being beaten
back on every front, were suing for
peace. They wanted an armistice conference—immediately.
Earth was willing. Interstellar war
is too costly to allow it to continue
any longer than necessary, and this
one had been going on for more than
thirteen years now. Peace was necessary.
But not peace at any price.
The trouble was that the Karna had
a reputation for losing wars and winning
at the peace table. They were
clever, persuasive talkers. They could
twist a disadvantage to an advantage,
and make their own strengths look
like weaknesses. If they won the armistice,
they'd be able to retrench and
rearm, and the war would break out
again within a few years.
Now—at this point in time—they
could be beaten. They could be forced
to allow supervision of the production
potential, forced to disarm, rendered
impotent. But if the armistice went to
their own advantage ...
Already, they had taken the offensive
in the matter of the peace talks.
They had sent a full delegation to
Saarkkad V, the next planet out from
the Saarkkad sun, a chilly world inhabited
only by low-intelligence animals.
The Karna considered this to be
fully neutral territory, and Earth
couldn't argue the point very well. In
addition, they demanded that the conference
begin in three days, Terrestrial
time.
The trouble was that interstellar
communication beams travel a devil
of a lot faster than ships. It would
take more than a week for the Earth
government to get a vessel to Saarkkad
V. Earth had been caught unprepared
for an armistice. They
objected.
The Karna pointed out that the
Saarkkad sun was just as far from
Karn as it was from Earth, that it
was only a few million miles from a
planet which was allied with Earth,
and that it was unfair for Earth to
take so much time in preparing for an
armistice. Why hadn't Earth been prepared?
Did they intend to fight to the
utter destruction of Karn?
It wouldn't have been a problem at
all if Earth and Karn had fostered the
only two intelligent races in the galaxy.
The sort of grandstanding the
Karna were putting on had to be
played to an audience. But there were
other intelligent races throughout the
galaxy, most of whom had remained
as neutral as possible during the
Earth-Karn war. They had no intention
of sticking their figurative noses
into a battle between the two most
powerful races in the galaxy.
But whoever won the armistice
would find that some of the now-neutral
races would come in on their
side if war broke out again. If the
Karna played their cards right, their
side would be strong enough next
time to win.
So Earth had to get a delegation to
meet with the Karna representatives
within the three-day limit or lose what
might be a vital point in the negotiations.
And that was where Bertrand Malloy
came in.
He had been appointed Minister
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to
the Earth-Karn peace conference.
He looked up at the ceiling again.
"What
can
I do?" he said softly.
On the second day after the arrival
of the communique, Malloy
made his decision. He flipped on his
intercom and said: "Miss Drayson,
get hold of James Nordon and Kylen
Braynek. I want to see them both immediately.
Send Nordon in first, and
tell Braynek to wait."
"Yes, sir."
"And keep the recorder on. You
can file the tape later."
"Yes, sir."
Malloy knew the woman would
listen in on the intercom anyway, and
it was better to give her permission to
do so.
James Nordon was tall, broad-shouldered,
and thirty-eight. His hair
was graying at the temples, and his
handsome face looked cool and efficient.
Malloy waved him to a seat.
"Nordon, I have a job for you. It's
probably one of the most important
jobs you'll ever have in your life. It
can mean big things for you—promotion
and prestige if you do it well."
Nordon nodded slowly. "Yes, sir."
Malloy explained the problem of
the Karna peace talks.
"We need a man who can outthink
them," Malloy finished, "and judging
from your record, I think you're that
man. It involves risk, of course. If
you make the wrong decisions, your
name will be mud back on Earth. But
I don't think there's much chance of
that, really. Do you want to handle
small-time operations all your life?
Of course not.
"You'll be leaving within an hour
for Saarkkad V."
Nordon nodded again. "Yes, sir;
certainly. Am I to go alone?"
"No," said Malloy, "I'm sending
an assistant with you—a man named
Kylen Braynek. Ever heard of him?"
Nordon shook his head. "Not that
I recall, Mr. Malloy. Should I have?"
"Not necessarily. He's a pretty
shrewd operator, though. He knows a
lot about interstellar law, and he's
capable of spotting a trap a mile away.
You'll be in charge, of course, but I
want you to pay special attention to
his advice."
"I will, sir," Nordon said gratefully.
"A man like that can be useful."
"Right. Now, you go into the anteroom
over there. I've prepared a summary
of the situation, and you'll have
to study it and get it into your head
before the ship leaves. That isn't
much time, but it's the Karna who are
doing the pushing, not us."
As soon as Nordon had left, Malloy
said softly: "Send in Braynek,
Miss Drayson."
Kylen Braynek was a smallish man
with mouse-brown hair that lay flat
against his skull, and hard, penetrating,
dark eyes that were shadowed by
heavy, protruding brows. Malloy asked
him to sit down.
Again Malloy went through the explanation
of the peace conference.
"Naturally, they'll be trying to
trick you every step of the way," Malloy
went on. "They're shrewd and
underhanded; we'll simply have to
be more shrewd and more underhanded.
Nordon's job is to sit
quietly and evaluate the data; yours
will be to find the loopholes they're
laying out for themselves and plug
them. Don't antagonize them, but
don't baby them, either. If you see
anything underhanded going on, let
Nordon know immediately."
"They won't get anything by me,
Mr. Malloy."
By the time the ship from Earth
got there, the peace conference had
been going on for four days. Bertrand
Malloy had full reports on the whole
parley, as relayed to him through the
ship that had taken Nordon and Braynek
to Saarkkad V.
Secretary of State Blendwell stopped
off at Saarkkad IV before going
on to V to take charge of the conference.
He was a tallish, lean man with
a few strands of gray hair on the top
of his otherwise bald scalp, and he
wore a hearty, professional smile that
didn't quite make it to his calculating
eyes.
He took Malloy's hand and shook
it warmly. "How are you, Mr. Ambassador?"
"Fine, Mr. Secretary. How's everything
on Earth?"
"Tense. They're waiting to see
what is going to happen on Five. So
am I, for that matter." His eyes were
curious. "You decided not to go
yourself, eh?"
"I thought it better not to. I sent a
good team, instead. Would you like
to see the reports?"
"I certainly would."
Malloy handed them to the secretary,
and as he read, Malloy watched
him. Blendwell was a political appointee—a
good man, Malloy had to
admit, but he didn't know all the
ins and outs of the Diplomatic Corps.
When Blendwell looked up from
the reports at last, he said: "Amazing!
They've held off the Karna at
every point! They've beaten them
back! They've managed to cope with
and outdo the finest team of negotiators
the Karna could send."
"I thought they would," said Malloy,
trying to appear modest.
The secretary's eyes narrowed.
"I've heard of the work you've been
doing here with ... ah ... sick men.
Is this one of your ... ah ... successes?"
Malloy nodded. "I think so. The
Karna put us in a dilemma, so I
threw a dilemma right back at them."
"How do you mean?"
"Nordon had a mental block
against making decisions. If he took
a girl out on a date, he'd have trouble
making up his mind whether to kiss
her or not until she made up his mind
for him, one way or the other. He's
that kind of guy. Until he's presented
with one, single, clear decision which
admits of no alternatives, he can't
move at all.
"As you can see, the Karna tried
to give us several choices on each
point, and they were all rigged. Until
they backed down to a single point
and proved that it
wasn't
rigged,
Nordon couldn't possibly make up his
mind. I drummed into him how important
this was, and the more importance
there is attached to his decisions,
the more incapable he becomes
of making them."
The Secretary nodded slowly.
"What about Braynek?"
"Paranoid," said Malloy. "He
thinks everyone is plotting against
him. In this case, that's all to the good
because the Karna
are
plotting against
him. No matter what they put forth,
Braynek is convinced that there's a
trap in it somewhere, and he digs to
find out what the trap is. Even if
there isn't a trap, the Karna can't
satisfy Braynek, because he's convinced
that there
has
to be—somewhere.
As a result, all his advice to
Nordon, and all his questioning on
the wildest possibilities, just serves
to keep Nordon from getting unconfused.
"These two men are honestly doing
their best to win at the peace conference,
and they've got the Karna reeling.
The Karna can see that we're not
trying to stall; our men are actually
working at trying to reach a decision.
But what the Karna don't see is that
those men, as a team, are unbeatable
because, in this situation, they're psychologically
incapable of losing."
Again the Secretary of State nodded
his approval, but there was still
a question in his mind. "Since you
know all that, couldn't you have handled
it yourself?"
"Maybe, but I doubt it. They might
have gotten around me someway by
sneaking up on a blind spot. Nordon
and Braynek have blind spots, but
they're covered with armor. No, I'm
glad I couldn't go; it's better this
way."
The Secretary of State raised an
eyebrow. "
Couldn't
go, Mr. Ambassador?"
Malloy looked at him. "Didn't you
know? I wondered why you appointed
me, in the first place. No, I
couldn't go. The reason why I'm here,
cooped up in this office, hiding from
the Saarkkada the way a good Saarkkadic
bigshot should, is because I
like
it that way. I suffer from agoraphobia
and xenophobia.
"I have to be drugged to be put on
a spaceship because I can't take all
that empty space, even if I'm protected
from it by a steel shell." A
look of revulsion came over his face.
"And I can't
stand
aliens!"
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
March 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Saarkkad V is not inhabited by intelligent life. | The Karna consider Saarkkad V to be neutral territory. | The inhabitants of Saarkkad V don't pose a danger to the Karna or to the humans. | Saarkkad V is halfway between Earth and Karn. | 1 |
24521_WM4KUPLS_7 | Who are the kind of men who are sent to Sararkkad IV? | IN CASE OF FIRE
By RANDALL GARRETT
There are times when a broken tool is better
than a sound one, or a twisted personality
more useful than a whole one. For
instance, a whole beer bottle isn't half
the weapon that half a beer bottle is ...
Illustrated by Martinez
In his
office apartment,
on the top floor of the
Terran Embassy Building
in Occeq City, Bertrand
Malloy leafed
casually through the dossiers of the
four new men who had been assigned
to him. They were typical of the kind
of men who were sent to him, he
thought. Which meant, as usual, that
they were atypical. Every man in the
Diplomatic Corps who developed a
twitch or a quirk was shipped to
Saarkkad IV to work under Bertrand
Malloy, Permanent Terran Ambassador
to His Utter Munificence, the
Occeq of Saarkkad.
Take this first one, for instance.
Malloy ran his finger down the columns
of complex symbolism that
showed the complete psychological
analysis of the man. Psychopathic
paranoia. The man wasn't technically
insane; he could be as lucid as the next
man most of the time. But he was
morbidly suspicious that every man's
hand was turned against him. He
trusted no one, and was perpetually
on his guard against imaginary plots
and persecutions.
Number two suffered from some
sort of emotional block that left him
continually on the horns of one dilemma
or another. He was psychologically
incapable of making a decision
if he were faced with two or more
possible alternatives of any major
importance.
Number three ...
Malloy sighed and pushed the dossiers
away from him. No two men
were alike, and yet there sometimes
seemed to be an eternal sameness
about all men. He considered himself
an individual, for instance, but wasn't
the basic similarity there, after all?
He was—how old? He glanced at
the Earth calendar dial that was automatically
correlated with the Saarkkadic
calendar just above it. Fifty-nine
next week. Fifty-nine years old. And
what did he have to show for it besides
flabby muscles, sagging skin, a
wrinkled face, and gray hair?
Well, he had an excellent record in
the Corps, if nothing else. One of the
top men in his field. And he had his
memories of Diane, dead these ten
years, but still beautiful and alive in
his recollections. And—he grinned
softly to himself—he had Saarkkad.
He glanced up at the ceiling, and
mentally allowed his gaze to penetrate
it to the blue sky beyond it.
Out there was the terrible emptiness
of interstellar space—a great, yawning,
infinite chasm capable of swallowing
men, ships, planets, suns, and
whole galaxies without filling its insatiable
void.
Malloy closed his eyes. Somewhere
out there, a war was raging. He
didn't even like to think of that, but
it was necessary to keep it in mind.
Somewhere out there, the ships of
Earth were ranged against the ships
of the alien Karna in the most important
war that Mankind had yet
fought.
And, Malloy knew, his own position
was not unimportant in that war.
He was not in the battle line, nor
even in the major production line, but
it was necessary to keep the drug supply
lines flowing from Saarkkad, and
that meant keeping on good terms
with the Saarkkadic government.
The Saarkkada themselves were humanoid
in physical form—if one allowed
the term to cover a wide range
of differences—but their minds just
didn't function along the same lines.
For nine years, Bertrand Malloy
had been Ambassador to Saarkkad,
and for nine years, no Saarkkada had
ever seen him. To have shown himself
to one of them would have
meant instant loss of prestige.
To their way of thinking, an important
official was aloof. The greater
his importance, the greater must be
his isolation. The Occeq of Saarkkad
himself was never seen except by a
handful of picked nobles, who, themselves,
were never seen except by their
underlings. It was a long, roundabout
way of doing business, but it was the
only way Saarkkad would do any
business at all. To violate the rigid
social setup of Saarkkad would mean
the instant closing off of the supply
of biochemical products that the
Saarkkadic laboratories produced
from native plants and animals—products
that were vitally necessary
to Earth's war, and which could be
duplicated nowhere else in the
known universe.
It was Bertrand Malloy's job to
keep the production output high and
to keep the materiel flowing towards
Earth and her allies and outposts.
The job would have been a snap
cinch in the right circumstances; the
Saarkkada weren't difficult to get
along with. A staff of top-grade men
could have handled them without
half trying.
But Malloy didn't have top-grade
men. They couldn't be spared from
work that required their total capacity.
It's inefficient to waste a man on a
job that he can do without half trying
where there are more important jobs
that will tax his full output.
So Malloy was stuck with the culls.
Not the worst ones, of course; there
were places in the galaxy that were
less important than Saarkkad to the
war effort. Malloy knew that, no matter
what was wrong with a man, as
long as he had the mental ability to
dress himself and get himself to
work, useful work could be found for
him.
Physical handicaps weren't at all
difficult to deal with. A blind man can
work very well in the total darkness
of an infrared-film darkroom. Partial
or total losses of limbs can be compensated
for in one way or another.
The mental disabilities were harder
to deal with, but not totally impossible.
On a world without liquor, a
dipsomaniac could be channeled easily
enough; and he'd better not try fermenting
his own on Saarkkad unless
he brought his own yeast—which
was impossible, in view of the sterilization
regulations.
But Malloy didn't like to stop at
merely thwarting mental quirks; he
liked to find places where they were
useful
.
The phone chimed. Malloy flipped
it on with a practiced hand.
"Malloy here."
"Mr. Malloy?" said a careful voice.
"A special communication for you has
been teletyped in from Earth. Shall I
bring it in?"
"Bring it in, Miss Drayson."
Miss Drayson was a case in point.
She was uncommunicative. She liked
to gather in information, but she
found it difficult to give it up once it
was in her possession.
Malloy had made her his private
secretary. Nothing—but
nothing
—got
out of Malloy's office without his
direct order. It had taken Malloy a
long time to get it into Miss Drayson's
head that it was perfectly all
right—even desirable—for her to
keep secrets from everyone except
Malloy.
She came in through the door,
a rather handsome woman in her middle
thirties, clutching a sheaf of
papers in her right hand as though
someone might at any instant snatch
it from her before she could turn it
over to Malloy.
She laid them carefully on the
desk. "If anything else comes in, I'll
let you know immediately, sir," she
said. "Will there be anything else?"
Malloy let her stand there while he
picked up the communique. She wanted
to know what his reaction was
going to be; it didn't matter because
no one would ever find out from her
what he had done unless she was
ordered to tell someone.
He read the first paragraph, and his
eyes widened involuntarily.
"Armistice," he said in a low
whisper. "There's a chance that the
war may be over."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Drayson in a
hushed voice.
Malloy read the whole thing
through, fighting to keep his emotions
in check. Miss Drayson stood
there calmly, her face a mask; her
emotions were a secret.
Finally, Malloy looked up. "I'll let
you know as soon as I reach a decision,
Miss Drayson. I think I hardly
need say that no news of this is to
leave this office."
"Of course not, sir."
Malloy watched her go out the door
without actually seeing her. The war
was over—at least for a while. He
looked down at the papers again.
The Karna, slowly being beaten
back on every front, were suing for
peace. They wanted an armistice conference—immediately.
Earth was willing. Interstellar war
is too costly to allow it to continue
any longer than necessary, and this
one had been going on for more than
thirteen years now. Peace was necessary.
But not peace at any price.
The trouble was that the Karna had
a reputation for losing wars and winning
at the peace table. They were
clever, persuasive talkers. They could
twist a disadvantage to an advantage,
and make their own strengths look
like weaknesses. If they won the armistice,
they'd be able to retrench and
rearm, and the war would break out
again within a few years.
Now—at this point in time—they
could be beaten. They could be forced
to allow supervision of the production
potential, forced to disarm, rendered
impotent. But if the armistice went to
their own advantage ...
Already, they had taken the offensive
in the matter of the peace talks.
They had sent a full delegation to
Saarkkad V, the next planet out from
the Saarkkad sun, a chilly world inhabited
only by low-intelligence animals.
The Karna considered this to be
fully neutral territory, and Earth
couldn't argue the point very well. In
addition, they demanded that the conference
begin in three days, Terrestrial
time.
The trouble was that interstellar
communication beams travel a devil
of a lot faster than ships. It would
take more than a week for the Earth
government to get a vessel to Saarkkad
V. Earth had been caught unprepared
for an armistice. They
objected.
The Karna pointed out that the
Saarkkad sun was just as far from
Karn as it was from Earth, that it
was only a few million miles from a
planet which was allied with Earth,
and that it was unfair for Earth to
take so much time in preparing for an
armistice. Why hadn't Earth been prepared?
Did they intend to fight to the
utter destruction of Karn?
It wouldn't have been a problem at
all if Earth and Karn had fostered the
only two intelligent races in the galaxy.
The sort of grandstanding the
Karna were putting on had to be
played to an audience. But there were
other intelligent races throughout the
galaxy, most of whom had remained
as neutral as possible during the
Earth-Karn war. They had no intention
of sticking their figurative noses
into a battle between the two most
powerful races in the galaxy.
But whoever won the armistice
would find that some of the now-neutral
races would come in on their
side if war broke out again. If the
Karna played their cards right, their
side would be strong enough next
time to win.
So Earth had to get a delegation to
meet with the Karna representatives
within the three-day limit or lose what
might be a vital point in the negotiations.
And that was where Bertrand Malloy
came in.
He had been appointed Minister
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to
the Earth-Karn peace conference.
He looked up at the ceiling again.
"What
can
I do?" he said softly.
On the second day after the arrival
of the communique, Malloy
made his decision. He flipped on his
intercom and said: "Miss Drayson,
get hold of James Nordon and Kylen
Braynek. I want to see them both immediately.
Send Nordon in first, and
tell Braynek to wait."
"Yes, sir."
"And keep the recorder on. You
can file the tape later."
"Yes, sir."
Malloy knew the woman would
listen in on the intercom anyway, and
it was better to give her permission to
do so.
James Nordon was tall, broad-shouldered,
and thirty-eight. His hair
was graying at the temples, and his
handsome face looked cool and efficient.
Malloy waved him to a seat.
"Nordon, I have a job for you. It's
probably one of the most important
jobs you'll ever have in your life. It
can mean big things for you—promotion
and prestige if you do it well."
Nordon nodded slowly. "Yes, sir."
Malloy explained the problem of
the Karna peace talks.
"We need a man who can outthink
them," Malloy finished, "and judging
from your record, I think you're that
man. It involves risk, of course. If
you make the wrong decisions, your
name will be mud back on Earth. But
I don't think there's much chance of
that, really. Do you want to handle
small-time operations all your life?
Of course not.
"You'll be leaving within an hour
for Saarkkad V."
Nordon nodded again. "Yes, sir;
certainly. Am I to go alone?"
"No," said Malloy, "I'm sending
an assistant with you—a man named
Kylen Braynek. Ever heard of him?"
Nordon shook his head. "Not that
I recall, Mr. Malloy. Should I have?"
"Not necessarily. He's a pretty
shrewd operator, though. He knows a
lot about interstellar law, and he's
capable of spotting a trap a mile away.
You'll be in charge, of course, but I
want you to pay special attention to
his advice."
"I will, sir," Nordon said gratefully.
"A man like that can be useful."
"Right. Now, you go into the anteroom
over there. I've prepared a summary
of the situation, and you'll have
to study it and get it into your head
before the ship leaves. That isn't
much time, but it's the Karna who are
doing the pushing, not us."
As soon as Nordon had left, Malloy
said softly: "Send in Braynek,
Miss Drayson."
Kylen Braynek was a smallish man
with mouse-brown hair that lay flat
against his skull, and hard, penetrating,
dark eyes that were shadowed by
heavy, protruding brows. Malloy asked
him to sit down.
Again Malloy went through the explanation
of the peace conference.
"Naturally, they'll be trying to
trick you every step of the way," Malloy
went on. "They're shrewd and
underhanded; we'll simply have to
be more shrewd and more underhanded.
Nordon's job is to sit
quietly and evaluate the data; yours
will be to find the loopholes they're
laying out for themselves and plug
them. Don't antagonize them, but
don't baby them, either. If you see
anything underhanded going on, let
Nordon know immediately."
"They won't get anything by me,
Mr. Malloy."
By the time the ship from Earth
got there, the peace conference had
been going on for four days. Bertrand
Malloy had full reports on the whole
parley, as relayed to him through the
ship that had taken Nordon and Braynek
to Saarkkad V.
Secretary of State Blendwell stopped
off at Saarkkad IV before going
on to V to take charge of the conference.
He was a tallish, lean man with
a few strands of gray hair on the top
of his otherwise bald scalp, and he
wore a hearty, professional smile that
didn't quite make it to his calculating
eyes.
He took Malloy's hand and shook
it warmly. "How are you, Mr. Ambassador?"
"Fine, Mr. Secretary. How's everything
on Earth?"
"Tense. They're waiting to see
what is going to happen on Five. So
am I, for that matter." His eyes were
curious. "You decided not to go
yourself, eh?"
"I thought it better not to. I sent a
good team, instead. Would you like
to see the reports?"
"I certainly would."
Malloy handed them to the secretary,
and as he read, Malloy watched
him. Blendwell was a political appointee—a
good man, Malloy had to
admit, but he didn't know all the
ins and outs of the Diplomatic Corps.
When Blendwell looked up from
the reports at last, he said: "Amazing!
They've held off the Karna at
every point! They've beaten them
back! They've managed to cope with
and outdo the finest team of negotiators
the Karna could send."
"I thought they would," said Malloy,
trying to appear modest.
The secretary's eyes narrowed.
"I've heard of the work you've been
doing here with ... ah ... sick men.
Is this one of your ... ah ... successes?"
Malloy nodded. "I think so. The
Karna put us in a dilemma, so I
threw a dilemma right back at them."
"How do you mean?"
"Nordon had a mental block
against making decisions. If he took
a girl out on a date, he'd have trouble
making up his mind whether to kiss
her or not until she made up his mind
for him, one way or the other. He's
that kind of guy. Until he's presented
with one, single, clear decision which
admits of no alternatives, he can't
move at all.
"As you can see, the Karna tried
to give us several choices on each
point, and they were all rigged. Until
they backed down to a single point
and proved that it
wasn't
rigged,
Nordon couldn't possibly make up his
mind. I drummed into him how important
this was, and the more importance
there is attached to his decisions,
the more incapable he becomes
of making them."
The Secretary nodded slowly.
"What about Braynek?"
"Paranoid," said Malloy. "He
thinks everyone is plotting against
him. In this case, that's all to the good
because the Karna
are
plotting against
him. No matter what they put forth,
Braynek is convinced that there's a
trap in it somewhere, and he digs to
find out what the trap is. Even if
there isn't a trap, the Karna can't
satisfy Braynek, because he's convinced
that there
has
to be—somewhere.
As a result, all his advice to
Nordon, and all his questioning on
the wildest possibilities, just serves
to keep Nordon from getting unconfused.
"These two men are honestly doing
their best to win at the peace conference,
and they've got the Karna reeling.
The Karna can see that we're not
trying to stall; our men are actually
working at trying to reach a decision.
But what the Karna don't see is that
those men, as a team, are unbeatable
because, in this situation, they're psychologically
incapable of losing."
Again the Secretary of State nodded
his approval, but there was still
a question in his mind. "Since you
know all that, couldn't you have handled
it yourself?"
"Maybe, but I doubt it. They might
have gotten around me someway by
sneaking up on a blind spot. Nordon
and Braynek have blind spots, but
they're covered with armor. No, I'm
glad I couldn't go; it's better this
way."
The Secretary of State raised an
eyebrow. "
Couldn't
go, Mr. Ambassador?"
Malloy looked at him. "Didn't you
know? I wondered why you appointed
me, in the first place. No, I
couldn't go. The reason why I'm here,
cooped up in this office, hiding from
the Saarkkada the way a good Saarkkadic
bigshot should, is because I
like
it that way. I suffer from agoraphobia
and xenophobia.
"I have to be drugged to be put on
a spaceship because I can't take all
that empty space, even if I'm protected
from it by a steel shell." A
look of revulsion came over his face.
"And I can't
stand
aliens!"
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
March 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Men who are hardened criminals. | Men who have mental illnesses. | Men who are physically challenged. | Men who are mentally challenged. | 1 |
24521_WM4KUPLS_8 | Why doesn't Bertrand Malloy appear in public? | IN CASE OF FIRE
By RANDALL GARRETT
There are times when a broken tool is better
than a sound one, or a twisted personality
more useful than a whole one. For
instance, a whole beer bottle isn't half
the weapon that half a beer bottle is ...
Illustrated by Martinez
In his
office apartment,
on the top floor of the
Terran Embassy Building
in Occeq City, Bertrand
Malloy leafed
casually through the dossiers of the
four new men who had been assigned
to him. They were typical of the kind
of men who were sent to him, he
thought. Which meant, as usual, that
they were atypical. Every man in the
Diplomatic Corps who developed a
twitch or a quirk was shipped to
Saarkkad IV to work under Bertrand
Malloy, Permanent Terran Ambassador
to His Utter Munificence, the
Occeq of Saarkkad.
Take this first one, for instance.
Malloy ran his finger down the columns
of complex symbolism that
showed the complete psychological
analysis of the man. Psychopathic
paranoia. The man wasn't technically
insane; he could be as lucid as the next
man most of the time. But he was
morbidly suspicious that every man's
hand was turned against him. He
trusted no one, and was perpetually
on his guard against imaginary plots
and persecutions.
Number two suffered from some
sort of emotional block that left him
continually on the horns of one dilemma
or another. He was psychologically
incapable of making a decision
if he were faced with two or more
possible alternatives of any major
importance.
Number three ...
Malloy sighed and pushed the dossiers
away from him. No two men
were alike, and yet there sometimes
seemed to be an eternal sameness
about all men. He considered himself
an individual, for instance, but wasn't
the basic similarity there, after all?
He was—how old? He glanced at
the Earth calendar dial that was automatically
correlated with the Saarkkadic
calendar just above it. Fifty-nine
next week. Fifty-nine years old. And
what did he have to show for it besides
flabby muscles, sagging skin, a
wrinkled face, and gray hair?
Well, he had an excellent record in
the Corps, if nothing else. One of the
top men in his field. And he had his
memories of Diane, dead these ten
years, but still beautiful and alive in
his recollections. And—he grinned
softly to himself—he had Saarkkad.
He glanced up at the ceiling, and
mentally allowed his gaze to penetrate
it to the blue sky beyond it.
Out there was the terrible emptiness
of interstellar space—a great, yawning,
infinite chasm capable of swallowing
men, ships, planets, suns, and
whole galaxies without filling its insatiable
void.
Malloy closed his eyes. Somewhere
out there, a war was raging. He
didn't even like to think of that, but
it was necessary to keep it in mind.
Somewhere out there, the ships of
Earth were ranged against the ships
of the alien Karna in the most important
war that Mankind had yet
fought.
And, Malloy knew, his own position
was not unimportant in that war.
He was not in the battle line, nor
even in the major production line, but
it was necessary to keep the drug supply
lines flowing from Saarkkad, and
that meant keeping on good terms
with the Saarkkadic government.
The Saarkkada themselves were humanoid
in physical form—if one allowed
the term to cover a wide range
of differences—but their minds just
didn't function along the same lines.
For nine years, Bertrand Malloy
had been Ambassador to Saarkkad,
and for nine years, no Saarkkada had
ever seen him. To have shown himself
to one of them would have
meant instant loss of prestige.
To their way of thinking, an important
official was aloof. The greater
his importance, the greater must be
his isolation. The Occeq of Saarkkad
himself was never seen except by a
handful of picked nobles, who, themselves,
were never seen except by their
underlings. It was a long, roundabout
way of doing business, but it was the
only way Saarkkad would do any
business at all. To violate the rigid
social setup of Saarkkad would mean
the instant closing off of the supply
of biochemical products that the
Saarkkadic laboratories produced
from native plants and animals—products
that were vitally necessary
to Earth's war, and which could be
duplicated nowhere else in the
known universe.
It was Bertrand Malloy's job to
keep the production output high and
to keep the materiel flowing towards
Earth and her allies and outposts.
The job would have been a snap
cinch in the right circumstances; the
Saarkkada weren't difficult to get
along with. A staff of top-grade men
could have handled them without
half trying.
But Malloy didn't have top-grade
men. They couldn't be spared from
work that required their total capacity.
It's inefficient to waste a man on a
job that he can do without half trying
where there are more important jobs
that will tax his full output.
So Malloy was stuck with the culls.
Not the worst ones, of course; there
were places in the galaxy that were
less important than Saarkkad to the
war effort. Malloy knew that, no matter
what was wrong with a man, as
long as he had the mental ability to
dress himself and get himself to
work, useful work could be found for
him.
Physical handicaps weren't at all
difficult to deal with. A blind man can
work very well in the total darkness
of an infrared-film darkroom. Partial
or total losses of limbs can be compensated
for in one way or another.
The mental disabilities were harder
to deal with, but not totally impossible.
On a world without liquor, a
dipsomaniac could be channeled easily
enough; and he'd better not try fermenting
his own on Saarkkad unless
he brought his own yeast—which
was impossible, in view of the sterilization
regulations.
But Malloy didn't like to stop at
merely thwarting mental quirks; he
liked to find places where they were
useful
.
The phone chimed. Malloy flipped
it on with a practiced hand.
"Malloy here."
"Mr. Malloy?" said a careful voice.
"A special communication for you has
been teletyped in from Earth. Shall I
bring it in?"
"Bring it in, Miss Drayson."
Miss Drayson was a case in point.
She was uncommunicative. She liked
to gather in information, but she
found it difficult to give it up once it
was in her possession.
Malloy had made her his private
secretary. Nothing—but
nothing
—got
out of Malloy's office without his
direct order. It had taken Malloy a
long time to get it into Miss Drayson's
head that it was perfectly all
right—even desirable—for her to
keep secrets from everyone except
Malloy.
She came in through the door,
a rather handsome woman in her middle
thirties, clutching a sheaf of
papers in her right hand as though
someone might at any instant snatch
it from her before she could turn it
over to Malloy.
She laid them carefully on the
desk. "If anything else comes in, I'll
let you know immediately, sir," she
said. "Will there be anything else?"
Malloy let her stand there while he
picked up the communique. She wanted
to know what his reaction was
going to be; it didn't matter because
no one would ever find out from her
what he had done unless she was
ordered to tell someone.
He read the first paragraph, and his
eyes widened involuntarily.
"Armistice," he said in a low
whisper. "There's a chance that the
war may be over."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Drayson in a
hushed voice.
Malloy read the whole thing
through, fighting to keep his emotions
in check. Miss Drayson stood
there calmly, her face a mask; her
emotions were a secret.
Finally, Malloy looked up. "I'll let
you know as soon as I reach a decision,
Miss Drayson. I think I hardly
need say that no news of this is to
leave this office."
"Of course not, sir."
Malloy watched her go out the door
without actually seeing her. The war
was over—at least for a while. He
looked down at the papers again.
The Karna, slowly being beaten
back on every front, were suing for
peace. They wanted an armistice conference—immediately.
Earth was willing. Interstellar war
is too costly to allow it to continue
any longer than necessary, and this
one had been going on for more than
thirteen years now. Peace was necessary.
But not peace at any price.
The trouble was that the Karna had
a reputation for losing wars and winning
at the peace table. They were
clever, persuasive talkers. They could
twist a disadvantage to an advantage,
and make their own strengths look
like weaknesses. If they won the armistice,
they'd be able to retrench and
rearm, and the war would break out
again within a few years.
Now—at this point in time—they
could be beaten. They could be forced
to allow supervision of the production
potential, forced to disarm, rendered
impotent. But if the armistice went to
their own advantage ...
Already, they had taken the offensive
in the matter of the peace talks.
They had sent a full delegation to
Saarkkad V, the next planet out from
the Saarkkad sun, a chilly world inhabited
only by low-intelligence animals.
The Karna considered this to be
fully neutral territory, and Earth
couldn't argue the point very well. In
addition, they demanded that the conference
begin in three days, Terrestrial
time.
The trouble was that interstellar
communication beams travel a devil
of a lot faster than ships. It would
take more than a week for the Earth
government to get a vessel to Saarkkad
V. Earth had been caught unprepared
for an armistice. They
objected.
The Karna pointed out that the
Saarkkad sun was just as far from
Karn as it was from Earth, that it
was only a few million miles from a
planet which was allied with Earth,
and that it was unfair for Earth to
take so much time in preparing for an
armistice. Why hadn't Earth been prepared?
Did they intend to fight to the
utter destruction of Karn?
It wouldn't have been a problem at
all if Earth and Karn had fostered the
only two intelligent races in the galaxy.
The sort of grandstanding the
Karna were putting on had to be
played to an audience. But there were
other intelligent races throughout the
galaxy, most of whom had remained
as neutral as possible during the
Earth-Karn war. They had no intention
of sticking their figurative noses
into a battle between the two most
powerful races in the galaxy.
But whoever won the armistice
would find that some of the now-neutral
races would come in on their
side if war broke out again. If the
Karna played their cards right, their
side would be strong enough next
time to win.
So Earth had to get a delegation to
meet with the Karna representatives
within the three-day limit or lose what
might be a vital point in the negotiations.
And that was where Bertrand Malloy
came in.
He had been appointed Minister
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to
the Earth-Karn peace conference.
He looked up at the ceiling again.
"What
can
I do?" he said softly.
On the second day after the arrival
of the communique, Malloy
made his decision. He flipped on his
intercom and said: "Miss Drayson,
get hold of James Nordon and Kylen
Braynek. I want to see them both immediately.
Send Nordon in first, and
tell Braynek to wait."
"Yes, sir."
"And keep the recorder on. You
can file the tape later."
"Yes, sir."
Malloy knew the woman would
listen in on the intercom anyway, and
it was better to give her permission to
do so.
James Nordon was tall, broad-shouldered,
and thirty-eight. His hair
was graying at the temples, and his
handsome face looked cool and efficient.
Malloy waved him to a seat.
"Nordon, I have a job for you. It's
probably one of the most important
jobs you'll ever have in your life. It
can mean big things for you—promotion
and prestige if you do it well."
Nordon nodded slowly. "Yes, sir."
Malloy explained the problem of
the Karna peace talks.
"We need a man who can outthink
them," Malloy finished, "and judging
from your record, I think you're that
man. It involves risk, of course. If
you make the wrong decisions, your
name will be mud back on Earth. But
I don't think there's much chance of
that, really. Do you want to handle
small-time operations all your life?
Of course not.
"You'll be leaving within an hour
for Saarkkad V."
Nordon nodded again. "Yes, sir;
certainly. Am I to go alone?"
"No," said Malloy, "I'm sending
an assistant with you—a man named
Kylen Braynek. Ever heard of him?"
Nordon shook his head. "Not that
I recall, Mr. Malloy. Should I have?"
"Not necessarily. He's a pretty
shrewd operator, though. He knows a
lot about interstellar law, and he's
capable of spotting a trap a mile away.
You'll be in charge, of course, but I
want you to pay special attention to
his advice."
"I will, sir," Nordon said gratefully.
"A man like that can be useful."
"Right. Now, you go into the anteroom
over there. I've prepared a summary
of the situation, and you'll have
to study it and get it into your head
before the ship leaves. That isn't
much time, but it's the Karna who are
doing the pushing, not us."
As soon as Nordon had left, Malloy
said softly: "Send in Braynek,
Miss Drayson."
Kylen Braynek was a smallish man
with mouse-brown hair that lay flat
against his skull, and hard, penetrating,
dark eyes that were shadowed by
heavy, protruding brows. Malloy asked
him to sit down.
Again Malloy went through the explanation
of the peace conference.
"Naturally, they'll be trying to
trick you every step of the way," Malloy
went on. "They're shrewd and
underhanded; we'll simply have to
be more shrewd and more underhanded.
Nordon's job is to sit
quietly and evaluate the data; yours
will be to find the loopholes they're
laying out for themselves and plug
them. Don't antagonize them, but
don't baby them, either. If you see
anything underhanded going on, let
Nordon know immediately."
"They won't get anything by me,
Mr. Malloy."
By the time the ship from Earth
got there, the peace conference had
been going on for four days. Bertrand
Malloy had full reports on the whole
parley, as relayed to him through the
ship that had taken Nordon and Braynek
to Saarkkad V.
Secretary of State Blendwell stopped
off at Saarkkad IV before going
on to V to take charge of the conference.
He was a tallish, lean man with
a few strands of gray hair on the top
of his otherwise bald scalp, and he
wore a hearty, professional smile that
didn't quite make it to his calculating
eyes.
He took Malloy's hand and shook
it warmly. "How are you, Mr. Ambassador?"
"Fine, Mr. Secretary. How's everything
on Earth?"
"Tense. They're waiting to see
what is going to happen on Five. So
am I, for that matter." His eyes were
curious. "You decided not to go
yourself, eh?"
"I thought it better not to. I sent a
good team, instead. Would you like
to see the reports?"
"I certainly would."
Malloy handed them to the secretary,
and as he read, Malloy watched
him. Blendwell was a political appointee—a
good man, Malloy had to
admit, but he didn't know all the
ins and outs of the Diplomatic Corps.
When Blendwell looked up from
the reports at last, he said: "Amazing!
They've held off the Karna at
every point! They've beaten them
back! They've managed to cope with
and outdo the finest team of negotiators
the Karna could send."
"I thought they would," said Malloy,
trying to appear modest.
The secretary's eyes narrowed.
"I've heard of the work you've been
doing here with ... ah ... sick men.
Is this one of your ... ah ... successes?"
Malloy nodded. "I think so. The
Karna put us in a dilemma, so I
threw a dilemma right back at them."
"How do you mean?"
"Nordon had a mental block
against making decisions. If he took
a girl out on a date, he'd have trouble
making up his mind whether to kiss
her or not until she made up his mind
for him, one way or the other. He's
that kind of guy. Until he's presented
with one, single, clear decision which
admits of no alternatives, he can't
move at all.
"As you can see, the Karna tried
to give us several choices on each
point, and they were all rigged. Until
they backed down to a single point
and proved that it
wasn't
rigged,
Nordon couldn't possibly make up his
mind. I drummed into him how important
this was, and the more importance
there is attached to his decisions,
the more incapable he becomes
of making them."
The Secretary nodded slowly.
"What about Braynek?"
"Paranoid," said Malloy. "He
thinks everyone is plotting against
him. In this case, that's all to the good
because the Karna
are
plotting against
him. No matter what they put forth,
Braynek is convinced that there's a
trap in it somewhere, and he digs to
find out what the trap is. Even if
there isn't a trap, the Karna can't
satisfy Braynek, because he's convinced
that there
has
to be—somewhere.
As a result, all his advice to
Nordon, and all his questioning on
the wildest possibilities, just serves
to keep Nordon from getting unconfused.
"These two men are honestly doing
their best to win at the peace conference,
and they've got the Karna reeling.
The Karna can see that we're not
trying to stall; our men are actually
working at trying to reach a decision.
But what the Karna don't see is that
those men, as a team, are unbeatable
because, in this situation, they're psychologically
incapable of losing."
Again the Secretary of State nodded
his approval, but there was still
a question in his mind. "Since you
know all that, couldn't you have handled
it yourself?"
"Maybe, but I doubt it. They might
have gotten around me someway by
sneaking up on a blind spot. Nordon
and Braynek have blind spots, but
they're covered with armor. No, I'm
glad I couldn't go; it's better this
way."
The Secretary of State raised an
eyebrow. "
Couldn't
go, Mr. Ambassador?"
Malloy looked at him. "Didn't you
know? I wondered why you appointed
me, in the first place. No, I
couldn't go. The reason why I'm here,
cooped up in this office, hiding from
the Saarkkada the way a good Saarkkadic
bigshot should, is because I
like
it that way. I suffer from agoraphobia
and xenophobia.
"I have to be drugged to be put on
a spaceship because I can't take all
that empty space, even if I'm protected
from it by a steel shell." A
look of revulsion came over his face.
"And I can't
stand
aliens!"
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
March 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Threats have been made against Malloy's life. He needs to stay out of sight. | Malloy is too frail to leave his apartment. | He holds a prestigious title. Prestigious men aren't seen in public. | He is agoraphobic. | 3 |
24521_WM4KUPLS_9 | Why do the Karna demand the conference begin in three days? | IN CASE OF FIRE
By RANDALL GARRETT
There are times when a broken tool is better
than a sound one, or a twisted personality
more useful than a whole one. For
instance, a whole beer bottle isn't half
the weapon that half a beer bottle is ...
Illustrated by Martinez
In his
office apartment,
on the top floor of the
Terran Embassy Building
in Occeq City, Bertrand
Malloy leafed
casually through the dossiers of the
four new men who had been assigned
to him. They were typical of the kind
of men who were sent to him, he
thought. Which meant, as usual, that
they were atypical. Every man in the
Diplomatic Corps who developed a
twitch or a quirk was shipped to
Saarkkad IV to work under Bertrand
Malloy, Permanent Terran Ambassador
to His Utter Munificence, the
Occeq of Saarkkad.
Take this first one, for instance.
Malloy ran his finger down the columns
of complex symbolism that
showed the complete psychological
analysis of the man. Psychopathic
paranoia. The man wasn't technically
insane; he could be as lucid as the next
man most of the time. But he was
morbidly suspicious that every man's
hand was turned against him. He
trusted no one, and was perpetually
on his guard against imaginary plots
and persecutions.
Number two suffered from some
sort of emotional block that left him
continually on the horns of one dilemma
or another. He was psychologically
incapable of making a decision
if he were faced with two or more
possible alternatives of any major
importance.
Number three ...
Malloy sighed and pushed the dossiers
away from him. No two men
were alike, and yet there sometimes
seemed to be an eternal sameness
about all men. He considered himself
an individual, for instance, but wasn't
the basic similarity there, after all?
He was—how old? He glanced at
the Earth calendar dial that was automatically
correlated with the Saarkkadic
calendar just above it. Fifty-nine
next week. Fifty-nine years old. And
what did he have to show for it besides
flabby muscles, sagging skin, a
wrinkled face, and gray hair?
Well, he had an excellent record in
the Corps, if nothing else. One of the
top men in his field. And he had his
memories of Diane, dead these ten
years, but still beautiful and alive in
his recollections. And—he grinned
softly to himself—he had Saarkkad.
He glanced up at the ceiling, and
mentally allowed his gaze to penetrate
it to the blue sky beyond it.
Out there was the terrible emptiness
of interstellar space—a great, yawning,
infinite chasm capable of swallowing
men, ships, planets, suns, and
whole galaxies without filling its insatiable
void.
Malloy closed his eyes. Somewhere
out there, a war was raging. He
didn't even like to think of that, but
it was necessary to keep it in mind.
Somewhere out there, the ships of
Earth were ranged against the ships
of the alien Karna in the most important
war that Mankind had yet
fought.
And, Malloy knew, his own position
was not unimportant in that war.
He was not in the battle line, nor
even in the major production line, but
it was necessary to keep the drug supply
lines flowing from Saarkkad, and
that meant keeping on good terms
with the Saarkkadic government.
The Saarkkada themselves were humanoid
in physical form—if one allowed
the term to cover a wide range
of differences—but their minds just
didn't function along the same lines.
For nine years, Bertrand Malloy
had been Ambassador to Saarkkad,
and for nine years, no Saarkkada had
ever seen him. To have shown himself
to one of them would have
meant instant loss of prestige.
To their way of thinking, an important
official was aloof. The greater
his importance, the greater must be
his isolation. The Occeq of Saarkkad
himself was never seen except by a
handful of picked nobles, who, themselves,
were never seen except by their
underlings. It was a long, roundabout
way of doing business, but it was the
only way Saarkkad would do any
business at all. To violate the rigid
social setup of Saarkkad would mean
the instant closing off of the supply
of biochemical products that the
Saarkkadic laboratories produced
from native plants and animals—products
that were vitally necessary
to Earth's war, and which could be
duplicated nowhere else in the
known universe.
It was Bertrand Malloy's job to
keep the production output high and
to keep the materiel flowing towards
Earth and her allies and outposts.
The job would have been a snap
cinch in the right circumstances; the
Saarkkada weren't difficult to get
along with. A staff of top-grade men
could have handled them without
half trying.
But Malloy didn't have top-grade
men. They couldn't be spared from
work that required their total capacity.
It's inefficient to waste a man on a
job that he can do without half trying
where there are more important jobs
that will tax his full output.
So Malloy was stuck with the culls.
Not the worst ones, of course; there
were places in the galaxy that were
less important than Saarkkad to the
war effort. Malloy knew that, no matter
what was wrong with a man, as
long as he had the mental ability to
dress himself and get himself to
work, useful work could be found for
him.
Physical handicaps weren't at all
difficult to deal with. A blind man can
work very well in the total darkness
of an infrared-film darkroom. Partial
or total losses of limbs can be compensated
for in one way or another.
The mental disabilities were harder
to deal with, but not totally impossible.
On a world without liquor, a
dipsomaniac could be channeled easily
enough; and he'd better not try fermenting
his own on Saarkkad unless
he brought his own yeast—which
was impossible, in view of the sterilization
regulations.
But Malloy didn't like to stop at
merely thwarting mental quirks; he
liked to find places where they were
useful
.
The phone chimed. Malloy flipped
it on with a practiced hand.
"Malloy here."
"Mr. Malloy?" said a careful voice.
"A special communication for you has
been teletyped in from Earth. Shall I
bring it in?"
"Bring it in, Miss Drayson."
Miss Drayson was a case in point.
She was uncommunicative. She liked
to gather in information, but she
found it difficult to give it up once it
was in her possession.
Malloy had made her his private
secretary. Nothing—but
nothing
—got
out of Malloy's office without his
direct order. It had taken Malloy a
long time to get it into Miss Drayson's
head that it was perfectly all
right—even desirable—for her to
keep secrets from everyone except
Malloy.
She came in through the door,
a rather handsome woman in her middle
thirties, clutching a sheaf of
papers in her right hand as though
someone might at any instant snatch
it from her before she could turn it
over to Malloy.
She laid them carefully on the
desk. "If anything else comes in, I'll
let you know immediately, sir," she
said. "Will there be anything else?"
Malloy let her stand there while he
picked up the communique. She wanted
to know what his reaction was
going to be; it didn't matter because
no one would ever find out from her
what he had done unless she was
ordered to tell someone.
He read the first paragraph, and his
eyes widened involuntarily.
"Armistice," he said in a low
whisper. "There's a chance that the
war may be over."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Drayson in a
hushed voice.
Malloy read the whole thing
through, fighting to keep his emotions
in check. Miss Drayson stood
there calmly, her face a mask; her
emotions were a secret.
Finally, Malloy looked up. "I'll let
you know as soon as I reach a decision,
Miss Drayson. I think I hardly
need say that no news of this is to
leave this office."
"Of course not, sir."
Malloy watched her go out the door
without actually seeing her. The war
was over—at least for a while. He
looked down at the papers again.
The Karna, slowly being beaten
back on every front, were suing for
peace. They wanted an armistice conference—immediately.
Earth was willing. Interstellar war
is too costly to allow it to continue
any longer than necessary, and this
one had been going on for more than
thirteen years now. Peace was necessary.
But not peace at any price.
The trouble was that the Karna had
a reputation for losing wars and winning
at the peace table. They were
clever, persuasive talkers. They could
twist a disadvantage to an advantage,
and make their own strengths look
like weaknesses. If they won the armistice,
they'd be able to retrench and
rearm, and the war would break out
again within a few years.
Now—at this point in time—they
could be beaten. They could be forced
to allow supervision of the production
potential, forced to disarm, rendered
impotent. But if the armistice went to
their own advantage ...
Already, they had taken the offensive
in the matter of the peace talks.
They had sent a full delegation to
Saarkkad V, the next planet out from
the Saarkkad sun, a chilly world inhabited
only by low-intelligence animals.
The Karna considered this to be
fully neutral territory, and Earth
couldn't argue the point very well. In
addition, they demanded that the conference
begin in three days, Terrestrial
time.
The trouble was that interstellar
communication beams travel a devil
of a lot faster than ships. It would
take more than a week for the Earth
government to get a vessel to Saarkkad
V. Earth had been caught unprepared
for an armistice. They
objected.
The Karna pointed out that the
Saarkkad sun was just as far from
Karn as it was from Earth, that it
was only a few million miles from a
planet which was allied with Earth,
and that it was unfair for Earth to
take so much time in preparing for an
armistice. Why hadn't Earth been prepared?
Did they intend to fight to the
utter destruction of Karn?
It wouldn't have been a problem at
all if Earth and Karn had fostered the
only two intelligent races in the galaxy.
The sort of grandstanding the
Karna were putting on had to be
played to an audience. But there were
other intelligent races throughout the
galaxy, most of whom had remained
as neutral as possible during the
Earth-Karn war. They had no intention
of sticking their figurative noses
into a battle between the two most
powerful races in the galaxy.
But whoever won the armistice
would find that some of the now-neutral
races would come in on their
side if war broke out again. If the
Karna played their cards right, their
side would be strong enough next
time to win.
So Earth had to get a delegation to
meet with the Karna representatives
within the three-day limit or lose what
might be a vital point in the negotiations.
And that was where Bertrand Malloy
came in.
He had been appointed Minister
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to
the Earth-Karn peace conference.
He looked up at the ceiling again.
"What
can
I do?" he said softly.
On the second day after the arrival
of the communique, Malloy
made his decision. He flipped on his
intercom and said: "Miss Drayson,
get hold of James Nordon and Kylen
Braynek. I want to see them both immediately.
Send Nordon in first, and
tell Braynek to wait."
"Yes, sir."
"And keep the recorder on. You
can file the tape later."
"Yes, sir."
Malloy knew the woman would
listen in on the intercom anyway, and
it was better to give her permission to
do so.
James Nordon was tall, broad-shouldered,
and thirty-eight. His hair
was graying at the temples, and his
handsome face looked cool and efficient.
Malloy waved him to a seat.
"Nordon, I have a job for you. It's
probably one of the most important
jobs you'll ever have in your life. It
can mean big things for you—promotion
and prestige if you do it well."
Nordon nodded slowly. "Yes, sir."
Malloy explained the problem of
the Karna peace talks.
"We need a man who can outthink
them," Malloy finished, "and judging
from your record, I think you're that
man. It involves risk, of course. If
you make the wrong decisions, your
name will be mud back on Earth. But
I don't think there's much chance of
that, really. Do you want to handle
small-time operations all your life?
Of course not.
"You'll be leaving within an hour
for Saarkkad V."
Nordon nodded again. "Yes, sir;
certainly. Am I to go alone?"
"No," said Malloy, "I'm sending
an assistant with you—a man named
Kylen Braynek. Ever heard of him?"
Nordon shook his head. "Not that
I recall, Mr. Malloy. Should I have?"
"Not necessarily. He's a pretty
shrewd operator, though. He knows a
lot about interstellar law, and he's
capable of spotting a trap a mile away.
You'll be in charge, of course, but I
want you to pay special attention to
his advice."
"I will, sir," Nordon said gratefully.
"A man like that can be useful."
"Right. Now, you go into the anteroom
over there. I've prepared a summary
of the situation, and you'll have
to study it and get it into your head
before the ship leaves. That isn't
much time, but it's the Karna who are
doing the pushing, not us."
As soon as Nordon had left, Malloy
said softly: "Send in Braynek,
Miss Drayson."
Kylen Braynek was a smallish man
with mouse-brown hair that lay flat
against his skull, and hard, penetrating,
dark eyes that were shadowed by
heavy, protruding brows. Malloy asked
him to sit down.
Again Malloy went through the explanation
of the peace conference.
"Naturally, they'll be trying to
trick you every step of the way," Malloy
went on. "They're shrewd and
underhanded; we'll simply have to
be more shrewd and more underhanded.
Nordon's job is to sit
quietly and evaluate the data; yours
will be to find the loopholes they're
laying out for themselves and plug
them. Don't antagonize them, but
don't baby them, either. If you see
anything underhanded going on, let
Nordon know immediately."
"They won't get anything by me,
Mr. Malloy."
By the time the ship from Earth
got there, the peace conference had
been going on for four days. Bertrand
Malloy had full reports on the whole
parley, as relayed to him through the
ship that had taken Nordon and Braynek
to Saarkkad V.
Secretary of State Blendwell stopped
off at Saarkkad IV before going
on to V to take charge of the conference.
He was a tallish, lean man with
a few strands of gray hair on the top
of his otherwise bald scalp, and he
wore a hearty, professional smile that
didn't quite make it to his calculating
eyes.
He took Malloy's hand and shook
it warmly. "How are you, Mr. Ambassador?"
"Fine, Mr. Secretary. How's everything
on Earth?"
"Tense. They're waiting to see
what is going to happen on Five. So
am I, for that matter." His eyes were
curious. "You decided not to go
yourself, eh?"
"I thought it better not to. I sent a
good team, instead. Would you like
to see the reports?"
"I certainly would."
Malloy handed them to the secretary,
and as he read, Malloy watched
him. Blendwell was a political appointee—a
good man, Malloy had to
admit, but he didn't know all the
ins and outs of the Diplomatic Corps.
When Blendwell looked up from
the reports at last, he said: "Amazing!
They've held off the Karna at
every point! They've beaten them
back! They've managed to cope with
and outdo the finest team of negotiators
the Karna could send."
"I thought they would," said Malloy,
trying to appear modest.
The secretary's eyes narrowed.
"I've heard of the work you've been
doing here with ... ah ... sick men.
Is this one of your ... ah ... successes?"
Malloy nodded. "I think so. The
Karna put us in a dilemma, so I
threw a dilemma right back at them."
"How do you mean?"
"Nordon had a mental block
against making decisions. If he took
a girl out on a date, he'd have trouble
making up his mind whether to kiss
her or not until she made up his mind
for him, one way or the other. He's
that kind of guy. Until he's presented
with one, single, clear decision which
admits of no alternatives, he can't
move at all.
"As you can see, the Karna tried
to give us several choices on each
point, and they were all rigged. Until
they backed down to a single point
and proved that it
wasn't
rigged,
Nordon couldn't possibly make up his
mind. I drummed into him how important
this was, and the more importance
there is attached to his decisions,
the more incapable he becomes
of making them."
The Secretary nodded slowly.
"What about Braynek?"
"Paranoid," said Malloy. "He
thinks everyone is plotting against
him. In this case, that's all to the good
because the Karna
are
plotting against
him. No matter what they put forth,
Braynek is convinced that there's a
trap in it somewhere, and he digs to
find out what the trap is. Even if
there isn't a trap, the Karna can't
satisfy Braynek, because he's convinced
that there
has
to be—somewhere.
As a result, all his advice to
Nordon, and all his questioning on
the wildest possibilities, just serves
to keep Nordon from getting unconfused.
"These two men are honestly doing
their best to win at the peace conference,
and they've got the Karna reeling.
The Karna can see that we're not
trying to stall; our men are actually
working at trying to reach a decision.
But what the Karna don't see is that
those men, as a team, are unbeatable
because, in this situation, they're psychologically
incapable of losing."
Again the Secretary of State nodded
his approval, but there was still
a question in his mind. "Since you
know all that, couldn't you have handled
it yourself?"
"Maybe, but I doubt it. They might
have gotten around me someway by
sneaking up on a blind spot. Nordon
and Braynek have blind spots, but
they're covered with armor. No, I'm
glad I couldn't go; it's better this
way."
The Secretary of State raised an
eyebrow. "
Couldn't
go, Mr. Ambassador?"
Malloy looked at him. "Didn't you
know? I wondered why you appointed
me, in the first place. No, I
couldn't go. The reason why I'm here,
cooped up in this office, hiding from
the Saarkkada the way a good Saarkkadic
bigshot should, is because I
like
it that way. I suffer from agoraphobia
and xenophobia.
"I have to be drugged to be put on
a spaceship because I can't take all
that empty space, even if I'm protected
from it by a steel shell." A
look of revulsion came over his face.
"And I can't
stand
aliens!"
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
March 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | There is an immediate threat to the planet of Karn, and the Karna desperately need help from Earth. | The Karna are hoping to disrupt Earth's supply chain. | The Karna want to make Earth look bad in the eyes of the other planets. | The Karna are skilled negotiators and want to control the peace talks. | 3 |
24958_YZ9IX4FI_1 | Why is the Earth worse than the aliens imagine? | SECOND LANDING
By FLOYD WALLACE
A gentle fancy for the Christmas Season—an
oft-told tale with a wistful twistful of Something
that left the Earth with a wing and a prayer.
Earth
was so far away that
it wasn't visible. Even the
sun was only a twinkle. But this
vast distance did not mean that
isolation could endure forever.
Instruments within the ship intercepted
radio broadcasts and,
within the hour, early TV signals.
Machines compiled dictionaries
and grammars and began
translating the major languages.
The history of the planet was
tabulated as facts became available.
The course of the ship changed
slightly; it was not much out of
the way to swing nearer Earth.
For days the two within the ship
listened and watched with little
comment. They had to decide
soon.
"We've got to make or break,"
said the first alien.
"You know what I'm in favor
of," said the second.
"I can guess," said Ethaniel,
who had spoken first. "The place
is a complete mess. They've never
done anything except fight
each other—and invent better
weapons."
"It's not what they've done,"
said Bal, the second alien. "It's
what they're going to do, with
that big bomb."
"The more reason for stopping,"
said Ethaniel. "The big
bomb can destroy them. Without
our help they may do just that."
"I may remind you that in two
months twenty-nine days we're
due in Willafours," said Bal.
"Without looking at the charts
I can tell you we still have more
than a hundred light-years to
go."
"A week," said Ethaniel. "We
can spare a week and still get
there on time."
"A week?" said Bal. "To settle
their problems? They've had two
world wars in one generation
and that the third and final one
is coming up you can't help feeling
in everything they do."
"It won't take much," said
Ethaniel. "The wrong diplomatic
move, or a trigger-happy soldier
could set it off. And it wouldn't
have to be deliberate. A meteor
shower could pass over and their
clumsy instruments could interpret
it as an all-out enemy
attack."
"Too bad," said Bal. "We'll
just have to forget there ever
was such a planet as Earth."
"Could you? Forget so many
people?"
"I'm doing it," said Bal. "Just
give them a little time and they
won't be here to remind me that
I have a conscience."
"My memory isn't convenient,"
said Ethaniel. "I ask you
to look at them."
Bal rustled, flicking the screen
intently. "Very much like ourselves,"
he said at last. "A bit
shorter perhaps, and most certainly
incomplete. Except for the
one thing they lack, and that's
quite odd, they seem exactly like
us. Is that what you wanted me
to say?"
"It is. The fact that they are
an incomplete version of ourselves
touches me. They actually
seem defenseless, though I suppose
they're not."
"Tough," said Bal. "Nothing
we can do about it."
"There is. We can give them
a week."
"In a week we can't negate
their entire history. We can't
begin to undo the effect of the
big bomb."
"You can't tell," said Ethaniel.
"We can look things over."
"And then what? How much
authority do we have?"
"Very little," conceded Ethaniel.
"Two minor officials on the
way to Willafours—and we run
directly into a problem no one
knew existed."
"And when we get to Willafours
we'll be busy. It will be a
long time before anyone comes
this way again."
"A very long time. There's
nothing in this region of space
our people want," said Ethaniel.
"And how long can Earth last?
Ten years? Even ten months?
The tension is building by the
hour."
"What can I say?" said Bal.
"I suppose we can stop and look
them over. We're not committing
ourselves by looking."
They went much closer to
Earth, not intending to commit
themselves. For a day they circled
the planet, avoiding radar
detection, which for them was
not difficult, testing, and sampling.
Finally Ethaniel looked up
from the monitor screen. "Any
conclusions?"
"What's there to think? It's
worse than I imagined."
"In what way?"
"Well, we knew they had the
big bomb. Atmospheric analysis
showed that as far away as we
were."
"I know."
"We also knew they could deliver
the big bomb, presumably
by some sort of aircraft."
"That was almost a certainty.
They'd have no use for the big
bomb without aircraft."
"What's worse is that I now
find they also have missiles,
range one thousand miles and
upward. They either have or are
near a primitive form of space
travel."
"Bad," said Ethaniel. "Sitting
there, wondering when it's going
to hit them. Nervousness could
set it off."
"It could, and the missiles
make it worse," said Bal. "What
did you find out at your end?"
"Nothing worthwhile. I was
looking at the people while you
were investigating their weapons."
"You must think something."
"I wish I knew what to think.
There's so little time," Ethaniel
said. "Language isn't the difficulty.
Our machines translate
their languages easily and I've
taken a cram course in two or
three of them. But that's not
enough, looking at a few plays,
listening to advertisements, music,
and news bulletins. I should
go down and live among them,
read books, talk to scholars, work
with them, play."
"You could do that and you'd
really get to know them. But
that takes time—and we don't
have it."
"I realize that."
"A flat yes or no," said Bal.
"No. We can't help them," said
Ethaniel. "There is nothing we
can do for them—but we have to
try."
"Sure, I knew it before we
started," said Bal. "It's happened
before. We take the trouble to
find out what a people are like
and when we can't help them we
feel bad. It's going to be that
way again." He rose and stretched.
"Well, give me an hour to
think of some way of going at
it."
It was longer than that before
they met again. In the meantime
the ship moved much closer to
Earth. They no longer needed instruments
to see it. The planet
revolved outside the visionports.
The southern plains were green,
coursed with rivers; the oceans
were blue; and much of the
northern hemisphere was glistening
white. Ragged clouds covered
the pole, and a dirty pall
spread over the mid-regions of
the north.
"I haven't thought of anything
brilliant," said Ethaniel.
"Nor I," said Bal. "We're going
to have to go down there
cold. And it will be cold."
"Yes. It's their winter."
"I did have an idea," said Bal.
"What about going down as supernatural
beings?"
"Hardly," said Ethaniel. "A
hundred years ago it might have
worked. Today they have satellites.
They are not primitives."
"I suppose you're right," said
Bal. "I did think we ought to
take advantage of our physical
differences."
"If we could I'd be all for it.
But these people are rough and
desperate. They wouldn't be
fooled by anything that crude."
"Well, you're calling it," said
Bal.
"All right," said Ethaniel.
"You take one side and I the
other. We'll tell them bluntly
what they'll have to do if they're
going to survive, how they can
keep their planet in one piece so
they can live on it."
"That'll go over big. Advice is
always popular."
"Can't help it. That's all we
have time for."
"Special instructions?"
"None. We leave the ship here
and go down in separate landing
craft. You can talk with me any
time you want to through our
communications, but don't unless
you have to."
"They can't intercept the
beams we use."
"They can't, and even if they
did they wouldn't know what to
do with our language. I want
them to think that we don't
need
to talk things over."
"I get it. Makes us seem better
than we are. They think we know
exactly what we're doing even
though we don't."
"If we're lucky they'll think
that."
Bal looked out of the port at
the planet below. "It's going to
be cold where I'm going. You too.
Sure we don't want to change
our plans and land in the southern
hemisphere? It's summer
there."
"I'm afraid not. The great
powers are in the north. They
are the ones we have to reach to
do the job."
"Yeah, but I was thinking of
that holiday you mentioned.
We'll be running straight into it.
That won't help us any."
"I know, they don't like their
holidays interrupted. It can't be
helped. We can't wait until it's
over."
"I'm aware of that," said Bal.
"Fill me in on that holiday, anything
I ought to know. Probably
religious in origin. That so?"
"It was religious a long time
ago," said Ethaniel. "I didn't
learn anything exact from radio
and TV. Now it seems to be
chiefly a time for eating, office
parties, and selling merchandise."
"I see. It has become a business
holiday."
"That's a good description. I
didn't get as much of it as I
ought to have. I was busy studying
the people, and they're hard
to pin down."
"I see. I was thinking there
might be some way we could tie
ourselves in with this holiday.
Make it work for us."
"If there is I haven't thought
of it."
"You ought to know. You're
running this one." Bal looked
down at the planet. Clouds were
beginning to form at the twilight
edge. "I hate to go down
and leave the ship up here with
no one in it."
"They can't touch it. No matter
how they develop in the next
hundred years they still won't be
able to get in or damage it in
any way."
"It's myself I'm thinking
about. Down there, alone."
"I'll be with you. On the other
side of the Earth."
"That's not very close. I'd like
it better if there were someone
in the ship to bring it down in a
hurry if things get rough. They
don't think much of each other.
I don't imagine they'll like aliens
any better."
"They may be unfriendly,"
Ethaniel acknowledged. Now he
switched a monitor screen until
he looked at the slope of a mountain.
It was snowing and men
were cutting small green trees in
the snow. "I've thought of a
trick."
"If it saves my neck I'm for
it."
"I don't guarantee anything,"
said Ethaniel. "This is what I
was thinking of: instead of hiding
the ship against the sun
where there's little chance it will
be seen, we'll make sure that
they do see it. Let's take it
around to the night side of the
planet and light it up."
"Say, pretty good," said Bal.
"They can't imagine that we'd
light up an unmanned ship," said
Ethaniel. "Even if the thought
should occur to them they'll have
no way of checking it. Also, they
won't be eager to harm us with
our ship shining down on them."
"That's thinking," said Bal,
moving to the controls. "I'll move
the ship over where they can see
it best and then I'll light it up.
I'll really light it up."
"Don't spare power."
"Don't worry about that.
They'll see it. Everybody on
Earth will see it." Later, with the
ship in position, glowing against
the darkness of space, pulsating
with light, Bal said: "You know,
I feel better about this. We may
pull it off. Lighting the ship may
be just the help we need."
"It's not we who need help, but
the people of Earth," said Ethaniel.
"See you in five days." With
that he entered a small landing
craft, which left a faintly luminescent
trail as it plunged toward
Earth. As soon as it was
safe to do so, Bal left in another
craft, heading for the other side
of the planet.
And the spaceship circled
Earth, unmanned, blazing and
pulsing with light. No star in the
winter skies of the planet below
could equal it in brilliancy. Once
a man-made satellite came near
but it was dim and was lost sight
of by the people below. During
the day the ship was visible as
a bright spot of light. At evening
it seemed to burn through
the sunset colors.
And the ship circled on,
bright, shining, seeming to be a
little piece clipped from the center
of a star and brought near
Earth to illuminate it. Never, or
seldom, had Earth seen anything
like it.
In five days the two small landing
craft that had left it arched
up from Earth and joined the
orbit of the large ship. The two
small craft slid inside the large
one and doors closed behind
them. In a short time the aliens
met again.
"We did it," said Bal exultantly
as he came in. "I don't know
how we did it and I thought we
were going to fail but at the last
minute they came through."
Ethaniel smiled. "I'm tired,"
he said, rustling.
"Me too, but mostly I'm cold,"
said Bal, shivering. "Snow.
Nothing but snow wherever I
went. Miserable climate. And yet
you had me go out walking after
that first day."
"From my own experience it
seemed to be a good idea," said
Ethaniel. "If I went out walking
one day I noticed that the next
day the officials were much more
cooperative. If it worked for me
I thought it might help you."
"It did. I don't know why, but
it did," said Bal. "Anyway, this
agreement they made isn't the
best but I think it will keep them
from destroying themselves."
"It's as much as we can expect,"
said Ethaniel. "They may
have small wars after this, but
never the big one. In fifty or a
hundred years we can come back
and see how much they've
learned."
"I'm not sure I want to," said
Bal. "Say, what's an angel?"
"Why?"
"When I went out walking
people stopped to look. Some
knelt in the snow and called me
an angel."
"Something like that happened
to me," said Ethaniel.
"I didn't get it but I didn't let
it upset me," said Bal. "I smiled
at them and went about my business."
He shivered again. "It was
always cold. I walked out, but
sometimes I flew back. I hope
that was all right."
In the cabin Bal spread his
great wings. Renaissance painters
had never seen his like but
knew exactly how he looked. In
their paintings they had pictured
him innumerable times.
"I don't think it hurt us that
you flew," said Ethaniel. "I did
so myself occasionally."
"But you don't know what an
angel is?"
"No. I didn't have time to find
out. Some creature of their folklore
I suppose. You know, except
for our wings they're very much
like ourselves. Their legends are
bound to resemble ours."
"Sure," said Bal. "Anyway,
peace on Earth."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The Earth has missiles and is close to space travel. | The humans are rough and desperate. | A meteor shower could be interpreted as an enemy attack by the humans' clumsy instruments. | The humans don't like aliens. | 0 |
24958_YZ9IX4FI_2 | Why does Ethaniel think the humans look defenseless? | SECOND LANDING
By FLOYD WALLACE
A gentle fancy for the Christmas Season—an
oft-told tale with a wistful twistful of Something
that left the Earth with a wing and a prayer.
Earth
was so far away that
it wasn't visible. Even the
sun was only a twinkle. But this
vast distance did not mean that
isolation could endure forever.
Instruments within the ship intercepted
radio broadcasts and,
within the hour, early TV signals.
Machines compiled dictionaries
and grammars and began
translating the major languages.
The history of the planet was
tabulated as facts became available.
The course of the ship changed
slightly; it was not much out of
the way to swing nearer Earth.
For days the two within the ship
listened and watched with little
comment. They had to decide
soon.
"We've got to make or break,"
said the first alien.
"You know what I'm in favor
of," said the second.
"I can guess," said Ethaniel,
who had spoken first. "The place
is a complete mess. They've never
done anything except fight
each other—and invent better
weapons."
"It's not what they've done,"
said Bal, the second alien. "It's
what they're going to do, with
that big bomb."
"The more reason for stopping,"
said Ethaniel. "The big
bomb can destroy them. Without
our help they may do just that."
"I may remind you that in two
months twenty-nine days we're
due in Willafours," said Bal.
"Without looking at the charts
I can tell you we still have more
than a hundred light-years to
go."
"A week," said Ethaniel. "We
can spare a week and still get
there on time."
"A week?" said Bal. "To settle
their problems? They've had two
world wars in one generation
and that the third and final one
is coming up you can't help feeling
in everything they do."
"It won't take much," said
Ethaniel. "The wrong diplomatic
move, or a trigger-happy soldier
could set it off. And it wouldn't
have to be deliberate. A meteor
shower could pass over and their
clumsy instruments could interpret
it as an all-out enemy
attack."
"Too bad," said Bal. "We'll
just have to forget there ever
was such a planet as Earth."
"Could you? Forget so many
people?"
"I'm doing it," said Bal. "Just
give them a little time and they
won't be here to remind me that
I have a conscience."
"My memory isn't convenient,"
said Ethaniel. "I ask you
to look at them."
Bal rustled, flicking the screen
intently. "Very much like ourselves,"
he said at last. "A bit
shorter perhaps, and most certainly
incomplete. Except for the
one thing they lack, and that's
quite odd, they seem exactly like
us. Is that what you wanted me
to say?"
"It is. The fact that they are
an incomplete version of ourselves
touches me. They actually
seem defenseless, though I suppose
they're not."
"Tough," said Bal. "Nothing
we can do about it."
"There is. We can give them
a week."
"In a week we can't negate
their entire history. We can't
begin to undo the effect of the
big bomb."
"You can't tell," said Ethaniel.
"We can look things over."
"And then what? How much
authority do we have?"
"Very little," conceded Ethaniel.
"Two minor officials on the
way to Willafours—and we run
directly into a problem no one
knew existed."
"And when we get to Willafours
we'll be busy. It will be a
long time before anyone comes
this way again."
"A very long time. There's
nothing in this region of space
our people want," said Ethaniel.
"And how long can Earth last?
Ten years? Even ten months?
The tension is building by the
hour."
"What can I say?" said Bal.
"I suppose we can stop and look
them over. We're not committing
ourselves by looking."
They went much closer to
Earth, not intending to commit
themselves. For a day they circled
the planet, avoiding radar
detection, which for them was
not difficult, testing, and sampling.
Finally Ethaniel looked up
from the monitor screen. "Any
conclusions?"
"What's there to think? It's
worse than I imagined."
"In what way?"
"Well, we knew they had the
big bomb. Atmospheric analysis
showed that as far away as we
were."
"I know."
"We also knew they could deliver
the big bomb, presumably
by some sort of aircraft."
"That was almost a certainty.
They'd have no use for the big
bomb without aircraft."
"What's worse is that I now
find they also have missiles,
range one thousand miles and
upward. They either have or are
near a primitive form of space
travel."
"Bad," said Ethaniel. "Sitting
there, wondering when it's going
to hit them. Nervousness could
set it off."
"It could, and the missiles
make it worse," said Bal. "What
did you find out at your end?"
"Nothing worthwhile. I was
looking at the people while you
were investigating their weapons."
"You must think something."
"I wish I knew what to think.
There's so little time," Ethaniel
said. "Language isn't the difficulty.
Our machines translate
their languages easily and I've
taken a cram course in two or
three of them. But that's not
enough, looking at a few plays,
listening to advertisements, music,
and news bulletins. I should
go down and live among them,
read books, talk to scholars, work
with them, play."
"You could do that and you'd
really get to know them. But
that takes time—and we don't
have it."
"I realize that."
"A flat yes or no," said Bal.
"No. We can't help them," said
Ethaniel. "There is nothing we
can do for them—but we have to
try."
"Sure, I knew it before we
started," said Bal. "It's happened
before. We take the trouble to
find out what a people are like
and when we can't help them we
feel bad. It's going to be that
way again." He rose and stretched.
"Well, give me an hour to
think of some way of going at
it."
It was longer than that before
they met again. In the meantime
the ship moved much closer to
Earth. They no longer needed instruments
to see it. The planet
revolved outside the visionports.
The southern plains were green,
coursed with rivers; the oceans
were blue; and much of the
northern hemisphere was glistening
white. Ragged clouds covered
the pole, and a dirty pall
spread over the mid-regions of
the north.
"I haven't thought of anything
brilliant," said Ethaniel.
"Nor I," said Bal. "We're going
to have to go down there
cold. And it will be cold."
"Yes. It's their winter."
"I did have an idea," said Bal.
"What about going down as supernatural
beings?"
"Hardly," said Ethaniel. "A
hundred years ago it might have
worked. Today they have satellites.
They are not primitives."
"I suppose you're right," said
Bal. "I did think we ought to
take advantage of our physical
differences."
"If we could I'd be all for it.
But these people are rough and
desperate. They wouldn't be
fooled by anything that crude."
"Well, you're calling it," said
Bal.
"All right," said Ethaniel.
"You take one side and I the
other. We'll tell them bluntly
what they'll have to do if they're
going to survive, how they can
keep their planet in one piece so
they can live on it."
"That'll go over big. Advice is
always popular."
"Can't help it. That's all we
have time for."
"Special instructions?"
"None. We leave the ship here
and go down in separate landing
craft. You can talk with me any
time you want to through our
communications, but don't unless
you have to."
"They can't intercept the
beams we use."
"They can't, and even if they
did they wouldn't know what to
do with our language. I want
them to think that we don't
need
to talk things over."
"I get it. Makes us seem better
than we are. They think we know
exactly what we're doing even
though we don't."
"If we're lucky they'll think
that."
Bal looked out of the port at
the planet below. "It's going to
be cold where I'm going. You too.
Sure we don't want to change
our plans and land in the southern
hemisphere? It's summer
there."
"I'm afraid not. The great
powers are in the north. They
are the ones we have to reach to
do the job."
"Yeah, but I was thinking of
that holiday you mentioned.
We'll be running straight into it.
That won't help us any."
"I know, they don't like their
holidays interrupted. It can't be
helped. We can't wait until it's
over."
"I'm aware of that," said Bal.
"Fill me in on that holiday, anything
I ought to know. Probably
religious in origin. That so?"
"It was religious a long time
ago," said Ethaniel. "I didn't
learn anything exact from radio
and TV. Now it seems to be
chiefly a time for eating, office
parties, and selling merchandise."
"I see. It has become a business
holiday."
"That's a good description. I
didn't get as much of it as I
ought to have. I was busy studying
the people, and they're hard
to pin down."
"I see. I was thinking there
might be some way we could tie
ourselves in with this holiday.
Make it work for us."
"If there is I haven't thought
of it."
"You ought to know. You're
running this one." Bal looked
down at the planet. Clouds were
beginning to form at the twilight
edge. "I hate to go down
and leave the ship up here with
no one in it."
"They can't touch it. No matter
how they develop in the next
hundred years they still won't be
able to get in or damage it in
any way."
"It's myself I'm thinking
about. Down there, alone."
"I'll be with you. On the other
side of the Earth."
"That's not very close. I'd like
it better if there were someone
in the ship to bring it down in a
hurry if things get rough. They
don't think much of each other.
I don't imagine they'll like aliens
any better."
"They may be unfriendly,"
Ethaniel acknowledged. Now he
switched a monitor screen until
he looked at the slope of a mountain.
It was snowing and men
were cutting small green trees in
the snow. "I've thought of a
trick."
"If it saves my neck I'm for
it."
"I don't guarantee anything,"
said Ethaniel. "This is what I
was thinking of: instead of hiding
the ship against the sun
where there's little chance it will
be seen, we'll make sure that
they do see it. Let's take it
around to the night side of the
planet and light it up."
"Say, pretty good," said Bal.
"They can't imagine that we'd
light up an unmanned ship," said
Ethaniel. "Even if the thought
should occur to them they'll have
no way of checking it. Also, they
won't be eager to harm us with
our ship shining down on them."
"That's thinking," said Bal,
moving to the controls. "I'll move
the ship over where they can see
it best and then I'll light it up.
I'll really light it up."
"Don't spare power."
"Don't worry about that.
They'll see it. Everybody on
Earth will see it." Later, with the
ship in position, glowing against
the darkness of space, pulsating
with light, Bal said: "You know,
I feel better about this. We may
pull it off. Lighting the ship may
be just the help we need."
"It's not we who need help, but
the people of Earth," said Ethaniel.
"See you in five days." With
that he entered a small landing
craft, which left a faintly luminescent
trail as it plunged toward
Earth. As soon as it was
safe to do so, Bal left in another
craft, heading for the other side
of the planet.
And the spaceship circled
Earth, unmanned, blazing and
pulsing with light. No star in the
winter skies of the planet below
could equal it in brilliancy. Once
a man-made satellite came near
but it was dim and was lost sight
of by the people below. During
the day the ship was visible as
a bright spot of light. At evening
it seemed to burn through
the sunset colors.
And the ship circled on,
bright, shining, seeming to be a
little piece clipped from the center
of a star and brought near
Earth to illuminate it. Never, or
seldom, had Earth seen anything
like it.
In five days the two small landing
craft that had left it arched
up from Earth and joined the
orbit of the large ship. The two
small craft slid inside the large
one and doors closed behind
them. In a short time the aliens
met again.
"We did it," said Bal exultantly
as he came in. "I don't know
how we did it and I thought we
were going to fail but at the last
minute they came through."
Ethaniel smiled. "I'm tired,"
he said, rustling.
"Me too, but mostly I'm cold,"
said Bal, shivering. "Snow.
Nothing but snow wherever I
went. Miserable climate. And yet
you had me go out walking after
that first day."
"From my own experience it
seemed to be a good idea," said
Ethaniel. "If I went out walking
one day I noticed that the next
day the officials were much more
cooperative. If it worked for me
I thought it might help you."
"It did. I don't know why, but
it did," said Bal. "Anyway, this
agreement they made isn't the
best but I think it will keep them
from destroying themselves."
"It's as much as we can expect,"
said Ethaniel. "They may
have small wars after this, but
never the big one. In fifty or a
hundred years we can come back
and see how much they've
learned."
"I'm not sure I want to," said
Bal. "Say, what's an angel?"
"Why?"
"When I went out walking
people stopped to look. Some
knelt in the snow and called me
an angel."
"Something like that happened
to me," said Ethaniel.
"I didn't get it but I didn't let
it upset me," said Bal. "I smiled
at them and went about my business."
He shivered again. "It was
always cold. I walked out, but
sometimes I flew back. I hope
that was all right."
In the cabin Bal spread his
great wings. Renaissance painters
had never seen his like but
knew exactly how he looked. In
their paintings they had pictured
him innumerable times.
"I don't think it hurt us that
you flew," said Ethaniel. "I did
so myself occasionally."
"But you don't know what an
angel is?"
"No. I didn't have time to find
out. Some creature of their folklore
I suppose. You know, except
for our wings they're very much
like ourselves. Their legends are
bound to resemble ours."
"Sure," said Bal. "Anyway,
peace on Earth."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Without space travel, the humans seem defenseless against an alien attack. | Without wings, the humans look small and defenseless. | Without wings, the humans look like children. | Without space weapon technology, the humans seem defenseless against an alien attack. | 1 |
24958_YZ9IX4FI_3 | What is the aliens' mission? | SECOND LANDING
By FLOYD WALLACE
A gentle fancy for the Christmas Season—an
oft-told tale with a wistful twistful of Something
that left the Earth with a wing and a prayer.
Earth
was so far away that
it wasn't visible. Even the
sun was only a twinkle. But this
vast distance did not mean that
isolation could endure forever.
Instruments within the ship intercepted
radio broadcasts and,
within the hour, early TV signals.
Machines compiled dictionaries
and grammars and began
translating the major languages.
The history of the planet was
tabulated as facts became available.
The course of the ship changed
slightly; it was not much out of
the way to swing nearer Earth.
For days the two within the ship
listened and watched with little
comment. They had to decide
soon.
"We've got to make or break,"
said the first alien.
"You know what I'm in favor
of," said the second.
"I can guess," said Ethaniel,
who had spoken first. "The place
is a complete mess. They've never
done anything except fight
each other—and invent better
weapons."
"It's not what they've done,"
said Bal, the second alien. "It's
what they're going to do, with
that big bomb."
"The more reason for stopping,"
said Ethaniel. "The big
bomb can destroy them. Without
our help they may do just that."
"I may remind you that in two
months twenty-nine days we're
due in Willafours," said Bal.
"Without looking at the charts
I can tell you we still have more
than a hundred light-years to
go."
"A week," said Ethaniel. "We
can spare a week and still get
there on time."
"A week?" said Bal. "To settle
their problems? They've had two
world wars in one generation
and that the third and final one
is coming up you can't help feeling
in everything they do."
"It won't take much," said
Ethaniel. "The wrong diplomatic
move, or a trigger-happy soldier
could set it off. And it wouldn't
have to be deliberate. A meteor
shower could pass over and their
clumsy instruments could interpret
it as an all-out enemy
attack."
"Too bad," said Bal. "We'll
just have to forget there ever
was such a planet as Earth."
"Could you? Forget so many
people?"
"I'm doing it," said Bal. "Just
give them a little time and they
won't be here to remind me that
I have a conscience."
"My memory isn't convenient,"
said Ethaniel. "I ask you
to look at them."
Bal rustled, flicking the screen
intently. "Very much like ourselves,"
he said at last. "A bit
shorter perhaps, and most certainly
incomplete. Except for the
one thing they lack, and that's
quite odd, they seem exactly like
us. Is that what you wanted me
to say?"
"It is. The fact that they are
an incomplete version of ourselves
touches me. They actually
seem defenseless, though I suppose
they're not."
"Tough," said Bal. "Nothing
we can do about it."
"There is. We can give them
a week."
"In a week we can't negate
their entire history. We can't
begin to undo the effect of the
big bomb."
"You can't tell," said Ethaniel.
"We can look things over."
"And then what? How much
authority do we have?"
"Very little," conceded Ethaniel.
"Two minor officials on the
way to Willafours—and we run
directly into a problem no one
knew existed."
"And when we get to Willafours
we'll be busy. It will be a
long time before anyone comes
this way again."
"A very long time. There's
nothing in this region of space
our people want," said Ethaniel.
"And how long can Earth last?
Ten years? Even ten months?
The tension is building by the
hour."
"What can I say?" said Bal.
"I suppose we can stop and look
them over. We're not committing
ourselves by looking."
They went much closer to
Earth, not intending to commit
themselves. For a day they circled
the planet, avoiding radar
detection, which for them was
not difficult, testing, and sampling.
Finally Ethaniel looked up
from the monitor screen. "Any
conclusions?"
"What's there to think? It's
worse than I imagined."
"In what way?"
"Well, we knew they had the
big bomb. Atmospheric analysis
showed that as far away as we
were."
"I know."
"We also knew they could deliver
the big bomb, presumably
by some sort of aircraft."
"That was almost a certainty.
They'd have no use for the big
bomb without aircraft."
"What's worse is that I now
find they also have missiles,
range one thousand miles and
upward. They either have or are
near a primitive form of space
travel."
"Bad," said Ethaniel. "Sitting
there, wondering when it's going
to hit them. Nervousness could
set it off."
"It could, and the missiles
make it worse," said Bal. "What
did you find out at your end?"
"Nothing worthwhile. I was
looking at the people while you
were investigating their weapons."
"You must think something."
"I wish I knew what to think.
There's so little time," Ethaniel
said. "Language isn't the difficulty.
Our machines translate
their languages easily and I've
taken a cram course in two or
three of them. But that's not
enough, looking at a few plays,
listening to advertisements, music,
and news bulletins. I should
go down and live among them,
read books, talk to scholars, work
with them, play."
"You could do that and you'd
really get to know them. But
that takes time—and we don't
have it."
"I realize that."
"A flat yes or no," said Bal.
"No. We can't help them," said
Ethaniel. "There is nothing we
can do for them—but we have to
try."
"Sure, I knew it before we
started," said Bal. "It's happened
before. We take the trouble to
find out what a people are like
and when we can't help them we
feel bad. It's going to be that
way again." He rose and stretched.
"Well, give me an hour to
think of some way of going at
it."
It was longer than that before
they met again. In the meantime
the ship moved much closer to
Earth. They no longer needed instruments
to see it. The planet
revolved outside the visionports.
The southern plains were green,
coursed with rivers; the oceans
were blue; and much of the
northern hemisphere was glistening
white. Ragged clouds covered
the pole, and a dirty pall
spread over the mid-regions of
the north.
"I haven't thought of anything
brilliant," said Ethaniel.
"Nor I," said Bal. "We're going
to have to go down there
cold. And it will be cold."
"Yes. It's their winter."
"I did have an idea," said Bal.
"What about going down as supernatural
beings?"
"Hardly," said Ethaniel. "A
hundred years ago it might have
worked. Today they have satellites.
They are not primitives."
"I suppose you're right," said
Bal. "I did think we ought to
take advantage of our physical
differences."
"If we could I'd be all for it.
But these people are rough and
desperate. They wouldn't be
fooled by anything that crude."
"Well, you're calling it," said
Bal.
"All right," said Ethaniel.
"You take one side and I the
other. We'll tell them bluntly
what they'll have to do if they're
going to survive, how they can
keep their planet in one piece so
they can live on it."
"That'll go over big. Advice is
always popular."
"Can't help it. That's all we
have time for."
"Special instructions?"
"None. We leave the ship here
and go down in separate landing
craft. You can talk with me any
time you want to through our
communications, but don't unless
you have to."
"They can't intercept the
beams we use."
"They can't, and even if they
did they wouldn't know what to
do with our language. I want
them to think that we don't
need
to talk things over."
"I get it. Makes us seem better
than we are. They think we know
exactly what we're doing even
though we don't."
"If we're lucky they'll think
that."
Bal looked out of the port at
the planet below. "It's going to
be cold where I'm going. You too.
Sure we don't want to change
our plans and land in the southern
hemisphere? It's summer
there."
"I'm afraid not. The great
powers are in the north. They
are the ones we have to reach to
do the job."
"Yeah, but I was thinking of
that holiday you mentioned.
We'll be running straight into it.
That won't help us any."
"I know, they don't like their
holidays interrupted. It can't be
helped. We can't wait until it's
over."
"I'm aware of that," said Bal.
"Fill me in on that holiday, anything
I ought to know. Probably
religious in origin. That so?"
"It was religious a long time
ago," said Ethaniel. "I didn't
learn anything exact from radio
and TV. Now it seems to be
chiefly a time for eating, office
parties, and selling merchandise."
"I see. It has become a business
holiday."
"That's a good description. I
didn't get as much of it as I
ought to have. I was busy studying
the people, and they're hard
to pin down."
"I see. I was thinking there
might be some way we could tie
ourselves in with this holiday.
Make it work for us."
"If there is I haven't thought
of it."
"You ought to know. You're
running this one." Bal looked
down at the planet. Clouds were
beginning to form at the twilight
edge. "I hate to go down
and leave the ship up here with
no one in it."
"They can't touch it. No matter
how they develop in the next
hundred years they still won't be
able to get in or damage it in
any way."
"It's myself I'm thinking
about. Down there, alone."
"I'll be with you. On the other
side of the Earth."
"That's not very close. I'd like
it better if there were someone
in the ship to bring it down in a
hurry if things get rough. They
don't think much of each other.
I don't imagine they'll like aliens
any better."
"They may be unfriendly,"
Ethaniel acknowledged. Now he
switched a monitor screen until
he looked at the slope of a mountain.
It was snowing and men
were cutting small green trees in
the snow. "I've thought of a
trick."
"If it saves my neck I'm for
it."
"I don't guarantee anything,"
said Ethaniel. "This is what I
was thinking of: instead of hiding
the ship against the sun
where there's little chance it will
be seen, we'll make sure that
they do see it. Let's take it
around to the night side of the
planet and light it up."
"Say, pretty good," said Bal.
"They can't imagine that we'd
light up an unmanned ship," said
Ethaniel. "Even if the thought
should occur to them they'll have
no way of checking it. Also, they
won't be eager to harm us with
our ship shining down on them."
"That's thinking," said Bal,
moving to the controls. "I'll move
the ship over where they can see
it best and then I'll light it up.
I'll really light it up."
"Don't spare power."
"Don't worry about that.
They'll see it. Everybody on
Earth will see it." Later, with the
ship in position, glowing against
the darkness of space, pulsating
with light, Bal said: "You know,
I feel better about this. We may
pull it off. Lighting the ship may
be just the help we need."
"It's not we who need help, but
the people of Earth," said Ethaniel.
"See you in five days." With
that he entered a small landing
craft, which left a faintly luminescent
trail as it plunged toward
Earth. As soon as it was
safe to do so, Bal left in another
craft, heading for the other side
of the planet.
And the spaceship circled
Earth, unmanned, blazing and
pulsing with light. No star in the
winter skies of the planet below
could equal it in brilliancy. Once
a man-made satellite came near
but it was dim and was lost sight
of by the people below. During
the day the ship was visible as
a bright spot of light. At evening
it seemed to burn through
the sunset colors.
And the ship circled on,
bright, shining, seeming to be a
little piece clipped from the center
of a star and brought near
Earth to illuminate it. Never, or
seldom, had Earth seen anything
like it.
In five days the two small landing
craft that had left it arched
up from Earth and joined the
orbit of the large ship. The two
small craft slid inside the large
one and doors closed behind
them. In a short time the aliens
met again.
"We did it," said Bal exultantly
as he came in. "I don't know
how we did it and I thought we
were going to fail but at the last
minute they came through."
Ethaniel smiled. "I'm tired,"
he said, rustling.
"Me too, but mostly I'm cold,"
said Bal, shivering. "Snow.
Nothing but snow wherever I
went. Miserable climate. And yet
you had me go out walking after
that first day."
"From my own experience it
seemed to be a good idea," said
Ethaniel. "If I went out walking
one day I noticed that the next
day the officials were much more
cooperative. If it worked for me
I thought it might help you."
"It did. I don't know why, but
it did," said Bal. "Anyway, this
agreement they made isn't the
best but I think it will keep them
from destroying themselves."
"It's as much as we can expect,"
said Ethaniel. "They may
have small wars after this, but
never the big one. In fifty or a
hundred years we can come back
and see how much they've
learned."
"I'm not sure I want to," said
Bal. "Say, what's an angel?"
"Why?"
"When I went out walking
people stopped to look. Some
knelt in the snow and called me
an angel."
"Something like that happened
to me," said Ethaniel.
"I didn't get it but I didn't let
it upset me," said Bal. "I smiled
at them and went about my business."
He shivered again. "It was
always cold. I walked out, but
sometimes I flew back. I hope
that was all right."
In the cabin Bal spread his
great wings. Renaissance painters
had never seen his like but
knew exactly how he looked. In
their paintings they had pictured
him innumerable times.
"I don't think it hurt us that
you flew," said Ethaniel. "I did
so myself occasionally."
"But you don't know what an
angel is?"
"No. I didn't have time to find
out. Some creature of their folklore
I suppose. You know, except
for our wings they're very much
like ourselves. Their legends are
bound to resemble ours."
"Sure," said Bal. "Anyway,
peace on Earth."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Bal and Ethaniel are on a mission to Earth to set up an interstellar trade route. | Bal and Ethaniel are on a mission to Willafours. | Bal and Ethaniel only have one week to save the Earth, but that is their mission. | Bal and Ethaniel are on a mission to steal the big bomb from the humans. | 1 |
24958_YZ9IX4FI_4 | Why are Bal and Ethaniel so cold? | SECOND LANDING
By FLOYD WALLACE
A gentle fancy for the Christmas Season—an
oft-told tale with a wistful twistful of Something
that left the Earth with a wing and a prayer.
Earth
was so far away that
it wasn't visible. Even the
sun was only a twinkle. But this
vast distance did not mean that
isolation could endure forever.
Instruments within the ship intercepted
radio broadcasts and,
within the hour, early TV signals.
Machines compiled dictionaries
and grammars and began
translating the major languages.
The history of the planet was
tabulated as facts became available.
The course of the ship changed
slightly; it was not much out of
the way to swing nearer Earth.
For days the two within the ship
listened and watched with little
comment. They had to decide
soon.
"We've got to make or break,"
said the first alien.
"You know what I'm in favor
of," said the second.
"I can guess," said Ethaniel,
who had spoken first. "The place
is a complete mess. They've never
done anything except fight
each other—and invent better
weapons."
"It's not what they've done,"
said Bal, the second alien. "It's
what they're going to do, with
that big bomb."
"The more reason for stopping,"
said Ethaniel. "The big
bomb can destroy them. Without
our help they may do just that."
"I may remind you that in two
months twenty-nine days we're
due in Willafours," said Bal.
"Without looking at the charts
I can tell you we still have more
than a hundred light-years to
go."
"A week," said Ethaniel. "We
can spare a week and still get
there on time."
"A week?" said Bal. "To settle
their problems? They've had two
world wars in one generation
and that the third and final one
is coming up you can't help feeling
in everything they do."
"It won't take much," said
Ethaniel. "The wrong diplomatic
move, or a trigger-happy soldier
could set it off. And it wouldn't
have to be deliberate. A meteor
shower could pass over and their
clumsy instruments could interpret
it as an all-out enemy
attack."
"Too bad," said Bal. "We'll
just have to forget there ever
was such a planet as Earth."
"Could you? Forget so many
people?"
"I'm doing it," said Bal. "Just
give them a little time and they
won't be here to remind me that
I have a conscience."
"My memory isn't convenient,"
said Ethaniel. "I ask you
to look at them."
Bal rustled, flicking the screen
intently. "Very much like ourselves,"
he said at last. "A bit
shorter perhaps, and most certainly
incomplete. Except for the
one thing they lack, and that's
quite odd, they seem exactly like
us. Is that what you wanted me
to say?"
"It is. The fact that they are
an incomplete version of ourselves
touches me. They actually
seem defenseless, though I suppose
they're not."
"Tough," said Bal. "Nothing
we can do about it."
"There is. We can give them
a week."
"In a week we can't negate
their entire history. We can't
begin to undo the effect of the
big bomb."
"You can't tell," said Ethaniel.
"We can look things over."
"And then what? How much
authority do we have?"
"Very little," conceded Ethaniel.
"Two minor officials on the
way to Willafours—and we run
directly into a problem no one
knew existed."
"And when we get to Willafours
we'll be busy. It will be a
long time before anyone comes
this way again."
"A very long time. There's
nothing in this region of space
our people want," said Ethaniel.
"And how long can Earth last?
Ten years? Even ten months?
The tension is building by the
hour."
"What can I say?" said Bal.
"I suppose we can stop and look
them over. We're not committing
ourselves by looking."
They went much closer to
Earth, not intending to commit
themselves. For a day they circled
the planet, avoiding radar
detection, which for them was
not difficult, testing, and sampling.
Finally Ethaniel looked up
from the monitor screen. "Any
conclusions?"
"What's there to think? It's
worse than I imagined."
"In what way?"
"Well, we knew they had the
big bomb. Atmospheric analysis
showed that as far away as we
were."
"I know."
"We also knew they could deliver
the big bomb, presumably
by some sort of aircraft."
"That was almost a certainty.
They'd have no use for the big
bomb without aircraft."
"What's worse is that I now
find they also have missiles,
range one thousand miles and
upward. They either have or are
near a primitive form of space
travel."
"Bad," said Ethaniel. "Sitting
there, wondering when it's going
to hit them. Nervousness could
set it off."
"It could, and the missiles
make it worse," said Bal. "What
did you find out at your end?"
"Nothing worthwhile. I was
looking at the people while you
were investigating their weapons."
"You must think something."
"I wish I knew what to think.
There's so little time," Ethaniel
said. "Language isn't the difficulty.
Our machines translate
their languages easily and I've
taken a cram course in two or
three of them. But that's not
enough, looking at a few plays,
listening to advertisements, music,
and news bulletins. I should
go down and live among them,
read books, talk to scholars, work
with them, play."
"You could do that and you'd
really get to know them. But
that takes time—and we don't
have it."
"I realize that."
"A flat yes or no," said Bal.
"No. We can't help them," said
Ethaniel. "There is nothing we
can do for them—but we have to
try."
"Sure, I knew it before we
started," said Bal. "It's happened
before. We take the trouble to
find out what a people are like
and when we can't help them we
feel bad. It's going to be that
way again." He rose and stretched.
"Well, give me an hour to
think of some way of going at
it."
It was longer than that before
they met again. In the meantime
the ship moved much closer to
Earth. They no longer needed instruments
to see it. The planet
revolved outside the visionports.
The southern plains were green,
coursed with rivers; the oceans
were blue; and much of the
northern hemisphere was glistening
white. Ragged clouds covered
the pole, and a dirty pall
spread over the mid-regions of
the north.
"I haven't thought of anything
brilliant," said Ethaniel.
"Nor I," said Bal. "We're going
to have to go down there
cold. And it will be cold."
"Yes. It's their winter."
"I did have an idea," said Bal.
"What about going down as supernatural
beings?"
"Hardly," said Ethaniel. "A
hundred years ago it might have
worked. Today they have satellites.
They are not primitives."
"I suppose you're right," said
Bal. "I did think we ought to
take advantage of our physical
differences."
"If we could I'd be all for it.
But these people are rough and
desperate. They wouldn't be
fooled by anything that crude."
"Well, you're calling it," said
Bal.
"All right," said Ethaniel.
"You take one side and I the
other. We'll tell them bluntly
what they'll have to do if they're
going to survive, how they can
keep their planet in one piece so
they can live on it."
"That'll go over big. Advice is
always popular."
"Can't help it. That's all we
have time for."
"Special instructions?"
"None. We leave the ship here
and go down in separate landing
craft. You can talk with me any
time you want to through our
communications, but don't unless
you have to."
"They can't intercept the
beams we use."
"They can't, and even if they
did they wouldn't know what to
do with our language. I want
them to think that we don't
need
to talk things over."
"I get it. Makes us seem better
than we are. They think we know
exactly what we're doing even
though we don't."
"If we're lucky they'll think
that."
Bal looked out of the port at
the planet below. "It's going to
be cold where I'm going. You too.
Sure we don't want to change
our plans and land in the southern
hemisphere? It's summer
there."
"I'm afraid not. The great
powers are in the north. They
are the ones we have to reach to
do the job."
"Yeah, but I was thinking of
that holiday you mentioned.
We'll be running straight into it.
That won't help us any."
"I know, they don't like their
holidays interrupted. It can't be
helped. We can't wait until it's
over."
"I'm aware of that," said Bal.
"Fill me in on that holiday, anything
I ought to know. Probably
religious in origin. That so?"
"It was religious a long time
ago," said Ethaniel. "I didn't
learn anything exact from radio
and TV. Now it seems to be
chiefly a time for eating, office
parties, and selling merchandise."
"I see. It has become a business
holiday."
"That's a good description. I
didn't get as much of it as I
ought to have. I was busy studying
the people, and they're hard
to pin down."
"I see. I was thinking there
might be some way we could tie
ourselves in with this holiday.
Make it work for us."
"If there is I haven't thought
of it."
"You ought to know. You're
running this one." Bal looked
down at the planet. Clouds were
beginning to form at the twilight
edge. "I hate to go down
and leave the ship up here with
no one in it."
"They can't touch it. No matter
how they develop in the next
hundred years they still won't be
able to get in or damage it in
any way."
"It's myself I'm thinking
about. Down there, alone."
"I'll be with you. On the other
side of the Earth."
"That's not very close. I'd like
it better if there were someone
in the ship to bring it down in a
hurry if things get rough. They
don't think much of each other.
I don't imagine they'll like aliens
any better."
"They may be unfriendly,"
Ethaniel acknowledged. Now he
switched a monitor screen until
he looked at the slope of a mountain.
It was snowing and men
were cutting small green trees in
the snow. "I've thought of a
trick."
"If it saves my neck I'm for
it."
"I don't guarantee anything,"
said Ethaniel. "This is what I
was thinking of: instead of hiding
the ship against the sun
where there's little chance it will
be seen, we'll make sure that
they do see it. Let's take it
around to the night side of the
planet and light it up."
"Say, pretty good," said Bal.
"They can't imagine that we'd
light up an unmanned ship," said
Ethaniel. "Even if the thought
should occur to them they'll have
no way of checking it. Also, they
won't be eager to harm us with
our ship shining down on them."
"That's thinking," said Bal,
moving to the controls. "I'll move
the ship over where they can see
it best and then I'll light it up.
I'll really light it up."
"Don't spare power."
"Don't worry about that.
They'll see it. Everybody on
Earth will see it." Later, with the
ship in position, glowing against
the darkness of space, pulsating
with light, Bal said: "You know,
I feel better about this. We may
pull it off. Lighting the ship may
be just the help we need."
"It's not we who need help, but
the people of Earth," said Ethaniel.
"See you in five days." With
that he entered a small landing
craft, which left a faintly luminescent
trail as it plunged toward
Earth. As soon as it was
safe to do so, Bal left in another
craft, heading for the other side
of the planet.
And the spaceship circled
Earth, unmanned, blazing and
pulsing with light. No star in the
winter skies of the planet below
could equal it in brilliancy. Once
a man-made satellite came near
but it was dim and was lost sight
of by the people below. During
the day the ship was visible as
a bright spot of light. At evening
it seemed to burn through
the sunset colors.
And the ship circled on,
bright, shining, seeming to be a
little piece clipped from the center
of a star and brought near
Earth to illuminate it. Never, or
seldom, had Earth seen anything
like it.
In five days the two small landing
craft that had left it arched
up from Earth and joined the
orbit of the large ship. The two
small craft slid inside the large
one and doors closed behind
them. In a short time the aliens
met again.
"We did it," said Bal exultantly
as he came in. "I don't know
how we did it and I thought we
were going to fail but at the last
minute they came through."
Ethaniel smiled. "I'm tired,"
he said, rustling.
"Me too, but mostly I'm cold,"
said Bal, shivering. "Snow.
Nothing but snow wherever I
went. Miserable climate. And yet
you had me go out walking after
that first day."
"From my own experience it
seemed to be a good idea," said
Ethaniel. "If I went out walking
one day I noticed that the next
day the officials were much more
cooperative. If it worked for me
I thought it might help you."
"It did. I don't know why, but
it did," said Bal. "Anyway, this
agreement they made isn't the
best but I think it will keep them
from destroying themselves."
"It's as much as we can expect,"
said Ethaniel. "They may
have small wars after this, but
never the big one. In fifty or a
hundred years we can come back
and see how much they've
learned."
"I'm not sure I want to," said
Bal. "Say, what's an angel?"
"Why?"
"When I went out walking
people stopped to look. Some
knelt in the snow and called me
an angel."
"Something like that happened
to me," said Ethaniel.
"I didn't get it but I didn't let
it upset me," said Bal. "I smiled
at them and went about my business."
He shivered again. "It was
always cold. I walked out, but
sometimes I flew back. I hope
that was all right."
In the cabin Bal spread his
great wings. Renaissance painters
had never seen his like but
knew exactly how he looked. In
their paintings they had pictured
him innumerable times.
"I don't think it hurt us that
you flew," said Ethaniel. "I did
so myself occasionally."
"But you don't know what an
angel is?"
"No. I didn't have time to find
out. Some creature of their folklore
I suppose. You know, except
for our wings they're very much
like ourselves. Their legends are
bound to resemble ours."
"Sure," said Bal. "Anyway,
peace on Earth."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | People are mistaking them for the types of angles seen in Renaissance paintings. It is likely they are wearing little or no clothing. | They are cold because the clothing synthesizer on their spaceship was not equipped with the materials needed to make cold-weather gear. | They are cold because the planet they come from has a much warmer climate, and they were not prepared for cold weather. | Bal and Ethaniel are cold because it is winter where they have landed on Earth. | 3 |
24958_YZ9IX4FI_5 | How do Bal and Ethaniel feel about the humans? | SECOND LANDING
By FLOYD WALLACE
A gentle fancy for the Christmas Season—an
oft-told tale with a wistful twistful of Something
that left the Earth with a wing and a prayer.
Earth
was so far away that
it wasn't visible. Even the
sun was only a twinkle. But this
vast distance did not mean that
isolation could endure forever.
Instruments within the ship intercepted
radio broadcasts and,
within the hour, early TV signals.
Machines compiled dictionaries
and grammars and began
translating the major languages.
The history of the planet was
tabulated as facts became available.
The course of the ship changed
slightly; it was not much out of
the way to swing nearer Earth.
For days the two within the ship
listened and watched with little
comment. They had to decide
soon.
"We've got to make or break,"
said the first alien.
"You know what I'm in favor
of," said the second.
"I can guess," said Ethaniel,
who had spoken first. "The place
is a complete mess. They've never
done anything except fight
each other—and invent better
weapons."
"It's not what they've done,"
said Bal, the second alien. "It's
what they're going to do, with
that big bomb."
"The more reason for stopping,"
said Ethaniel. "The big
bomb can destroy them. Without
our help they may do just that."
"I may remind you that in two
months twenty-nine days we're
due in Willafours," said Bal.
"Without looking at the charts
I can tell you we still have more
than a hundred light-years to
go."
"A week," said Ethaniel. "We
can spare a week and still get
there on time."
"A week?" said Bal. "To settle
their problems? They've had two
world wars in one generation
and that the third and final one
is coming up you can't help feeling
in everything they do."
"It won't take much," said
Ethaniel. "The wrong diplomatic
move, or a trigger-happy soldier
could set it off. And it wouldn't
have to be deliberate. A meteor
shower could pass over and their
clumsy instruments could interpret
it as an all-out enemy
attack."
"Too bad," said Bal. "We'll
just have to forget there ever
was such a planet as Earth."
"Could you? Forget so many
people?"
"I'm doing it," said Bal. "Just
give them a little time and they
won't be here to remind me that
I have a conscience."
"My memory isn't convenient,"
said Ethaniel. "I ask you
to look at them."
Bal rustled, flicking the screen
intently. "Very much like ourselves,"
he said at last. "A bit
shorter perhaps, and most certainly
incomplete. Except for the
one thing they lack, and that's
quite odd, they seem exactly like
us. Is that what you wanted me
to say?"
"It is. The fact that they are
an incomplete version of ourselves
touches me. They actually
seem defenseless, though I suppose
they're not."
"Tough," said Bal. "Nothing
we can do about it."
"There is. We can give them
a week."
"In a week we can't negate
their entire history. We can't
begin to undo the effect of the
big bomb."
"You can't tell," said Ethaniel.
"We can look things over."
"And then what? How much
authority do we have?"
"Very little," conceded Ethaniel.
"Two minor officials on the
way to Willafours—and we run
directly into a problem no one
knew existed."
"And when we get to Willafours
we'll be busy. It will be a
long time before anyone comes
this way again."
"A very long time. There's
nothing in this region of space
our people want," said Ethaniel.
"And how long can Earth last?
Ten years? Even ten months?
The tension is building by the
hour."
"What can I say?" said Bal.
"I suppose we can stop and look
them over. We're not committing
ourselves by looking."
They went much closer to
Earth, not intending to commit
themselves. For a day they circled
the planet, avoiding radar
detection, which for them was
not difficult, testing, and sampling.
Finally Ethaniel looked up
from the monitor screen. "Any
conclusions?"
"What's there to think? It's
worse than I imagined."
"In what way?"
"Well, we knew they had the
big bomb. Atmospheric analysis
showed that as far away as we
were."
"I know."
"We also knew they could deliver
the big bomb, presumably
by some sort of aircraft."
"That was almost a certainty.
They'd have no use for the big
bomb without aircraft."
"What's worse is that I now
find they also have missiles,
range one thousand miles and
upward. They either have or are
near a primitive form of space
travel."
"Bad," said Ethaniel. "Sitting
there, wondering when it's going
to hit them. Nervousness could
set it off."
"It could, and the missiles
make it worse," said Bal. "What
did you find out at your end?"
"Nothing worthwhile. I was
looking at the people while you
were investigating their weapons."
"You must think something."
"I wish I knew what to think.
There's so little time," Ethaniel
said. "Language isn't the difficulty.
Our machines translate
their languages easily and I've
taken a cram course in two or
three of them. But that's not
enough, looking at a few plays,
listening to advertisements, music,
and news bulletins. I should
go down and live among them,
read books, talk to scholars, work
with them, play."
"You could do that and you'd
really get to know them. But
that takes time—and we don't
have it."
"I realize that."
"A flat yes or no," said Bal.
"No. We can't help them," said
Ethaniel. "There is nothing we
can do for them—but we have to
try."
"Sure, I knew it before we
started," said Bal. "It's happened
before. We take the trouble to
find out what a people are like
and when we can't help them we
feel bad. It's going to be that
way again." He rose and stretched.
"Well, give me an hour to
think of some way of going at
it."
It was longer than that before
they met again. In the meantime
the ship moved much closer to
Earth. They no longer needed instruments
to see it. The planet
revolved outside the visionports.
The southern plains were green,
coursed with rivers; the oceans
were blue; and much of the
northern hemisphere was glistening
white. Ragged clouds covered
the pole, and a dirty pall
spread over the mid-regions of
the north.
"I haven't thought of anything
brilliant," said Ethaniel.
"Nor I," said Bal. "We're going
to have to go down there
cold. And it will be cold."
"Yes. It's their winter."
"I did have an idea," said Bal.
"What about going down as supernatural
beings?"
"Hardly," said Ethaniel. "A
hundred years ago it might have
worked. Today they have satellites.
They are not primitives."
"I suppose you're right," said
Bal. "I did think we ought to
take advantage of our physical
differences."
"If we could I'd be all for it.
But these people are rough and
desperate. They wouldn't be
fooled by anything that crude."
"Well, you're calling it," said
Bal.
"All right," said Ethaniel.
"You take one side and I the
other. We'll tell them bluntly
what they'll have to do if they're
going to survive, how they can
keep their planet in one piece so
they can live on it."
"That'll go over big. Advice is
always popular."
"Can't help it. That's all we
have time for."
"Special instructions?"
"None. We leave the ship here
and go down in separate landing
craft. You can talk with me any
time you want to through our
communications, but don't unless
you have to."
"They can't intercept the
beams we use."
"They can't, and even if they
did they wouldn't know what to
do with our language. I want
them to think that we don't
need
to talk things over."
"I get it. Makes us seem better
than we are. They think we know
exactly what we're doing even
though we don't."
"If we're lucky they'll think
that."
Bal looked out of the port at
the planet below. "It's going to
be cold where I'm going. You too.
Sure we don't want to change
our plans and land in the southern
hemisphere? It's summer
there."
"I'm afraid not. The great
powers are in the north. They
are the ones we have to reach to
do the job."
"Yeah, but I was thinking of
that holiday you mentioned.
We'll be running straight into it.
That won't help us any."
"I know, they don't like their
holidays interrupted. It can't be
helped. We can't wait until it's
over."
"I'm aware of that," said Bal.
"Fill me in on that holiday, anything
I ought to know. Probably
religious in origin. That so?"
"It was religious a long time
ago," said Ethaniel. "I didn't
learn anything exact from radio
and TV. Now it seems to be
chiefly a time for eating, office
parties, and selling merchandise."
"I see. It has become a business
holiday."
"That's a good description. I
didn't get as much of it as I
ought to have. I was busy studying
the people, and they're hard
to pin down."
"I see. I was thinking there
might be some way we could tie
ourselves in with this holiday.
Make it work for us."
"If there is I haven't thought
of it."
"You ought to know. You're
running this one." Bal looked
down at the planet. Clouds were
beginning to form at the twilight
edge. "I hate to go down
and leave the ship up here with
no one in it."
"They can't touch it. No matter
how they develop in the next
hundred years they still won't be
able to get in or damage it in
any way."
"It's myself I'm thinking
about. Down there, alone."
"I'll be with you. On the other
side of the Earth."
"That's not very close. I'd like
it better if there were someone
in the ship to bring it down in a
hurry if things get rough. They
don't think much of each other.
I don't imagine they'll like aliens
any better."
"They may be unfriendly,"
Ethaniel acknowledged. Now he
switched a monitor screen until
he looked at the slope of a mountain.
It was snowing and men
were cutting small green trees in
the snow. "I've thought of a
trick."
"If it saves my neck I'm for
it."
"I don't guarantee anything,"
said Ethaniel. "This is what I
was thinking of: instead of hiding
the ship against the sun
where there's little chance it will
be seen, we'll make sure that
they do see it. Let's take it
around to the night side of the
planet and light it up."
"Say, pretty good," said Bal.
"They can't imagine that we'd
light up an unmanned ship," said
Ethaniel. "Even if the thought
should occur to them they'll have
no way of checking it. Also, they
won't be eager to harm us with
our ship shining down on them."
"That's thinking," said Bal,
moving to the controls. "I'll move
the ship over where they can see
it best and then I'll light it up.
I'll really light it up."
"Don't spare power."
"Don't worry about that.
They'll see it. Everybody on
Earth will see it." Later, with the
ship in position, glowing against
the darkness of space, pulsating
with light, Bal said: "You know,
I feel better about this. We may
pull it off. Lighting the ship may
be just the help we need."
"It's not we who need help, but
the people of Earth," said Ethaniel.
"See you in five days." With
that he entered a small landing
craft, which left a faintly luminescent
trail as it plunged toward
Earth. As soon as it was
safe to do so, Bal left in another
craft, heading for the other side
of the planet.
And the spaceship circled
Earth, unmanned, blazing and
pulsing with light. No star in the
winter skies of the planet below
could equal it in brilliancy. Once
a man-made satellite came near
but it was dim and was lost sight
of by the people below. During
the day the ship was visible as
a bright spot of light. At evening
it seemed to burn through
the sunset colors.
And the ship circled on,
bright, shining, seeming to be a
little piece clipped from the center
of a star and brought near
Earth to illuminate it. Never, or
seldom, had Earth seen anything
like it.
In five days the two small landing
craft that had left it arched
up from Earth and joined the
orbit of the large ship. The two
small craft slid inside the large
one and doors closed behind
them. In a short time the aliens
met again.
"We did it," said Bal exultantly
as he came in. "I don't know
how we did it and I thought we
were going to fail but at the last
minute they came through."
Ethaniel smiled. "I'm tired,"
he said, rustling.
"Me too, but mostly I'm cold,"
said Bal, shivering. "Snow.
Nothing but snow wherever I
went. Miserable climate. And yet
you had me go out walking after
that first day."
"From my own experience it
seemed to be a good idea," said
Ethaniel. "If I went out walking
one day I noticed that the next
day the officials were much more
cooperative. If it worked for me
I thought it might help you."
"It did. I don't know why, but
it did," said Bal. "Anyway, this
agreement they made isn't the
best but I think it will keep them
from destroying themselves."
"It's as much as we can expect,"
said Ethaniel. "They may
have small wars after this, but
never the big one. In fifty or a
hundred years we can come back
and see how much they've
learned."
"I'm not sure I want to," said
Bal. "Say, what's an angel?"
"Why?"
"When I went out walking
people stopped to look. Some
knelt in the snow and called me
an angel."
"Something like that happened
to me," said Ethaniel.
"I didn't get it but I didn't let
it upset me," said Bal. "I smiled
at them and went about my business."
He shivered again. "It was
always cold. I walked out, but
sometimes I flew back. I hope
that was all right."
In the cabin Bal spread his
great wings. Renaissance painters
had never seen his like but
knew exactly how he looked. In
their paintings they had pictured
him innumerable times.
"I don't think it hurt us that
you flew," said Ethaniel. "I did
so myself occasionally."
"But you don't know what an
angel is?"
"No. I didn't have time to find
out. Some creature of their folklore
I suppose. You know, except
for our wings they're very much
like ourselves. Their legends are
bound to resemble ours."
"Sure," said Bal. "Anyway,
peace on Earth."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Bal and Ethaniel think humans are very similar beings to themselves. | Bal and Ethaniel think humans are crude, rough, and desperate. | Bal and Ethaniel think humans are not very intelligent and superstitious. | Bal and Ethaniel are scared of the humans because humans seem to be trigger-happy. | 0 |
24958_YZ9IX4FI_6 | Why do Bal and Ethaniel think they have to make time to save Earth? | SECOND LANDING
By FLOYD WALLACE
A gentle fancy for the Christmas Season—an
oft-told tale with a wistful twistful of Something
that left the Earth with a wing and a prayer.
Earth
was so far away that
it wasn't visible. Even the
sun was only a twinkle. But this
vast distance did not mean that
isolation could endure forever.
Instruments within the ship intercepted
radio broadcasts and,
within the hour, early TV signals.
Machines compiled dictionaries
and grammars and began
translating the major languages.
The history of the planet was
tabulated as facts became available.
The course of the ship changed
slightly; it was not much out of
the way to swing nearer Earth.
For days the two within the ship
listened and watched with little
comment. They had to decide
soon.
"We've got to make or break,"
said the first alien.
"You know what I'm in favor
of," said the second.
"I can guess," said Ethaniel,
who had spoken first. "The place
is a complete mess. They've never
done anything except fight
each other—and invent better
weapons."
"It's not what they've done,"
said Bal, the second alien. "It's
what they're going to do, with
that big bomb."
"The more reason for stopping,"
said Ethaniel. "The big
bomb can destroy them. Without
our help they may do just that."
"I may remind you that in two
months twenty-nine days we're
due in Willafours," said Bal.
"Without looking at the charts
I can tell you we still have more
than a hundred light-years to
go."
"A week," said Ethaniel. "We
can spare a week and still get
there on time."
"A week?" said Bal. "To settle
their problems? They've had two
world wars in one generation
and that the third and final one
is coming up you can't help feeling
in everything they do."
"It won't take much," said
Ethaniel. "The wrong diplomatic
move, or a trigger-happy soldier
could set it off. And it wouldn't
have to be deliberate. A meteor
shower could pass over and their
clumsy instruments could interpret
it as an all-out enemy
attack."
"Too bad," said Bal. "We'll
just have to forget there ever
was such a planet as Earth."
"Could you? Forget so many
people?"
"I'm doing it," said Bal. "Just
give them a little time and they
won't be here to remind me that
I have a conscience."
"My memory isn't convenient,"
said Ethaniel. "I ask you
to look at them."
Bal rustled, flicking the screen
intently. "Very much like ourselves,"
he said at last. "A bit
shorter perhaps, and most certainly
incomplete. Except for the
one thing they lack, and that's
quite odd, they seem exactly like
us. Is that what you wanted me
to say?"
"It is. The fact that they are
an incomplete version of ourselves
touches me. They actually
seem defenseless, though I suppose
they're not."
"Tough," said Bal. "Nothing
we can do about it."
"There is. We can give them
a week."
"In a week we can't negate
their entire history. We can't
begin to undo the effect of the
big bomb."
"You can't tell," said Ethaniel.
"We can look things over."
"And then what? How much
authority do we have?"
"Very little," conceded Ethaniel.
"Two minor officials on the
way to Willafours—and we run
directly into a problem no one
knew existed."
"And when we get to Willafours
we'll be busy. It will be a
long time before anyone comes
this way again."
"A very long time. There's
nothing in this region of space
our people want," said Ethaniel.
"And how long can Earth last?
Ten years? Even ten months?
The tension is building by the
hour."
"What can I say?" said Bal.
"I suppose we can stop and look
them over. We're not committing
ourselves by looking."
They went much closer to
Earth, not intending to commit
themselves. For a day they circled
the planet, avoiding radar
detection, which for them was
not difficult, testing, and sampling.
Finally Ethaniel looked up
from the monitor screen. "Any
conclusions?"
"What's there to think? It's
worse than I imagined."
"In what way?"
"Well, we knew they had the
big bomb. Atmospheric analysis
showed that as far away as we
were."
"I know."
"We also knew they could deliver
the big bomb, presumably
by some sort of aircraft."
"That was almost a certainty.
They'd have no use for the big
bomb without aircraft."
"What's worse is that I now
find they also have missiles,
range one thousand miles and
upward. They either have or are
near a primitive form of space
travel."
"Bad," said Ethaniel. "Sitting
there, wondering when it's going
to hit them. Nervousness could
set it off."
"It could, and the missiles
make it worse," said Bal. "What
did you find out at your end?"
"Nothing worthwhile. I was
looking at the people while you
were investigating their weapons."
"You must think something."
"I wish I knew what to think.
There's so little time," Ethaniel
said. "Language isn't the difficulty.
Our machines translate
their languages easily and I've
taken a cram course in two or
three of them. But that's not
enough, looking at a few plays,
listening to advertisements, music,
and news bulletins. I should
go down and live among them,
read books, talk to scholars, work
with them, play."
"You could do that and you'd
really get to know them. But
that takes time—and we don't
have it."
"I realize that."
"A flat yes or no," said Bal.
"No. We can't help them," said
Ethaniel. "There is nothing we
can do for them—but we have to
try."
"Sure, I knew it before we
started," said Bal. "It's happened
before. We take the trouble to
find out what a people are like
and when we can't help them we
feel bad. It's going to be that
way again." He rose and stretched.
"Well, give me an hour to
think of some way of going at
it."
It was longer than that before
they met again. In the meantime
the ship moved much closer to
Earth. They no longer needed instruments
to see it. The planet
revolved outside the visionports.
The southern plains were green,
coursed with rivers; the oceans
were blue; and much of the
northern hemisphere was glistening
white. Ragged clouds covered
the pole, and a dirty pall
spread over the mid-regions of
the north.
"I haven't thought of anything
brilliant," said Ethaniel.
"Nor I," said Bal. "We're going
to have to go down there
cold. And it will be cold."
"Yes. It's their winter."
"I did have an idea," said Bal.
"What about going down as supernatural
beings?"
"Hardly," said Ethaniel. "A
hundred years ago it might have
worked. Today they have satellites.
They are not primitives."
"I suppose you're right," said
Bal. "I did think we ought to
take advantage of our physical
differences."
"If we could I'd be all for it.
But these people are rough and
desperate. They wouldn't be
fooled by anything that crude."
"Well, you're calling it," said
Bal.
"All right," said Ethaniel.
"You take one side and I the
other. We'll tell them bluntly
what they'll have to do if they're
going to survive, how they can
keep their planet in one piece so
they can live on it."
"That'll go over big. Advice is
always popular."
"Can't help it. That's all we
have time for."
"Special instructions?"
"None. We leave the ship here
and go down in separate landing
craft. You can talk with me any
time you want to through our
communications, but don't unless
you have to."
"They can't intercept the
beams we use."
"They can't, and even if they
did they wouldn't know what to
do with our language. I want
them to think that we don't
need
to talk things over."
"I get it. Makes us seem better
than we are. They think we know
exactly what we're doing even
though we don't."
"If we're lucky they'll think
that."
Bal looked out of the port at
the planet below. "It's going to
be cold where I'm going. You too.
Sure we don't want to change
our plans and land in the southern
hemisphere? It's summer
there."
"I'm afraid not. The great
powers are in the north. They
are the ones we have to reach to
do the job."
"Yeah, but I was thinking of
that holiday you mentioned.
We'll be running straight into it.
That won't help us any."
"I know, they don't like their
holidays interrupted. It can't be
helped. We can't wait until it's
over."
"I'm aware of that," said Bal.
"Fill me in on that holiday, anything
I ought to know. Probably
religious in origin. That so?"
"It was religious a long time
ago," said Ethaniel. "I didn't
learn anything exact from radio
and TV. Now it seems to be
chiefly a time for eating, office
parties, and selling merchandise."
"I see. It has become a business
holiday."
"That's a good description. I
didn't get as much of it as I
ought to have. I was busy studying
the people, and they're hard
to pin down."
"I see. I was thinking there
might be some way we could tie
ourselves in with this holiday.
Make it work for us."
"If there is I haven't thought
of it."
"You ought to know. You're
running this one." Bal looked
down at the planet. Clouds were
beginning to form at the twilight
edge. "I hate to go down
and leave the ship up here with
no one in it."
"They can't touch it. No matter
how they develop in the next
hundred years they still won't be
able to get in or damage it in
any way."
"It's myself I'm thinking
about. Down there, alone."
"I'll be with you. On the other
side of the Earth."
"That's not very close. I'd like
it better if there were someone
in the ship to bring it down in a
hurry if things get rough. They
don't think much of each other.
I don't imagine they'll like aliens
any better."
"They may be unfriendly,"
Ethaniel acknowledged. Now he
switched a monitor screen until
he looked at the slope of a mountain.
It was snowing and men
were cutting small green trees in
the snow. "I've thought of a
trick."
"If it saves my neck I'm for
it."
"I don't guarantee anything,"
said Ethaniel. "This is what I
was thinking of: instead of hiding
the ship against the sun
where there's little chance it will
be seen, we'll make sure that
they do see it. Let's take it
around to the night side of the
planet and light it up."
"Say, pretty good," said Bal.
"They can't imagine that we'd
light up an unmanned ship," said
Ethaniel. "Even if the thought
should occur to them they'll have
no way of checking it. Also, they
won't be eager to harm us with
our ship shining down on them."
"That's thinking," said Bal,
moving to the controls. "I'll move
the ship over where they can see
it best and then I'll light it up.
I'll really light it up."
"Don't spare power."
"Don't worry about that.
They'll see it. Everybody on
Earth will see it." Later, with the
ship in position, glowing against
the darkness of space, pulsating
with light, Bal said: "You know,
I feel better about this. We may
pull it off. Lighting the ship may
be just the help we need."
"It's not we who need help, but
the people of Earth," said Ethaniel.
"See you in five days." With
that he entered a small landing
craft, which left a faintly luminescent
trail as it plunged toward
Earth. As soon as it was
safe to do so, Bal left in another
craft, heading for the other side
of the planet.
And the spaceship circled
Earth, unmanned, blazing and
pulsing with light. No star in the
winter skies of the planet below
could equal it in brilliancy. Once
a man-made satellite came near
but it was dim and was lost sight
of by the people below. During
the day the ship was visible as
a bright spot of light. At evening
it seemed to burn through
the sunset colors.
And the ship circled on,
bright, shining, seeming to be a
little piece clipped from the center
of a star and brought near
Earth to illuminate it. Never, or
seldom, had Earth seen anything
like it.
In five days the two small landing
craft that had left it arched
up from Earth and joined the
orbit of the large ship. The two
small craft slid inside the large
one and doors closed behind
them. In a short time the aliens
met again.
"We did it," said Bal exultantly
as he came in. "I don't know
how we did it and I thought we
were going to fail but at the last
minute they came through."
Ethaniel smiled. "I'm tired,"
he said, rustling.
"Me too, but mostly I'm cold,"
said Bal, shivering. "Snow.
Nothing but snow wherever I
went. Miserable climate. And yet
you had me go out walking after
that first day."
"From my own experience it
seemed to be a good idea," said
Ethaniel. "If I went out walking
one day I noticed that the next
day the officials were much more
cooperative. If it worked for me
I thought it might help you."
"It did. I don't know why, but
it did," said Bal. "Anyway, this
agreement they made isn't the
best but I think it will keep them
from destroying themselves."
"It's as much as we can expect,"
said Ethaniel. "They may
have small wars after this, but
never the big one. In fifty or a
hundred years we can come back
and see how much they've
learned."
"I'm not sure I want to," said
Bal. "Say, what's an angel?"
"Why?"
"When I went out walking
people stopped to look. Some
knelt in the snow and called me
an angel."
"Something like that happened
to me," said Ethaniel.
"I didn't get it but I didn't let
it upset me," said Bal. "I smiled
at them and went about my business."
He shivered again. "It was
always cold. I walked out, but
sometimes I flew back. I hope
that was all right."
In the cabin Bal spread his
great wings. Renaissance painters
had never seen his like but
knew exactly how he looked. In
their paintings they had pictured
him innumerable times.
"I don't think it hurt us that
you flew," said Ethaniel. "I did
so myself occasionally."
"But you don't know what an
angel is?"
"No. I didn't have time to find
out. Some creature of their folklore
I suppose. You know, except
for our wings they're very much
like ourselves. Their legends are
bound to resemble ours."
"Sure," said Bal. "Anyway,
peace on Earth."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | No one else knows Earth and its big bomb problem exisits. It will be quite a long time before anyone passes out this way again. By then, it will be too late for the Earth. | If Bal and Ethaniel don't make time to save the Earth from the big bomb, the shockwave may also destroy their spacecraft. | If Bal and Ethaniel don't make time to save the Earth from the big bomb, the shockwave may also destroy Willafours. | Not saving the humans would be like letting their own people die. | 0 |
24958_YZ9IX4FI_7 | Why doesn't the Earth shoot the spaceship out of the sky? | SECOND LANDING
By FLOYD WALLACE
A gentle fancy for the Christmas Season—an
oft-told tale with a wistful twistful of Something
that left the Earth with a wing and a prayer.
Earth
was so far away that
it wasn't visible. Even the
sun was only a twinkle. But this
vast distance did not mean that
isolation could endure forever.
Instruments within the ship intercepted
radio broadcasts and,
within the hour, early TV signals.
Machines compiled dictionaries
and grammars and began
translating the major languages.
The history of the planet was
tabulated as facts became available.
The course of the ship changed
slightly; it was not much out of
the way to swing nearer Earth.
For days the two within the ship
listened and watched with little
comment. They had to decide
soon.
"We've got to make or break,"
said the first alien.
"You know what I'm in favor
of," said the second.
"I can guess," said Ethaniel,
who had spoken first. "The place
is a complete mess. They've never
done anything except fight
each other—and invent better
weapons."
"It's not what they've done,"
said Bal, the second alien. "It's
what they're going to do, with
that big bomb."
"The more reason for stopping,"
said Ethaniel. "The big
bomb can destroy them. Without
our help they may do just that."
"I may remind you that in two
months twenty-nine days we're
due in Willafours," said Bal.
"Without looking at the charts
I can tell you we still have more
than a hundred light-years to
go."
"A week," said Ethaniel. "We
can spare a week and still get
there on time."
"A week?" said Bal. "To settle
their problems? They've had two
world wars in one generation
and that the third and final one
is coming up you can't help feeling
in everything they do."
"It won't take much," said
Ethaniel. "The wrong diplomatic
move, or a trigger-happy soldier
could set it off. And it wouldn't
have to be deliberate. A meteor
shower could pass over and their
clumsy instruments could interpret
it as an all-out enemy
attack."
"Too bad," said Bal. "We'll
just have to forget there ever
was such a planet as Earth."
"Could you? Forget so many
people?"
"I'm doing it," said Bal. "Just
give them a little time and they
won't be here to remind me that
I have a conscience."
"My memory isn't convenient,"
said Ethaniel. "I ask you
to look at them."
Bal rustled, flicking the screen
intently. "Very much like ourselves,"
he said at last. "A bit
shorter perhaps, and most certainly
incomplete. Except for the
one thing they lack, and that's
quite odd, they seem exactly like
us. Is that what you wanted me
to say?"
"It is. The fact that they are
an incomplete version of ourselves
touches me. They actually
seem defenseless, though I suppose
they're not."
"Tough," said Bal. "Nothing
we can do about it."
"There is. We can give them
a week."
"In a week we can't negate
their entire history. We can't
begin to undo the effect of the
big bomb."
"You can't tell," said Ethaniel.
"We can look things over."
"And then what? How much
authority do we have?"
"Very little," conceded Ethaniel.
"Two minor officials on the
way to Willafours—and we run
directly into a problem no one
knew existed."
"And when we get to Willafours
we'll be busy. It will be a
long time before anyone comes
this way again."
"A very long time. There's
nothing in this region of space
our people want," said Ethaniel.
"And how long can Earth last?
Ten years? Even ten months?
The tension is building by the
hour."
"What can I say?" said Bal.
"I suppose we can stop and look
them over. We're not committing
ourselves by looking."
They went much closer to
Earth, not intending to commit
themselves. For a day they circled
the planet, avoiding radar
detection, which for them was
not difficult, testing, and sampling.
Finally Ethaniel looked up
from the monitor screen. "Any
conclusions?"
"What's there to think? It's
worse than I imagined."
"In what way?"
"Well, we knew they had the
big bomb. Atmospheric analysis
showed that as far away as we
were."
"I know."
"We also knew they could deliver
the big bomb, presumably
by some sort of aircraft."
"That was almost a certainty.
They'd have no use for the big
bomb without aircraft."
"What's worse is that I now
find they also have missiles,
range one thousand miles and
upward. They either have or are
near a primitive form of space
travel."
"Bad," said Ethaniel. "Sitting
there, wondering when it's going
to hit them. Nervousness could
set it off."
"It could, and the missiles
make it worse," said Bal. "What
did you find out at your end?"
"Nothing worthwhile. I was
looking at the people while you
were investigating their weapons."
"You must think something."
"I wish I knew what to think.
There's so little time," Ethaniel
said. "Language isn't the difficulty.
Our machines translate
their languages easily and I've
taken a cram course in two or
three of them. But that's not
enough, looking at a few plays,
listening to advertisements, music,
and news bulletins. I should
go down and live among them,
read books, talk to scholars, work
with them, play."
"You could do that and you'd
really get to know them. But
that takes time—and we don't
have it."
"I realize that."
"A flat yes or no," said Bal.
"No. We can't help them," said
Ethaniel. "There is nothing we
can do for them—but we have to
try."
"Sure, I knew it before we
started," said Bal. "It's happened
before. We take the trouble to
find out what a people are like
and when we can't help them we
feel bad. It's going to be that
way again." He rose and stretched.
"Well, give me an hour to
think of some way of going at
it."
It was longer than that before
they met again. In the meantime
the ship moved much closer to
Earth. They no longer needed instruments
to see it. The planet
revolved outside the visionports.
The southern plains were green,
coursed with rivers; the oceans
were blue; and much of the
northern hemisphere was glistening
white. Ragged clouds covered
the pole, and a dirty pall
spread over the mid-regions of
the north.
"I haven't thought of anything
brilliant," said Ethaniel.
"Nor I," said Bal. "We're going
to have to go down there
cold. And it will be cold."
"Yes. It's their winter."
"I did have an idea," said Bal.
"What about going down as supernatural
beings?"
"Hardly," said Ethaniel. "A
hundred years ago it might have
worked. Today they have satellites.
They are not primitives."
"I suppose you're right," said
Bal. "I did think we ought to
take advantage of our physical
differences."
"If we could I'd be all for it.
But these people are rough and
desperate. They wouldn't be
fooled by anything that crude."
"Well, you're calling it," said
Bal.
"All right," said Ethaniel.
"You take one side and I the
other. We'll tell them bluntly
what they'll have to do if they're
going to survive, how they can
keep their planet in one piece so
they can live on it."
"That'll go over big. Advice is
always popular."
"Can't help it. That's all we
have time for."
"Special instructions?"
"None. We leave the ship here
and go down in separate landing
craft. You can talk with me any
time you want to through our
communications, but don't unless
you have to."
"They can't intercept the
beams we use."
"They can't, and even if they
did they wouldn't know what to
do with our language. I want
them to think that we don't
need
to talk things over."
"I get it. Makes us seem better
than we are. They think we know
exactly what we're doing even
though we don't."
"If we're lucky they'll think
that."
Bal looked out of the port at
the planet below. "It's going to
be cold where I'm going. You too.
Sure we don't want to change
our plans and land in the southern
hemisphere? It's summer
there."
"I'm afraid not. The great
powers are in the north. They
are the ones we have to reach to
do the job."
"Yeah, but I was thinking of
that holiday you mentioned.
We'll be running straight into it.
That won't help us any."
"I know, they don't like their
holidays interrupted. It can't be
helped. We can't wait until it's
over."
"I'm aware of that," said Bal.
"Fill me in on that holiday, anything
I ought to know. Probably
religious in origin. That so?"
"It was religious a long time
ago," said Ethaniel. "I didn't
learn anything exact from radio
and TV. Now it seems to be
chiefly a time for eating, office
parties, and selling merchandise."
"I see. It has become a business
holiday."
"That's a good description. I
didn't get as much of it as I
ought to have. I was busy studying
the people, and they're hard
to pin down."
"I see. I was thinking there
might be some way we could tie
ourselves in with this holiday.
Make it work for us."
"If there is I haven't thought
of it."
"You ought to know. You're
running this one." Bal looked
down at the planet. Clouds were
beginning to form at the twilight
edge. "I hate to go down
and leave the ship up here with
no one in it."
"They can't touch it. No matter
how they develop in the next
hundred years they still won't be
able to get in or damage it in
any way."
"It's myself I'm thinking
about. Down there, alone."
"I'll be with you. On the other
side of the Earth."
"That's not very close. I'd like
it better if there were someone
in the ship to bring it down in a
hurry if things get rough. They
don't think much of each other.
I don't imagine they'll like aliens
any better."
"They may be unfriendly,"
Ethaniel acknowledged. Now he
switched a monitor screen until
he looked at the slope of a mountain.
It was snowing and men
were cutting small green trees in
the snow. "I've thought of a
trick."
"If it saves my neck I'm for
it."
"I don't guarantee anything,"
said Ethaniel. "This is what I
was thinking of: instead of hiding
the ship against the sun
where there's little chance it will
be seen, we'll make sure that
they do see it. Let's take it
around to the night side of the
planet and light it up."
"Say, pretty good," said Bal.
"They can't imagine that we'd
light up an unmanned ship," said
Ethaniel. "Even if the thought
should occur to them they'll have
no way of checking it. Also, they
won't be eager to harm us with
our ship shining down on them."
"That's thinking," said Bal,
moving to the controls. "I'll move
the ship over where they can see
it best and then I'll light it up.
I'll really light it up."
"Don't spare power."
"Don't worry about that.
They'll see it. Everybody on
Earth will see it." Later, with the
ship in position, glowing against
the darkness of space, pulsating
with light, Bal said: "You know,
I feel better about this. We may
pull it off. Lighting the ship may
be just the help we need."
"It's not we who need help, but
the people of Earth," said Ethaniel.
"See you in five days." With
that he entered a small landing
craft, which left a faintly luminescent
trail as it plunged toward
Earth. As soon as it was
safe to do so, Bal left in another
craft, heading for the other side
of the planet.
And the spaceship circled
Earth, unmanned, blazing and
pulsing with light. No star in the
winter skies of the planet below
could equal it in brilliancy. Once
a man-made satellite came near
but it was dim and was lost sight
of by the people below. During
the day the ship was visible as
a bright spot of light. At evening
it seemed to burn through
the sunset colors.
And the ship circled on,
bright, shining, seeming to be a
little piece clipped from the center
of a star and brought near
Earth to illuminate it. Never, or
seldom, had Earth seen anything
like it.
In five days the two small landing
craft that had left it arched
up from Earth and joined the
orbit of the large ship. The two
small craft slid inside the large
one and doors closed behind
them. In a short time the aliens
met again.
"We did it," said Bal exultantly
as he came in. "I don't know
how we did it and I thought we
were going to fail but at the last
minute they came through."
Ethaniel smiled. "I'm tired,"
he said, rustling.
"Me too, but mostly I'm cold,"
said Bal, shivering. "Snow.
Nothing but snow wherever I
went. Miserable climate. And yet
you had me go out walking after
that first day."
"From my own experience it
seemed to be a good idea," said
Ethaniel. "If I went out walking
one day I noticed that the next
day the officials were much more
cooperative. If it worked for me
I thought it might help you."
"It did. I don't know why, but
it did," said Bal. "Anyway, this
agreement they made isn't the
best but I think it will keep them
from destroying themselves."
"It's as much as we can expect,"
said Ethaniel. "They may
have small wars after this, but
never the big one. In fifty or a
hundred years we can come back
and see how much they've
learned."
"I'm not sure I want to," said
Bal. "Say, what's an angel?"
"Why?"
"When I went out walking
people stopped to look. Some
knelt in the snow and called me
an angel."
"Something like that happened
to me," said Ethaniel.
"I didn't get it but I didn't let
it upset me," said Bal. "I smiled
at them and went about my business."
He shivered again. "It was
always cold. I walked out, but
sometimes I flew back. I hope
that was all right."
In the cabin Bal spread his
great wings. Renaissance painters
had never seen his like but
knew exactly how he looked. In
their paintings they had pictured
him innumerable times.
"I don't think it hurt us that
you flew," said Ethaniel. "I did
so myself occasionally."
"But you don't know what an
angel is?"
"No. I didn't have time to find
out. Some creature of their folklore
I suppose. You know, except
for our wings they're very much
like ourselves. Their legends are
bound to resemble ours."
"Sure," said Bal. "Anyway,
peace on Earth."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The Earth does not have weapons that are capable of going as high as the spaceship. Nor are their weapons capable of penetrating the spaceship's hull. | Bal and Ethaniel are using the spaceship to broadcast a message of peace in all the languages of the world. | The combination of the Christmas holiday, aliens that look like angels, and what looks to be the star of Bethlehem, has convinced the people of Earth that Bal and Ethaniel are friends and not foes. | The spaceship is lit up as brightly as a star. The light is bright enough to convince the humans that firing upon it would be futile. | 2 |
24958_YZ9IX4FI_8 | Why do the aliens believe they have succeeded in saving Earth? | SECOND LANDING
By FLOYD WALLACE
A gentle fancy for the Christmas Season—an
oft-told tale with a wistful twistful of Something
that left the Earth with a wing and a prayer.
Earth
was so far away that
it wasn't visible. Even the
sun was only a twinkle. But this
vast distance did not mean that
isolation could endure forever.
Instruments within the ship intercepted
radio broadcasts and,
within the hour, early TV signals.
Machines compiled dictionaries
and grammars and began
translating the major languages.
The history of the planet was
tabulated as facts became available.
The course of the ship changed
slightly; it was not much out of
the way to swing nearer Earth.
For days the two within the ship
listened and watched with little
comment. They had to decide
soon.
"We've got to make or break,"
said the first alien.
"You know what I'm in favor
of," said the second.
"I can guess," said Ethaniel,
who had spoken first. "The place
is a complete mess. They've never
done anything except fight
each other—and invent better
weapons."
"It's not what they've done,"
said Bal, the second alien. "It's
what they're going to do, with
that big bomb."
"The more reason for stopping,"
said Ethaniel. "The big
bomb can destroy them. Without
our help they may do just that."
"I may remind you that in two
months twenty-nine days we're
due in Willafours," said Bal.
"Without looking at the charts
I can tell you we still have more
than a hundred light-years to
go."
"A week," said Ethaniel. "We
can spare a week and still get
there on time."
"A week?" said Bal. "To settle
their problems? They've had two
world wars in one generation
and that the third and final one
is coming up you can't help feeling
in everything they do."
"It won't take much," said
Ethaniel. "The wrong diplomatic
move, or a trigger-happy soldier
could set it off. And it wouldn't
have to be deliberate. A meteor
shower could pass over and their
clumsy instruments could interpret
it as an all-out enemy
attack."
"Too bad," said Bal. "We'll
just have to forget there ever
was such a planet as Earth."
"Could you? Forget so many
people?"
"I'm doing it," said Bal. "Just
give them a little time and they
won't be here to remind me that
I have a conscience."
"My memory isn't convenient,"
said Ethaniel. "I ask you
to look at them."
Bal rustled, flicking the screen
intently. "Very much like ourselves,"
he said at last. "A bit
shorter perhaps, and most certainly
incomplete. Except for the
one thing they lack, and that's
quite odd, they seem exactly like
us. Is that what you wanted me
to say?"
"It is. The fact that they are
an incomplete version of ourselves
touches me. They actually
seem defenseless, though I suppose
they're not."
"Tough," said Bal. "Nothing
we can do about it."
"There is. We can give them
a week."
"In a week we can't negate
their entire history. We can't
begin to undo the effect of the
big bomb."
"You can't tell," said Ethaniel.
"We can look things over."
"And then what? How much
authority do we have?"
"Very little," conceded Ethaniel.
"Two minor officials on the
way to Willafours—and we run
directly into a problem no one
knew existed."
"And when we get to Willafours
we'll be busy. It will be a
long time before anyone comes
this way again."
"A very long time. There's
nothing in this region of space
our people want," said Ethaniel.
"And how long can Earth last?
Ten years? Even ten months?
The tension is building by the
hour."
"What can I say?" said Bal.
"I suppose we can stop and look
them over. We're not committing
ourselves by looking."
They went much closer to
Earth, not intending to commit
themselves. For a day they circled
the planet, avoiding radar
detection, which for them was
not difficult, testing, and sampling.
Finally Ethaniel looked up
from the monitor screen. "Any
conclusions?"
"What's there to think? It's
worse than I imagined."
"In what way?"
"Well, we knew they had the
big bomb. Atmospheric analysis
showed that as far away as we
were."
"I know."
"We also knew they could deliver
the big bomb, presumably
by some sort of aircraft."
"That was almost a certainty.
They'd have no use for the big
bomb without aircraft."
"What's worse is that I now
find they also have missiles,
range one thousand miles and
upward. They either have or are
near a primitive form of space
travel."
"Bad," said Ethaniel. "Sitting
there, wondering when it's going
to hit them. Nervousness could
set it off."
"It could, and the missiles
make it worse," said Bal. "What
did you find out at your end?"
"Nothing worthwhile. I was
looking at the people while you
were investigating their weapons."
"You must think something."
"I wish I knew what to think.
There's so little time," Ethaniel
said. "Language isn't the difficulty.
Our machines translate
their languages easily and I've
taken a cram course in two or
three of them. But that's not
enough, looking at a few plays,
listening to advertisements, music,
and news bulletins. I should
go down and live among them,
read books, talk to scholars, work
with them, play."
"You could do that and you'd
really get to know them. But
that takes time—and we don't
have it."
"I realize that."
"A flat yes or no," said Bal.
"No. We can't help them," said
Ethaniel. "There is nothing we
can do for them—but we have to
try."
"Sure, I knew it before we
started," said Bal. "It's happened
before. We take the trouble to
find out what a people are like
and when we can't help them we
feel bad. It's going to be that
way again." He rose and stretched.
"Well, give me an hour to
think of some way of going at
it."
It was longer than that before
they met again. In the meantime
the ship moved much closer to
Earth. They no longer needed instruments
to see it. The planet
revolved outside the visionports.
The southern plains were green,
coursed with rivers; the oceans
were blue; and much of the
northern hemisphere was glistening
white. Ragged clouds covered
the pole, and a dirty pall
spread over the mid-regions of
the north.
"I haven't thought of anything
brilliant," said Ethaniel.
"Nor I," said Bal. "We're going
to have to go down there
cold. And it will be cold."
"Yes. It's their winter."
"I did have an idea," said Bal.
"What about going down as supernatural
beings?"
"Hardly," said Ethaniel. "A
hundred years ago it might have
worked. Today they have satellites.
They are not primitives."
"I suppose you're right," said
Bal. "I did think we ought to
take advantage of our physical
differences."
"If we could I'd be all for it.
But these people are rough and
desperate. They wouldn't be
fooled by anything that crude."
"Well, you're calling it," said
Bal.
"All right," said Ethaniel.
"You take one side and I the
other. We'll tell them bluntly
what they'll have to do if they're
going to survive, how they can
keep their planet in one piece so
they can live on it."
"That'll go over big. Advice is
always popular."
"Can't help it. That's all we
have time for."
"Special instructions?"
"None. We leave the ship here
and go down in separate landing
craft. You can talk with me any
time you want to through our
communications, but don't unless
you have to."
"They can't intercept the
beams we use."
"They can't, and even if they
did they wouldn't know what to
do with our language. I want
them to think that we don't
need
to talk things over."
"I get it. Makes us seem better
than we are. They think we know
exactly what we're doing even
though we don't."
"If we're lucky they'll think
that."
Bal looked out of the port at
the planet below. "It's going to
be cold where I'm going. You too.
Sure we don't want to change
our plans and land in the southern
hemisphere? It's summer
there."
"I'm afraid not. The great
powers are in the north. They
are the ones we have to reach to
do the job."
"Yeah, but I was thinking of
that holiday you mentioned.
We'll be running straight into it.
That won't help us any."
"I know, they don't like their
holidays interrupted. It can't be
helped. We can't wait until it's
over."
"I'm aware of that," said Bal.
"Fill me in on that holiday, anything
I ought to know. Probably
religious in origin. That so?"
"It was religious a long time
ago," said Ethaniel. "I didn't
learn anything exact from radio
and TV. Now it seems to be
chiefly a time for eating, office
parties, and selling merchandise."
"I see. It has become a business
holiday."
"That's a good description. I
didn't get as much of it as I
ought to have. I was busy studying
the people, and they're hard
to pin down."
"I see. I was thinking there
might be some way we could tie
ourselves in with this holiday.
Make it work for us."
"If there is I haven't thought
of it."
"You ought to know. You're
running this one." Bal looked
down at the planet. Clouds were
beginning to form at the twilight
edge. "I hate to go down
and leave the ship up here with
no one in it."
"They can't touch it. No matter
how they develop in the next
hundred years they still won't be
able to get in or damage it in
any way."
"It's myself I'm thinking
about. Down there, alone."
"I'll be with you. On the other
side of the Earth."
"That's not very close. I'd like
it better if there were someone
in the ship to bring it down in a
hurry if things get rough. They
don't think much of each other.
I don't imagine they'll like aliens
any better."
"They may be unfriendly,"
Ethaniel acknowledged. Now he
switched a monitor screen until
he looked at the slope of a mountain.
It was snowing and men
were cutting small green trees in
the snow. "I've thought of a
trick."
"If it saves my neck I'm for
it."
"I don't guarantee anything,"
said Ethaniel. "This is what I
was thinking of: instead of hiding
the ship against the sun
where there's little chance it will
be seen, we'll make sure that
they do see it. Let's take it
around to the night side of the
planet and light it up."
"Say, pretty good," said Bal.
"They can't imagine that we'd
light up an unmanned ship," said
Ethaniel. "Even if the thought
should occur to them they'll have
no way of checking it. Also, they
won't be eager to harm us with
our ship shining down on them."
"That's thinking," said Bal,
moving to the controls. "I'll move
the ship over where they can see
it best and then I'll light it up.
I'll really light it up."
"Don't spare power."
"Don't worry about that.
They'll see it. Everybody on
Earth will see it." Later, with the
ship in position, glowing against
the darkness of space, pulsating
with light, Bal said: "You know,
I feel better about this. We may
pull it off. Lighting the ship may
be just the help we need."
"It's not we who need help, but
the people of Earth," said Ethaniel.
"See you in five days." With
that he entered a small landing
craft, which left a faintly luminescent
trail as it plunged toward
Earth. As soon as it was
safe to do so, Bal left in another
craft, heading for the other side
of the planet.
And the spaceship circled
Earth, unmanned, blazing and
pulsing with light. No star in the
winter skies of the planet below
could equal it in brilliancy. Once
a man-made satellite came near
but it was dim and was lost sight
of by the people below. During
the day the ship was visible as
a bright spot of light. At evening
it seemed to burn through
the sunset colors.
And the ship circled on,
bright, shining, seeming to be a
little piece clipped from the center
of a star and brought near
Earth to illuminate it. Never, or
seldom, had Earth seen anything
like it.
In five days the two small landing
craft that had left it arched
up from Earth and joined the
orbit of the large ship. The two
small craft slid inside the large
one and doors closed behind
them. In a short time the aliens
met again.
"We did it," said Bal exultantly
as he came in. "I don't know
how we did it and I thought we
were going to fail but at the last
minute they came through."
Ethaniel smiled. "I'm tired,"
he said, rustling.
"Me too, but mostly I'm cold,"
said Bal, shivering. "Snow.
Nothing but snow wherever I
went. Miserable climate. And yet
you had me go out walking after
that first day."
"From my own experience it
seemed to be a good idea," said
Ethaniel. "If I went out walking
one day I noticed that the next
day the officials were much more
cooperative. If it worked for me
I thought it might help you."
"It did. I don't know why, but
it did," said Bal. "Anyway, this
agreement they made isn't the
best but I think it will keep them
from destroying themselves."
"It's as much as we can expect,"
said Ethaniel. "They may
have small wars after this, but
never the big one. In fifty or a
hundred years we can come back
and see how much they've
learned."
"I'm not sure I want to," said
Bal. "Say, what's an angel?"
"Why?"
"When I went out walking
people stopped to look. Some
knelt in the snow and called me
an angel."
"Something like that happened
to me," said Ethaniel.
"I didn't get it but I didn't let
it upset me," said Bal. "I smiled
at them and went about my business."
He shivered again. "It was
always cold. I walked out, but
sometimes I flew back. I hope
that was all right."
In the cabin Bal spread his
great wings. Renaissance painters
had never seen his like but
knew exactly how he looked. In
their paintings they had pictured
him innumerable times.
"I don't think it hurt us that
you flew," said Ethaniel. "I did
so myself occasionally."
"But you don't know what an
angel is?"
"No. I didn't have time to find
out. Some creature of their folklore
I suppose. You know, except
for our wings they're very much
like ourselves. Their legends are
bound to resemble ours."
"Sure," said Bal. "Anyway,
peace on Earth."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The humans did come to a formal agreement before the aliens left them. | The humans realized they were not alone in the universe. They dropped all their petty differences to defend themselves against an alien invasion. | The humans painted many pictures of the aliens to commemorate the historic event of first contact, a sign they will hold to the agreement made. | The humans were kneeling before the aliens in deference, a sign that they will hold to the agreement made. | 0 |
24966_5VVG9W0A_1 | Why is Alan in the jungle? | SURVIVAL
TACTICS
By AL SEVCIK
ILLUSTRATOR NOVICK
The robots were built to serve
Man; to do his work, see to his
comforts, make smooth his way.
Then the robots figured out an
additional service—putting Man
out of his misery.
There
was a sudden crash
that hung sharply in the air,
as if a tree had been hit by
lightning some distance away.
Then another. Alan stopped,
puzzled. Two more blasts, quickly
together, and the sound of a
scream faintly.
Frowning, worrying about the
sounds, Alan momentarily forgot
to watch his step until his foot
suddenly plunged into an ant
hill, throwing him to the jungle
floor. "Damn!" He cursed again,
for the tenth time, and stood
uncertainly in the dimness.
From tall, moss-shrouded trees,
wrist-thick vines hung quietly,
scraping the spongy ground like
the tentacles of some monstrous
tree-bound octopus. Fitful little
plants grew straggly in the
shadows of the mossy trunks,
forming a dense underbrush that
made walking difficult. At midday
some few of the blue sun's
rays filtered through to the
jungle floor, but now, late afternoon
on the planet, the shadows
were long and gloomy.
Alan peered around him at the
vine-draped shadows, listening
to the soft rustlings and faint
twig-snappings of life in the
jungle. Two short, popping
sounds echoed across the stillness,
drowned out almost immediately
and silenced by an
explosive crash. Alan started,
"Blaster fighting! But it can't
be!"
Suddenly anxious, he slashed
a hurried X in one of the trees
to mark his position then turned
to follow a line of similar marks
back through the jungle. He
tried to run, but vines blocked
his way and woody shrubs
caught at his legs, tripping him
and holding him back. Then,
through the trees he saw the
clearing of the camp site, the
temporary home for the scout
ship and the eleven men who,
with Alan, were the only humans
on the jungle planet, Waiamea.
Stepping through the low
shrubbery at the edge of the
site, he looked across the open
area to the two temporary structures,
the camp headquarters
where the power supplies and
the computer were; and the
sleeping quarters. Beyond, nose
high, stood the silver scout ship
that had brought the advance
exploratory party of scientists
and technicians to Waiamea
three days before. Except for a
few of the killer robots rolling
slowly around the camp site on
their quiet treads, there was no
one about.
"So, they've finally got those
things working." Alan smiled
slightly. "Guess that means I
owe Pete a bourbon-and-soda
for sure. Anybody who can
build a robot that hunts by homing
in on animals' mind impulses ..."
He stepped forward
just as a roar of blue flame dissolved
the branches of a tree,
barely above his head.
Without pausing to think,
Alan leaped back, and fell
sprawling over a bush just as
one of the robots rolled silently
up from the right, lowering its
blaster barrel to aim directly at
his head. Alan froze. "My God,
Pete built those things wrong!"
Suddenly a screeching whirlwind
of claws and teeth hurled
itself from the smoldering
branches and crashed against the
robot, clawing insanely at the
antenna and blaster barrel.
With an awkward jerk the robot
swung around and fired its blaster,
completely dissolving the
lower half of the cat creature
which had clung across the barrel.
But the back pressure of the
cat's body overloaded the discharge
circuits. The robot started
to shake, then clicked sharply
as an overload relay snapped
and shorted the blaster cells.
The killer turned and rolled back
towards the camp, leaving Alan
alone.
Shakily, Alan crawled a few
feet back into the undergrowth
where he could lie and watch the
camp, but not himself be seen.
Though visibility didn't make
any difference to the robots, he
felt safer, somehow, hidden. He
knew now what the shooting
sounds had been and why there
hadn't been anyone around the
camp site. A charred blob lying
in the grass of the clearing confirmed
his hypothesis. His stomach
felt sick.
"I suppose," he muttered to
himself, "that Pete assembled
these robots in a batch and then
activated them all at once, probably
never living to realize that
they're tuned to pick up human
brain waves, too. Damn!
Damn!" His eyes blurred and
he slammed his fist into the soft
earth.
When he raised his eyes again
the jungle was perceptibly darker.
Stealthy rustlings in the
shadows grew louder with the
setting sun. Branches snapped
unaccountably in the trees overhead
and every now and then
leaves or a twig fell softly to the
ground, close to where he lay.
Reaching into his jacket, Alan
fingered his pocket blaster. He
pulled it out and held it in his
right hand. "This pop gun
wouldn't even singe a robot, but
it just might stop one of those
pumas."
They said the blast with your name on it would find
you anywhere. This looked like Alan's blast.
Slowly Alan looked around,
sizing up his situation. Behind
him the dark jungle rustled forbiddingly.
He shuddered. "Not a
very healthy spot to spend the
night. On the other hand, I certainly
can't get to the camp with
a pack of mind-activated mechanical
killers running around.
If I can just hold out until morning,
when the big ship arrives ...
The big ship! Good
Lord, Peggy!" He turned white;
oily sweat punctuated his forehead.
Peggy, arriving tomorrow
with the other colonists, the
wives and kids! The metal killers,
tuned to blast any living
flesh, would murder them the
instant they stepped from the
ship!
A pretty girl, Peggy, the girl
he'd married just three weeks
ago. He still couldn't believe it.
It was crazy, he supposed, to
marry a girl and then take off
for an unknown planet, with her
to follow, to try to create a home
in a jungle clearing. Crazy maybe,
but Peggy and her green eyes
that changed color with the
light, with her soft brown hair,
and her happy smile, had ended
thirty years of loneliness and
had, at last, given him a reason
for living. "Not to be killed!"
Alan unclenched his fists and
wiped his palms, bloody where
his fingernails had dug into the
flesh.
There was a slight creak above
him like the protesting of a
branch too heavily laden. Blaster
ready, Alan rolled over onto his
back. In the movement, his elbow
struck the top of a small
earthy mound and he was instantly
engulfed in a swarm of
locust-like insects that beat disgustingly
against his eyes and
mouth. "Fagh!" Waving his
arms before his face he jumped
up and backwards, away from
the bugs. As he did so, a dark
shapeless thing plopped from
the trees onto the spot where he
had been lying stretched out.
Then, like an ambient fungus,
it slithered off into the jungle
undergrowth.
For a split second the jungle
stood frozen in a brilliant blue
flash, followed by the sharp report
of a blaster. Then another.
Alan whirled, startled. The
planet's double moon had risen
and he could see a robot rolling
slowly across the clearing in his
general direction, blasting indiscriminately
at whatever mind
impulses came within its pickup
range, birds, insects, anything.
Six or seven others also left the
camp headquarters area and
headed for the jungle, each to a
slightly different spot.
Apparently the robot hadn't
sensed him yet, but Alan didn't
know what the effective range
of its pickup devices was. He
began to slide back into the
jungle. Minutes later, looking
back he saw that the machine,
though several hundred yards
away, had altered its course and
was now headed directly for
him.
His stomach tightened. Panic.
The dank, musty smell of the
jungle seemed for an instant to
thicken and choke in his throat.
Then he thought of the big ship
landing in the morning, settling
down slowly after a lonely two-week
voyage. He thought of a
brown-haired girl crowding with
the others to the gangway, eager
to embrace the new planet, and
the next instant a charred nothing,
unrecognizable, the victim
of a design error or a misplaced
wire in a machine. "I have to
try," he said aloud. "I have to
try." He moved into the blackness.
Powerful as a small tank, the
killer robot was equipped to
crush, slash, and burn its way
through undergrowth. Nevertheless,
it was slowed by the
larger trees and the thick, clinging
vines, and Alan found that
he could manage to keep ahead
of it, barely out of blaster range.
Only, the robot didn't get tired.
Alan did.
The twin moons cast pale, deceptive
shadows that wavered
and danced across the jungle
floor, hiding debris that tripped
him and often sent him sprawling
into the dark. Sharp-edged
growths tore at his face and
clothes, and insects attracted by
the blood matted against his
pants and shirt. Behind, the robot
crashed imperturbably after
him, lighting the night with fitful
blaster flashes as some
winged or legged life came within
its range.
There was movement also, in
the darkness beside him, scrapings
and rustlings and an occasional
low, throaty sound like an
angry cat. Alan's fingers tensed
on his pocket blaster. Swift
shadowy forms moved quickly in
the shrubs and the growling became
suddenly louder. He fired
twice, blindly, into the undergrowth.
Sharp screams punctuated
the electric blue discharge as
a pack of small feline creatures
leaped snarling and clawing
back into the night.
Mentally, Alan tried to figure
the charge remaining in his blaster.
There wouldn't be much.
"Enough for a few more shots,
maybe. Why the devil didn't I
load in fresh cells this morning!"
The robot crashed on, louder
now, gaining on the tired human.
Legs aching and bruised,
stinging from insect bites, Alan
tried to force himself to run
holding his hands in front of
him like a child in the dark. His
foot tripped on a barely visible
insect hill and a winged swarm
exploded around him. Startled,
Alan jerked sideways, crashing
his head against a tree. He
clutched at the bark for a second,
dazed, then his knees
buckled. His blaster fell into the
shadows.
The robot crashed loudly behind
him now. Without stopping
to think, Alan fumbled along the
ground after his gun, straining
his eyes in the darkness. He
found it just a couple of feet to
one side, against the base of a
small bush. Just as his fingers
closed upon the barrel his other
hand slipped into something
sticky that splashed over his
forearm. He screamed in pain
and leaped back, trying frantically
to wipe the clinging,
burning blackness off his arm.
Patches of black scraped off onto
branches and vines, but the rest
spread slowly over his arm as
agonizing as hot acid, or as flesh
being ripped away layer by
layer.
Almost blinded by pain, whimpering,
Alan stumbled forward.
Sharp muscle spasms shot from
his shoulder across his back and
chest. Tears streamed across his
cheeks.
A blue arc slashed at the trees
a mere hundred yards behind.
He screamed at the blast. "Damn
you, Pete! Damn your robots!
Damn, damn ... Oh, Peggy!"
He stepped into emptiness.
Coolness. Wet. Slowly, washed
by the water, the pain began to
fall away. He wanted to lie there
forever in the dark, cool, wetness.
For ever, and ever, and ...
The air thundered.
In the dim light he could see
the banks of the stream, higher
than a man, muddy and loose.
Growing right to the edge of the
banks, the jungle reached out
with hairy, disjointed arms as
if to snag even the dirty little
stream that passed so timidly
through its domain.
Alan, lying in the mud of the
stream bed, felt the earth shake
as the heavy little robot rolled
slowly and inexorably towards
him. "The Lord High Executioner,"
he thought, "in battle
dress." He tried to stand but his
legs were almost too weak and
his arm felt numb. "I'll drown
him," he said aloud. "I'll drown
the Lord High Executioner." He
laughed. Then his mind cleared.
He remembered where he was.
Alan trembled. For the first
time in his life he understood
what it was to live, because for
the first time he realized that he
would sometime die. In other
times and circumstances he
might put it off for a while, for
months or years, but eventually,
as now, he would have to watch,
still and helpless, while death
came creeping. Then, at thirty,
Alan became a man.
"Dammit, no law says I have
to flame-out
now
!" He forced
himself to rise, forced his legs
to stand, struggling painfully in
the shin-deep ooze. He worked
his way to the bank and began to
dig frenziedly, chest high, about
two feet below the edge.
His arm where the black thing
had been was swollen and tender,
but he forced his hands to dig,
dig, dig, cursing and crying to
hide the pain, and biting his
lips, ignoring the salty taste of
blood. The soft earth crumbled
under his hands until he had a
small cave about three feet deep
in the bank. Beyond that the
soil was held too tightly by the
roots from above and he had to
stop.
The air crackled blue and a
tree crashed heavily past Alan
into the stream. Above him on
the bank, silhouetting against
the moons, the killer robot stopped
and its blaster swivelled
slowly down. Frantically, Alan
hugged the bank as a shaft of
pure electricity arced over him,
sliced into the water, and exploded
in a cloud of steam. The
robot shook for a second, its
blaster muzzle lifted erratically
and for an instant it seemed almost
out of control, then it
quieted and the muzzle again
pointed down.
Pressing with all his might,
Alan slid slowly along the bank
inches at a time, away from the
machine above. Its muzzle turned
to follow him but the edge of
the bank blocked its aim. Grinding
forward a couple of feet,
slightly overhanging the bank,
the robot fired again. For a split
second Alan seemed engulfed in
flame; the heat of hell singed his
head and back, and mud boiled
in the bank by his arm.
Again the robot trembled. It
jerked forward a foot and its
blaster swung slightly away. But
only for a moment. Then the gun
swung back again.
Suddenly, as if sensing something
wrong, its tracks slammed
into reverse. It stood poised for
a second, its treads spinning
crazily as the earth collapsed underneath
it, where Alan had
dug, then it fell with a heavy
splash into the mud, ten feet
from where Alan stood.
Without hesitation Alan
threw himself across the blaster
housing, frantically locking his
arms around the barrel as the
robot's treads churned furiously
in the sticky mud, causing it to
buck and plunge like a Brahma
bull. The treads stopped and the
blaster jerked upwards wrenching
Alan's arms, then slammed
down. Then the whole housing
whirled around and around, tilting
alternately up and down like
a steel-skinned water monster
trying to dislodge a tenacious
crab, while Alan, arms and legs
wrapped tightly around the blaster
barrel and housing, pressed
fiercely against the robot's metal
skin.
Slowly, trying to anticipate
and shift his weight with the
spinning plunges, Alan worked
his hand down to his right hip.
He fumbled for the sheath clipped
to his belt, found it, and extracted
a stubby hunting knife.
Sweat and blood in his eyes,
hardly able to move on the wildly
swinging turret, he felt down
the sides to the thin crack between
the revolving housing and
the stationary portion of the robot.
With a quick prayer he
jammed in the knife blade—and
was whipped headlong into the
mud as the turret literally snapped
to a stop.
The earth, jungle and moons
spun in a pinwheeled blur,
slowed, and settled to their proper
places. Standing in the sticky,
sweet-smelling ooze, Alan eyed
the robot apprehensively. Half
buried in mud, it stood quiet in
the shadowy light except for an
occasional, almost spasmodic
jerk of its blaster barrel. For
the first time that night Alan
allowed himself a slight smile.
"A blade in the old gear box,
eh? How does that feel, boy?"
He turned. "Well, I'd better
get out of here before the knife
slips or the monster cooks up
some more tricks with whatever
it's got for a brain." Digging
little footholds in the soft bank,
he climbed up and stood once
again in the rustling jungle
darkness.
"I wonder," he thought, "how
Pete could cram enough brain
into one of those things to make
it hunt and track so perfectly."
He tried to visualize the computing
circuits needed for the
operation of its tracking mechanism
alone. "There just isn't
room for the electronics. You'd
need a computer as big as the
one at camp headquarters."
In the distance the sky blazed
as a blaster roared in the jungle.
Then Alan heard the approaching
robot, crunching and snapping
its way through the undergrowth
like an onrushing forest
fire. He froze. "Good Lord!
They communicate with each
other! The one I jammed must
be calling others to help."
He began to move along the
bank, away from the crashing
sounds. Suddenly he stopped, his
eyes widened. "Of course! Radio!
I'll bet anything they're
automatically controlled by the
camp computer. That's where
their brain is!" He paused.
"Then, if that were put out of
commission ..." He jerked away
from the bank and half ran, half
pulled himself through the undergrowth
towards the camp.
Trees exploded to his left as
another robot fired in his direction,
too far away to be effective
but churning towards him
through the blackness.
Alan changed direction slightly
to follow a line between the
two robots coming up from
either side, behind him. His eyes
were well accustomed to the dark
now, and he managed to dodge
most of the shadowy vines and
branches before they could snag
or trip him. Even so, he stumbled
in the wiry underbrush and
his legs were a mass of stinging
slashes from ankle to thigh.
The crashing rumble of the
killer robots shook the night behind
him, nearer sometimes,
then falling slightly back, but
following constantly, more
unshakable than bloodhounds
because a man can sometimes cover
a scent, but no man can stop his
thoughts. Intermittently, like
photographers' strobes, blue
flashes would light the jungle
about him. Then, for seconds
afterwards his eyes would see
dancing streaks of yellow and
sharp multi-colored pinwheels
that alternately shrunk and expanded
as if in a surrealist's
nightmare. Alan would have to
pause and squeeze his eyelids
tight shut before he could see
again, and the robots would
move a little closer.
To his right the trees silhouetted
briefly against brilliance as
a third robot slowly moved up
in the distance. Without thinking,
Alan turned slightly to the
left, then froze in momentary
panic. "I should be at the camp
now. Damn, what direction am
I going?" He tried to think
back, to visualize the twists and
turns he'd taken in the jungle.
"All I need is to get lost."
He pictured the camp computer
with no one to stop it, automatically
sending its robots in
wider and wider forays, slowly
wiping every trace of life from
the planet. Technologically advanced
machines doing the job
for which they were built, completely,
thoroughly, without feeling,
and without human masters
to separate sense from futility.
Finally parts would wear out,
circuits would short, and one by
one the killers would crunch to
a halt. A few birds would still
fly then, but a unique animal
life, rare in the universe, would
exist no more. And the bones of
children, eager girls, and their
men would also lie, beside a
rusty hulk, beneath the alien
sun.
"Peggy!"
As if in answer, a tree beside
him breathed fire, then exploded.
In the brief flash of the
blaster shot, Alan saw the steel
glint of a robot only a hundred
yards away, much nearer than
he had thought. "Thank heaven
for trees!" He stepped back, felt
his foot catch in something,
clutched futilely at some leaves
and fell heavily.
Pain danced up his leg as he
grabbed his ankle. Quickly he
felt the throbbing flesh. "Damn
the rotten luck, anyway!" He
blinked the pain tears from his
eyes and looked up—into a robot's
blaster, jutting out of the
foliage, thirty yards away.
Instinctively, in one motion
Alan grabbed his pocket blaster
and fired. To his amazement the
robot jerked back, its gun wobbled
and started to tilt away.
Then, getting itself under control,
it swung back again to face
Alan. He fired again, and again
the robot reacted. It seemed familiar
somehow. Then he remembered
the robot on the river
bank, jiggling and swaying for
seconds after each shot. "Of
course!" He cursed himself for
missing the obvious. "The blaster
static blanks out radio
transmission from the computer
for a few seconds. They even do
it to themselves!"
Firing intermittently, he
pulled himself upright and hobbled
ahead through the bush.
The robot shook spasmodically
with each shot, its gun tilted upward
at an awkward angle.
Then, unexpectedly, Alan saw
stars, real stars brilliant in the
night sky, and half dragging his
swelling leg he stumbled out of
the jungle into the camp clearing.
Ahead, across fifty yards of
grass stood the headquarters
building, housing the robot-controlling
computer. Still firing at
short intervals he started across
the clearing, gritting his teeth
at every step.
Straining every muscle in
spite of the agonizing pain, Alan
forced himself to a limping run
across the uneven ground, carefully
avoiding the insect hills
that jutted up through the grass.
From the corner of his eye he
saw another of the robots standing
shakily in the dark edge of
the jungle waiting, it seemed,
for his small blaster to run dry.
"Be damned! You can't win
now!" Alan yelled between blaster
shots, almost irrational from
the pain that ripped jaggedly
through his leg. Then it happened.
A few feet from the
building's door his blaster quit.
A click. A faint hiss when he
frantically jerked the trigger
again and again, and the spent
cells released themselves from
the device, falling in the grass
at his feet. He dropped the useless
gun.
"No!" He threw himself on
the ground as a new robot suddenly
appeared around the edge
of the building a few feet away,
aimed, and fired. Air burned
over Alan's back and ozone tingled
in his nostrils.
Blinding itself for a few seconds
with its own blaster static,
the robot paused momentarily,
jiggling in place. In this
instant, Alan jammed his hands
into an insect hill and hurled the
pile of dirt and insects directly
at the robot's antenna. In a flash,
hundreds of the winged things
erupted angrily from the hole in
a swarming cloud, each part of
which was a speck of life
transmitting mental energy to the
robot's pickup devices.
Confused by the sudden dispersion
of mind impulses, the
robot fired erratically as Alan
crouched and raced painfully for
the door. It fired again, closer,
as he fumbled with the lock
release. Jagged bits of plastic and
stone ripped past him, torn loose
by the blast.
Frantically, Alan slammed
open the door as the robot, sensing
him strongly now, aimed
point blank. He saw nothing, his
mind thought of nothing but the
red-clad safety switch mounted
beside the computer. Time stopped.
There was nothing else in
the world. He half-jumped, half-fell
towards it, slowly, in tenths
of seconds that seemed measured
out in years.
The universe went black.
Later. Brilliance pressed upon
his eyes. Then pain returned, a
multi-hurting thing that crawled
through his body and dragged
ragged tentacles across his
brain. He moaned.
A voice spoke hollowly in the
distance. "He's waking. Call his
wife."
Alan opened his eyes in a
white room; a white light hung
over his head. Beside him, looking
down with a rueful smile,
stood a young man wearing
space medical insignia. "Yes,"
he acknowledged the question in
Alan's eyes, "you hit the switch.
That was three days ago. When
you're up again we'd all like to
thank you."
Suddenly a sobbing-laughing
green-eyed girl was pressed
tightly against him. Neither of
them spoke. They couldn't. There
was too much to say.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
October 1958. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Alan is hiding from the killer robots in the jungle. | Alan is with a group of colonists, who are going to build a new colony on the jungle planet. | Alan is hunting pumas in the jungle. | Alan is camping with friends in the jungle. | 1 |
24966_5VVG9W0A_2 | Why is Alan so surprised to hear blaster fighting? | SURVIVAL
TACTICS
By AL SEVCIK
ILLUSTRATOR NOVICK
The robots were built to serve
Man; to do his work, see to his
comforts, make smooth his way.
Then the robots figured out an
additional service—putting Man
out of his misery.
There
was a sudden crash
that hung sharply in the air,
as if a tree had been hit by
lightning some distance away.
Then another. Alan stopped,
puzzled. Two more blasts, quickly
together, and the sound of a
scream faintly.
Frowning, worrying about the
sounds, Alan momentarily forgot
to watch his step until his foot
suddenly plunged into an ant
hill, throwing him to the jungle
floor. "Damn!" He cursed again,
for the tenth time, and stood
uncertainly in the dimness.
From tall, moss-shrouded trees,
wrist-thick vines hung quietly,
scraping the spongy ground like
the tentacles of some monstrous
tree-bound octopus. Fitful little
plants grew straggly in the
shadows of the mossy trunks,
forming a dense underbrush that
made walking difficult. At midday
some few of the blue sun's
rays filtered through to the
jungle floor, but now, late afternoon
on the planet, the shadows
were long and gloomy.
Alan peered around him at the
vine-draped shadows, listening
to the soft rustlings and faint
twig-snappings of life in the
jungle. Two short, popping
sounds echoed across the stillness,
drowned out almost immediately
and silenced by an
explosive crash. Alan started,
"Blaster fighting! But it can't
be!"
Suddenly anxious, he slashed
a hurried X in one of the trees
to mark his position then turned
to follow a line of similar marks
back through the jungle. He
tried to run, but vines blocked
his way and woody shrubs
caught at his legs, tripping him
and holding him back. Then,
through the trees he saw the
clearing of the camp site, the
temporary home for the scout
ship and the eleven men who,
with Alan, were the only humans
on the jungle planet, Waiamea.
Stepping through the low
shrubbery at the edge of the
site, he looked across the open
area to the two temporary structures,
the camp headquarters
where the power supplies and
the computer were; and the
sleeping quarters. Beyond, nose
high, stood the silver scout ship
that had brought the advance
exploratory party of scientists
and technicians to Waiamea
three days before. Except for a
few of the killer robots rolling
slowly around the camp site on
their quiet treads, there was no
one about.
"So, they've finally got those
things working." Alan smiled
slightly. "Guess that means I
owe Pete a bourbon-and-soda
for sure. Anybody who can
build a robot that hunts by homing
in on animals' mind impulses ..."
He stepped forward
just as a roar of blue flame dissolved
the branches of a tree,
barely above his head.
Without pausing to think,
Alan leaped back, and fell
sprawling over a bush just as
one of the robots rolled silently
up from the right, lowering its
blaster barrel to aim directly at
his head. Alan froze. "My God,
Pete built those things wrong!"
Suddenly a screeching whirlwind
of claws and teeth hurled
itself from the smoldering
branches and crashed against the
robot, clawing insanely at the
antenna and blaster barrel.
With an awkward jerk the robot
swung around and fired its blaster,
completely dissolving the
lower half of the cat creature
which had clung across the barrel.
But the back pressure of the
cat's body overloaded the discharge
circuits. The robot started
to shake, then clicked sharply
as an overload relay snapped
and shorted the blaster cells.
The killer turned and rolled back
towards the camp, leaving Alan
alone.
Shakily, Alan crawled a few
feet back into the undergrowth
where he could lie and watch the
camp, but not himself be seen.
Though visibility didn't make
any difference to the robots, he
felt safer, somehow, hidden. He
knew now what the shooting
sounds had been and why there
hadn't been anyone around the
camp site. A charred blob lying
in the grass of the clearing confirmed
his hypothesis. His stomach
felt sick.
"I suppose," he muttered to
himself, "that Pete assembled
these robots in a batch and then
activated them all at once, probably
never living to realize that
they're tuned to pick up human
brain waves, too. Damn!
Damn!" His eyes blurred and
he slammed his fist into the soft
earth.
When he raised his eyes again
the jungle was perceptibly darker.
Stealthy rustlings in the
shadows grew louder with the
setting sun. Branches snapped
unaccountably in the trees overhead
and every now and then
leaves or a twig fell softly to the
ground, close to where he lay.
Reaching into his jacket, Alan
fingered his pocket blaster. He
pulled it out and held it in his
right hand. "This pop gun
wouldn't even singe a robot, but
it just might stop one of those
pumas."
They said the blast with your name on it would find
you anywhere. This looked like Alan's blast.
Slowly Alan looked around,
sizing up his situation. Behind
him the dark jungle rustled forbiddingly.
He shuddered. "Not a
very healthy spot to spend the
night. On the other hand, I certainly
can't get to the camp with
a pack of mind-activated mechanical
killers running around.
If I can just hold out until morning,
when the big ship arrives ...
The big ship! Good
Lord, Peggy!" He turned white;
oily sweat punctuated his forehead.
Peggy, arriving tomorrow
with the other colonists, the
wives and kids! The metal killers,
tuned to blast any living
flesh, would murder them the
instant they stepped from the
ship!
A pretty girl, Peggy, the girl
he'd married just three weeks
ago. He still couldn't believe it.
It was crazy, he supposed, to
marry a girl and then take off
for an unknown planet, with her
to follow, to try to create a home
in a jungle clearing. Crazy maybe,
but Peggy and her green eyes
that changed color with the
light, with her soft brown hair,
and her happy smile, had ended
thirty years of loneliness and
had, at last, given him a reason
for living. "Not to be killed!"
Alan unclenched his fists and
wiped his palms, bloody where
his fingernails had dug into the
flesh.
There was a slight creak above
him like the protesting of a
branch too heavily laden. Blaster
ready, Alan rolled over onto his
back. In the movement, his elbow
struck the top of a small
earthy mound and he was instantly
engulfed in a swarm of
locust-like insects that beat disgustingly
against his eyes and
mouth. "Fagh!" Waving his
arms before his face he jumped
up and backwards, away from
the bugs. As he did so, a dark
shapeless thing plopped from
the trees onto the spot where he
had been lying stretched out.
Then, like an ambient fungus,
it slithered off into the jungle
undergrowth.
For a split second the jungle
stood frozen in a brilliant blue
flash, followed by the sharp report
of a blaster. Then another.
Alan whirled, startled. The
planet's double moon had risen
and he could see a robot rolling
slowly across the clearing in his
general direction, blasting indiscriminately
at whatever mind
impulses came within its pickup
range, birds, insects, anything.
Six or seven others also left the
camp headquarters area and
headed for the jungle, each to a
slightly different spot.
Apparently the robot hadn't
sensed him yet, but Alan didn't
know what the effective range
of its pickup devices was. He
began to slide back into the
jungle. Minutes later, looking
back he saw that the machine,
though several hundred yards
away, had altered its course and
was now headed directly for
him.
His stomach tightened. Panic.
The dank, musty smell of the
jungle seemed for an instant to
thicken and choke in his throat.
Then he thought of the big ship
landing in the morning, settling
down slowly after a lonely two-week
voyage. He thought of a
brown-haired girl crowding with
the others to the gangway, eager
to embrace the new planet, and
the next instant a charred nothing,
unrecognizable, the victim
of a design error or a misplaced
wire in a machine. "I have to
try," he said aloud. "I have to
try." He moved into the blackness.
Powerful as a small tank, the
killer robot was equipped to
crush, slash, and burn its way
through undergrowth. Nevertheless,
it was slowed by the
larger trees and the thick, clinging
vines, and Alan found that
he could manage to keep ahead
of it, barely out of blaster range.
Only, the robot didn't get tired.
Alan did.
The twin moons cast pale, deceptive
shadows that wavered
and danced across the jungle
floor, hiding debris that tripped
him and often sent him sprawling
into the dark. Sharp-edged
growths tore at his face and
clothes, and insects attracted by
the blood matted against his
pants and shirt. Behind, the robot
crashed imperturbably after
him, lighting the night with fitful
blaster flashes as some
winged or legged life came within
its range.
There was movement also, in
the darkness beside him, scrapings
and rustlings and an occasional
low, throaty sound like an
angry cat. Alan's fingers tensed
on his pocket blaster. Swift
shadowy forms moved quickly in
the shrubs and the growling became
suddenly louder. He fired
twice, blindly, into the undergrowth.
Sharp screams punctuated
the electric blue discharge as
a pack of small feline creatures
leaped snarling and clawing
back into the night.
Mentally, Alan tried to figure
the charge remaining in his blaster.
There wouldn't be much.
"Enough for a few more shots,
maybe. Why the devil didn't I
load in fresh cells this morning!"
The robot crashed on, louder
now, gaining on the tired human.
Legs aching and bruised,
stinging from insect bites, Alan
tried to force himself to run
holding his hands in front of
him like a child in the dark. His
foot tripped on a barely visible
insect hill and a winged swarm
exploded around him. Startled,
Alan jerked sideways, crashing
his head against a tree. He
clutched at the bark for a second,
dazed, then his knees
buckled. His blaster fell into the
shadows.
The robot crashed loudly behind
him now. Without stopping
to think, Alan fumbled along the
ground after his gun, straining
his eyes in the darkness. He
found it just a couple of feet to
one side, against the base of a
small bush. Just as his fingers
closed upon the barrel his other
hand slipped into something
sticky that splashed over his
forearm. He screamed in pain
and leaped back, trying frantically
to wipe the clinging,
burning blackness off his arm.
Patches of black scraped off onto
branches and vines, but the rest
spread slowly over his arm as
agonizing as hot acid, or as flesh
being ripped away layer by
layer.
Almost blinded by pain, whimpering,
Alan stumbled forward.
Sharp muscle spasms shot from
his shoulder across his back and
chest. Tears streamed across his
cheeks.
A blue arc slashed at the trees
a mere hundred yards behind.
He screamed at the blast. "Damn
you, Pete! Damn your robots!
Damn, damn ... Oh, Peggy!"
He stepped into emptiness.
Coolness. Wet. Slowly, washed
by the water, the pain began to
fall away. He wanted to lie there
forever in the dark, cool, wetness.
For ever, and ever, and ...
The air thundered.
In the dim light he could see
the banks of the stream, higher
than a man, muddy and loose.
Growing right to the edge of the
banks, the jungle reached out
with hairy, disjointed arms as
if to snag even the dirty little
stream that passed so timidly
through its domain.
Alan, lying in the mud of the
stream bed, felt the earth shake
as the heavy little robot rolled
slowly and inexorably towards
him. "The Lord High Executioner,"
he thought, "in battle
dress." He tried to stand but his
legs were almost too weak and
his arm felt numb. "I'll drown
him," he said aloud. "I'll drown
the Lord High Executioner." He
laughed. Then his mind cleared.
He remembered where he was.
Alan trembled. For the first
time in his life he understood
what it was to live, because for
the first time he realized that he
would sometime die. In other
times and circumstances he
might put it off for a while, for
months or years, but eventually,
as now, he would have to watch,
still and helpless, while death
came creeping. Then, at thirty,
Alan became a man.
"Dammit, no law says I have
to flame-out
now
!" He forced
himself to rise, forced his legs
to stand, struggling painfully in
the shin-deep ooze. He worked
his way to the bank and began to
dig frenziedly, chest high, about
two feet below the edge.
His arm where the black thing
had been was swollen and tender,
but he forced his hands to dig,
dig, dig, cursing and crying to
hide the pain, and biting his
lips, ignoring the salty taste of
blood. The soft earth crumbled
under his hands until he had a
small cave about three feet deep
in the bank. Beyond that the
soil was held too tightly by the
roots from above and he had to
stop.
The air crackled blue and a
tree crashed heavily past Alan
into the stream. Above him on
the bank, silhouetting against
the moons, the killer robot stopped
and its blaster swivelled
slowly down. Frantically, Alan
hugged the bank as a shaft of
pure electricity arced over him,
sliced into the water, and exploded
in a cloud of steam. The
robot shook for a second, its
blaster muzzle lifted erratically
and for an instant it seemed almost
out of control, then it
quieted and the muzzle again
pointed down.
Pressing with all his might,
Alan slid slowly along the bank
inches at a time, away from the
machine above. Its muzzle turned
to follow him but the edge of
the bank blocked its aim. Grinding
forward a couple of feet,
slightly overhanging the bank,
the robot fired again. For a split
second Alan seemed engulfed in
flame; the heat of hell singed his
head and back, and mud boiled
in the bank by his arm.
Again the robot trembled. It
jerked forward a foot and its
blaster swung slightly away. But
only for a moment. Then the gun
swung back again.
Suddenly, as if sensing something
wrong, its tracks slammed
into reverse. It stood poised for
a second, its treads spinning
crazily as the earth collapsed underneath
it, where Alan had
dug, then it fell with a heavy
splash into the mud, ten feet
from where Alan stood.
Without hesitation Alan
threw himself across the blaster
housing, frantically locking his
arms around the barrel as the
robot's treads churned furiously
in the sticky mud, causing it to
buck and plunge like a Brahma
bull. The treads stopped and the
blaster jerked upwards wrenching
Alan's arms, then slammed
down. Then the whole housing
whirled around and around, tilting
alternately up and down like
a steel-skinned water monster
trying to dislodge a tenacious
crab, while Alan, arms and legs
wrapped tightly around the blaster
barrel and housing, pressed
fiercely against the robot's metal
skin.
Slowly, trying to anticipate
and shift his weight with the
spinning plunges, Alan worked
his hand down to his right hip.
He fumbled for the sheath clipped
to his belt, found it, and extracted
a stubby hunting knife.
Sweat and blood in his eyes,
hardly able to move on the wildly
swinging turret, he felt down
the sides to the thin crack between
the revolving housing and
the stationary portion of the robot.
With a quick prayer he
jammed in the knife blade—and
was whipped headlong into the
mud as the turret literally snapped
to a stop.
The earth, jungle and moons
spun in a pinwheeled blur,
slowed, and settled to their proper
places. Standing in the sticky,
sweet-smelling ooze, Alan eyed
the robot apprehensively. Half
buried in mud, it stood quiet in
the shadowy light except for an
occasional, almost spasmodic
jerk of its blaster barrel. For
the first time that night Alan
allowed himself a slight smile.
"A blade in the old gear box,
eh? How does that feel, boy?"
He turned. "Well, I'd better
get out of here before the knife
slips or the monster cooks up
some more tricks with whatever
it's got for a brain." Digging
little footholds in the soft bank,
he climbed up and stood once
again in the rustling jungle
darkness.
"I wonder," he thought, "how
Pete could cram enough brain
into one of those things to make
it hunt and track so perfectly."
He tried to visualize the computing
circuits needed for the
operation of its tracking mechanism
alone. "There just isn't
room for the electronics. You'd
need a computer as big as the
one at camp headquarters."
In the distance the sky blazed
as a blaster roared in the jungle.
Then Alan heard the approaching
robot, crunching and snapping
its way through the undergrowth
like an onrushing forest
fire. He froze. "Good Lord!
They communicate with each
other! The one I jammed must
be calling others to help."
He began to move along the
bank, away from the crashing
sounds. Suddenly he stopped, his
eyes widened. "Of course! Radio!
I'll bet anything they're
automatically controlled by the
camp computer. That's where
their brain is!" He paused.
"Then, if that were put out of
commission ..." He jerked away
from the bank and half ran, half
pulled himself through the undergrowth
towards the camp.
Trees exploded to his left as
another robot fired in his direction,
too far away to be effective
but churning towards him
through the blackness.
Alan changed direction slightly
to follow a line between the
two robots coming up from
either side, behind him. His eyes
were well accustomed to the dark
now, and he managed to dodge
most of the shadowy vines and
branches before they could snag
or trip him. Even so, he stumbled
in the wiry underbrush and
his legs were a mass of stinging
slashes from ankle to thigh.
The crashing rumble of the
killer robots shook the night behind
him, nearer sometimes,
then falling slightly back, but
following constantly, more
unshakable than bloodhounds
because a man can sometimes cover
a scent, but no man can stop his
thoughts. Intermittently, like
photographers' strobes, blue
flashes would light the jungle
about him. Then, for seconds
afterwards his eyes would see
dancing streaks of yellow and
sharp multi-colored pinwheels
that alternately shrunk and expanded
as if in a surrealist's
nightmare. Alan would have to
pause and squeeze his eyelids
tight shut before he could see
again, and the robots would
move a little closer.
To his right the trees silhouetted
briefly against brilliance as
a third robot slowly moved up
in the distance. Without thinking,
Alan turned slightly to the
left, then froze in momentary
panic. "I should be at the camp
now. Damn, what direction am
I going?" He tried to think
back, to visualize the twists and
turns he'd taken in the jungle.
"All I need is to get lost."
He pictured the camp computer
with no one to stop it, automatically
sending its robots in
wider and wider forays, slowly
wiping every trace of life from
the planet. Technologically advanced
machines doing the job
for which they were built, completely,
thoroughly, without feeling,
and without human masters
to separate sense from futility.
Finally parts would wear out,
circuits would short, and one by
one the killers would crunch to
a halt. A few birds would still
fly then, but a unique animal
life, rare in the universe, would
exist no more. And the bones of
children, eager girls, and their
men would also lie, beside a
rusty hulk, beneath the alien
sun.
"Peggy!"
As if in answer, a tree beside
him breathed fire, then exploded.
In the brief flash of the
blaster shot, Alan saw the steel
glint of a robot only a hundred
yards away, much nearer than
he had thought. "Thank heaven
for trees!" He stepped back, felt
his foot catch in something,
clutched futilely at some leaves
and fell heavily.
Pain danced up his leg as he
grabbed his ankle. Quickly he
felt the throbbing flesh. "Damn
the rotten luck, anyway!" He
blinked the pain tears from his
eyes and looked up—into a robot's
blaster, jutting out of the
foliage, thirty yards away.
Instinctively, in one motion
Alan grabbed his pocket blaster
and fired. To his amazement the
robot jerked back, its gun wobbled
and started to tilt away.
Then, getting itself under control,
it swung back again to face
Alan. He fired again, and again
the robot reacted. It seemed familiar
somehow. Then he remembered
the robot on the river
bank, jiggling and swaying for
seconds after each shot. "Of
course!" He cursed himself for
missing the obvious. "The blaster
static blanks out radio
transmission from the computer
for a few seconds. They even do
it to themselves!"
Firing intermittently, he
pulled himself upright and hobbled
ahead through the bush.
The robot shook spasmodically
with each shot, its gun tilted upward
at an awkward angle.
Then, unexpectedly, Alan saw
stars, real stars brilliant in the
night sky, and half dragging his
swelling leg he stumbled out of
the jungle into the camp clearing.
Ahead, across fifty yards of
grass stood the headquarters
building, housing the robot-controlling
computer. Still firing at
short intervals he started across
the clearing, gritting his teeth
at every step.
Straining every muscle in
spite of the agonizing pain, Alan
forced himself to a limping run
across the uneven ground, carefully
avoiding the insect hills
that jutted up through the grass.
From the corner of his eye he
saw another of the robots standing
shakily in the dark edge of
the jungle waiting, it seemed,
for his small blaster to run dry.
"Be damned! You can't win
now!" Alan yelled between blaster
shots, almost irrational from
the pain that ripped jaggedly
through his leg. Then it happened.
A few feet from the
building's door his blaster quit.
A click. A faint hiss when he
frantically jerked the trigger
again and again, and the spent
cells released themselves from
the device, falling in the grass
at his feet. He dropped the useless
gun.
"No!" He threw himself on
the ground as a new robot suddenly
appeared around the edge
of the building a few feet away,
aimed, and fired. Air burned
over Alan's back and ozone tingled
in his nostrils.
Blinding itself for a few seconds
with its own blaster static,
the robot paused momentarily,
jiggling in place. In this
instant, Alan jammed his hands
into an insect hill and hurled the
pile of dirt and insects directly
at the robot's antenna. In a flash,
hundreds of the winged things
erupted angrily from the hole in
a swarming cloud, each part of
which was a speck of life
transmitting mental energy to the
robot's pickup devices.
Confused by the sudden dispersion
of mind impulses, the
robot fired erratically as Alan
crouched and raced painfully for
the door. It fired again, closer,
as he fumbled with the lock
release. Jagged bits of plastic and
stone ripped past him, torn loose
by the blast.
Frantically, Alan slammed
open the door as the robot, sensing
him strongly now, aimed
point blank. He saw nothing, his
mind thought of nothing but the
red-clad safety switch mounted
beside the computer. Time stopped.
There was nothing else in
the world. He half-jumped, half-fell
towards it, slowly, in tenths
of seconds that seemed measured
out in years.
The universe went black.
Later. Brilliance pressed upon
his eyes. Then pain returned, a
multi-hurting thing that crawled
through his body and dragged
ragged tentacles across his
brain. He moaned.
A voice spoke hollowly in the
distance. "He's waking. Call his
wife."
Alan opened his eyes in a
white room; a white light hung
over his head. Beside him, looking
down with a rueful smile,
stood a young man wearing
space medical insignia. "Yes,"
he acknowledged the question in
Alan's eyes, "you hit the switch.
That was three days ago. When
you're up again we'd all like to
thank you."
Suddenly a sobbing-laughing
green-eyed girl was pressed
tightly against him. Neither of
them spoke. They couldn't. There
was too much to say.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
October 1958. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Alan is surprised because he came with a team of scientists, not soldiers. | Alan is surprised because he was sure they had escaped the enemy soldiers when they ran into the jungle for cover. | Alan is surprised because the planet is only inhabited by animals, not intelligent life. | Alan is surprised because the Waiameans don't have advanced weapons capabilities. | 2 |
24966_5VVG9W0A_3 | Why are the robots hunting Alan? | SURVIVAL
TACTICS
By AL SEVCIK
ILLUSTRATOR NOVICK
The robots were built to serve
Man; to do his work, see to his
comforts, make smooth his way.
Then the robots figured out an
additional service—putting Man
out of his misery.
There
was a sudden crash
that hung sharply in the air,
as if a tree had been hit by
lightning some distance away.
Then another. Alan stopped,
puzzled. Two more blasts, quickly
together, and the sound of a
scream faintly.
Frowning, worrying about the
sounds, Alan momentarily forgot
to watch his step until his foot
suddenly plunged into an ant
hill, throwing him to the jungle
floor. "Damn!" He cursed again,
for the tenth time, and stood
uncertainly in the dimness.
From tall, moss-shrouded trees,
wrist-thick vines hung quietly,
scraping the spongy ground like
the tentacles of some monstrous
tree-bound octopus. Fitful little
plants grew straggly in the
shadows of the mossy trunks,
forming a dense underbrush that
made walking difficult. At midday
some few of the blue sun's
rays filtered through to the
jungle floor, but now, late afternoon
on the planet, the shadows
were long and gloomy.
Alan peered around him at the
vine-draped shadows, listening
to the soft rustlings and faint
twig-snappings of life in the
jungle. Two short, popping
sounds echoed across the stillness,
drowned out almost immediately
and silenced by an
explosive crash. Alan started,
"Blaster fighting! But it can't
be!"
Suddenly anxious, he slashed
a hurried X in one of the trees
to mark his position then turned
to follow a line of similar marks
back through the jungle. He
tried to run, but vines blocked
his way and woody shrubs
caught at his legs, tripping him
and holding him back. Then,
through the trees he saw the
clearing of the camp site, the
temporary home for the scout
ship and the eleven men who,
with Alan, were the only humans
on the jungle planet, Waiamea.
Stepping through the low
shrubbery at the edge of the
site, he looked across the open
area to the two temporary structures,
the camp headquarters
where the power supplies and
the computer were; and the
sleeping quarters. Beyond, nose
high, stood the silver scout ship
that had brought the advance
exploratory party of scientists
and technicians to Waiamea
three days before. Except for a
few of the killer robots rolling
slowly around the camp site on
their quiet treads, there was no
one about.
"So, they've finally got those
things working." Alan smiled
slightly. "Guess that means I
owe Pete a bourbon-and-soda
for sure. Anybody who can
build a robot that hunts by homing
in on animals' mind impulses ..."
He stepped forward
just as a roar of blue flame dissolved
the branches of a tree,
barely above his head.
Without pausing to think,
Alan leaped back, and fell
sprawling over a bush just as
one of the robots rolled silently
up from the right, lowering its
blaster barrel to aim directly at
his head. Alan froze. "My God,
Pete built those things wrong!"
Suddenly a screeching whirlwind
of claws and teeth hurled
itself from the smoldering
branches and crashed against the
robot, clawing insanely at the
antenna and blaster barrel.
With an awkward jerk the robot
swung around and fired its blaster,
completely dissolving the
lower half of the cat creature
which had clung across the barrel.
But the back pressure of the
cat's body overloaded the discharge
circuits. The robot started
to shake, then clicked sharply
as an overload relay snapped
and shorted the blaster cells.
The killer turned and rolled back
towards the camp, leaving Alan
alone.
Shakily, Alan crawled a few
feet back into the undergrowth
where he could lie and watch the
camp, but not himself be seen.
Though visibility didn't make
any difference to the robots, he
felt safer, somehow, hidden. He
knew now what the shooting
sounds had been and why there
hadn't been anyone around the
camp site. A charred blob lying
in the grass of the clearing confirmed
his hypothesis. His stomach
felt sick.
"I suppose," he muttered to
himself, "that Pete assembled
these robots in a batch and then
activated them all at once, probably
never living to realize that
they're tuned to pick up human
brain waves, too. Damn!
Damn!" His eyes blurred and
he slammed his fist into the soft
earth.
When he raised his eyes again
the jungle was perceptibly darker.
Stealthy rustlings in the
shadows grew louder with the
setting sun. Branches snapped
unaccountably in the trees overhead
and every now and then
leaves or a twig fell softly to the
ground, close to where he lay.
Reaching into his jacket, Alan
fingered his pocket blaster. He
pulled it out and held it in his
right hand. "This pop gun
wouldn't even singe a robot, but
it just might stop one of those
pumas."
They said the blast with your name on it would find
you anywhere. This looked like Alan's blast.
Slowly Alan looked around,
sizing up his situation. Behind
him the dark jungle rustled forbiddingly.
He shuddered. "Not a
very healthy spot to spend the
night. On the other hand, I certainly
can't get to the camp with
a pack of mind-activated mechanical
killers running around.
If I can just hold out until morning,
when the big ship arrives ...
The big ship! Good
Lord, Peggy!" He turned white;
oily sweat punctuated his forehead.
Peggy, arriving tomorrow
with the other colonists, the
wives and kids! The metal killers,
tuned to blast any living
flesh, would murder them the
instant they stepped from the
ship!
A pretty girl, Peggy, the girl
he'd married just three weeks
ago. He still couldn't believe it.
It was crazy, he supposed, to
marry a girl and then take off
for an unknown planet, with her
to follow, to try to create a home
in a jungle clearing. Crazy maybe,
but Peggy and her green eyes
that changed color with the
light, with her soft brown hair,
and her happy smile, had ended
thirty years of loneliness and
had, at last, given him a reason
for living. "Not to be killed!"
Alan unclenched his fists and
wiped his palms, bloody where
his fingernails had dug into the
flesh.
There was a slight creak above
him like the protesting of a
branch too heavily laden. Blaster
ready, Alan rolled over onto his
back. In the movement, his elbow
struck the top of a small
earthy mound and he was instantly
engulfed in a swarm of
locust-like insects that beat disgustingly
against his eyes and
mouth. "Fagh!" Waving his
arms before his face he jumped
up and backwards, away from
the bugs. As he did so, a dark
shapeless thing plopped from
the trees onto the spot where he
had been lying stretched out.
Then, like an ambient fungus,
it slithered off into the jungle
undergrowth.
For a split second the jungle
stood frozen in a brilliant blue
flash, followed by the sharp report
of a blaster. Then another.
Alan whirled, startled. The
planet's double moon had risen
and he could see a robot rolling
slowly across the clearing in his
general direction, blasting indiscriminately
at whatever mind
impulses came within its pickup
range, birds, insects, anything.
Six or seven others also left the
camp headquarters area and
headed for the jungle, each to a
slightly different spot.
Apparently the robot hadn't
sensed him yet, but Alan didn't
know what the effective range
of its pickup devices was. He
began to slide back into the
jungle. Minutes later, looking
back he saw that the machine,
though several hundred yards
away, had altered its course and
was now headed directly for
him.
His stomach tightened. Panic.
The dank, musty smell of the
jungle seemed for an instant to
thicken and choke in his throat.
Then he thought of the big ship
landing in the morning, settling
down slowly after a lonely two-week
voyage. He thought of a
brown-haired girl crowding with
the others to the gangway, eager
to embrace the new planet, and
the next instant a charred nothing,
unrecognizable, the victim
of a design error or a misplaced
wire in a machine. "I have to
try," he said aloud. "I have to
try." He moved into the blackness.
Powerful as a small tank, the
killer robot was equipped to
crush, slash, and burn its way
through undergrowth. Nevertheless,
it was slowed by the
larger trees and the thick, clinging
vines, and Alan found that
he could manage to keep ahead
of it, barely out of blaster range.
Only, the robot didn't get tired.
Alan did.
The twin moons cast pale, deceptive
shadows that wavered
and danced across the jungle
floor, hiding debris that tripped
him and often sent him sprawling
into the dark. Sharp-edged
growths tore at his face and
clothes, and insects attracted by
the blood matted against his
pants and shirt. Behind, the robot
crashed imperturbably after
him, lighting the night with fitful
blaster flashes as some
winged or legged life came within
its range.
There was movement also, in
the darkness beside him, scrapings
and rustlings and an occasional
low, throaty sound like an
angry cat. Alan's fingers tensed
on his pocket blaster. Swift
shadowy forms moved quickly in
the shrubs and the growling became
suddenly louder. He fired
twice, blindly, into the undergrowth.
Sharp screams punctuated
the electric blue discharge as
a pack of small feline creatures
leaped snarling and clawing
back into the night.
Mentally, Alan tried to figure
the charge remaining in his blaster.
There wouldn't be much.
"Enough for a few more shots,
maybe. Why the devil didn't I
load in fresh cells this morning!"
The robot crashed on, louder
now, gaining on the tired human.
Legs aching and bruised,
stinging from insect bites, Alan
tried to force himself to run
holding his hands in front of
him like a child in the dark. His
foot tripped on a barely visible
insect hill and a winged swarm
exploded around him. Startled,
Alan jerked sideways, crashing
his head against a tree. He
clutched at the bark for a second,
dazed, then his knees
buckled. His blaster fell into the
shadows.
The robot crashed loudly behind
him now. Without stopping
to think, Alan fumbled along the
ground after his gun, straining
his eyes in the darkness. He
found it just a couple of feet to
one side, against the base of a
small bush. Just as his fingers
closed upon the barrel his other
hand slipped into something
sticky that splashed over his
forearm. He screamed in pain
and leaped back, trying frantically
to wipe the clinging,
burning blackness off his arm.
Patches of black scraped off onto
branches and vines, but the rest
spread slowly over his arm as
agonizing as hot acid, or as flesh
being ripped away layer by
layer.
Almost blinded by pain, whimpering,
Alan stumbled forward.
Sharp muscle spasms shot from
his shoulder across his back and
chest. Tears streamed across his
cheeks.
A blue arc slashed at the trees
a mere hundred yards behind.
He screamed at the blast. "Damn
you, Pete! Damn your robots!
Damn, damn ... Oh, Peggy!"
He stepped into emptiness.
Coolness. Wet. Slowly, washed
by the water, the pain began to
fall away. He wanted to lie there
forever in the dark, cool, wetness.
For ever, and ever, and ...
The air thundered.
In the dim light he could see
the banks of the stream, higher
than a man, muddy and loose.
Growing right to the edge of the
banks, the jungle reached out
with hairy, disjointed arms as
if to snag even the dirty little
stream that passed so timidly
through its domain.
Alan, lying in the mud of the
stream bed, felt the earth shake
as the heavy little robot rolled
slowly and inexorably towards
him. "The Lord High Executioner,"
he thought, "in battle
dress." He tried to stand but his
legs were almost too weak and
his arm felt numb. "I'll drown
him," he said aloud. "I'll drown
the Lord High Executioner." He
laughed. Then his mind cleared.
He remembered where he was.
Alan trembled. For the first
time in his life he understood
what it was to live, because for
the first time he realized that he
would sometime die. In other
times and circumstances he
might put it off for a while, for
months or years, but eventually,
as now, he would have to watch,
still and helpless, while death
came creeping. Then, at thirty,
Alan became a man.
"Dammit, no law says I have
to flame-out
now
!" He forced
himself to rise, forced his legs
to stand, struggling painfully in
the shin-deep ooze. He worked
his way to the bank and began to
dig frenziedly, chest high, about
two feet below the edge.
His arm where the black thing
had been was swollen and tender,
but he forced his hands to dig,
dig, dig, cursing and crying to
hide the pain, and biting his
lips, ignoring the salty taste of
blood. The soft earth crumbled
under his hands until he had a
small cave about three feet deep
in the bank. Beyond that the
soil was held too tightly by the
roots from above and he had to
stop.
The air crackled blue and a
tree crashed heavily past Alan
into the stream. Above him on
the bank, silhouetting against
the moons, the killer robot stopped
and its blaster swivelled
slowly down. Frantically, Alan
hugged the bank as a shaft of
pure electricity arced over him,
sliced into the water, and exploded
in a cloud of steam. The
robot shook for a second, its
blaster muzzle lifted erratically
and for an instant it seemed almost
out of control, then it
quieted and the muzzle again
pointed down.
Pressing with all his might,
Alan slid slowly along the bank
inches at a time, away from the
machine above. Its muzzle turned
to follow him but the edge of
the bank blocked its aim. Grinding
forward a couple of feet,
slightly overhanging the bank,
the robot fired again. For a split
second Alan seemed engulfed in
flame; the heat of hell singed his
head and back, and mud boiled
in the bank by his arm.
Again the robot trembled. It
jerked forward a foot and its
blaster swung slightly away. But
only for a moment. Then the gun
swung back again.
Suddenly, as if sensing something
wrong, its tracks slammed
into reverse. It stood poised for
a second, its treads spinning
crazily as the earth collapsed underneath
it, where Alan had
dug, then it fell with a heavy
splash into the mud, ten feet
from where Alan stood.
Without hesitation Alan
threw himself across the blaster
housing, frantically locking his
arms around the barrel as the
robot's treads churned furiously
in the sticky mud, causing it to
buck and plunge like a Brahma
bull. The treads stopped and the
blaster jerked upwards wrenching
Alan's arms, then slammed
down. Then the whole housing
whirled around and around, tilting
alternately up and down like
a steel-skinned water monster
trying to dislodge a tenacious
crab, while Alan, arms and legs
wrapped tightly around the blaster
barrel and housing, pressed
fiercely against the robot's metal
skin.
Slowly, trying to anticipate
and shift his weight with the
spinning plunges, Alan worked
his hand down to his right hip.
He fumbled for the sheath clipped
to his belt, found it, and extracted
a stubby hunting knife.
Sweat and blood in his eyes,
hardly able to move on the wildly
swinging turret, he felt down
the sides to the thin crack between
the revolving housing and
the stationary portion of the robot.
With a quick prayer he
jammed in the knife blade—and
was whipped headlong into the
mud as the turret literally snapped
to a stop.
The earth, jungle and moons
spun in a pinwheeled blur,
slowed, and settled to their proper
places. Standing in the sticky,
sweet-smelling ooze, Alan eyed
the robot apprehensively. Half
buried in mud, it stood quiet in
the shadowy light except for an
occasional, almost spasmodic
jerk of its blaster barrel. For
the first time that night Alan
allowed himself a slight smile.
"A blade in the old gear box,
eh? How does that feel, boy?"
He turned. "Well, I'd better
get out of here before the knife
slips or the monster cooks up
some more tricks with whatever
it's got for a brain." Digging
little footholds in the soft bank,
he climbed up and stood once
again in the rustling jungle
darkness.
"I wonder," he thought, "how
Pete could cram enough brain
into one of those things to make
it hunt and track so perfectly."
He tried to visualize the computing
circuits needed for the
operation of its tracking mechanism
alone. "There just isn't
room for the electronics. You'd
need a computer as big as the
one at camp headquarters."
In the distance the sky blazed
as a blaster roared in the jungle.
Then Alan heard the approaching
robot, crunching and snapping
its way through the undergrowth
like an onrushing forest
fire. He froze. "Good Lord!
They communicate with each
other! The one I jammed must
be calling others to help."
He began to move along the
bank, away from the crashing
sounds. Suddenly he stopped, his
eyes widened. "Of course! Radio!
I'll bet anything they're
automatically controlled by the
camp computer. That's where
their brain is!" He paused.
"Then, if that were put out of
commission ..." He jerked away
from the bank and half ran, half
pulled himself through the undergrowth
towards the camp.
Trees exploded to his left as
another robot fired in his direction,
too far away to be effective
but churning towards him
through the blackness.
Alan changed direction slightly
to follow a line between the
two robots coming up from
either side, behind him. His eyes
were well accustomed to the dark
now, and he managed to dodge
most of the shadowy vines and
branches before they could snag
or trip him. Even so, he stumbled
in the wiry underbrush and
his legs were a mass of stinging
slashes from ankle to thigh.
The crashing rumble of the
killer robots shook the night behind
him, nearer sometimes,
then falling slightly back, but
following constantly, more
unshakable than bloodhounds
because a man can sometimes cover
a scent, but no man can stop his
thoughts. Intermittently, like
photographers' strobes, blue
flashes would light the jungle
about him. Then, for seconds
afterwards his eyes would see
dancing streaks of yellow and
sharp multi-colored pinwheels
that alternately shrunk and expanded
as if in a surrealist's
nightmare. Alan would have to
pause and squeeze his eyelids
tight shut before he could see
again, and the robots would
move a little closer.
To his right the trees silhouetted
briefly against brilliance as
a third robot slowly moved up
in the distance. Without thinking,
Alan turned slightly to the
left, then froze in momentary
panic. "I should be at the camp
now. Damn, what direction am
I going?" He tried to think
back, to visualize the twists and
turns he'd taken in the jungle.
"All I need is to get lost."
He pictured the camp computer
with no one to stop it, automatically
sending its robots in
wider and wider forays, slowly
wiping every trace of life from
the planet. Technologically advanced
machines doing the job
for which they were built, completely,
thoroughly, without feeling,
and without human masters
to separate sense from futility.
Finally parts would wear out,
circuits would short, and one by
one the killers would crunch to
a halt. A few birds would still
fly then, but a unique animal
life, rare in the universe, would
exist no more. And the bones of
children, eager girls, and their
men would also lie, beside a
rusty hulk, beneath the alien
sun.
"Peggy!"
As if in answer, a tree beside
him breathed fire, then exploded.
In the brief flash of the
blaster shot, Alan saw the steel
glint of a robot only a hundred
yards away, much nearer than
he had thought. "Thank heaven
for trees!" He stepped back, felt
his foot catch in something,
clutched futilely at some leaves
and fell heavily.
Pain danced up his leg as he
grabbed his ankle. Quickly he
felt the throbbing flesh. "Damn
the rotten luck, anyway!" He
blinked the pain tears from his
eyes and looked up—into a robot's
blaster, jutting out of the
foliage, thirty yards away.
Instinctively, in one motion
Alan grabbed his pocket blaster
and fired. To his amazement the
robot jerked back, its gun wobbled
and started to tilt away.
Then, getting itself under control,
it swung back again to face
Alan. He fired again, and again
the robot reacted. It seemed familiar
somehow. Then he remembered
the robot on the river
bank, jiggling and swaying for
seconds after each shot. "Of
course!" He cursed himself for
missing the obvious. "The blaster
static blanks out radio
transmission from the computer
for a few seconds. They even do
it to themselves!"
Firing intermittently, he
pulled himself upright and hobbled
ahead through the bush.
The robot shook spasmodically
with each shot, its gun tilted upward
at an awkward angle.
Then, unexpectedly, Alan saw
stars, real stars brilliant in the
night sky, and half dragging his
swelling leg he stumbled out of
the jungle into the camp clearing.
Ahead, across fifty yards of
grass stood the headquarters
building, housing the robot-controlling
computer. Still firing at
short intervals he started across
the clearing, gritting his teeth
at every step.
Straining every muscle in
spite of the agonizing pain, Alan
forced himself to a limping run
across the uneven ground, carefully
avoiding the insect hills
that jutted up through the grass.
From the corner of his eye he
saw another of the robots standing
shakily in the dark edge of
the jungle waiting, it seemed,
for his small blaster to run dry.
"Be damned! You can't win
now!" Alan yelled between blaster
shots, almost irrational from
the pain that ripped jaggedly
through his leg. Then it happened.
A few feet from the
building's door his blaster quit.
A click. A faint hiss when he
frantically jerked the trigger
again and again, and the spent
cells released themselves from
the device, falling in the grass
at his feet. He dropped the useless
gun.
"No!" He threw himself on
the ground as a new robot suddenly
appeared around the edge
of the building a few feet away,
aimed, and fired. Air burned
over Alan's back and ozone tingled
in his nostrils.
Blinding itself for a few seconds
with its own blaster static,
the robot paused momentarily,
jiggling in place. In this
instant, Alan jammed his hands
into an insect hill and hurled the
pile of dirt and insects directly
at the robot's antenna. In a flash,
hundreds of the winged things
erupted angrily from the hole in
a swarming cloud, each part of
which was a speck of life
transmitting mental energy to the
robot's pickup devices.
Confused by the sudden dispersion
of mind impulses, the
robot fired erratically as Alan
crouched and raced painfully for
the door. It fired again, closer,
as he fumbled with the lock
release. Jagged bits of plastic and
stone ripped past him, torn loose
by the blast.
Frantically, Alan slammed
open the door as the robot, sensing
him strongly now, aimed
point blank. He saw nothing, his
mind thought of nothing but the
red-clad safety switch mounted
beside the computer. Time stopped.
There was nothing else in
the world. He half-jumped, half-fell
towards it, slowly, in tenths
of seconds that seemed measured
out in years.
The universe went black.
Later. Brilliance pressed upon
his eyes. Then pain returned, a
multi-hurting thing that crawled
through his body and dragged
ragged tentacles across his
brain. He moaned.
A voice spoke hollowly in the
distance. "He's waking. Call his
wife."
Alan opened his eyes in a
white room; a white light hung
over his head. Beside him, looking
down with a rueful smile,
stood a young man wearing
space medical insignia. "Yes,"
he acknowledged the question in
Alan's eyes, "you hit the switch.
That was three days ago. When
you're up again we'd all like to
thank you."
Suddenly a sobbing-laughing
green-eyed girl was pressed
tightly against him. Neither of
them spoke. They couldn't. There
was too much to say.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
October 1958. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The robots aren't hunting Alan specifically. They are hunting all life forms. | The robots are hunting Alan because he invaded Waiamea. | The robots aren't hunting Alan. They're hunting pumas. Alan got in the way. | The robots are hunting Alan because he was illegally poaching pumas in the jungle. | 0 |
24966_5VVG9W0A_4 | How is Alan able to evade so many robots? | SURVIVAL
TACTICS
By AL SEVCIK
ILLUSTRATOR NOVICK
The robots were built to serve
Man; to do his work, see to his
comforts, make smooth his way.
Then the robots figured out an
additional service—putting Man
out of his misery.
There
was a sudden crash
that hung sharply in the air,
as if a tree had been hit by
lightning some distance away.
Then another. Alan stopped,
puzzled. Two more blasts, quickly
together, and the sound of a
scream faintly.
Frowning, worrying about the
sounds, Alan momentarily forgot
to watch his step until his foot
suddenly plunged into an ant
hill, throwing him to the jungle
floor. "Damn!" He cursed again,
for the tenth time, and stood
uncertainly in the dimness.
From tall, moss-shrouded trees,
wrist-thick vines hung quietly,
scraping the spongy ground like
the tentacles of some monstrous
tree-bound octopus. Fitful little
plants grew straggly in the
shadows of the mossy trunks,
forming a dense underbrush that
made walking difficult. At midday
some few of the blue sun's
rays filtered through to the
jungle floor, but now, late afternoon
on the planet, the shadows
were long and gloomy.
Alan peered around him at the
vine-draped shadows, listening
to the soft rustlings and faint
twig-snappings of life in the
jungle. Two short, popping
sounds echoed across the stillness,
drowned out almost immediately
and silenced by an
explosive crash. Alan started,
"Blaster fighting! But it can't
be!"
Suddenly anxious, he slashed
a hurried X in one of the trees
to mark his position then turned
to follow a line of similar marks
back through the jungle. He
tried to run, but vines blocked
his way and woody shrubs
caught at his legs, tripping him
and holding him back. Then,
through the trees he saw the
clearing of the camp site, the
temporary home for the scout
ship and the eleven men who,
with Alan, were the only humans
on the jungle planet, Waiamea.
Stepping through the low
shrubbery at the edge of the
site, he looked across the open
area to the two temporary structures,
the camp headquarters
where the power supplies and
the computer were; and the
sleeping quarters. Beyond, nose
high, stood the silver scout ship
that had brought the advance
exploratory party of scientists
and technicians to Waiamea
three days before. Except for a
few of the killer robots rolling
slowly around the camp site on
their quiet treads, there was no
one about.
"So, they've finally got those
things working." Alan smiled
slightly. "Guess that means I
owe Pete a bourbon-and-soda
for sure. Anybody who can
build a robot that hunts by homing
in on animals' mind impulses ..."
He stepped forward
just as a roar of blue flame dissolved
the branches of a tree,
barely above his head.
Without pausing to think,
Alan leaped back, and fell
sprawling over a bush just as
one of the robots rolled silently
up from the right, lowering its
blaster barrel to aim directly at
his head. Alan froze. "My God,
Pete built those things wrong!"
Suddenly a screeching whirlwind
of claws and teeth hurled
itself from the smoldering
branches and crashed against the
robot, clawing insanely at the
antenna and blaster barrel.
With an awkward jerk the robot
swung around and fired its blaster,
completely dissolving the
lower half of the cat creature
which had clung across the barrel.
But the back pressure of the
cat's body overloaded the discharge
circuits. The robot started
to shake, then clicked sharply
as an overload relay snapped
and shorted the blaster cells.
The killer turned and rolled back
towards the camp, leaving Alan
alone.
Shakily, Alan crawled a few
feet back into the undergrowth
where he could lie and watch the
camp, but not himself be seen.
Though visibility didn't make
any difference to the robots, he
felt safer, somehow, hidden. He
knew now what the shooting
sounds had been and why there
hadn't been anyone around the
camp site. A charred blob lying
in the grass of the clearing confirmed
his hypothesis. His stomach
felt sick.
"I suppose," he muttered to
himself, "that Pete assembled
these robots in a batch and then
activated them all at once, probably
never living to realize that
they're tuned to pick up human
brain waves, too. Damn!
Damn!" His eyes blurred and
he slammed his fist into the soft
earth.
When he raised his eyes again
the jungle was perceptibly darker.
Stealthy rustlings in the
shadows grew louder with the
setting sun. Branches snapped
unaccountably in the trees overhead
and every now and then
leaves or a twig fell softly to the
ground, close to where he lay.
Reaching into his jacket, Alan
fingered his pocket blaster. He
pulled it out and held it in his
right hand. "This pop gun
wouldn't even singe a robot, but
it just might stop one of those
pumas."
They said the blast with your name on it would find
you anywhere. This looked like Alan's blast.
Slowly Alan looked around,
sizing up his situation. Behind
him the dark jungle rustled forbiddingly.
He shuddered. "Not a
very healthy spot to spend the
night. On the other hand, I certainly
can't get to the camp with
a pack of mind-activated mechanical
killers running around.
If I can just hold out until morning,
when the big ship arrives ...
The big ship! Good
Lord, Peggy!" He turned white;
oily sweat punctuated his forehead.
Peggy, arriving tomorrow
with the other colonists, the
wives and kids! The metal killers,
tuned to blast any living
flesh, would murder them the
instant they stepped from the
ship!
A pretty girl, Peggy, the girl
he'd married just three weeks
ago. He still couldn't believe it.
It was crazy, he supposed, to
marry a girl and then take off
for an unknown planet, with her
to follow, to try to create a home
in a jungle clearing. Crazy maybe,
but Peggy and her green eyes
that changed color with the
light, with her soft brown hair,
and her happy smile, had ended
thirty years of loneliness and
had, at last, given him a reason
for living. "Not to be killed!"
Alan unclenched his fists and
wiped his palms, bloody where
his fingernails had dug into the
flesh.
There was a slight creak above
him like the protesting of a
branch too heavily laden. Blaster
ready, Alan rolled over onto his
back. In the movement, his elbow
struck the top of a small
earthy mound and he was instantly
engulfed in a swarm of
locust-like insects that beat disgustingly
against his eyes and
mouth. "Fagh!" Waving his
arms before his face he jumped
up and backwards, away from
the bugs. As he did so, a dark
shapeless thing plopped from
the trees onto the spot where he
had been lying stretched out.
Then, like an ambient fungus,
it slithered off into the jungle
undergrowth.
For a split second the jungle
stood frozen in a brilliant blue
flash, followed by the sharp report
of a blaster. Then another.
Alan whirled, startled. The
planet's double moon had risen
and he could see a robot rolling
slowly across the clearing in his
general direction, blasting indiscriminately
at whatever mind
impulses came within its pickup
range, birds, insects, anything.
Six or seven others also left the
camp headquarters area and
headed for the jungle, each to a
slightly different spot.
Apparently the robot hadn't
sensed him yet, but Alan didn't
know what the effective range
of its pickup devices was. He
began to slide back into the
jungle. Minutes later, looking
back he saw that the machine,
though several hundred yards
away, had altered its course and
was now headed directly for
him.
His stomach tightened. Panic.
The dank, musty smell of the
jungle seemed for an instant to
thicken and choke in his throat.
Then he thought of the big ship
landing in the morning, settling
down slowly after a lonely two-week
voyage. He thought of a
brown-haired girl crowding with
the others to the gangway, eager
to embrace the new planet, and
the next instant a charred nothing,
unrecognizable, the victim
of a design error or a misplaced
wire in a machine. "I have to
try," he said aloud. "I have to
try." He moved into the blackness.
Powerful as a small tank, the
killer robot was equipped to
crush, slash, and burn its way
through undergrowth. Nevertheless,
it was slowed by the
larger trees and the thick, clinging
vines, and Alan found that
he could manage to keep ahead
of it, barely out of blaster range.
Only, the robot didn't get tired.
Alan did.
The twin moons cast pale, deceptive
shadows that wavered
and danced across the jungle
floor, hiding debris that tripped
him and often sent him sprawling
into the dark. Sharp-edged
growths tore at his face and
clothes, and insects attracted by
the blood matted against his
pants and shirt. Behind, the robot
crashed imperturbably after
him, lighting the night with fitful
blaster flashes as some
winged or legged life came within
its range.
There was movement also, in
the darkness beside him, scrapings
and rustlings and an occasional
low, throaty sound like an
angry cat. Alan's fingers tensed
on his pocket blaster. Swift
shadowy forms moved quickly in
the shrubs and the growling became
suddenly louder. He fired
twice, blindly, into the undergrowth.
Sharp screams punctuated
the electric blue discharge as
a pack of small feline creatures
leaped snarling and clawing
back into the night.
Mentally, Alan tried to figure
the charge remaining in his blaster.
There wouldn't be much.
"Enough for a few more shots,
maybe. Why the devil didn't I
load in fresh cells this morning!"
The robot crashed on, louder
now, gaining on the tired human.
Legs aching and bruised,
stinging from insect bites, Alan
tried to force himself to run
holding his hands in front of
him like a child in the dark. His
foot tripped on a barely visible
insect hill and a winged swarm
exploded around him. Startled,
Alan jerked sideways, crashing
his head against a tree. He
clutched at the bark for a second,
dazed, then his knees
buckled. His blaster fell into the
shadows.
The robot crashed loudly behind
him now. Without stopping
to think, Alan fumbled along the
ground after his gun, straining
his eyes in the darkness. He
found it just a couple of feet to
one side, against the base of a
small bush. Just as his fingers
closed upon the barrel his other
hand slipped into something
sticky that splashed over his
forearm. He screamed in pain
and leaped back, trying frantically
to wipe the clinging,
burning blackness off his arm.
Patches of black scraped off onto
branches and vines, but the rest
spread slowly over his arm as
agonizing as hot acid, or as flesh
being ripped away layer by
layer.
Almost blinded by pain, whimpering,
Alan stumbled forward.
Sharp muscle spasms shot from
his shoulder across his back and
chest. Tears streamed across his
cheeks.
A blue arc slashed at the trees
a mere hundred yards behind.
He screamed at the blast. "Damn
you, Pete! Damn your robots!
Damn, damn ... Oh, Peggy!"
He stepped into emptiness.
Coolness. Wet. Slowly, washed
by the water, the pain began to
fall away. He wanted to lie there
forever in the dark, cool, wetness.
For ever, and ever, and ...
The air thundered.
In the dim light he could see
the banks of the stream, higher
than a man, muddy and loose.
Growing right to the edge of the
banks, the jungle reached out
with hairy, disjointed arms as
if to snag even the dirty little
stream that passed so timidly
through its domain.
Alan, lying in the mud of the
stream bed, felt the earth shake
as the heavy little robot rolled
slowly and inexorably towards
him. "The Lord High Executioner,"
he thought, "in battle
dress." He tried to stand but his
legs were almost too weak and
his arm felt numb. "I'll drown
him," he said aloud. "I'll drown
the Lord High Executioner." He
laughed. Then his mind cleared.
He remembered where he was.
Alan trembled. For the first
time in his life he understood
what it was to live, because for
the first time he realized that he
would sometime die. In other
times and circumstances he
might put it off for a while, for
months or years, but eventually,
as now, he would have to watch,
still and helpless, while death
came creeping. Then, at thirty,
Alan became a man.
"Dammit, no law says I have
to flame-out
now
!" He forced
himself to rise, forced his legs
to stand, struggling painfully in
the shin-deep ooze. He worked
his way to the bank and began to
dig frenziedly, chest high, about
two feet below the edge.
His arm where the black thing
had been was swollen and tender,
but he forced his hands to dig,
dig, dig, cursing and crying to
hide the pain, and biting his
lips, ignoring the salty taste of
blood. The soft earth crumbled
under his hands until he had a
small cave about three feet deep
in the bank. Beyond that the
soil was held too tightly by the
roots from above and he had to
stop.
The air crackled blue and a
tree crashed heavily past Alan
into the stream. Above him on
the bank, silhouetting against
the moons, the killer robot stopped
and its blaster swivelled
slowly down. Frantically, Alan
hugged the bank as a shaft of
pure electricity arced over him,
sliced into the water, and exploded
in a cloud of steam. The
robot shook for a second, its
blaster muzzle lifted erratically
and for an instant it seemed almost
out of control, then it
quieted and the muzzle again
pointed down.
Pressing with all his might,
Alan slid slowly along the bank
inches at a time, away from the
machine above. Its muzzle turned
to follow him but the edge of
the bank blocked its aim. Grinding
forward a couple of feet,
slightly overhanging the bank,
the robot fired again. For a split
second Alan seemed engulfed in
flame; the heat of hell singed his
head and back, and mud boiled
in the bank by his arm.
Again the robot trembled. It
jerked forward a foot and its
blaster swung slightly away. But
only for a moment. Then the gun
swung back again.
Suddenly, as if sensing something
wrong, its tracks slammed
into reverse. It stood poised for
a second, its treads spinning
crazily as the earth collapsed underneath
it, where Alan had
dug, then it fell with a heavy
splash into the mud, ten feet
from where Alan stood.
Without hesitation Alan
threw himself across the blaster
housing, frantically locking his
arms around the barrel as the
robot's treads churned furiously
in the sticky mud, causing it to
buck and plunge like a Brahma
bull. The treads stopped and the
blaster jerked upwards wrenching
Alan's arms, then slammed
down. Then the whole housing
whirled around and around, tilting
alternately up and down like
a steel-skinned water monster
trying to dislodge a tenacious
crab, while Alan, arms and legs
wrapped tightly around the blaster
barrel and housing, pressed
fiercely against the robot's metal
skin.
Slowly, trying to anticipate
and shift his weight with the
spinning plunges, Alan worked
his hand down to his right hip.
He fumbled for the sheath clipped
to his belt, found it, and extracted
a stubby hunting knife.
Sweat and blood in his eyes,
hardly able to move on the wildly
swinging turret, he felt down
the sides to the thin crack between
the revolving housing and
the stationary portion of the robot.
With a quick prayer he
jammed in the knife blade—and
was whipped headlong into the
mud as the turret literally snapped
to a stop.
The earth, jungle and moons
spun in a pinwheeled blur,
slowed, and settled to their proper
places. Standing in the sticky,
sweet-smelling ooze, Alan eyed
the robot apprehensively. Half
buried in mud, it stood quiet in
the shadowy light except for an
occasional, almost spasmodic
jerk of its blaster barrel. For
the first time that night Alan
allowed himself a slight smile.
"A blade in the old gear box,
eh? How does that feel, boy?"
He turned. "Well, I'd better
get out of here before the knife
slips or the monster cooks up
some more tricks with whatever
it's got for a brain." Digging
little footholds in the soft bank,
he climbed up and stood once
again in the rustling jungle
darkness.
"I wonder," he thought, "how
Pete could cram enough brain
into one of those things to make
it hunt and track so perfectly."
He tried to visualize the computing
circuits needed for the
operation of its tracking mechanism
alone. "There just isn't
room for the electronics. You'd
need a computer as big as the
one at camp headquarters."
In the distance the sky blazed
as a blaster roared in the jungle.
Then Alan heard the approaching
robot, crunching and snapping
its way through the undergrowth
like an onrushing forest
fire. He froze. "Good Lord!
They communicate with each
other! The one I jammed must
be calling others to help."
He began to move along the
bank, away from the crashing
sounds. Suddenly he stopped, his
eyes widened. "Of course! Radio!
I'll bet anything they're
automatically controlled by the
camp computer. That's where
their brain is!" He paused.
"Then, if that were put out of
commission ..." He jerked away
from the bank and half ran, half
pulled himself through the undergrowth
towards the camp.
Trees exploded to his left as
another robot fired in his direction,
too far away to be effective
but churning towards him
through the blackness.
Alan changed direction slightly
to follow a line between the
two robots coming up from
either side, behind him. His eyes
were well accustomed to the dark
now, and he managed to dodge
most of the shadowy vines and
branches before they could snag
or trip him. Even so, he stumbled
in the wiry underbrush and
his legs were a mass of stinging
slashes from ankle to thigh.
The crashing rumble of the
killer robots shook the night behind
him, nearer sometimes,
then falling slightly back, but
following constantly, more
unshakable than bloodhounds
because a man can sometimes cover
a scent, but no man can stop his
thoughts. Intermittently, like
photographers' strobes, blue
flashes would light the jungle
about him. Then, for seconds
afterwards his eyes would see
dancing streaks of yellow and
sharp multi-colored pinwheels
that alternately shrunk and expanded
as if in a surrealist's
nightmare. Alan would have to
pause and squeeze his eyelids
tight shut before he could see
again, and the robots would
move a little closer.
To his right the trees silhouetted
briefly against brilliance as
a third robot slowly moved up
in the distance. Without thinking,
Alan turned slightly to the
left, then froze in momentary
panic. "I should be at the camp
now. Damn, what direction am
I going?" He tried to think
back, to visualize the twists and
turns he'd taken in the jungle.
"All I need is to get lost."
He pictured the camp computer
with no one to stop it, automatically
sending its robots in
wider and wider forays, slowly
wiping every trace of life from
the planet. Technologically advanced
machines doing the job
for which they were built, completely,
thoroughly, without feeling,
and without human masters
to separate sense from futility.
Finally parts would wear out,
circuits would short, and one by
one the killers would crunch to
a halt. A few birds would still
fly then, but a unique animal
life, rare in the universe, would
exist no more. And the bones of
children, eager girls, and their
men would also lie, beside a
rusty hulk, beneath the alien
sun.
"Peggy!"
As if in answer, a tree beside
him breathed fire, then exploded.
In the brief flash of the
blaster shot, Alan saw the steel
glint of a robot only a hundred
yards away, much nearer than
he had thought. "Thank heaven
for trees!" He stepped back, felt
his foot catch in something,
clutched futilely at some leaves
and fell heavily.
Pain danced up his leg as he
grabbed his ankle. Quickly he
felt the throbbing flesh. "Damn
the rotten luck, anyway!" He
blinked the pain tears from his
eyes and looked up—into a robot's
blaster, jutting out of the
foliage, thirty yards away.
Instinctively, in one motion
Alan grabbed his pocket blaster
and fired. To his amazement the
robot jerked back, its gun wobbled
and started to tilt away.
Then, getting itself under control,
it swung back again to face
Alan. He fired again, and again
the robot reacted. It seemed familiar
somehow. Then he remembered
the robot on the river
bank, jiggling and swaying for
seconds after each shot. "Of
course!" He cursed himself for
missing the obvious. "The blaster
static blanks out radio
transmission from the computer
for a few seconds. They even do
it to themselves!"
Firing intermittently, he
pulled himself upright and hobbled
ahead through the bush.
The robot shook spasmodically
with each shot, its gun tilted upward
at an awkward angle.
Then, unexpectedly, Alan saw
stars, real stars brilliant in the
night sky, and half dragging his
swelling leg he stumbled out of
the jungle into the camp clearing.
Ahead, across fifty yards of
grass stood the headquarters
building, housing the robot-controlling
computer. Still firing at
short intervals he started across
the clearing, gritting his teeth
at every step.
Straining every muscle in
spite of the agonizing pain, Alan
forced himself to a limping run
across the uneven ground, carefully
avoiding the insect hills
that jutted up through the grass.
From the corner of his eye he
saw another of the robots standing
shakily in the dark edge of
the jungle waiting, it seemed,
for his small blaster to run dry.
"Be damned! You can't win
now!" Alan yelled between blaster
shots, almost irrational from
the pain that ripped jaggedly
through his leg. Then it happened.
A few feet from the
building's door his blaster quit.
A click. A faint hiss when he
frantically jerked the trigger
again and again, and the spent
cells released themselves from
the device, falling in the grass
at his feet. He dropped the useless
gun.
"No!" He threw himself on
the ground as a new robot suddenly
appeared around the edge
of the building a few feet away,
aimed, and fired. Air burned
over Alan's back and ozone tingled
in his nostrils.
Blinding itself for a few seconds
with its own blaster static,
the robot paused momentarily,
jiggling in place. In this
instant, Alan jammed his hands
into an insect hill and hurled the
pile of dirt and insects directly
at the robot's antenna. In a flash,
hundreds of the winged things
erupted angrily from the hole in
a swarming cloud, each part of
which was a speck of life
transmitting mental energy to the
robot's pickup devices.
Confused by the sudden dispersion
of mind impulses, the
robot fired erratically as Alan
crouched and raced painfully for
the door. It fired again, closer,
as he fumbled with the lock
release. Jagged bits of plastic and
stone ripped past him, torn loose
by the blast.
Frantically, Alan slammed
open the door as the robot, sensing
him strongly now, aimed
point blank. He saw nothing, his
mind thought of nothing but the
red-clad safety switch mounted
beside the computer. Time stopped.
There was nothing else in
the world. He half-jumped, half-fell
towards it, slowly, in tenths
of seconds that seemed measured
out in years.
The universe went black.
Later. Brilliance pressed upon
his eyes. Then pain returned, a
multi-hurting thing that crawled
through his body and dragged
ragged tentacles across his
brain. He moaned.
A voice spoke hollowly in the
distance. "He's waking. Call his
wife."
Alan opened his eyes in a
white room; a white light hung
over his head. Beside him, looking
down with a rueful smile,
stood a young man wearing
space medical insignia. "Yes,"
he acknowledged the question in
Alan's eyes, "you hit the switch.
That was three days ago. When
you're up again we'd all like to
thank you."
Suddenly a sobbing-laughing
green-eyed girl was pressed
tightly against him. Neither of
them spoke. They couldn't. There
was too much to say.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
October 1958. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Luckily for Alan, the robots are shooting at all the living creatures, including bugs. | Luckily for Alan, the robots are being attacked by pumas. | Luckily for Alan, the robots are having a difficult time navigating the jungle terrain. | Luckily for Alan, a sticky oozing blob-like creature was dissolving the robots one by one. | 0 |
24966_5VVG9W0A_5 | Why are the robots incinerating all the living creatures? | SURVIVAL
TACTICS
By AL SEVCIK
ILLUSTRATOR NOVICK
The robots were built to serve
Man; to do his work, see to his
comforts, make smooth his way.
Then the robots figured out an
additional service—putting Man
out of his misery.
There
was a sudden crash
that hung sharply in the air,
as if a tree had been hit by
lightning some distance away.
Then another. Alan stopped,
puzzled. Two more blasts, quickly
together, and the sound of a
scream faintly.
Frowning, worrying about the
sounds, Alan momentarily forgot
to watch his step until his foot
suddenly plunged into an ant
hill, throwing him to the jungle
floor. "Damn!" He cursed again,
for the tenth time, and stood
uncertainly in the dimness.
From tall, moss-shrouded trees,
wrist-thick vines hung quietly,
scraping the spongy ground like
the tentacles of some monstrous
tree-bound octopus. Fitful little
plants grew straggly in the
shadows of the mossy trunks,
forming a dense underbrush that
made walking difficult. At midday
some few of the blue sun's
rays filtered through to the
jungle floor, but now, late afternoon
on the planet, the shadows
were long and gloomy.
Alan peered around him at the
vine-draped shadows, listening
to the soft rustlings and faint
twig-snappings of life in the
jungle. Two short, popping
sounds echoed across the stillness,
drowned out almost immediately
and silenced by an
explosive crash. Alan started,
"Blaster fighting! But it can't
be!"
Suddenly anxious, he slashed
a hurried X in one of the trees
to mark his position then turned
to follow a line of similar marks
back through the jungle. He
tried to run, but vines blocked
his way and woody shrubs
caught at his legs, tripping him
and holding him back. Then,
through the trees he saw the
clearing of the camp site, the
temporary home for the scout
ship and the eleven men who,
with Alan, were the only humans
on the jungle planet, Waiamea.
Stepping through the low
shrubbery at the edge of the
site, he looked across the open
area to the two temporary structures,
the camp headquarters
where the power supplies and
the computer were; and the
sleeping quarters. Beyond, nose
high, stood the silver scout ship
that had brought the advance
exploratory party of scientists
and technicians to Waiamea
three days before. Except for a
few of the killer robots rolling
slowly around the camp site on
their quiet treads, there was no
one about.
"So, they've finally got those
things working." Alan smiled
slightly. "Guess that means I
owe Pete a bourbon-and-soda
for sure. Anybody who can
build a robot that hunts by homing
in on animals' mind impulses ..."
He stepped forward
just as a roar of blue flame dissolved
the branches of a tree,
barely above his head.
Without pausing to think,
Alan leaped back, and fell
sprawling over a bush just as
one of the robots rolled silently
up from the right, lowering its
blaster barrel to aim directly at
his head. Alan froze. "My God,
Pete built those things wrong!"
Suddenly a screeching whirlwind
of claws and teeth hurled
itself from the smoldering
branches and crashed against the
robot, clawing insanely at the
antenna and blaster barrel.
With an awkward jerk the robot
swung around and fired its blaster,
completely dissolving the
lower half of the cat creature
which had clung across the barrel.
But the back pressure of the
cat's body overloaded the discharge
circuits. The robot started
to shake, then clicked sharply
as an overload relay snapped
and shorted the blaster cells.
The killer turned and rolled back
towards the camp, leaving Alan
alone.
Shakily, Alan crawled a few
feet back into the undergrowth
where he could lie and watch the
camp, but not himself be seen.
Though visibility didn't make
any difference to the robots, he
felt safer, somehow, hidden. He
knew now what the shooting
sounds had been and why there
hadn't been anyone around the
camp site. A charred blob lying
in the grass of the clearing confirmed
his hypothesis. His stomach
felt sick.
"I suppose," he muttered to
himself, "that Pete assembled
these robots in a batch and then
activated them all at once, probably
never living to realize that
they're tuned to pick up human
brain waves, too. Damn!
Damn!" His eyes blurred and
he slammed his fist into the soft
earth.
When he raised his eyes again
the jungle was perceptibly darker.
Stealthy rustlings in the
shadows grew louder with the
setting sun. Branches snapped
unaccountably in the trees overhead
and every now and then
leaves or a twig fell softly to the
ground, close to where he lay.
Reaching into his jacket, Alan
fingered his pocket blaster. He
pulled it out and held it in his
right hand. "This pop gun
wouldn't even singe a robot, but
it just might stop one of those
pumas."
They said the blast with your name on it would find
you anywhere. This looked like Alan's blast.
Slowly Alan looked around,
sizing up his situation. Behind
him the dark jungle rustled forbiddingly.
He shuddered. "Not a
very healthy spot to spend the
night. On the other hand, I certainly
can't get to the camp with
a pack of mind-activated mechanical
killers running around.
If I can just hold out until morning,
when the big ship arrives ...
The big ship! Good
Lord, Peggy!" He turned white;
oily sweat punctuated his forehead.
Peggy, arriving tomorrow
with the other colonists, the
wives and kids! The metal killers,
tuned to blast any living
flesh, would murder them the
instant they stepped from the
ship!
A pretty girl, Peggy, the girl
he'd married just three weeks
ago. He still couldn't believe it.
It was crazy, he supposed, to
marry a girl and then take off
for an unknown planet, with her
to follow, to try to create a home
in a jungle clearing. Crazy maybe,
but Peggy and her green eyes
that changed color with the
light, with her soft brown hair,
and her happy smile, had ended
thirty years of loneliness and
had, at last, given him a reason
for living. "Not to be killed!"
Alan unclenched his fists and
wiped his palms, bloody where
his fingernails had dug into the
flesh.
There was a slight creak above
him like the protesting of a
branch too heavily laden. Blaster
ready, Alan rolled over onto his
back. In the movement, his elbow
struck the top of a small
earthy mound and he was instantly
engulfed in a swarm of
locust-like insects that beat disgustingly
against his eyes and
mouth. "Fagh!" Waving his
arms before his face he jumped
up and backwards, away from
the bugs. As he did so, a dark
shapeless thing plopped from
the trees onto the spot where he
had been lying stretched out.
Then, like an ambient fungus,
it slithered off into the jungle
undergrowth.
For a split second the jungle
stood frozen in a brilliant blue
flash, followed by the sharp report
of a blaster. Then another.
Alan whirled, startled. The
planet's double moon had risen
and he could see a robot rolling
slowly across the clearing in his
general direction, blasting indiscriminately
at whatever mind
impulses came within its pickup
range, birds, insects, anything.
Six or seven others also left the
camp headquarters area and
headed for the jungle, each to a
slightly different spot.
Apparently the robot hadn't
sensed him yet, but Alan didn't
know what the effective range
of its pickup devices was. He
began to slide back into the
jungle. Minutes later, looking
back he saw that the machine,
though several hundred yards
away, had altered its course and
was now headed directly for
him.
His stomach tightened. Panic.
The dank, musty smell of the
jungle seemed for an instant to
thicken and choke in his throat.
Then he thought of the big ship
landing in the morning, settling
down slowly after a lonely two-week
voyage. He thought of a
brown-haired girl crowding with
the others to the gangway, eager
to embrace the new planet, and
the next instant a charred nothing,
unrecognizable, the victim
of a design error or a misplaced
wire in a machine. "I have to
try," he said aloud. "I have to
try." He moved into the blackness.
Powerful as a small tank, the
killer robot was equipped to
crush, slash, and burn its way
through undergrowth. Nevertheless,
it was slowed by the
larger trees and the thick, clinging
vines, and Alan found that
he could manage to keep ahead
of it, barely out of blaster range.
Only, the robot didn't get tired.
Alan did.
The twin moons cast pale, deceptive
shadows that wavered
and danced across the jungle
floor, hiding debris that tripped
him and often sent him sprawling
into the dark. Sharp-edged
growths tore at his face and
clothes, and insects attracted by
the blood matted against his
pants and shirt. Behind, the robot
crashed imperturbably after
him, lighting the night with fitful
blaster flashes as some
winged or legged life came within
its range.
There was movement also, in
the darkness beside him, scrapings
and rustlings and an occasional
low, throaty sound like an
angry cat. Alan's fingers tensed
on his pocket blaster. Swift
shadowy forms moved quickly in
the shrubs and the growling became
suddenly louder. He fired
twice, blindly, into the undergrowth.
Sharp screams punctuated
the electric blue discharge as
a pack of small feline creatures
leaped snarling and clawing
back into the night.
Mentally, Alan tried to figure
the charge remaining in his blaster.
There wouldn't be much.
"Enough for a few more shots,
maybe. Why the devil didn't I
load in fresh cells this morning!"
The robot crashed on, louder
now, gaining on the tired human.
Legs aching and bruised,
stinging from insect bites, Alan
tried to force himself to run
holding his hands in front of
him like a child in the dark. His
foot tripped on a barely visible
insect hill and a winged swarm
exploded around him. Startled,
Alan jerked sideways, crashing
his head against a tree. He
clutched at the bark for a second,
dazed, then his knees
buckled. His blaster fell into the
shadows.
The robot crashed loudly behind
him now. Without stopping
to think, Alan fumbled along the
ground after his gun, straining
his eyes in the darkness. He
found it just a couple of feet to
one side, against the base of a
small bush. Just as his fingers
closed upon the barrel his other
hand slipped into something
sticky that splashed over his
forearm. He screamed in pain
and leaped back, trying frantically
to wipe the clinging,
burning blackness off his arm.
Patches of black scraped off onto
branches and vines, but the rest
spread slowly over his arm as
agonizing as hot acid, or as flesh
being ripped away layer by
layer.
Almost blinded by pain, whimpering,
Alan stumbled forward.
Sharp muscle spasms shot from
his shoulder across his back and
chest. Tears streamed across his
cheeks.
A blue arc slashed at the trees
a mere hundred yards behind.
He screamed at the blast. "Damn
you, Pete! Damn your robots!
Damn, damn ... Oh, Peggy!"
He stepped into emptiness.
Coolness. Wet. Slowly, washed
by the water, the pain began to
fall away. He wanted to lie there
forever in the dark, cool, wetness.
For ever, and ever, and ...
The air thundered.
In the dim light he could see
the banks of the stream, higher
than a man, muddy and loose.
Growing right to the edge of the
banks, the jungle reached out
with hairy, disjointed arms as
if to snag even the dirty little
stream that passed so timidly
through its domain.
Alan, lying in the mud of the
stream bed, felt the earth shake
as the heavy little robot rolled
slowly and inexorably towards
him. "The Lord High Executioner,"
he thought, "in battle
dress." He tried to stand but his
legs were almost too weak and
his arm felt numb. "I'll drown
him," he said aloud. "I'll drown
the Lord High Executioner." He
laughed. Then his mind cleared.
He remembered where he was.
Alan trembled. For the first
time in his life he understood
what it was to live, because for
the first time he realized that he
would sometime die. In other
times and circumstances he
might put it off for a while, for
months or years, but eventually,
as now, he would have to watch,
still and helpless, while death
came creeping. Then, at thirty,
Alan became a man.
"Dammit, no law says I have
to flame-out
now
!" He forced
himself to rise, forced his legs
to stand, struggling painfully in
the shin-deep ooze. He worked
his way to the bank and began to
dig frenziedly, chest high, about
two feet below the edge.
His arm where the black thing
had been was swollen and tender,
but he forced his hands to dig,
dig, dig, cursing and crying to
hide the pain, and biting his
lips, ignoring the salty taste of
blood. The soft earth crumbled
under his hands until he had a
small cave about three feet deep
in the bank. Beyond that the
soil was held too tightly by the
roots from above and he had to
stop.
The air crackled blue and a
tree crashed heavily past Alan
into the stream. Above him on
the bank, silhouetting against
the moons, the killer robot stopped
and its blaster swivelled
slowly down. Frantically, Alan
hugged the bank as a shaft of
pure electricity arced over him,
sliced into the water, and exploded
in a cloud of steam. The
robot shook for a second, its
blaster muzzle lifted erratically
and for an instant it seemed almost
out of control, then it
quieted and the muzzle again
pointed down.
Pressing with all his might,
Alan slid slowly along the bank
inches at a time, away from the
machine above. Its muzzle turned
to follow him but the edge of
the bank blocked its aim. Grinding
forward a couple of feet,
slightly overhanging the bank,
the robot fired again. For a split
second Alan seemed engulfed in
flame; the heat of hell singed his
head and back, and mud boiled
in the bank by his arm.
Again the robot trembled. It
jerked forward a foot and its
blaster swung slightly away. But
only for a moment. Then the gun
swung back again.
Suddenly, as if sensing something
wrong, its tracks slammed
into reverse. It stood poised for
a second, its treads spinning
crazily as the earth collapsed underneath
it, where Alan had
dug, then it fell with a heavy
splash into the mud, ten feet
from where Alan stood.
Without hesitation Alan
threw himself across the blaster
housing, frantically locking his
arms around the barrel as the
robot's treads churned furiously
in the sticky mud, causing it to
buck and plunge like a Brahma
bull. The treads stopped and the
blaster jerked upwards wrenching
Alan's arms, then slammed
down. Then the whole housing
whirled around and around, tilting
alternately up and down like
a steel-skinned water monster
trying to dislodge a tenacious
crab, while Alan, arms and legs
wrapped tightly around the blaster
barrel and housing, pressed
fiercely against the robot's metal
skin.
Slowly, trying to anticipate
and shift his weight with the
spinning plunges, Alan worked
his hand down to his right hip.
He fumbled for the sheath clipped
to his belt, found it, and extracted
a stubby hunting knife.
Sweat and blood in his eyes,
hardly able to move on the wildly
swinging turret, he felt down
the sides to the thin crack between
the revolving housing and
the stationary portion of the robot.
With a quick prayer he
jammed in the knife blade—and
was whipped headlong into the
mud as the turret literally snapped
to a stop.
The earth, jungle and moons
spun in a pinwheeled blur,
slowed, and settled to their proper
places. Standing in the sticky,
sweet-smelling ooze, Alan eyed
the robot apprehensively. Half
buried in mud, it stood quiet in
the shadowy light except for an
occasional, almost spasmodic
jerk of its blaster barrel. For
the first time that night Alan
allowed himself a slight smile.
"A blade in the old gear box,
eh? How does that feel, boy?"
He turned. "Well, I'd better
get out of here before the knife
slips or the monster cooks up
some more tricks with whatever
it's got for a brain." Digging
little footholds in the soft bank,
he climbed up and stood once
again in the rustling jungle
darkness.
"I wonder," he thought, "how
Pete could cram enough brain
into one of those things to make
it hunt and track so perfectly."
He tried to visualize the computing
circuits needed for the
operation of its tracking mechanism
alone. "There just isn't
room for the electronics. You'd
need a computer as big as the
one at camp headquarters."
In the distance the sky blazed
as a blaster roared in the jungle.
Then Alan heard the approaching
robot, crunching and snapping
its way through the undergrowth
like an onrushing forest
fire. He froze. "Good Lord!
They communicate with each
other! The one I jammed must
be calling others to help."
He began to move along the
bank, away from the crashing
sounds. Suddenly he stopped, his
eyes widened. "Of course! Radio!
I'll bet anything they're
automatically controlled by the
camp computer. That's where
their brain is!" He paused.
"Then, if that were put out of
commission ..." He jerked away
from the bank and half ran, half
pulled himself through the undergrowth
towards the camp.
Trees exploded to his left as
another robot fired in his direction,
too far away to be effective
but churning towards him
through the blackness.
Alan changed direction slightly
to follow a line between the
two robots coming up from
either side, behind him. His eyes
were well accustomed to the dark
now, and he managed to dodge
most of the shadowy vines and
branches before they could snag
or trip him. Even so, he stumbled
in the wiry underbrush and
his legs were a mass of stinging
slashes from ankle to thigh.
The crashing rumble of the
killer robots shook the night behind
him, nearer sometimes,
then falling slightly back, but
following constantly, more
unshakable than bloodhounds
because a man can sometimes cover
a scent, but no man can stop his
thoughts. Intermittently, like
photographers' strobes, blue
flashes would light the jungle
about him. Then, for seconds
afterwards his eyes would see
dancing streaks of yellow and
sharp multi-colored pinwheels
that alternately shrunk and expanded
as if in a surrealist's
nightmare. Alan would have to
pause and squeeze his eyelids
tight shut before he could see
again, and the robots would
move a little closer.
To his right the trees silhouetted
briefly against brilliance as
a third robot slowly moved up
in the distance. Without thinking,
Alan turned slightly to the
left, then froze in momentary
panic. "I should be at the camp
now. Damn, what direction am
I going?" He tried to think
back, to visualize the twists and
turns he'd taken in the jungle.
"All I need is to get lost."
He pictured the camp computer
with no one to stop it, automatically
sending its robots in
wider and wider forays, slowly
wiping every trace of life from
the planet. Technologically advanced
machines doing the job
for which they were built, completely,
thoroughly, without feeling,
and without human masters
to separate sense from futility.
Finally parts would wear out,
circuits would short, and one by
one the killers would crunch to
a halt. A few birds would still
fly then, but a unique animal
life, rare in the universe, would
exist no more. And the bones of
children, eager girls, and their
men would also lie, beside a
rusty hulk, beneath the alien
sun.
"Peggy!"
As if in answer, a tree beside
him breathed fire, then exploded.
In the brief flash of the
blaster shot, Alan saw the steel
glint of a robot only a hundred
yards away, much nearer than
he had thought. "Thank heaven
for trees!" He stepped back, felt
his foot catch in something,
clutched futilely at some leaves
and fell heavily.
Pain danced up his leg as he
grabbed his ankle. Quickly he
felt the throbbing flesh. "Damn
the rotten luck, anyway!" He
blinked the pain tears from his
eyes and looked up—into a robot's
blaster, jutting out of the
foliage, thirty yards away.
Instinctively, in one motion
Alan grabbed his pocket blaster
and fired. To his amazement the
robot jerked back, its gun wobbled
and started to tilt away.
Then, getting itself under control,
it swung back again to face
Alan. He fired again, and again
the robot reacted. It seemed familiar
somehow. Then he remembered
the robot on the river
bank, jiggling and swaying for
seconds after each shot. "Of
course!" He cursed himself for
missing the obvious. "The blaster
static blanks out radio
transmission from the computer
for a few seconds. They even do
it to themselves!"
Firing intermittently, he
pulled himself upright and hobbled
ahead through the bush.
The robot shook spasmodically
with each shot, its gun tilted upward
at an awkward angle.
Then, unexpectedly, Alan saw
stars, real stars brilliant in the
night sky, and half dragging his
swelling leg he stumbled out of
the jungle into the camp clearing.
Ahead, across fifty yards of
grass stood the headquarters
building, housing the robot-controlling
computer. Still firing at
short intervals he started across
the clearing, gritting his teeth
at every step.
Straining every muscle in
spite of the agonizing pain, Alan
forced himself to a limping run
across the uneven ground, carefully
avoiding the insect hills
that jutted up through the grass.
From the corner of his eye he
saw another of the robots standing
shakily in the dark edge of
the jungle waiting, it seemed,
for his small blaster to run dry.
"Be damned! You can't win
now!" Alan yelled between blaster
shots, almost irrational from
the pain that ripped jaggedly
through his leg. Then it happened.
A few feet from the
building's door his blaster quit.
A click. A faint hiss when he
frantically jerked the trigger
again and again, and the spent
cells released themselves from
the device, falling in the grass
at his feet. He dropped the useless
gun.
"No!" He threw himself on
the ground as a new robot suddenly
appeared around the edge
of the building a few feet away,
aimed, and fired. Air burned
over Alan's back and ozone tingled
in his nostrils.
Blinding itself for a few seconds
with its own blaster static,
the robot paused momentarily,
jiggling in place. In this
instant, Alan jammed his hands
into an insect hill and hurled the
pile of dirt and insects directly
at the robot's antenna. In a flash,
hundreds of the winged things
erupted angrily from the hole in
a swarming cloud, each part of
which was a speck of life
transmitting mental energy to the
robot's pickup devices.
Confused by the sudden dispersion
of mind impulses, the
robot fired erratically as Alan
crouched and raced painfully for
the door. It fired again, closer,
as he fumbled with the lock
release. Jagged bits of plastic and
stone ripped past him, torn loose
by the blast.
Frantically, Alan slammed
open the door as the robot, sensing
him strongly now, aimed
point blank. He saw nothing, his
mind thought of nothing but the
red-clad safety switch mounted
beside the computer. Time stopped.
There was nothing else in
the world. He half-jumped, half-fell
towards it, slowly, in tenths
of seconds that seemed measured
out in years.
The universe went black.
Later. Brilliance pressed upon
his eyes. Then pain returned, a
multi-hurting thing that crawled
through his body and dragged
ragged tentacles across his
brain. He moaned.
A voice spoke hollowly in the
distance. "He's waking. Call his
wife."
Alan opened his eyes in a
white room; a white light hung
over his head. Beside him, looking
down with a rueful smile,
stood a young man wearing
space medical insignia. "Yes,"
he acknowledged the question in
Alan's eyes, "you hit the switch.
That was three days ago. When
you're up again we'd all like to
thank you."
Suddenly a sobbing-laughing
green-eyed girl was pressed
tightly against him. Neither of
them spoke. They couldn't. There
was too much to say.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
October 1958. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | A radio frequency from Waiamea scrambled the robots' programming. | Pete did not read the directions when assembling the robots. | Pete lost his mind on the journey to Waiamea and programmed the robots to kill everyone and everything. | Pete built the robots to hunt by following brain waves. | 3 |
24966_5VVG9W0A_6 | How does Alan interrupt the robots' communication signal? | SURVIVAL
TACTICS
By AL SEVCIK
ILLUSTRATOR NOVICK
The robots were built to serve
Man; to do his work, see to his
comforts, make smooth his way.
Then the robots figured out an
additional service—putting Man
out of his misery.
There
was a sudden crash
that hung sharply in the air,
as if a tree had been hit by
lightning some distance away.
Then another. Alan stopped,
puzzled. Two more blasts, quickly
together, and the sound of a
scream faintly.
Frowning, worrying about the
sounds, Alan momentarily forgot
to watch his step until his foot
suddenly plunged into an ant
hill, throwing him to the jungle
floor. "Damn!" He cursed again,
for the tenth time, and stood
uncertainly in the dimness.
From tall, moss-shrouded trees,
wrist-thick vines hung quietly,
scraping the spongy ground like
the tentacles of some monstrous
tree-bound octopus. Fitful little
plants grew straggly in the
shadows of the mossy trunks,
forming a dense underbrush that
made walking difficult. At midday
some few of the blue sun's
rays filtered through to the
jungle floor, but now, late afternoon
on the planet, the shadows
were long and gloomy.
Alan peered around him at the
vine-draped shadows, listening
to the soft rustlings and faint
twig-snappings of life in the
jungle. Two short, popping
sounds echoed across the stillness,
drowned out almost immediately
and silenced by an
explosive crash. Alan started,
"Blaster fighting! But it can't
be!"
Suddenly anxious, he slashed
a hurried X in one of the trees
to mark his position then turned
to follow a line of similar marks
back through the jungle. He
tried to run, but vines blocked
his way and woody shrubs
caught at his legs, tripping him
and holding him back. Then,
through the trees he saw the
clearing of the camp site, the
temporary home for the scout
ship and the eleven men who,
with Alan, were the only humans
on the jungle planet, Waiamea.
Stepping through the low
shrubbery at the edge of the
site, he looked across the open
area to the two temporary structures,
the camp headquarters
where the power supplies and
the computer were; and the
sleeping quarters. Beyond, nose
high, stood the silver scout ship
that had brought the advance
exploratory party of scientists
and technicians to Waiamea
three days before. Except for a
few of the killer robots rolling
slowly around the camp site on
their quiet treads, there was no
one about.
"So, they've finally got those
things working." Alan smiled
slightly. "Guess that means I
owe Pete a bourbon-and-soda
for sure. Anybody who can
build a robot that hunts by homing
in on animals' mind impulses ..."
He stepped forward
just as a roar of blue flame dissolved
the branches of a tree,
barely above his head.
Without pausing to think,
Alan leaped back, and fell
sprawling over a bush just as
one of the robots rolled silently
up from the right, lowering its
blaster barrel to aim directly at
his head. Alan froze. "My God,
Pete built those things wrong!"
Suddenly a screeching whirlwind
of claws and teeth hurled
itself from the smoldering
branches and crashed against the
robot, clawing insanely at the
antenna and blaster barrel.
With an awkward jerk the robot
swung around and fired its blaster,
completely dissolving the
lower half of the cat creature
which had clung across the barrel.
But the back pressure of the
cat's body overloaded the discharge
circuits. The robot started
to shake, then clicked sharply
as an overload relay snapped
and shorted the blaster cells.
The killer turned and rolled back
towards the camp, leaving Alan
alone.
Shakily, Alan crawled a few
feet back into the undergrowth
where he could lie and watch the
camp, but not himself be seen.
Though visibility didn't make
any difference to the robots, he
felt safer, somehow, hidden. He
knew now what the shooting
sounds had been and why there
hadn't been anyone around the
camp site. A charred blob lying
in the grass of the clearing confirmed
his hypothesis. His stomach
felt sick.
"I suppose," he muttered to
himself, "that Pete assembled
these robots in a batch and then
activated them all at once, probably
never living to realize that
they're tuned to pick up human
brain waves, too. Damn!
Damn!" His eyes blurred and
he slammed his fist into the soft
earth.
When he raised his eyes again
the jungle was perceptibly darker.
Stealthy rustlings in the
shadows grew louder with the
setting sun. Branches snapped
unaccountably in the trees overhead
and every now and then
leaves or a twig fell softly to the
ground, close to where he lay.
Reaching into his jacket, Alan
fingered his pocket blaster. He
pulled it out and held it in his
right hand. "This pop gun
wouldn't even singe a robot, but
it just might stop one of those
pumas."
They said the blast with your name on it would find
you anywhere. This looked like Alan's blast.
Slowly Alan looked around,
sizing up his situation. Behind
him the dark jungle rustled forbiddingly.
He shuddered. "Not a
very healthy spot to spend the
night. On the other hand, I certainly
can't get to the camp with
a pack of mind-activated mechanical
killers running around.
If I can just hold out until morning,
when the big ship arrives ...
The big ship! Good
Lord, Peggy!" He turned white;
oily sweat punctuated his forehead.
Peggy, arriving tomorrow
with the other colonists, the
wives and kids! The metal killers,
tuned to blast any living
flesh, would murder them the
instant they stepped from the
ship!
A pretty girl, Peggy, the girl
he'd married just three weeks
ago. He still couldn't believe it.
It was crazy, he supposed, to
marry a girl and then take off
for an unknown planet, with her
to follow, to try to create a home
in a jungle clearing. Crazy maybe,
but Peggy and her green eyes
that changed color with the
light, with her soft brown hair,
and her happy smile, had ended
thirty years of loneliness and
had, at last, given him a reason
for living. "Not to be killed!"
Alan unclenched his fists and
wiped his palms, bloody where
his fingernails had dug into the
flesh.
There was a slight creak above
him like the protesting of a
branch too heavily laden. Blaster
ready, Alan rolled over onto his
back. In the movement, his elbow
struck the top of a small
earthy mound and he was instantly
engulfed in a swarm of
locust-like insects that beat disgustingly
against his eyes and
mouth. "Fagh!" Waving his
arms before his face he jumped
up and backwards, away from
the bugs. As he did so, a dark
shapeless thing plopped from
the trees onto the spot where he
had been lying stretched out.
Then, like an ambient fungus,
it slithered off into the jungle
undergrowth.
For a split second the jungle
stood frozen in a brilliant blue
flash, followed by the sharp report
of a blaster. Then another.
Alan whirled, startled. The
planet's double moon had risen
and he could see a robot rolling
slowly across the clearing in his
general direction, blasting indiscriminately
at whatever mind
impulses came within its pickup
range, birds, insects, anything.
Six or seven others also left the
camp headquarters area and
headed for the jungle, each to a
slightly different spot.
Apparently the robot hadn't
sensed him yet, but Alan didn't
know what the effective range
of its pickup devices was. He
began to slide back into the
jungle. Minutes later, looking
back he saw that the machine,
though several hundred yards
away, had altered its course and
was now headed directly for
him.
His stomach tightened. Panic.
The dank, musty smell of the
jungle seemed for an instant to
thicken and choke in his throat.
Then he thought of the big ship
landing in the morning, settling
down slowly after a lonely two-week
voyage. He thought of a
brown-haired girl crowding with
the others to the gangway, eager
to embrace the new planet, and
the next instant a charred nothing,
unrecognizable, the victim
of a design error or a misplaced
wire in a machine. "I have to
try," he said aloud. "I have to
try." He moved into the blackness.
Powerful as a small tank, the
killer robot was equipped to
crush, slash, and burn its way
through undergrowth. Nevertheless,
it was slowed by the
larger trees and the thick, clinging
vines, and Alan found that
he could manage to keep ahead
of it, barely out of blaster range.
Only, the robot didn't get tired.
Alan did.
The twin moons cast pale, deceptive
shadows that wavered
and danced across the jungle
floor, hiding debris that tripped
him and often sent him sprawling
into the dark. Sharp-edged
growths tore at his face and
clothes, and insects attracted by
the blood matted against his
pants and shirt. Behind, the robot
crashed imperturbably after
him, lighting the night with fitful
blaster flashes as some
winged or legged life came within
its range.
There was movement also, in
the darkness beside him, scrapings
and rustlings and an occasional
low, throaty sound like an
angry cat. Alan's fingers tensed
on his pocket blaster. Swift
shadowy forms moved quickly in
the shrubs and the growling became
suddenly louder. He fired
twice, blindly, into the undergrowth.
Sharp screams punctuated
the electric blue discharge as
a pack of small feline creatures
leaped snarling and clawing
back into the night.
Mentally, Alan tried to figure
the charge remaining in his blaster.
There wouldn't be much.
"Enough for a few more shots,
maybe. Why the devil didn't I
load in fresh cells this morning!"
The robot crashed on, louder
now, gaining on the tired human.
Legs aching and bruised,
stinging from insect bites, Alan
tried to force himself to run
holding his hands in front of
him like a child in the dark. His
foot tripped on a barely visible
insect hill and a winged swarm
exploded around him. Startled,
Alan jerked sideways, crashing
his head against a tree. He
clutched at the bark for a second,
dazed, then his knees
buckled. His blaster fell into the
shadows.
The robot crashed loudly behind
him now. Without stopping
to think, Alan fumbled along the
ground after his gun, straining
his eyes in the darkness. He
found it just a couple of feet to
one side, against the base of a
small bush. Just as his fingers
closed upon the barrel his other
hand slipped into something
sticky that splashed over his
forearm. He screamed in pain
and leaped back, trying frantically
to wipe the clinging,
burning blackness off his arm.
Patches of black scraped off onto
branches and vines, but the rest
spread slowly over his arm as
agonizing as hot acid, or as flesh
being ripped away layer by
layer.
Almost blinded by pain, whimpering,
Alan stumbled forward.
Sharp muscle spasms shot from
his shoulder across his back and
chest. Tears streamed across his
cheeks.
A blue arc slashed at the trees
a mere hundred yards behind.
He screamed at the blast. "Damn
you, Pete! Damn your robots!
Damn, damn ... Oh, Peggy!"
He stepped into emptiness.
Coolness. Wet. Slowly, washed
by the water, the pain began to
fall away. He wanted to lie there
forever in the dark, cool, wetness.
For ever, and ever, and ...
The air thundered.
In the dim light he could see
the banks of the stream, higher
than a man, muddy and loose.
Growing right to the edge of the
banks, the jungle reached out
with hairy, disjointed arms as
if to snag even the dirty little
stream that passed so timidly
through its domain.
Alan, lying in the mud of the
stream bed, felt the earth shake
as the heavy little robot rolled
slowly and inexorably towards
him. "The Lord High Executioner,"
he thought, "in battle
dress." He tried to stand but his
legs were almost too weak and
his arm felt numb. "I'll drown
him," he said aloud. "I'll drown
the Lord High Executioner." He
laughed. Then his mind cleared.
He remembered where he was.
Alan trembled. For the first
time in his life he understood
what it was to live, because for
the first time he realized that he
would sometime die. In other
times and circumstances he
might put it off for a while, for
months or years, but eventually,
as now, he would have to watch,
still and helpless, while death
came creeping. Then, at thirty,
Alan became a man.
"Dammit, no law says I have
to flame-out
now
!" He forced
himself to rise, forced his legs
to stand, struggling painfully in
the shin-deep ooze. He worked
his way to the bank and began to
dig frenziedly, chest high, about
two feet below the edge.
His arm where the black thing
had been was swollen and tender,
but he forced his hands to dig,
dig, dig, cursing and crying to
hide the pain, and biting his
lips, ignoring the salty taste of
blood. The soft earth crumbled
under his hands until he had a
small cave about three feet deep
in the bank. Beyond that the
soil was held too tightly by the
roots from above and he had to
stop.
The air crackled blue and a
tree crashed heavily past Alan
into the stream. Above him on
the bank, silhouetting against
the moons, the killer robot stopped
and its blaster swivelled
slowly down. Frantically, Alan
hugged the bank as a shaft of
pure electricity arced over him,
sliced into the water, and exploded
in a cloud of steam. The
robot shook for a second, its
blaster muzzle lifted erratically
and for an instant it seemed almost
out of control, then it
quieted and the muzzle again
pointed down.
Pressing with all his might,
Alan slid slowly along the bank
inches at a time, away from the
machine above. Its muzzle turned
to follow him but the edge of
the bank blocked its aim. Grinding
forward a couple of feet,
slightly overhanging the bank,
the robot fired again. For a split
second Alan seemed engulfed in
flame; the heat of hell singed his
head and back, and mud boiled
in the bank by his arm.
Again the robot trembled. It
jerked forward a foot and its
blaster swung slightly away. But
only for a moment. Then the gun
swung back again.
Suddenly, as if sensing something
wrong, its tracks slammed
into reverse. It stood poised for
a second, its treads spinning
crazily as the earth collapsed underneath
it, where Alan had
dug, then it fell with a heavy
splash into the mud, ten feet
from where Alan stood.
Without hesitation Alan
threw himself across the blaster
housing, frantically locking his
arms around the barrel as the
robot's treads churned furiously
in the sticky mud, causing it to
buck and plunge like a Brahma
bull. The treads stopped and the
blaster jerked upwards wrenching
Alan's arms, then slammed
down. Then the whole housing
whirled around and around, tilting
alternately up and down like
a steel-skinned water monster
trying to dislodge a tenacious
crab, while Alan, arms and legs
wrapped tightly around the blaster
barrel and housing, pressed
fiercely against the robot's metal
skin.
Slowly, trying to anticipate
and shift his weight with the
spinning plunges, Alan worked
his hand down to his right hip.
He fumbled for the sheath clipped
to his belt, found it, and extracted
a stubby hunting knife.
Sweat and blood in his eyes,
hardly able to move on the wildly
swinging turret, he felt down
the sides to the thin crack between
the revolving housing and
the stationary portion of the robot.
With a quick prayer he
jammed in the knife blade—and
was whipped headlong into the
mud as the turret literally snapped
to a stop.
The earth, jungle and moons
spun in a pinwheeled blur,
slowed, and settled to their proper
places. Standing in the sticky,
sweet-smelling ooze, Alan eyed
the robot apprehensively. Half
buried in mud, it stood quiet in
the shadowy light except for an
occasional, almost spasmodic
jerk of its blaster barrel. For
the first time that night Alan
allowed himself a slight smile.
"A blade in the old gear box,
eh? How does that feel, boy?"
He turned. "Well, I'd better
get out of here before the knife
slips or the monster cooks up
some more tricks with whatever
it's got for a brain." Digging
little footholds in the soft bank,
he climbed up and stood once
again in the rustling jungle
darkness.
"I wonder," he thought, "how
Pete could cram enough brain
into one of those things to make
it hunt and track so perfectly."
He tried to visualize the computing
circuits needed for the
operation of its tracking mechanism
alone. "There just isn't
room for the electronics. You'd
need a computer as big as the
one at camp headquarters."
In the distance the sky blazed
as a blaster roared in the jungle.
Then Alan heard the approaching
robot, crunching and snapping
its way through the undergrowth
like an onrushing forest
fire. He froze. "Good Lord!
They communicate with each
other! The one I jammed must
be calling others to help."
He began to move along the
bank, away from the crashing
sounds. Suddenly he stopped, his
eyes widened. "Of course! Radio!
I'll bet anything they're
automatically controlled by the
camp computer. That's where
their brain is!" He paused.
"Then, if that were put out of
commission ..." He jerked away
from the bank and half ran, half
pulled himself through the undergrowth
towards the camp.
Trees exploded to his left as
another robot fired in his direction,
too far away to be effective
but churning towards him
through the blackness.
Alan changed direction slightly
to follow a line between the
two robots coming up from
either side, behind him. His eyes
were well accustomed to the dark
now, and he managed to dodge
most of the shadowy vines and
branches before they could snag
or trip him. Even so, he stumbled
in the wiry underbrush and
his legs were a mass of stinging
slashes from ankle to thigh.
The crashing rumble of the
killer robots shook the night behind
him, nearer sometimes,
then falling slightly back, but
following constantly, more
unshakable than bloodhounds
because a man can sometimes cover
a scent, but no man can stop his
thoughts. Intermittently, like
photographers' strobes, blue
flashes would light the jungle
about him. Then, for seconds
afterwards his eyes would see
dancing streaks of yellow and
sharp multi-colored pinwheels
that alternately shrunk and expanded
as if in a surrealist's
nightmare. Alan would have to
pause and squeeze his eyelids
tight shut before he could see
again, and the robots would
move a little closer.
To his right the trees silhouetted
briefly against brilliance as
a third robot slowly moved up
in the distance. Without thinking,
Alan turned slightly to the
left, then froze in momentary
panic. "I should be at the camp
now. Damn, what direction am
I going?" He tried to think
back, to visualize the twists and
turns he'd taken in the jungle.
"All I need is to get lost."
He pictured the camp computer
with no one to stop it, automatically
sending its robots in
wider and wider forays, slowly
wiping every trace of life from
the planet. Technologically advanced
machines doing the job
for which they were built, completely,
thoroughly, without feeling,
and without human masters
to separate sense from futility.
Finally parts would wear out,
circuits would short, and one by
one the killers would crunch to
a halt. A few birds would still
fly then, but a unique animal
life, rare in the universe, would
exist no more. And the bones of
children, eager girls, and their
men would also lie, beside a
rusty hulk, beneath the alien
sun.
"Peggy!"
As if in answer, a tree beside
him breathed fire, then exploded.
In the brief flash of the
blaster shot, Alan saw the steel
glint of a robot only a hundred
yards away, much nearer than
he had thought. "Thank heaven
for trees!" He stepped back, felt
his foot catch in something,
clutched futilely at some leaves
and fell heavily.
Pain danced up his leg as he
grabbed his ankle. Quickly he
felt the throbbing flesh. "Damn
the rotten luck, anyway!" He
blinked the pain tears from his
eyes and looked up—into a robot's
blaster, jutting out of the
foliage, thirty yards away.
Instinctively, in one motion
Alan grabbed his pocket blaster
and fired. To his amazement the
robot jerked back, its gun wobbled
and started to tilt away.
Then, getting itself under control,
it swung back again to face
Alan. He fired again, and again
the robot reacted. It seemed familiar
somehow. Then he remembered
the robot on the river
bank, jiggling and swaying for
seconds after each shot. "Of
course!" He cursed himself for
missing the obvious. "The blaster
static blanks out radio
transmission from the computer
for a few seconds. They even do
it to themselves!"
Firing intermittently, he
pulled himself upright and hobbled
ahead through the bush.
The robot shook spasmodically
with each shot, its gun tilted upward
at an awkward angle.
Then, unexpectedly, Alan saw
stars, real stars brilliant in the
night sky, and half dragging his
swelling leg he stumbled out of
the jungle into the camp clearing.
Ahead, across fifty yards of
grass stood the headquarters
building, housing the robot-controlling
computer. Still firing at
short intervals he started across
the clearing, gritting his teeth
at every step.
Straining every muscle in
spite of the agonizing pain, Alan
forced himself to a limping run
across the uneven ground, carefully
avoiding the insect hills
that jutted up through the grass.
From the corner of his eye he
saw another of the robots standing
shakily in the dark edge of
the jungle waiting, it seemed,
for his small blaster to run dry.
"Be damned! You can't win
now!" Alan yelled between blaster
shots, almost irrational from
the pain that ripped jaggedly
through his leg. Then it happened.
A few feet from the
building's door his blaster quit.
A click. A faint hiss when he
frantically jerked the trigger
again and again, and the spent
cells released themselves from
the device, falling in the grass
at his feet. He dropped the useless
gun.
"No!" He threw himself on
the ground as a new robot suddenly
appeared around the edge
of the building a few feet away,
aimed, and fired. Air burned
over Alan's back and ozone tingled
in his nostrils.
Blinding itself for a few seconds
with its own blaster static,
the robot paused momentarily,
jiggling in place. In this
instant, Alan jammed his hands
into an insect hill and hurled the
pile of dirt and insects directly
at the robot's antenna. In a flash,
hundreds of the winged things
erupted angrily from the hole in
a swarming cloud, each part of
which was a speck of life
transmitting mental energy to the
robot's pickup devices.
Confused by the sudden dispersion
of mind impulses, the
robot fired erratically as Alan
crouched and raced painfully for
the door. It fired again, closer,
as he fumbled with the lock
release. Jagged bits of plastic and
stone ripped past him, torn loose
by the blast.
Frantically, Alan slammed
open the door as the robot, sensing
him strongly now, aimed
point blank. He saw nothing, his
mind thought of nothing but the
red-clad safety switch mounted
beside the computer. Time stopped.
There was nothing else in
the world. He half-jumped, half-fell
towards it, slowly, in tenths
of seconds that seemed measured
out in years.
The universe went black.
Later. Brilliance pressed upon
his eyes. Then pain returned, a
multi-hurting thing that crawled
through his body and dragged
ragged tentacles across his
brain. He moaned.
A voice spoke hollowly in the
distance. "He's waking. Call his
wife."
Alan opened his eyes in a
white room; a white light hung
over his head. Beside him, looking
down with a rueful smile,
stood a young man wearing
space medical insignia. "Yes,"
he acknowledged the question in
Alan's eyes, "you hit the switch.
That was three days ago. When
you're up again we'd all like to
thank you."
Suddenly a sobbing-laughing
green-eyed girl was pressed
tightly against him. Neither of
them spoke. They couldn't. There
was too much to say.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
October 1958. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Alan jambs his knife into the fallen robot, which disrupts the signal. | Alan hurls the oozing blob-like creature at the robot. The blob dissolves the robot with its acid and that is what disrupts the signal. | Alan uses his pocket blaster to disrupt the signal. | Alan throws a handful of an anthill at the robot, using the brain waves of hundred of ants to disrupt the signal. | 2 |
24966_5VVG9W0A_7 | Why did Pete build killer robots? | SURVIVAL
TACTICS
By AL SEVCIK
ILLUSTRATOR NOVICK
The robots were built to serve
Man; to do his work, see to his
comforts, make smooth his way.
Then the robots figured out an
additional service—putting Man
out of his misery.
There
was a sudden crash
that hung sharply in the air,
as if a tree had been hit by
lightning some distance away.
Then another. Alan stopped,
puzzled. Two more blasts, quickly
together, and the sound of a
scream faintly.
Frowning, worrying about the
sounds, Alan momentarily forgot
to watch his step until his foot
suddenly plunged into an ant
hill, throwing him to the jungle
floor. "Damn!" He cursed again,
for the tenth time, and stood
uncertainly in the dimness.
From tall, moss-shrouded trees,
wrist-thick vines hung quietly,
scraping the spongy ground like
the tentacles of some monstrous
tree-bound octopus. Fitful little
plants grew straggly in the
shadows of the mossy trunks,
forming a dense underbrush that
made walking difficult. At midday
some few of the blue sun's
rays filtered through to the
jungle floor, but now, late afternoon
on the planet, the shadows
were long and gloomy.
Alan peered around him at the
vine-draped shadows, listening
to the soft rustlings and faint
twig-snappings of life in the
jungle. Two short, popping
sounds echoed across the stillness,
drowned out almost immediately
and silenced by an
explosive crash. Alan started,
"Blaster fighting! But it can't
be!"
Suddenly anxious, he slashed
a hurried X in one of the trees
to mark his position then turned
to follow a line of similar marks
back through the jungle. He
tried to run, but vines blocked
his way and woody shrubs
caught at his legs, tripping him
and holding him back. Then,
through the trees he saw the
clearing of the camp site, the
temporary home for the scout
ship and the eleven men who,
with Alan, were the only humans
on the jungle planet, Waiamea.
Stepping through the low
shrubbery at the edge of the
site, he looked across the open
area to the two temporary structures,
the camp headquarters
where the power supplies and
the computer were; and the
sleeping quarters. Beyond, nose
high, stood the silver scout ship
that had brought the advance
exploratory party of scientists
and technicians to Waiamea
three days before. Except for a
few of the killer robots rolling
slowly around the camp site on
their quiet treads, there was no
one about.
"So, they've finally got those
things working." Alan smiled
slightly. "Guess that means I
owe Pete a bourbon-and-soda
for sure. Anybody who can
build a robot that hunts by homing
in on animals' mind impulses ..."
He stepped forward
just as a roar of blue flame dissolved
the branches of a tree,
barely above his head.
Without pausing to think,
Alan leaped back, and fell
sprawling over a bush just as
one of the robots rolled silently
up from the right, lowering its
blaster barrel to aim directly at
his head. Alan froze. "My God,
Pete built those things wrong!"
Suddenly a screeching whirlwind
of claws and teeth hurled
itself from the smoldering
branches and crashed against the
robot, clawing insanely at the
antenna and blaster barrel.
With an awkward jerk the robot
swung around and fired its blaster,
completely dissolving the
lower half of the cat creature
which had clung across the barrel.
But the back pressure of the
cat's body overloaded the discharge
circuits. The robot started
to shake, then clicked sharply
as an overload relay snapped
and shorted the blaster cells.
The killer turned and rolled back
towards the camp, leaving Alan
alone.
Shakily, Alan crawled a few
feet back into the undergrowth
where he could lie and watch the
camp, but not himself be seen.
Though visibility didn't make
any difference to the robots, he
felt safer, somehow, hidden. He
knew now what the shooting
sounds had been and why there
hadn't been anyone around the
camp site. A charred blob lying
in the grass of the clearing confirmed
his hypothesis. His stomach
felt sick.
"I suppose," he muttered to
himself, "that Pete assembled
these robots in a batch and then
activated them all at once, probably
never living to realize that
they're tuned to pick up human
brain waves, too. Damn!
Damn!" His eyes blurred and
he slammed his fist into the soft
earth.
When he raised his eyes again
the jungle was perceptibly darker.
Stealthy rustlings in the
shadows grew louder with the
setting sun. Branches snapped
unaccountably in the trees overhead
and every now and then
leaves or a twig fell softly to the
ground, close to where he lay.
Reaching into his jacket, Alan
fingered his pocket blaster. He
pulled it out and held it in his
right hand. "This pop gun
wouldn't even singe a robot, but
it just might stop one of those
pumas."
They said the blast with your name on it would find
you anywhere. This looked like Alan's blast.
Slowly Alan looked around,
sizing up his situation. Behind
him the dark jungle rustled forbiddingly.
He shuddered. "Not a
very healthy spot to spend the
night. On the other hand, I certainly
can't get to the camp with
a pack of mind-activated mechanical
killers running around.
If I can just hold out until morning,
when the big ship arrives ...
The big ship! Good
Lord, Peggy!" He turned white;
oily sweat punctuated his forehead.
Peggy, arriving tomorrow
with the other colonists, the
wives and kids! The metal killers,
tuned to blast any living
flesh, would murder them the
instant they stepped from the
ship!
A pretty girl, Peggy, the girl
he'd married just three weeks
ago. He still couldn't believe it.
It was crazy, he supposed, to
marry a girl and then take off
for an unknown planet, with her
to follow, to try to create a home
in a jungle clearing. Crazy maybe,
but Peggy and her green eyes
that changed color with the
light, with her soft brown hair,
and her happy smile, had ended
thirty years of loneliness and
had, at last, given him a reason
for living. "Not to be killed!"
Alan unclenched his fists and
wiped his palms, bloody where
his fingernails had dug into the
flesh.
There was a slight creak above
him like the protesting of a
branch too heavily laden. Blaster
ready, Alan rolled over onto his
back. In the movement, his elbow
struck the top of a small
earthy mound and he was instantly
engulfed in a swarm of
locust-like insects that beat disgustingly
against his eyes and
mouth. "Fagh!" Waving his
arms before his face he jumped
up and backwards, away from
the bugs. As he did so, a dark
shapeless thing plopped from
the trees onto the spot where he
had been lying stretched out.
Then, like an ambient fungus,
it slithered off into the jungle
undergrowth.
For a split second the jungle
stood frozen in a brilliant blue
flash, followed by the sharp report
of a blaster. Then another.
Alan whirled, startled. The
planet's double moon had risen
and he could see a robot rolling
slowly across the clearing in his
general direction, blasting indiscriminately
at whatever mind
impulses came within its pickup
range, birds, insects, anything.
Six or seven others also left the
camp headquarters area and
headed for the jungle, each to a
slightly different spot.
Apparently the robot hadn't
sensed him yet, but Alan didn't
know what the effective range
of its pickup devices was. He
began to slide back into the
jungle. Minutes later, looking
back he saw that the machine,
though several hundred yards
away, had altered its course and
was now headed directly for
him.
His stomach tightened. Panic.
The dank, musty smell of the
jungle seemed for an instant to
thicken and choke in his throat.
Then he thought of the big ship
landing in the morning, settling
down slowly after a lonely two-week
voyage. He thought of a
brown-haired girl crowding with
the others to the gangway, eager
to embrace the new planet, and
the next instant a charred nothing,
unrecognizable, the victim
of a design error or a misplaced
wire in a machine. "I have to
try," he said aloud. "I have to
try." He moved into the blackness.
Powerful as a small tank, the
killer robot was equipped to
crush, slash, and burn its way
through undergrowth. Nevertheless,
it was slowed by the
larger trees and the thick, clinging
vines, and Alan found that
he could manage to keep ahead
of it, barely out of blaster range.
Only, the robot didn't get tired.
Alan did.
The twin moons cast pale, deceptive
shadows that wavered
and danced across the jungle
floor, hiding debris that tripped
him and often sent him sprawling
into the dark. Sharp-edged
growths tore at his face and
clothes, and insects attracted by
the blood matted against his
pants and shirt. Behind, the robot
crashed imperturbably after
him, lighting the night with fitful
blaster flashes as some
winged or legged life came within
its range.
There was movement also, in
the darkness beside him, scrapings
and rustlings and an occasional
low, throaty sound like an
angry cat. Alan's fingers tensed
on his pocket blaster. Swift
shadowy forms moved quickly in
the shrubs and the growling became
suddenly louder. He fired
twice, blindly, into the undergrowth.
Sharp screams punctuated
the electric blue discharge as
a pack of small feline creatures
leaped snarling and clawing
back into the night.
Mentally, Alan tried to figure
the charge remaining in his blaster.
There wouldn't be much.
"Enough for a few more shots,
maybe. Why the devil didn't I
load in fresh cells this morning!"
The robot crashed on, louder
now, gaining on the tired human.
Legs aching and bruised,
stinging from insect bites, Alan
tried to force himself to run
holding his hands in front of
him like a child in the dark. His
foot tripped on a barely visible
insect hill and a winged swarm
exploded around him. Startled,
Alan jerked sideways, crashing
his head against a tree. He
clutched at the bark for a second,
dazed, then his knees
buckled. His blaster fell into the
shadows.
The robot crashed loudly behind
him now. Without stopping
to think, Alan fumbled along the
ground after his gun, straining
his eyes in the darkness. He
found it just a couple of feet to
one side, against the base of a
small bush. Just as his fingers
closed upon the barrel his other
hand slipped into something
sticky that splashed over his
forearm. He screamed in pain
and leaped back, trying frantically
to wipe the clinging,
burning blackness off his arm.
Patches of black scraped off onto
branches and vines, but the rest
spread slowly over his arm as
agonizing as hot acid, or as flesh
being ripped away layer by
layer.
Almost blinded by pain, whimpering,
Alan stumbled forward.
Sharp muscle spasms shot from
his shoulder across his back and
chest. Tears streamed across his
cheeks.
A blue arc slashed at the trees
a mere hundred yards behind.
He screamed at the blast. "Damn
you, Pete! Damn your robots!
Damn, damn ... Oh, Peggy!"
He stepped into emptiness.
Coolness. Wet. Slowly, washed
by the water, the pain began to
fall away. He wanted to lie there
forever in the dark, cool, wetness.
For ever, and ever, and ...
The air thundered.
In the dim light he could see
the banks of the stream, higher
than a man, muddy and loose.
Growing right to the edge of the
banks, the jungle reached out
with hairy, disjointed arms as
if to snag even the dirty little
stream that passed so timidly
through its domain.
Alan, lying in the mud of the
stream bed, felt the earth shake
as the heavy little robot rolled
slowly and inexorably towards
him. "The Lord High Executioner,"
he thought, "in battle
dress." He tried to stand but his
legs were almost too weak and
his arm felt numb. "I'll drown
him," he said aloud. "I'll drown
the Lord High Executioner." He
laughed. Then his mind cleared.
He remembered where he was.
Alan trembled. For the first
time in his life he understood
what it was to live, because for
the first time he realized that he
would sometime die. In other
times and circumstances he
might put it off for a while, for
months or years, but eventually,
as now, he would have to watch,
still and helpless, while death
came creeping. Then, at thirty,
Alan became a man.
"Dammit, no law says I have
to flame-out
now
!" He forced
himself to rise, forced his legs
to stand, struggling painfully in
the shin-deep ooze. He worked
his way to the bank and began to
dig frenziedly, chest high, about
two feet below the edge.
His arm where the black thing
had been was swollen and tender,
but he forced his hands to dig,
dig, dig, cursing and crying to
hide the pain, and biting his
lips, ignoring the salty taste of
blood. The soft earth crumbled
under his hands until he had a
small cave about three feet deep
in the bank. Beyond that the
soil was held too tightly by the
roots from above and he had to
stop.
The air crackled blue and a
tree crashed heavily past Alan
into the stream. Above him on
the bank, silhouetting against
the moons, the killer robot stopped
and its blaster swivelled
slowly down. Frantically, Alan
hugged the bank as a shaft of
pure electricity arced over him,
sliced into the water, and exploded
in a cloud of steam. The
robot shook for a second, its
blaster muzzle lifted erratically
and for an instant it seemed almost
out of control, then it
quieted and the muzzle again
pointed down.
Pressing with all his might,
Alan slid slowly along the bank
inches at a time, away from the
machine above. Its muzzle turned
to follow him but the edge of
the bank blocked its aim. Grinding
forward a couple of feet,
slightly overhanging the bank,
the robot fired again. For a split
second Alan seemed engulfed in
flame; the heat of hell singed his
head and back, and mud boiled
in the bank by his arm.
Again the robot trembled. It
jerked forward a foot and its
blaster swung slightly away. But
only for a moment. Then the gun
swung back again.
Suddenly, as if sensing something
wrong, its tracks slammed
into reverse. It stood poised for
a second, its treads spinning
crazily as the earth collapsed underneath
it, where Alan had
dug, then it fell with a heavy
splash into the mud, ten feet
from where Alan stood.
Without hesitation Alan
threw himself across the blaster
housing, frantically locking his
arms around the barrel as the
robot's treads churned furiously
in the sticky mud, causing it to
buck and plunge like a Brahma
bull. The treads stopped and the
blaster jerked upwards wrenching
Alan's arms, then slammed
down. Then the whole housing
whirled around and around, tilting
alternately up and down like
a steel-skinned water monster
trying to dislodge a tenacious
crab, while Alan, arms and legs
wrapped tightly around the blaster
barrel and housing, pressed
fiercely against the robot's metal
skin.
Slowly, trying to anticipate
and shift his weight with the
spinning plunges, Alan worked
his hand down to his right hip.
He fumbled for the sheath clipped
to his belt, found it, and extracted
a stubby hunting knife.
Sweat and blood in his eyes,
hardly able to move on the wildly
swinging turret, he felt down
the sides to the thin crack between
the revolving housing and
the stationary portion of the robot.
With a quick prayer he
jammed in the knife blade—and
was whipped headlong into the
mud as the turret literally snapped
to a stop.
The earth, jungle and moons
spun in a pinwheeled blur,
slowed, and settled to their proper
places. Standing in the sticky,
sweet-smelling ooze, Alan eyed
the robot apprehensively. Half
buried in mud, it stood quiet in
the shadowy light except for an
occasional, almost spasmodic
jerk of its blaster barrel. For
the first time that night Alan
allowed himself a slight smile.
"A blade in the old gear box,
eh? How does that feel, boy?"
He turned. "Well, I'd better
get out of here before the knife
slips or the monster cooks up
some more tricks with whatever
it's got for a brain." Digging
little footholds in the soft bank,
he climbed up and stood once
again in the rustling jungle
darkness.
"I wonder," he thought, "how
Pete could cram enough brain
into one of those things to make
it hunt and track so perfectly."
He tried to visualize the computing
circuits needed for the
operation of its tracking mechanism
alone. "There just isn't
room for the electronics. You'd
need a computer as big as the
one at camp headquarters."
In the distance the sky blazed
as a blaster roared in the jungle.
Then Alan heard the approaching
robot, crunching and snapping
its way through the undergrowth
like an onrushing forest
fire. He froze. "Good Lord!
They communicate with each
other! The one I jammed must
be calling others to help."
He began to move along the
bank, away from the crashing
sounds. Suddenly he stopped, his
eyes widened. "Of course! Radio!
I'll bet anything they're
automatically controlled by the
camp computer. That's where
their brain is!" He paused.
"Then, if that were put out of
commission ..." He jerked away
from the bank and half ran, half
pulled himself through the undergrowth
towards the camp.
Trees exploded to his left as
another robot fired in his direction,
too far away to be effective
but churning towards him
through the blackness.
Alan changed direction slightly
to follow a line between the
two robots coming up from
either side, behind him. His eyes
were well accustomed to the dark
now, and he managed to dodge
most of the shadowy vines and
branches before they could snag
or trip him. Even so, he stumbled
in the wiry underbrush and
his legs were a mass of stinging
slashes from ankle to thigh.
The crashing rumble of the
killer robots shook the night behind
him, nearer sometimes,
then falling slightly back, but
following constantly, more
unshakable than bloodhounds
because a man can sometimes cover
a scent, but no man can stop his
thoughts. Intermittently, like
photographers' strobes, blue
flashes would light the jungle
about him. Then, for seconds
afterwards his eyes would see
dancing streaks of yellow and
sharp multi-colored pinwheels
that alternately shrunk and expanded
as if in a surrealist's
nightmare. Alan would have to
pause and squeeze his eyelids
tight shut before he could see
again, and the robots would
move a little closer.
To his right the trees silhouetted
briefly against brilliance as
a third robot slowly moved up
in the distance. Without thinking,
Alan turned slightly to the
left, then froze in momentary
panic. "I should be at the camp
now. Damn, what direction am
I going?" He tried to think
back, to visualize the twists and
turns he'd taken in the jungle.
"All I need is to get lost."
He pictured the camp computer
with no one to stop it, automatically
sending its robots in
wider and wider forays, slowly
wiping every trace of life from
the planet. Technologically advanced
machines doing the job
for which they were built, completely,
thoroughly, without feeling,
and without human masters
to separate sense from futility.
Finally parts would wear out,
circuits would short, and one by
one the killers would crunch to
a halt. A few birds would still
fly then, but a unique animal
life, rare in the universe, would
exist no more. And the bones of
children, eager girls, and their
men would also lie, beside a
rusty hulk, beneath the alien
sun.
"Peggy!"
As if in answer, a tree beside
him breathed fire, then exploded.
In the brief flash of the
blaster shot, Alan saw the steel
glint of a robot only a hundred
yards away, much nearer than
he had thought. "Thank heaven
for trees!" He stepped back, felt
his foot catch in something,
clutched futilely at some leaves
and fell heavily.
Pain danced up his leg as he
grabbed his ankle. Quickly he
felt the throbbing flesh. "Damn
the rotten luck, anyway!" He
blinked the pain tears from his
eyes and looked up—into a robot's
blaster, jutting out of the
foliage, thirty yards away.
Instinctively, in one motion
Alan grabbed his pocket blaster
and fired. To his amazement the
robot jerked back, its gun wobbled
and started to tilt away.
Then, getting itself under control,
it swung back again to face
Alan. He fired again, and again
the robot reacted. It seemed familiar
somehow. Then he remembered
the robot on the river
bank, jiggling and swaying for
seconds after each shot. "Of
course!" He cursed himself for
missing the obvious. "The blaster
static blanks out radio
transmission from the computer
for a few seconds. They even do
it to themselves!"
Firing intermittently, he
pulled himself upright and hobbled
ahead through the bush.
The robot shook spasmodically
with each shot, its gun tilted upward
at an awkward angle.
Then, unexpectedly, Alan saw
stars, real stars brilliant in the
night sky, and half dragging his
swelling leg he stumbled out of
the jungle into the camp clearing.
Ahead, across fifty yards of
grass stood the headquarters
building, housing the robot-controlling
computer. Still firing at
short intervals he started across
the clearing, gritting his teeth
at every step.
Straining every muscle in
spite of the agonizing pain, Alan
forced himself to a limping run
across the uneven ground, carefully
avoiding the insect hills
that jutted up through the grass.
From the corner of his eye he
saw another of the robots standing
shakily in the dark edge of
the jungle waiting, it seemed,
for his small blaster to run dry.
"Be damned! You can't win
now!" Alan yelled between blaster
shots, almost irrational from
the pain that ripped jaggedly
through his leg. Then it happened.
A few feet from the
building's door his blaster quit.
A click. A faint hiss when he
frantically jerked the trigger
again and again, and the spent
cells released themselves from
the device, falling in the grass
at his feet. He dropped the useless
gun.
"No!" He threw himself on
the ground as a new robot suddenly
appeared around the edge
of the building a few feet away,
aimed, and fired. Air burned
over Alan's back and ozone tingled
in his nostrils.
Blinding itself for a few seconds
with its own blaster static,
the robot paused momentarily,
jiggling in place. In this
instant, Alan jammed his hands
into an insect hill and hurled the
pile of dirt and insects directly
at the robot's antenna. In a flash,
hundreds of the winged things
erupted angrily from the hole in
a swarming cloud, each part of
which was a speck of life
transmitting mental energy to the
robot's pickup devices.
Confused by the sudden dispersion
of mind impulses, the
robot fired erratically as Alan
crouched and raced painfully for
the door. It fired again, closer,
as he fumbled with the lock
release. Jagged bits of plastic and
stone ripped past him, torn loose
by the blast.
Frantically, Alan slammed
open the door as the robot, sensing
him strongly now, aimed
point blank. He saw nothing, his
mind thought of nothing but the
red-clad safety switch mounted
beside the computer. Time stopped.
There was nothing else in
the world. He half-jumped, half-fell
towards it, slowly, in tenths
of seconds that seemed measured
out in years.
The universe went black.
Later. Brilliance pressed upon
his eyes. Then pain returned, a
multi-hurting thing that crawled
through his body and dragged
ragged tentacles across his
brain. He moaned.
A voice spoke hollowly in the
distance. "He's waking. Call his
wife."
Alan opened his eyes in a
white room; a white light hung
over his head. Beside him, looking
down with a rueful smile,
stood a young man wearing
space medical insignia. "Yes,"
he acknowledged the question in
Alan's eyes, "you hit the switch.
That was three days ago. When
you're up again we'd all like to
thank you."
Suddenly a sobbing-laughing
green-eyed girl was pressed
tightly against him. Neither of
them spoke. They couldn't. There
was too much to say.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
October 1958. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Pete did not intentionally build killer robots. The robots became sentient and decided organic life forms were the enemy. | Pete did not intentionally build killer robots. Clearly, something went wrong. | Pete did not intentionally build killer robots. The Waiameans must have reprogrammed them to kill the colonists. | Pete lost his mind during the voyage to Waiamea. He just wants to watch the planet burn. | 1 |
24966_5VVG9W0A_8 | Where are the rest of the men from the scout ship? | SURVIVAL
TACTICS
By AL SEVCIK
ILLUSTRATOR NOVICK
The robots were built to serve
Man; to do his work, see to his
comforts, make smooth his way.
Then the robots figured out an
additional service—putting Man
out of his misery.
There
was a sudden crash
that hung sharply in the air,
as if a tree had been hit by
lightning some distance away.
Then another. Alan stopped,
puzzled. Two more blasts, quickly
together, and the sound of a
scream faintly.
Frowning, worrying about the
sounds, Alan momentarily forgot
to watch his step until his foot
suddenly plunged into an ant
hill, throwing him to the jungle
floor. "Damn!" He cursed again,
for the tenth time, and stood
uncertainly in the dimness.
From tall, moss-shrouded trees,
wrist-thick vines hung quietly,
scraping the spongy ground like
the tentacles of some monstrous
tree-bound octopus. Fitful little
plants grew straggly in the
shadows of the mossy trunks,
forming a dense underbrush that
made walking difficult. At midday
some few of the blue sun's
rays filtered through to the
jungle floor, but now, late afternoon
on the planet, the shadows
were long and gloomy.
Alan peered around him at the
vine-draped shadows, listening
to the soft rustlings and faint
twig-snappings of life in the
jungle. Two short, popping
sounds echoed across the stillness,
drowned out almost immediately
and silenced by an
explosive crash. Alan started,
"Blaster fighting! But it can't
be!"
Suddenly anxious, he slashed
a hurried X in one of the trees
to mark his position then turned
to follow a line of similar marks
back through the jungle. He
tried to run, but vines blocked
his way and woody shrubs
caught at his legs, tripping him
and holding him back. Then,
through the trees he saw the
clearing of the camp site, the
temporary home for the scout
ship and the eleven men who,
with Alan, were the only humans
on the jungle planet, Waiamea.
Stepping through the low
shrubbery at the edge of the
site, he looked across the open
area to the two temporary structures,
the camp headquarters
where the power supplies and
the computer were; and the
sleeping quarters. Beyond, nose
high, stood the silver scout ship
that had brought the advance
exploratory party of scientists
and technicians to Waiamea
three days before. Except for a
few of the killer robots rolling
slowly around the camp site on
their quiet treads, there was no
one about.
"So, they've finally got those
things working." Alan smiled
slightly. "Guess that means I
owe Pete a bourbon-and-soda
for sure. Anybody who can
build a robot that hunts by homing
in on animals' mind impulses ..."
He stepped forward
just as a roar of blue flame dissolved
the branches of a tree,
barely above his head.
Without pausing to think,
Alan leaped back, and fell
sprawling over a bush just as
one of the robots rolled silently
up from the right, lowering its
blaster barrel to aim directly at
his head. Alan froze. "My God,
Pete built those things wrong!"
Suddenly a screeching whirlwind
of claws and teeth hurled
itself from the smoldering
branches and crashed against the
robot, clawing insanely at the
antenna and blaster barrel.
With an awkward jerk the robot
swung around and fired its blaster,
completely dissolving the
lower half of the cat creature
which had clung across the barrel.
But the back pressure of the
cat's body overloaded the discharge
circuits. The robot started
to shake, then clicked sharply
as an overload relay snapped
and shorted the blaster cells.
The killer turned and rolled back
towards the camp, leaving Alan
alone.
Shakily, Alan crawled a few
feet back into the undergrowth
where he could lie and watch the
camp, but not himself be seen.
Though visibility didn't make
any difference to the robots, he
felt safer, somehow, hidden. He
knew now what the shooting
sounds had been and why there
hadn't been anyone around the
camp site. A charred blob lying
in the grass of the clearing confirmed
his hypothesis. His stomach
felt sick.
"I suppose," he muttered to
himself, "that Pete assembled
these robots in a batch and then
activated them all at once, probably
never living to realize that
they're tuned to pick up human
brain waves, too. Damn!
Damn!" His eyes blurred and
he slammed his fist into the soft
earth.
When he raised his eyes again
the jungle was perceptibly darker.
Stealthy rustlings in the
shadows grew louder with the
setting sun. Branches snapped
unaccountably in the trees overhead
and every now and then
leaves or a twig fell softly to the
ground, close to where he lay.
Reaching into his jacket, Alan
fingered his pocket blaster. He
pulled it out and held it in his
right hand. "This pop gun
wouldn't even singe a robot, but
it just might stop one of those
pumas."
They said the blast with your name on it would find
you anywhere. This looked like Alan's blast.
Slowly Alan looked around,
sizing up his situation. Behind
him the dark jungle rustled forbiddingly.
He shuddered. "Not a
very healthy spot to spend the
night. On the other hand, I certainly
can't get to the camp with
a pack of mind-activated mechanical
killers running around.
If I can just hold out until morning,
when the big ship arrives ...
The big ship! Good
Lord, Peggy!" He turned white;
oily sweat punctuated his forehead.
Peggy, arriving tomorrow
with the other colonists, the
wives and kids! The metal killers,
tuned to blast any living
flesh, would murder them the
instant they stepped from the
ship!
A pretty girl, Peggy, the girl
he'd married just three weeks
ago. He still couldn't believe it.
It was crazy, he supposed, to
marry a girl and then take off
for an unknown planet, with her
to follow, to try to create a home
in a jungle clearing. Crazy maybe,
but Peggy and her green eyes
that changed color with the
light, with her soft brown hair,
and her happy smile, had ended
thirty years of loneliness and
had, at last, given him a reason
for living. "Not to be killed!"
Alan unclenched his fists and
wiped his palms, bloody where
his fingernails had dug into the
flesh.
There was a slight creak above
him like the protesting of a
branch too heavily laden. Blaster
ready, Alan rolled over onto his
back. In the movement, his elbow
struck the top of a small
earthy mound and he was instantly
engulfed in a swarm of
locust-like insects that beat disgustingly
against his eyes and
mouth. "Fagh!" Waving his
arms before his face he jumped
up and backwards, away from
the bugs. As he did so, a dark
shapeless thing plopped from
the trees onto the spot where he
had been lying stretched out.
Then, like an ambient fungus,
it slithered off into the jungle
undergrowth.
For a split second the jungle
stood frozen in a brilliant blue
flash, followed by the sharp report
of a blaster. Then another.
Alan whirled, startled. The
planet's double moon had risen
and he could see a robot rolling
slowly across the clearing in his
general direction, blasting indiscriminately
at whatever mind
impulses came within its pickup
range, birds, insects, anything.
Six or seven others also left the
camp headquarters area and
headed for the jungle, each to a
slightly different spot.
Apparently the robot hadn't
sensed him yet, but Alan didn't
know what the effective range
of its pickup devices was. He
began to slide back into the
jungle. Minutes later, looking
back he saw that the machine,
though several hundred yards
away, had altered its course and
was now headed directly for
him.
His stomach tightened. Panic.
The dank, musty smell of the
jungle seemed for an instant to
thicken and choke in his throat.
Then he thought of the big ship
landing in the morning, settling
down slowly after a lonely two-week
voyage. He thought of a
brown-haired girl crowding with
the others to the gangway, eager
to embrace the new planet, and
the next instant a charred nothing,
unrecognizable, the victim
of a design error or a misplaced
wire in a machine. "I have to
try," he said aloud. "I have to
try." He moved into the blackness.
Powerful as a small tank, the
killer robot was equipped to
crush, slash, and burn its way
through undergrowth. Nevertheless,
it was slowed by the
larger trees and the thick, clinging
vines, and Alan found that
he could manage to keep ahead
of it, barely out of blaster range.
Only, the robot didn't get tired.
Alan did.
The twin moons cast pale, deceptive
shadows that wavered
and danced across the jungle
floor, hiding debris that tripped
him and often sent him sprawling
into the dark. Sharp-edged
growths tore at his face and
clothes, and insects attracted by
the blood matted against his
pants and shirt. Behind, the robot
crashed imperturbably after
him, lighting the night with fitful
blaster flashes as some
winged or legged life came within
its range.
There was movement also, in
the darkness beside him, scrapings
and rustlings and an occasional
low, throaty sound like an
angry cat. Alan's fingers tensed
on his pocket blaster. Swift
shadowy forms moved quickly in
the shrubs and the growling became
suddenly louder. He fired
twice, blindly, into the undergrowth.
Sharp screams punctuated
the electric blue discharge as
a pack of small feline creatures
leaped snarling and clawing
back into the night.
Mentally, Alan tried to figure
the charge remaining in his blaster.
There wouldn't be much.
"Enough for a few more shots,
maybe. Why the devil didn't I
load in fresh cells this morning!"
The robot crashed on, louder
now, gaining on the tired human.
Legs aching and bruised,
stinging from insect bites, Alan
tried to force himself to run
holding his hands in front of
him like a child in the dark. His
foot tripped on a barely visible
insect hill and a winged swarm
exploded around him. Startled,
Alan jerked sideways, crashing
his head against a tree. He
clutched at the bark for a second,
dazed, then his knees
buckled. His blaster fell into the
shadows.
The robot crashed loudly behind
him now. Without stopping
to think, Alan fumbled along the
ground after his gun, straining
his eyes in the darkness. He
found it just a couple of feet to
one side, against the base of a
small bush. Just as his fingers
closed upon the barrel his other
hand slipped into something
sticky that splashed over his
forearm. He screamed in pain
and leaped back, trying frantically
to wipe the clinging,
burning blackness off his arm.
Patches of black scraped off onto
branches and vines, but the rest
spread slowly over his arm as
agonizing as hot acid, or as flesh
being ripped away layer by
layer.
Almost blinded by pain, whimpering,
Alan stumbled forward.
Sharp muscle spasms shot from
his shoulder across his back and
chest. Tears streamed across his
cheeks.
A blue arc slashed at the trees
a mere hundred yards behind.
He screamed at the blast. "Damn
you, Pete! Damn your robots!
Damn, damn ... Oh, Peggy!"
He stepped into emptiness.
Coolness. Wet. Slowly, washed
by the water, the pain began to
fall away. He wanted to lie there
forever in the dark, cool, wetness.
For ever, and ever, and ...
The air thundered.
In the dim light he could see
the banks of the stream, higher
than a man, muddy and loose.
Growing right to the edge of the
banks, the jungle reached out
with hairy, disjointed arms as
if to snag even the dirty little
stream that passed so timidly
through its domain.
Alan, lying in the mud of the
stream bed, felt the earth shake
as the heavy little robot rolled
slowly and inexorably towards
him. "The Lord High Executioner,"
he thought, "in battle
dress." He tried to stand but his
legs were almost too weak and
his arm felt numb. "I'll drown
him," he said aloud. "I'll drown
the Lord High Executioner." He
laughed. Then his mind cleared.
He remembered where he was.
Alan trembled. For the first
time in his life he understood
what it was to live, because for
the first time he realized that he
would sometime die. In other
times and circumstances he
might put it off for a while, for
months or years, but eventually,
as now, he would have to watch,
still and helpless, while death
came creeping. Then, at thirty,
Alan became a man.
"Dammit, no law says I have
to flame-out
now
!" He forced
himself to rise, forced his legs
to stand, struggling painfully in
the shin-deep ooze. He worked
his way to the bank and began to
dig frenziedly, chest high, about
two feet below the edge.
His arm where the black thing
had been was swollen and tender,
but he forced his hands to dig,
dig, dig, cursing and crying to
hide the pain, and biting his
lips, ignoring the salty taste of
blood. The soft earth crumbled
under his hands until he had a
small cave about three feet deep
in the bank. Beyond that the
soil was held too tightly by the
roots from above and he had to
stop.
The air crackled blue and a
tree crashed heavily past Alan
into the stream. Above him on
the bank, silhouetting against
the moons, the killer robot stopped
and its blaster swivelled
slowly down. Frantically, Alan
hugged the bank as a shaft of
pure electricity arced over him,
sliced into the water, and exploded
in a cloud of steam. The
robot shook for a second, its
blaster muzzle lifted erratically
and for an instant it seemed almost
out of control, then it
quieted and the muzzle again
pointed down.
Pressing with all his might,
Alan slid slowly along the bank
inches at a time, away from the
machine above. Its muzzle turned
to follow him but the edge of
the bank blocked its aim. Grinding
forward a couple of feet,
slightly overhanging the bank,
the robot fired again. For a split
second Alan seemed engulfed in
flame; the heat of hell singed his
head and back, and mud boiled
in the bank by his arm.
Again the robot trembled. It
jerked forward a foot and its
blaster swung slightly away. But
only for a moment. Then the gun
swung back again.
Suddenly, as if sensing something
wrong, its tracks slammed
into reverse. It stood poised for
a second, its treads spinning
crazily as the earth collapsed underneath
it, where Alan had
dug, then it fell with a heavy
splash into the mud, ten feet
from where Alan stood.
Without hesitation Alan
threw himself across the blaster
housing, frantically locking his
arms around the barrel as the
robot's treads churned furiously
in the sticky mud, causing it to
buck and plunge like a Brahma
bull. The treads stopped and the
blaster jerked upwards wrenching
Alan's arms, then slammed
down. Then the whole housing
whirled around and around, tilting
alternately up and down like
a steel-skinned water monster
trying to dislodge a tenacious
crab, while Alan, arms and legs
wrapped tightly around the blaster
barrel and housing, pressed
fiercely against the robot's metal
skin.
Slowly, trying to anticipate
and shift his weight with the
spinning plunges, Alan worked
his hand down to his right hip.
He fumbled for the sheath clipped
to his belt, found it, and extracted
a stubby hunting knife.
Sweat and blood in his eyes,
hardly able to move on the wildly
swinging turret, he felt down
the sides to the thin crack between
the revolving housing and
the stationary portion of the robot.
With a quick prayer he
jammed in the knife blade—and
was whipped headlong into the
mud as the turret literally snapped
to a stop.
The earth, jungle and moons
spun in a pinwheeled blur,
slowed, and settled to their proper
places. Standing in the sticky,
sweet-smelling ooze, Alan eyed
the robot apprehensively. Half
buried in mud, it stood quiet in
the shadowy light except for an
occasional, almost spasmodic
jerk of its blaster barrel. For
the first time that night Alan
allowed himself a slight smile.
"A blade in the old gear box,
eh? How does that feel, boy?"
He turned. "Well, I'd better
get out of here before the knife
slips or the monster cooks up
some more tricks with whatever
it's got for a brain." Digging
little footholds in the soft bank,
he climbed up and stood once
again in the rustling jungle
darkness.
"I wonder," he thought, "how
Pete could cram enough brain
into one of those things to make
it hunt and track so perfectly."
He tried to visualize the computing
circuits needed for the
operation of its tracking mechanism
alone. "There just isn't
room for the electronics. You'd
need a computer as big as the
one at camp headquarters."
In the distance the sky blazed
as a blaster roared in the jungle.
Then Alan heard the approaching
robot, crunching and snapping
its way through the undergrowth
like an onrushing forest
fire. He froze. "Good Lord!
They communicate with each
other! The one I jammed must
be calling others to help."
He began to move along the
bank, away from the crashing
sounds. Suddenly he stopped, his
eyes widened. "Of course! Radio!
I'll bet anything they're
automatically controlled by the
camp computer. That's where
their brain is!" He paused.
"Then, if that were put out of
commission ..." He jerked away
from the bank and half ran, half
pulled himself through the undergrowth
towards the camp.
Trees exploded to his left as
another robot fired in his direction,
too far away to be effective
but churning towards him
through the blackness.
Alan changed direction slightly
to follow a line between the
two robots coming up from
either side, behind him. His eyes
were well accustomed to the dark
now, and he managed to dodge
most of the shadowy vines and
branches before they could snag
or trip him. Even so, he stumbled
in the wiry underbrush and
his legs were a mass of stinging
slashes from ankle to thigh.
The crashing rumble of the
killer robots shook the night behind
him, nearer sometimes,
then falling slightly back, but
following constantly, more
unshakable than bloodhounds
because a man can sometimes cover
a scent, but no man can stop his
thoughts. Intermittently, like
photographers' strobes, blue
flashes would light the jungle
about him. Then, for seconds
afterwards his eyes would see
dancing streaks of yellow and
sharp multi-colored pinwheels
that alternately shrunk and expanded
as if in a surrealist's
nightmare. Alan would have to
pause and squeeze his eyelids
tight shut before he could see
again, and the robots would
move a little closer.
To his right the trees silhouetted
briefly against brilliance as
a third robot slowly moved up
in the distance. Without thinking,
Alan turned slightly to the
left, then froze in momentary
panic. "I should be at the camp
now. Damn, what direction am
I going?" He tried to think
back, to visualize the twists and
turns he'd taken in the jungle.
"All I need is to get lost."
He pictured the camp computer
with no one to stop it, automatically
sending its robots in
wider and wider forays, slowly
wiping every trace of life from
the planet. Technologically advanced
machines doing the job
for which they were built, completely,
thoroughly, without feeling,
and without human masters
to separate sense from futility.
Finally parts would wear out,
circuits would short, and one by
one the killers would crunch to
a halt. A few birds would still
fly then, but a unique animal
life, rare in the universe, would
exist no more. And the bones of
children, eager girls, and their
men would also lie, beside a
rusty hulk, beneath the alien
sun.
"Peggy!"
As if in answer, a tree beside
him breathed fire, then exploded.
In the brief flash of the
blaster shot, Alan saw the steel
glint of a robot only a hundred
yards away, much nearer than
he had thought. "Thank heaven
for trees!" He stepped back, felt
his foot catch in something,
clutched futilely at some leaves
and fell heavily.
Pain danced up his leg as he
grabbed his ankle. Quickly he
felt the throbbing flesh. "Damn
the rotten luck, anyway!" He
blinked the pain tears from his
eyes and looked up—into a robot's
blaster, jutting out of the
foliage, thirty yards away.
Instinctively, in one motion
Alan grabbed his pocket blaster
and fired. To his amazement the
robot jerked back, its gun wobbled
and started to tilt away.
Then, getting itself under control,
it swung back again to face
Alan. He fired again, and again
the robot reacted. It seemed familiar
somehow. Then he remembered
the robot on the river
bank, jiggling and swaying for
seconds after each shot. "Of
course!" He cursed himself for
missing the obvious. "The blaster
static blanks out radio
transmission from the computer
for a few seconds. They even do
it to themselves!"
Firing intermittently, he
pulled himself upright and hobbled
ahead through the bush.
The robot shook spasmodically
with each shot, its gun tilted upward
at an awkward angle.
Then, unexpectedly, Alan saw
stars, real stars brilliant in the
night sky, and half dragging his
swelling leg he stumbled out of
the jungle into the camp clearing.
Ahead, across fifty yards of
grass stood the headquarters
building, housing the robot-controlling
computer. Still firing at
short intervals he started across
the clearing, gritting his teeth
at every step.
Straining every muscle in
spite of the agonizing pain, Alan
forced himself to a limping run
across the uneven ground, carefully
avoiding the insect hills
that jutted up through the grass.
From the corner of his eye he
saw another of the robots standing
shakily in the dark edge of
the jungle waiting, it seemed,
for his small blaster to run dry.
"Be damned! You can't win
now!" Alan yelled between blaster
shots, almost irrational from
the pain that ripped jaggedly
through his leg. Then it happened.
A few feet from the
building's door his blaster quit.
A click. A faint hiss when he
frantically jerked the trigger
again and again, and the spent
cells released themselves from
the device, falling in the grass
at his feet. He dropped the useless
gun.
"No!" He threw himself on
the ground as a new robot suddenly
appeared around the edge
of the building a few feet away,
aimed, and fired. Air burned
over Alan's back and ozone tingled
in his nostrils.
Blinding itself for a few seconds
with its own blaster static,
the robot paused momentarily,
jiggling in place. In this
instant, Alan jammed his hands
into an insect hill and hurled the
pile of dirt and insects directly
at the robot's antenna. In a flash,
hundreds of the winged things
erupted angrily from the hole in
a swarming cloud, each part of
which was a speck of life
transmitting mental energy to the
robot's pickup devices.
Confused by the sudden dispersion
of mind impulses, the
robot fired erratically as Alan
crouched and raced painfully for
the door. It fired again, closer,
as he fumbled with the lock
release. Jagged bits of plastic and
stone ripped past him, torn loose
by the blast.
Frantically, Alan slammed
open the door as the robot, sensing
him strongly now, aimed
point blank. He saw nothing, his
mind thought of nothing but the
red-clad safety switch mounted
beside the computer. Time stopped.
There was nothing else in
the world. He half-jumped, half-fell
towards it, slowly, in tenths
of seconds that seemed measured
out in years.
The universe went black.
Later. Brilliance pressed upon
his eyes. Then pain returned, a
multi-hurting thing that crawled
through his body and dragged
ragged tentacles across his
brain. He moaned.
A voice spoke hollowly in the
distance. "He's waking. Call his
wife."
Alan opened his eyes in a
white room; a white light hung
over his head. Beside him, looking
down with a rueful smile,
stood a young man wearing
space medical insignia. "Yes,"
he acknowledged the question in
Alan's eyes, "you hit the switch.
That was three days ago. When
you're up again we'd all like to
thank you."
Suddenly a sobbing-laughing
green-eyed girl was pressed
tightly against him. Neither of
them spoke. They couldn't. There
was too much to say.
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
October 1958. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | They fled in the scout ship once the robots started shooting. They are safe aboard the big ship again. | Their bodies were disintegrated by the robots' weapons. | They are hiding on the scout ship from Pete and his evil robots. | They put themselves into stasis on the scout ship. Now the robots will not be able to track their brain waves. | 1 |
24977_63MMCMYX_1 | How does Pembrook feel about Mary Ann? | THE PERFECTIONISTS
By ARNOLD CASTLE
ILLUSTRATED by SUMMERS
Is there something wrong with you?
Do you fail to fit in with your group?
Nervous, anxious, ill-at-ease? Happy
about it? Lucky you!
Frank Pembroke
sat behind
the desk of his shabby
little office over Lemark's Liquors
in downtown Los Angeles and
waited for his first customer. He
had been in business for a week
and as yet had had no callers.
Therefore, it was with a mingled
sense of excitement and satisfaction
that he greeted the tall,
dark, smooth-faced figure that
came up the stairs and into the
office shortly before noon.
"Good day, sir," said Pembroke
with an amiable smile. "I
see my advertisement has interested
you. Please stand in that
corner for just a moment."
Opening the desk drawer,
which was almost empty, Pembroke
removed an automatic pistol
fitted with a silencer. Pointing
it at the amazed customer, he
fired four .22 caliber longs into
the narrow chest. Then he made
a telephone call and sat down to
wait. He wondered how long it
would be before his next client
would arrive.
The series of events leading up
to Pembroke's present occupation
had commenced on a dismal,
overcast evening in the South
Pacific a year earlier. Bound for
Sydney, two days out of Valparaiso,
the Colombian tramp
steamer
Elena Mia
had encountered
a dense greenish fog which
seemed vaguely redolent of citrus
trees. Standing on the forward
deck, Pembroke was one of the
first to perceive the peculiar odor
and to spot the immense gray
hulk wallowing in the murky distance.
Then the explosion had come,
from far below the waterline,
and the decks were awash with
frantic crewmen, officers, and the
handful of passengers. Only two
lifeboats were launched before
the
Elena Mia
went down. Pembroke
was in the second. The
roar of the sinking ship was the
last thing he heard for some
time.
Pembroke came as close to being
a professional adventurer as
one can in these days of regimented
travel, organized peril,
and political restriction. He had
made for himself a substantial
fortune through speculation in a
great variety of properties, real
and otherwise. Life had given
him much and demanded little,
which was perhaps the reason
for his restiveness.
Loyalty to person or to people
was a trait Pembroke had never
recognized in himself, nor had it
ever been expected of him. And
yet he greatly envied those
staunch patriots and lovers who
could find it in themselves to
elevate the glory and safety of
others above that of themselves.
Lacking such loyalties, Pembroke
adapted quickly to the situation
in which he found himself
when he regained consciousness.
He awoke in a small room in
what appeared to be a typical
modern American hotel. The wallet
in his pocket contained exactly
what it should, approximately
three hundred dollars.
His next thought was of food.
He left the room and descended
via the elevator to the restaurant.
Here he observed that it
was early afternoon. Ordering
a full dinner, for he was unusually
hungry, he began to study the
others in the restaurant.
Many of the faces seemed familiar;
the crew of the ship,
probably. He also recognized several
of the passengers. However,
he made no attempt to speak to
them. After his meal, he bought
a good corona and went for a
walk. His situation could have
been any small western American
seacoast city. He heard the hiss
of the ocean in the direction the
afternoon sun was taking. In his
full-gaited walk, he was soon approaching
the beach.
On the sand he saw a number
of sun bathers. One in particular,
an attractive woman of about
thirty, tossed back her long,
chestnut locks and gazed up intently
at Pembroke as he passed.
Seldom had he enjoyed so ingenuous
an invitation. He halted
and stared down at her for a few
moments.
"You are looking for someone?"
she inquired.
"Much of the time," said the
man.
"Could it be me?"
"It could be."
"Yet you seem unsure," she
said.
Pembroke smiled, uneasily.
There was something not entirely
normal about her conversation.
Though the rest of her compensated
for that.
"Tell me what's wrong with
me," she went on urgently. "I'm
not good enough, am I? I mean,
there's something wrong with
the way I look or act. Isn't there?
Please help me, please!"
"You're not casual enough, for
one thing," said Pembroke, deciding
to play along with her for
the moment. "You're too tense.
Also you're a bit knock-kneed,
not that it matters. Is that what
you wanted to hear?"
"Yes, yes—I mean, I suppose
so. I can try to be more casual.
But I don't know what to do
about my knees," she said wistfully,
staring across at the
smooth, tan limbs. "Do you think
I'm okay otherwise? I mean, as a
whole I'm not so bad, am I? Oh,
please tell me."
"How about talking it over at
supper tonight?" Pembroke proposed.
"Maybe with less distraction
I'll have a better picture of
you—as a whole."
"Oh, that's very generous of
you," the woman told him. She
scribbled a name and an address
on a small piece of paper and
handed it to him. "Any time
after six," she said.
Pembroke left the beach and
walked through several small
specialty shops. He tried to get
the woman off his mind, but the
oddness of her conversation continued
to bother him. She was
right about being different, but
it was her concern about being
different that made her so. How
to explain
that
to her?
Then he saw the weird little
glass statuette among the usual
bric-a-brac. It rather resembled
a ground hog, had seven fingers
on each of its six limbs, and
smiled up at him as he stared.
"Can I help you, sir?" a middle-aged
saleswoman inquired.
"Oh, good heavens, whatever is
that thing doing here?"
Pembroke watched with lifted
eyebrows as the clerk whisked
the bizarre statuette underneath
the counter.
"What the hell was that?"
Pembroke demanded.
"Oh, you know—or don't you?
Oh, my," she concluded, "are you
one of the—strangers?"
"And if I were?"
"Well, I'd certainly appreciate
it if you'd tell me how I walk."
She came around in front of
the counter and strutted back
and forth a few times.
"They tell me I lean too far
forward," she confided. "But I
should think you'd fall down if
you didn't."
"Don't try to go so fast and
you won't fall down," suggested
Pembroke. "You're in too much
of a hurry. Also those fake flowers
on your blouse make you look
frumpy."
"Well, I'm supposed to look
frumpy," the woman retorted.
"That's the type of person I am.
But you can look frumpy and still
walk natural, can't you? Everyone
says you can."
"Well, they've got a point,"
said Pembroke. "Incidentally,
just where are we, anyway?
What city is this?"
"Puerto Pacifico," she told
him. "Isn't that a lovely name?
It means peaceful port. In Spanish."
That was fine. At least he now
knew where he was. But as he
left the shop he began checking
off every west coast state, city,
town, and inlet. None, to the best
of his knowledge, was called
Puerto Pacifico.
He headed for the nearest
service station and asked for a
map. The attendant gave him one
which showed the city, but nothing
beyond.
"Which way is it to San Francisco?"
asked Pembroke.
"That all depends on where
you are," the boy returned.
"Okay, then where am I?"
"Pardon me, there's a customer,"
the boy said. "This is
Puerto Pacifico."
Pembroke watched him hurry
off to service a car with a sense
of having been given the runaround.
To his surprise, the boy
came back a few minutes later
after servicing the automobile.
"Say, I've just figured out who
you are," the youngster told him.
"I'd sure appreciate it if you'd
give me a little help on my lingo.
Also, you gas up the car first,
then try to sell 'em the oil—right?"
"Right," said Pembroke wearily.
"What's wrong with your
lingo? Other than the fact that
it's not colloquial enough."
"Not enough slang, huh? Well,
I guess I'll have to concentrate
on that. How about the smile?"
"Perfect," Pembroke told him.
"Yeah?" said the boy delightedly.
"Say, come back again,
huh? I sure appreciate the help.
Keep the map."
"Thanks. One more thing,"
Pembroke said. "What's over
that way—outside the city?"
"Sand."
"How about that way?" he
asked, pointing north. "And that
way?" pointing south.
"More of the same."
"Any railroads?"
"That we ain't got."
"Buses? Airlines?"
The kid shook his head.
"Some city."
"Yeah, it's kinda isolated. A
lot of ships dock here, though."
"All cargo ships, I'll bet. No
passengers," said Pembroke.
"Right," said the attendant,
giving with his perfect smile.
"No getting out of here, is
there?"
"That's for sure," the boy said,
walking away to wait on another
customer. "If you don't like the
place, you've had it."
Pembroke returned to the
hotel. Going to the bar, he recognized
one of the
Elena Mia's
paying
passengers. He was a short,
rectangular little man in his fifties
named Spencer. He sat in a
booth with three young women,
all lovely, all effusive. The topic
of the conversation turned out
to be precisely what Pembroke
had predicted.
"Well, Louisa, I'd say your
only fault is the way you keep
wigglin' your shoulders up 'n'
down. Why'n'sha try holdin' 'em
straight?"
"I thought it made me look
sexy," the redhead said petulantly.
"Just be yourself, gal," Spencer
drawled, jabbing her intimately
with a fat elbow, "and
you'll qualify."
"Me, me," the blonde with a
feather cut was insisting. "What
is wrong with me?"
"You're perfect, sweetheart,"
he told her, taking her hand.
"Ah, come on," she pleaded.
"Everyone tells me I chew gum
with my mouth open. Don't you
hate that?"
"Naw, that's part of your
charm," Spencer assured her.
"How 'bout me, sugar," asked
the girl with the coal black hair.
"Ah, you're perfect, too. You
are all perfect. I've never seen
such a collection of dolls as parade
around this here city.
C'mon, kids—how 'bout another
round?"
But the dolls had apparently
lost interest in him. They got up
one by one and walked out of the
bar. Pembroke took his rum and
tonic and moved over to Spencer's
booth.
"Okay if I join you?"
"Sure," said the fat man.
"Wonder what the hell got into
those babes?"
"You said they were perfect.
They know they're not. You've
got to be rough with them in this
town," said Pembroke. "That's
all they want from us."
"Mister, you've been doing
some thinkin', I can see," said
Spencer, peering at him suspiciously.
"Maybe you've figured
out where we are."
"Your bet's as good as mine,"
said Pembroke. "It's not Wellington,
and it's not Brisbane, and
it's not Long Beach, and it's not
Tahiti. There are a lot of places
it's not. But where the hell it is,
you tell me.
"And, by the way," he added,
"I hope you like it in Puerto
Pacifico. Because there isn't any
place to go from here and there
isn't any way to get there if
there were."
"Pardon me, gentlemen, but
I'm Joe Valencia, manager of the
hotel. I would be very grateful if
you would give me a few minutes
of honest criticism."
"Ah, no, not you, too," groaned
Spencer. "Look, Joe, what's
the gag?"
"You are newcomers, Mr.
Spencer," Valencia explained.
"You are therefore in an excellent
position to point out our
faults as you see them."
"Well, so what?" demanded
Spencer. "I've got more important
things to do than to worry
about your troubles. You look
okay to me."
"Mr. Valencia," said Pembroke.
"I've noticed that you
walk with a very slight limp. If
you have a bad leg, I should
think you would do better to develop
a more pronounced limp.
Otherwise, you may appear to
be self-conscious about it."
Spencer opened his mouth to
protest, but saw with amazement
that it was exactly this that
Valencia was seeking. Pembroke
was amused at his companion's
reaction but observed that Spencer
still failed to see the point.
"Also, there is a certain effeminateness
in the way in which
you speak," said Pembroke. "Try
to be a little more direct, a little
more brusque. Speak in a monotone.
It will make you more acceptable."
"Thank you so much," said the
manager. "There is much food
for thought in what you have
said, Mr. Pembroke. However,
Mr. Spencer, your value has failed
to prove itself. You have only
yourself to blame. Cooperation is
all we require of you."
Valencia left. Spencer ordered
another martini. Neither he nor
Pembroke spoke for several minutes.
"Somebody's crazy around
here," the fat man muttered
after a few moments. "Is it me,
Frank?"
"No. You just don't belong
here, in this particular place,"
said Pembroke thoughtfully.
"You're the wrong type. But they
couldn't know that ahead of time.
The way they operate it's a
pretty hit-or-miss operation. But
they don't care one bit about us,
Spencer. Consider the men who
went down with the ship. That
was just part of the game."
"What the hell are you sayin'?"
asked Spencer in disbelief.
"You figure
they
sunk the ship?
Valencia and the waitress and
the three babes? Ah, come on."
"It's what you think that will
determine what you do, Spencer.
I suggest you change your attitude;
play along with them for a
few days till the picture becomes
a little clearer to you. We'll talk
about it again then."
Pembroke rose and started out
of the bar. A policeman entered
and walked directly to Spencer's
table. Loitering at the juke box,
Pembroke overheard the conversation.
"You Spencer?"
"That's right," said the fat
man sullenly.
"What don't you like about
me? The
truth
, buddy."
"Ah, hell! Nothin' wrong
with you at all, and nothin'll
make me say there is," said Spencer.
"You're the guy, all right. Too
bad, Mac," said the cop.
Pembroke heard the shots as
he strolled casually out into the
brightness of the hotel lobby.
While he waited for the elevator,
he saw them carrying the body
into the street. How many others,
he wondered, had gone out on
their backs during their first day
in Puerto Pacifico?
Pembroke shaved, showered,
and put on the new suit and shirt
he had bought. Then he took
Mary Ann, the woman he had
met on the beach, out to dinner.
She would look magnificent even
when fully clothed, he decided,
and the pale chartreuse gown she
wore hardly placed her in that
category. Her conversation seemed
considerably more normal
after the other denizens of
Puerto Pacifico Pembroke had
listened to that afternoon.
After eating they danced for
an hour, had a few more drinks,
then went to Pembroke's room.
He still knew nothing about her
and had almost exhausted his
critical capabilities, but not once
had she become annoyed with
him. She seemed to devour every
factual point of imperfection
about herself that Pembroke
brought to her attention. And,
fantastically enough, she actually
appeared to have overcome every
little imperfection he had been
able to communicate to her.
It was in the privacy of his
room that Pembroke became
aware of just how perfect, physically,
Mary Ann was. Too perfect.
No freckles or moles anywhere
on the visible surface of
her brown skin, which was more
than a mere sampling. Furthermore,
her face and body were
meticulously symmetrical. And
she seemed to be wholly ambidextrous.
"With so many beautiful
women in Puerto Pacifico," said
Pembroke probingly, "I find it
hard to understand why there are
so few children."
"Yes, children are decorative,
aren't they," said Mary Ann. "I
do wish there were more of
them."
"Why not have a couple of
your own?" he asked.
"Oh, they're only given to maternal
types. I'd never get one.
Anyway, I won't ever marry,"
she said. "I'm the paramour
type."
It was obvious that the liquor
had been having some effect.
Either that, or she had a basic
flaw of loquacity that no one else
had discovered. Pembroke decided
he would have to cover his
tracks carefully.
"What type am I?" he asked.
"Silly, you're real. You're not
a type at all."
"Mary Ann, I love you very
much," Pembroke murmured,
gambling everything on this one
throw. "When you go to Earth
I'll miss you terribly."
"Oh, but you'll be dead by
then," she pouted. "So I mustn't
fall in love with you. I don't want
to be miserable."
"If I pretended I was one of
you, if I left on the boat with
you, they'd let me go to Earth
with you. Wouldn't they?"
"Oh, yes, I'm sure they would."
"Mary Ann, you have two
other flaws I feel I should mention."
"Yes? Please tell me."
"In the first place," said Pembroke,
"you should be willing to
fall in love with me even if it
will eventually make you unhappy.
How can you be the paramour
type if you refuse to fall in
love foolishly? And when you
have fallen in love, you should be
very loyal."
"I'll try," she said unsurely.
"What else?"
"The other thing is that, as
my mistress, you must never
mention me to anyone. It would
place me in great danger."
"I'll never tell anyone anything
about you," she promised.
"Now try to love me," Pembroke
said, drawing her into his
arms and kissing with little
pleasure the smooth, warm perfection
of her tanned cheeks.
"Love me my sweet, beautiful,
affectionate Mary Ann. My paramour."
Making love to Mary Ann was
something short of ecstasy. Not
for any obvious reason, but because
of subtle little factors that
make a woman a woman. Mary
Ann had no pulse. Mary Ann did
not perspire. Mary Ann did not
fatigue gradually but all at once.
Mary Ann breathed regularly
under all circumstances. Mary
Ann talked and talked and talked.
But then, Mary Ann was not
a human being.
When she left the hotel at midnight,
Pembroke was quite sure
that she understood his plan and
that she was irrevocably in love
with him. Tomorrow might bring
his death, but it might also ensure
his escape. After forty-two
years of searching for a passion,
for a cause, for a loyalty, Frank
Pembroke had at last found his.
Earth and the human race that
peopled it. And Mary Ann would
help him to save it.
The next morning Pembroke
talked to Valencia about hunting.
He said that he planned to go
shooting out on the desert which
surrounded the city. Valencia
told him that there were no living
creatures anywhere but in
the city. Pembroke said he was
going out anyway.
He picked up Mary Ann at her
apartment and together they
went to a sporting goods store.
As he guessed there was a goodly
selection of firearms, despite the
fact that there was nothing to
hunt and only a single target
range within the city. Everything,
of course, had to be just
like Earth. That, after all, was
the purpose of Puerto Pacifico.
By noon they had rented a
jeep and were well away from
the city. Pembroke and Mary
Ann took turns firing at the paper
targets they had purchased. At
twilight they headed back to the
city. On the outskirts, where the
sand and soil were mixed and no
footprints would be left, Pembroke
hopped off. Mary Ann
would go straight to the police
and report that Pembroke had attacked
her and that she had shot
him. If necessary, she would conduct
the authorities to the place
where they had been target
shooting, but would be unable to
locate the spot where she had
buried the body. Why had she
buried it? Because at first she
was not going to report the incident.
She was frightened. It
was not airtight, but there would
probably be no further investigation.
And they certainly would
not prosecute Mary Ann for killing
an Earthman.
Now Pembroke had himself to
worry about. The first step was
to enter smoothly into the new
life he had planned. It wouldn't
be so comfortable as the previous
one, but should be considerably
safer. He headed slowly for the
"old" part of town, aging his
clothes against buildings and
fences as he walked. He had already
torn the collar of the shirt
and discarded his belt. By morning
his beard would grow to
blacken his face. And he would
look weary and hungry and aimless.
Only the last would be a deception.
Two weeks later Pembroke
phoned Mary Ann. The police
had accepted her story without
even checking. And when, when
would she be seeing him again?
He had aroused her passion and
no amount of long-distance love
could requite it. Soon, he assured
her, soon.
"Because, after all, you do owe
me something," she added.
And that was bad because it
sounded as if she had been giving
some womanly thought to the situation.
A little more of that and
she might go to the police again,
this time for vengeance.
Twice during his wanderings
Pembroke had seen the corpses
of Earthmen being carted out of
buildings. They had to be Earthmen
because they bled. Mary Ann
had admitted that she did not.
There would be very few Earthmen
left in Puerto Pacifico, and
it would be simple enough to locate
him if he were reported as
being on the loose. There was
no out but to do away with Mary
Ann.
Pembroke headed for the
beach. He knew she invariably
went there in the afternoon. He
loitered around the stalls where
hot dogs and soft drinks were
sold, leaning against a post in
the hot sun, hat pulled down over
his forehead. Then he noticed
that people all about him were
talking excitedly. They were discussing
a ship. It was leaving
that afternoon. Anyone who
could pass the interview would
be sent to Earth.
Pembroke had visited the
docks every day, without being
able to learn when the great
exodus would take place. Yet he
was certain the first lap would be
by water rather than by spaceship,
since no one he had talked
to in the city had ever heard of
spaceships. In fact, they knew
very little about their masters.
Now the ship had arrived and
was to leave shortly. If there was
any but the most superficial examination,
Pembroke would no
doubt be discovered and exterminated.
But since no one seemed
concerned about anything but his
own speech and behavior, he assumed
that they had all qualified
in every other respect. The reason
for transporting Earth People
to this planet was, of course,
to apply a corrective to any of
the Pacificos' aberrant mannerisms
or articulation. This was
the polishing up phase.
Pembroke began hobbling toward
the docks. Almost at once
he found himself face to face
with Mary Ann. She smiled happily
when she recognized him.
That
was a good thing.
"It is a sign of poor breeding
to smile at tramps," Pembroke
admonished her in a whisper.
"Walk on ahead."
She obeyed. He followed. The
crowd grew thicker. They neared
the docks and Pembroke saw that
there were now set up on the
roped-off wharves small interviewing
booths. When it was
their turn, he and Mary Ann
each went into separate ones.
Pembroke found himself alone in
the little room.
Then he saw that there was
another entity in his presence
confined beneath a glass dome. It
looked rather like a groundhog
and had seven fingers on each of
its six limbs. But it was larger
and hairier than the glass one
he had seen at the gift store.
With four of its limbs it tapped
on an intricate keyboard in front
of it.
"What is your name?" queried
a metallic voice from a speaker
on the wall.
"I'm Jerry Newton. Got no
middle initial," Pembroke said in
a surly voice.
"Occupation?"
"I work a lot o' trades. Fisherman,
fruit picker, fightin' range
fires, vineyards, car washer. Anything.
You name it. Been out of
work for a long time now,
though. Goin' on five months.
These here are hard times, no
matter what they say."
"What do you think of the
Chinese situation?" the voice inquired.
"Which situation's 'at?"
"Where's Seattle?"
"Seattle? State o' Washington."
And so it went for about five
minutes. Then he was told he
had qualified as a satisfactory
surrogate for a mid-twentieth
century American male, itinerant
type.
"You understand your mission,
Newton?" the voice asked. "You
are to establish yourself on
Earth. In time you will receive
instructions. Then you will attack.
You will not see us, your
masters, again until the atmosphere
has been sufficiently chlorinated.
In the meantime, serve
us well."
He stumbled out toward the
docks, then looked about for
Mary Ann. He saw her at last
behind the ropes, her lovely face
in tears.
Then she saw him. Waving
frantically, she called his name
several times. Pembroke mingled
with the crowd moving toward
the ship, ignoring her. But still
the woman persisted in her
shouting.
Sidling up to a well-dressed
man-about-town type, Pembroke
winked at him and snickered.
"You Frank?" he asked.
"Hell, no. But some poor
punk's sure red in the face, I'll
bet," the man-about-town said
with a chuckle. "Those high-strung
paramour types always
raising a ruckus. They never do
pass the interview. Don't know
why they even make 'em."
Suddenly Mary Ann was quiet.
"Ambulance squad," Pembroke's
companion explained.
"They'll take her off to the buggy
house for a few days and bring
her out fresh and ignorant as the
day she was assembled. Don't
know why they keep making 'em,
as I say. But I guess there's a
call for that type up there on
Earth."
"Yeah, I reckon there is at
that," said Pembroke, snickering
again as he moved away from the
other. "And why not? Hey?
Why not?"
Pembroke went right on hating
himself, however, till the
night he was deposited in a field
outside of Ensenada, broke but
happy, with two other itinerant
types. They separated in San
Diego, and it was not long before
Pembroke was explaining to the
police how he had drifted far
from the scene of the sinking of
the
Elena Mia
on a piece of
wreckage, and had been picked
up by a Chilean trawler. How he
had then made his way, with
much suffering, up the coast to
California. Two days later, his
identity established and his circumstances
again solvent, he was
headed for Los Angeles to begin
his save-Earth campaign.
Now, seated at his battered
desk in the shabby rented office
over Lemark's Liquors, Pembroke
gazed without emotion at
the two demolished Pacificos that
lay sprawled one atop the other
in the corner. His watch said
one-fifteen. The man from the
FBI should arrive soon.
There were footsteps on the
stairs for the third time that
day. Not the brisk, efficient steps
of a federal official, but the hesitant,
self-conscious steps of a
junior clerk type.
Pembroke rose as the young
man appeared at the door. His
face was smooth, unpimpled,
clean-shaven, without sweat on a
warm summer afternoon.
"Are you Dr. Von Schubert?"
the newcomer asked, peering into
the room. "You see, I've got a
problem—"
The four shots from Pembroke's
pistol solved his problem
effectively. Pembroke tossed his
third victim onto the pile, then
opened a can of lager, quaffing
it appreciatively. Seating himself
once more, he leaned back in
the chair, both feet upon the
desk.
He would be out of business
soon, once the FBI agent had got
there. Pembroke was only in it to
get the proof he would need to
convince people of the truth of
his tale. But in the meantime he
allowed himself to admire the
clipping of the newspaper ad he
had run in all the Los Angeles
papers for the past week. The
little ad that had saved mankind
from God-knew-what insidious
menace. It read:
ARE YOU IMPERFECT?
LET DR. VON SCHUBERT POINT OUT
YOUR FLAWS
IT IS HIS GOAL TO MAKE YOU THE
AVERAGE FOR YOUR TYPE
FEE—$3.75
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January 1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Pembrook is in love with Mary Ann. | Pembrook feels betrayed by Mary Ann because she was plotting to kill him. | At, first Mary Ann was a means to an end, but now Pembrook is in love with her. | Mary Ann is a means to an end for Pembrook. | 3 |
24977_63MMCMYX_2 | Why does Pembrook shoot the man in the corner? | THE PERFECTIONISTS
By ARNOLD CASTLE
ILLUSTRATED by SUMMERS
Is there something wrong with you?
Do you fail to fit in with your group?
Nervous, anxious, ill-at-ease? Happy
about it? Lucky you!
Frank Pembroke
sat behind
the desk of his shabby
little office over Lemark's Liquors
in downtown Los Angeles and
waited for his first customer. He
had been in business for a week
and as yet had had no callers.
Therefore, it was with a mingled
sense of excitement and satisfaction
that he greeted the tall,
dark, smooth-faced figure that
came up the stairs and into the
office shortly before noon.
"Good day, sir," said Pembroke
with an amiable smile. "I
see my advertisement has interested
you. Please stand in that
corner for just a moment."
Opening the desk drawer,
which was almost empty, Pembroke
removed an automatic pistol
fitted with a silencer. Pointing
it at the amazed customer, he
fired four .22 caliber longs into
the narrow chest. Then he made
a telephone call and sat down to
wait. He wondered how long it
would be before his next client
would arrive.
The series of events leading up
to Pembroke's present occupation
had commenced on a dismal,
overcast evening in the South
Pacific a year earlier. Bound for
Sydney, two days out of Valparaiso,
the Colombian tramp
steamer
Elena Mia
had encountered
a dense greenish fog which
seemed vaguely redolent of citrus
trees. Standing on the forward
deck, Pembroke was one of the
first to perceive the peculiar odor
and to spot the immense gray
hulk wallowing in the murky distance.
Then the explosion had come,
from far below the waterline,
and the decks were awash with
frantic crewmen, officers, and the
handful of passengers. Only two
lifeboats were launched before
the
Elena Mia
went down. Pembroke
was in the second. The
roar of the sinking ship was the
last thing he heard for some
time.
Pembroke came as close to being
a professional adventurer as
one can in these days of regimented
travel, organized peril,
and political restriction. He had
made for himself a substantial
fortune through speculation in a
great variety of properties, real
and otherwise. Life had given
him much and demanded little,
which was perhaps the reason
for his restiveness.
Loyalty to person or to people
was a trait Pembroke had never
recognized in himself, nor had it
ever been expected of him. And
yet he greatly envied those
staunch patriots and lovers who
could find it in themselves to
elevate the glory and safety of
others above that of themselves.
Lacking such loyalties, Pembroke
adapted quickly to the situation
in which he found himself
when he regained consciousness.
He awoke in a small room in
what appeared to be a typical
modern American hotel. The wallet
in his pocket contained exactly
what it should, approximately
three hundred dollars.
His next thought was of food.
He left the room and descended
via the elevator to the restaurant.
Here he observed that it
was early afternoon. Ordering
a full dinner, for he was unusually
hungry, he began to study the
others in the restaurant.
Many of the faces seemed familiar;
the crew of the ship,
probably. He also recognized several
of the passengers. However,
he made no attempt to speak to
them. After his meal, he bought
a good corona and went for a
walk. His situation could have
been any small western American
seacoast city. He heard the hiss
of the ocean in the direction the
afternoon sun was taking. In his
full-gaited walk, he was soon approaching
the beach.
On the sand he saw a number
of sun bathers. One in particular,
an attractive woman of about
thirty, tossed back her long,
chestnut locks and gazed up intently
at Pembroke as he passed.
Seldom had he enjoyed so ingenuous
an invitation. He halted
and stared down at her for a few
moments.
"You are looking for someone?"
she inquired.
"Much of the time," said the
man.
"Could it be me?"
"It could be."
"Yet you seem unsure," she
said.
Pembroke smiled, uneasily.
There was something not entirely
normal about her conversation.
Though the rest of her compensated
for that.
"Tell me what's wrong with
me," she went on urgently. "I'm
not good enough, am I? I mean,
there's something wrong with
the way I look or act. Isn't there?
Please help me, please!"
"You're not casual enough, for
one thing," said Pembroke, deciding
to play along with her for
the moment. "You're too tense.
Also you're a bit knock-kneed,
not that it matters. Is that what
you wanted to hear?"
"Yes, yes—I mean, I suppose
so. I can try to be more casual.
But I don't know what to do
about my knees," she said wistfully,
staring across at the
smooth, tan limbs. "Do you think
I'm okay otherwise? I mean, as a
whole I'm not so bad, am I? Oh,
please tell me."
"How about talking it over at
supper tonight?" Pembroke proposed.
"Maybe with less distraction
I'll have a better picture of
you—as a whole."
"Oh, that's very generous of
you," the woman told him. She
scribbled a name and an address
on a small piece of paper and
handed it to him. "Any time
after six," she said.
Pembroke left the beach and
walked through several small
specialty shops. He tried to get
the woman off his mind, but the
oddness of her conversation continued
to bother him. She was
right about being different, but
it was her concern about being
different that made her so. How
to explain
that
to her?
Then he saw the weird little
glass statuette among the usual
bric-a-brac. It rather resembled
a ground hog, had seven fingers
on each of its six limbs, and
smiled up at him as he stared.
"Can I help you, sir?" a middle-aged
saleswoman inquired.
"Oh, good heavens, whatever is
that thing doing here?"
Pembroke watched with lifted
eyebrows as the clerk whisked
the bizarre statuette underneath
the counter.
"What the hell was that?"
Pembroke demanded.
"Oh, you know—or don't you?
Oh, my," she concluded, "are you
one of the—strangers?"
"And if I were?"
"Well, I'd certainly appreciate
it if you'd tell me how I walk."
She came around in front of
the counter and strutted back
and forth a few times.
"They tell me I lean too far
forward," she confided. "But I
should think you'd fall down if
you didn't."
"Don't try to go so fast and
you won't fall down," suggested
Pembroke. "You're in too much
of a hurry. Also those fake flowers
on your blouse make you look
frumpy."
"Well, I'm supposed to look
frumpy," the woman retorted.
"That's the type of person I am.
But you can look frumpy and still
walk natural, can't you? Everyone
says you can."
"Well, they've got a point,"
said Pembroke. "Incidentally,
just where are we, anyway?
What city is this?"
"Puerto Pacifico," she told
him. "Isn't that a lovely name?
It means peaceful port. In Spanish."
That was fine. At least he now
knew where he was. But as he
left the shop he began checking
off every west coast state, city,
town, and inlet. None, to the best
of his knowledge, was called
Puerto Pacifico.
He headed for the nearest
service station and asked for a
map. The attendant gave him one
which showed the city, but nothing
beyond.
"Which way is it to San Francisco?"
asked Pembroke.
"That all depends on where
you are," the boy returned.
"Okay, then where am I?"
"Pardon me, there's a customer,"
the boy said. "This is
Puerto Pacifico."
Pembroke watched him hurry
off to service a car with a sense
of having been given the runaround.
To his surprise, the boy
came back a few minutes later
after servicing the automobile.
"Say, I've just figured out who
you are," the youngster told him.
"I'd sure appreciate it if you'd
give me a little help on my lingo.
Also, you gas up the car first,
then try to sell 'em the oil—right?"
"Right," said Pembroke wearily.
"What's wrong with your
lingo? Other than the fact that
it's not colloquial enough."
"Not enough slang, huh? Well,
I guess I'll have to concentrate
on that. How about the smile?"
"Perfect," Pembroke told him.
"Yeah?" said the boy delightedly.
"Say, come back again,
huh? I sure appreciate the help.
Keep the map."
"Thanks. One more thing,"
Pembroke said. "What's over
that way—outside the city?"
"Sand."
"How about that way?" he
asked, pointing north. "And that
way?" pointing south.
"More of the same."
"Any railroads?"
"That we ain't got."
"Buses? Airlines?"
The kid shook his head.
"Some city."
"Yeah, it's kinda isolated. A
lot of ships dock here, though."
"All cargo ships, I'll bet. No
passengers," said Pembroke.
"Right," said the attendant,
giving with his perfect smile.
"No getting out of here, is
there?"
"That's for sure," the boy said,
walking away to wait on another
customer. "If you don't like the
place, you've had it."
Pembroke returned to the
hotel. Going to the bar, he recognized
one of the
Elena Mia's
paying
passengers. He was a short,
rectangular little man in his fifties
named Spencer. He sat in a
booth with three young women,
all lovely, all effusive. The topic
of the conversation turned out
to be precisely what Pembroke
had predicted.
"Well, Louisa, I'd say your
only fault is the way you keep
wigglin' your shoulders up 'n'
down. Why'n'sha try holdin' 'em
straight?"
"I thought it made me look
sexy," the redhead said petulantly.
"Just be yourself, gal," Spencer
drawled, jabbing her intimately
with a fat elbow, "and
you'll qualify."
"Me, me," the blonde with a
feather cut was insisting. "What
is wrong with me?"
"You're perfect, sweetheart,"
he told her, taking her hand.
"Ah, come on," she pleaded.
"Everyone tells me I chew gum
with my mouth open. Don't you
hate that?"
"Naw, that's part of your
charm," Spencer assured her.
"How 'bout me, sugar," asked
the girl with the coal black hair.
"Ah, you're perfect, too. You
are all perfect. I've never seen
such a collection of dolls as parade
around this here city.
C'mon, kids—how 'bout another
round?"
But the dolls had apparently
lost interest in him. They got up
one by one and walked out of the
bar. Pembroke took his rum and
tonic and moved over to Spencer's
booth.
"Okay if I join you?"
"Sure," said the fat man.
"Wonder what the hell got into
those babes?"
"You said they were perfect.
They know they're not. You've
got to be rough with them in this
town," said Pembroke. "That's
all they want from us."
"Mister, you've been doing
some thinkin', I can see," said
Spencer, peering at him suspiciously.
"Maybe you've figured
out where we are."
"Your bet's as good as mine,"
said Pembroke. "It's not Wellington,
and it's not Brisbane, and
it's not Long Beach, and it's not
Tahiti. There are a lot of places
it's not. But where the hell it is,
you tell me.
"And, by the way," he added,
"I hope you like it in Puerto
Pacifico. Because there isn't any
place to go from here and there
isn't any way to get there if
there were."
"Pardon me, gentlemen, but
I'm Joe Valencia, manager of the
hotel. I would be very grateful if
you would give me a few minutes
of honest criticism."
"Ah, no, not you, too," groaned
Spencer. "Look, Joe, what's
the gag?"
"You are newcomers, Mr.
Spencer," Valencia explained.
"You are therefore in an excellent
position to point out our
faults as you see them."
"Well, so what?" demanded
Spencer. "I've got more important
things to do than to worry
about your troubles. You look
okay to me."
"Mr. Valencia," said Pembroke.
"I've noticed that you
walk with a very slight limp. If
you have a bad leg, I should
think you would do better to develop
a more pronounced limp.
Otherwise, you may appear to
be self-conscious about it."
Spencer opened his mouth to
protest, but saw with amazement
that it was exactly this that
Valencia was seeking. Pembroke
was amused at his companion's
reaction but observed that Spencer
still failed to see the point.
"Also, there is a certain effeminateness
in the way in which
you speak," said Pembroke. "Try
to be a little more direct, a little
more brusque. Speak in a monotone.
It will make you more acceptable."
"Thank you so much," said the
manager. "There is much food
for thought in what you have
said, Mr. Pembroke. However,
Mr. Spencer, your value has failed
to prove itself. You have only
yourself to blame. Cooperation is
all we require of you."
Valencia left. Spencer ordered
another martini. Neither he nor
Pembroke spoke for several minutes.
"Somebody's crazy around
here," the fat man muttered
after a few moments. "Is it me,
Frank?"
"No. You just don't belong
here, in this particular place,"
said Pembroke thoughtfully.
"You're the wrong type. But they
couldn't know that ahead of time.
The way they operate it's a
pretty hit-or-miss operation. But
they don't care one bit about us,
Spencer. Consider the men who
went down with the ship. That
was just part of the game."
"What the hell are you sayin'?"
asked Spencer in disbelief.
"You figure
they
sunk the ship?
Valencia and the waitress and
the three babes? Ah, come on."
"It's what you think that will
determine what you do, Spencer.
I suggest you change your attitude;
play along with them for a
few days till the picture becomes
a little clearer to you. We'll talk
about it again then."
Pembroke rose and started out
of the bar. A policeman entered
and walked directly to Spencer's
table. Loitering at the juke box,
Pembroke overheard the conversation.
"You Spencer?"
"That's right," said the fat
man sullenly.
"What don't you like about
me? The
truth
, buddy."
"Ah, hell! Nothin' wrong
with you at all, and nothin'll
make me say there is," said Spencer.
"You're the guy, all right. Too
bad, Mac," said the cop.
Pembroke heard the shots as
he strolled casually out into the
brightness of the hotel lobby.
While he waited for the elevator,
he saw them carrying the body
into the street. How many others,
he wondered, had gone out on
their backs during their first day
in Puerto Pacifico?
Pembroke shaved, showered,
and put on the new suit and shirt
he had bought. Then he took
Mary Ann, the woman he had
met on the beach, out to dinner.
She would look magnificent even
when fully clothed, he decided,
and the pale chartreuse gown she
wore hardly placed her in that
category. Her conversation seemed
considerably more normal
after the other denizens of
Puerto Pacifico Pembroke had
listened to that afternoon.
After eating they danced for
an hour, had a few more drinks,
then went to Pembroke's room.
He still knew nothing about her
and had almost exhausted his
critical capabilities, but not once
had she become annoyed with
him. She seemed to devour every
factual point of imperfection
about herself that Pembroke
brought to her attention. And,
fantastically enough, she actually
appeared to have overcome every
little imperfection he had been
able to communicate to her.
It was in the privacy of his
room that Pembroke became
aware of just how perfect, physically,
Mary Ann was. Too perfect.
No freckles or moles anywhere
on the visible surface of
her brown skin, which was more
than a mere sampling. Furthermore,
her face and body were
meticulously symmetrical. And
she seemed to be wholly ambidextrous.
"With so many beautiful
women in Puerto Pacifico," said
Pembroke probingly, "I find it
hard to understand why there are
so few children."
"Yes, children are decorative,
aren't they," said Mary Ann. "I
do wish there were more of
them."
"Why not have a couple of
your own?" he asked.
"Oh, they're only given to maternal
types. I'd never get one.
Anyway, I won't ever marry,"
she said. "I'm the paramour
type."
It was obvious that the liquor
had been having some effect.
Either that, or she had a basic
flaw of loquacity that no one else
had discovered. Pembroke decided
he would have to cover his
tracks carefully.
"What type am I?" he asked.
"Silly, you're real. You're not
a type at all."
"Mary Ann, I love you very
much," Pembroke murmured,
gambling everything on this one
throw. "When you go to Earth
I'll miss you terribly."
"Oh, but you'll be dead by
then," she pouted. "So I mustn't
fall in love with you. I don't want
to be miserable."
"If I pretended I was one of
you, if I left on the boat with
you, they'd let me go to Earth
with you. Wouldn't they?"
"Oh, yes, I'm sure they would."
"Mary Ann, you have two
other flaws I feel I should mention."
"Yes? Please tell me."
"In the first place," said Pembroke,
"you should be willing to
fall in love with me even if it
will eventually make you unhappy.
How can you be the paramour
type if you refuse to fall in
love foolishly? And when you
have fallen in love, you should be
very loyal."
"I'll try," she said unsurely.
"What else?"
"The other thing is that, as
my mistress, you must never
mention me to anyone. It would
place me in great danger."
"I'll never tell anyone anything
about you," she promised.
"Now try to love me," Pembroke
said, drawing her into his
arms and kissing with little
pleasure the smooth, warm perfection
of her tanned cheeks.
"Love me my sweet, beautiful,
affectionate Mary Ann. My paramour."
Making love to Mary Ann was
something short of ecstasy. Not
for any obvious reason, but because
of subtle little factors that
make a woman a woman. Mary
Ann had no pulse. Mary Ann did
not perspire. Mary Ann did not
fatigue gradually but all at once.
Mary Ann breathed regularly
under all circumstances. Mary
Ann talked and talked and talked.
But then, Mary Ann was not
a human being.
When she left the hotel at midnight,
Pembroke was quite sure
that she understood his plan and
that she was irrevocably in love
with him. Tomorrow might bring
his death, but it might also ensure
his escape. After forty-two
years of searching for a passion,
for a cause, for a loyalty, Frank
Pembroke had at last found his.
Earth and the human race that
peopled it. And Mary Ann would
help him to save it.
The next morning Pembroke
talked to Valencia about hunting.
He said that he planned to go
shooting out on the desert which
surrounded the city. Valencia
told him that there were no living
creatures anywhere but in
the city. Pembroke said he was
going out anyway.
He picked up Mary Ann at her
apartment and together they
went to a sporting goods store.
As he guessed there was a goodly
selection of firearms, despite the
fact that there was nothing to
hunt and only a single target
range within the city. Everything,
of course, had to be just
like Earth. That, after all, was
the purpose of Puerto Pacifico.
By noon they had rented a
jeep and were well away from
the city. Pembroke and Mary
Ann took turns firing at the paper
targets they had purchased. At
twilight they headed back to the
city. On the outskirts, where the
sand and soil were mixed and no
footprints would be left, Pembroke
hopped off. Mary Ann
would go straight to the police
and report that Pembroke had attacked
her and that she had shot
him. If necessary, she would conduct
the authorities to the place
where they had been target
shooting, but would be unable to
locate the spot where she had
buried the body. Why had she
buried it? Because at first she
was not going to report the incident.
She was frightened. It
was not airtight, but there would
probably be no further investigation.
And they certainly would
not prosecute Mary Ann for killing
an Earthman.
Now Pembroke had himself to
worry about. The first step was
to enter smoothly into the new
life he had planned. It wouldn't
be so comfortable as the previous
one, but should be considerably
safer. He headed slowly for the
"old" part of town, aging his
clothes against buildings and
fences as he walked. He had already
torn the collar of the shirt
and discarded his belt. By morning
his beard would grow to
blacken his face. And he would
look weary and hungry and aimless.
Only the last would be a deception.
Two weeks later Pembroke
phoned Mary Ann. The police
had accepted her story without
even checking. And when, when
would she be seeing him again?
He had aroused her passion and
no amount of long-distance love
could requite it. Soon, he assured
her, soon.
"Because, after all, you do owe
me something," she added.
And that was bad because it
sounded as if she had been giving
some womanly thought to the situation.
A little more of that and
she might go to the police again,
this time for vengeance.
Twice during his wanderings
Pembroke had seen the corpses
of Earthmen being carted out of
buildings. They had to be Earthmen
because they bled. Mary Ann
had admitted that she did not.
There would be very few Earthmen
left in Puerto Pacifico, and
it would be simple enough to locate
him if he were reported as
being on the loose. There was
no out but to do away with Mary
Ann.
Pembroke headed for the
beach. He knew she invariably
went there in the afternoon. He
loitered around the stalls where
hot dogs and soft drinks were
sold, leaning against a post in
the hot sun, hat pulled down over
his forehead. Then he noticed
that people all about him were
talking excitedly. They were discussing
a ship. It was leaving
that afternoon. Anyone who
could pass the interview would
be sent to Earth.
Pembroke had visited the
docks every day, without being
able to learn when the great
exodus would take place. Yet he
was certain the first lap would be
by water rather than by spaceship,
since no one he had talked
to in the city had ever heard of
spaceships. In fact, they knew
very little about their masters.
Now the ship had arrived and
was to leave shortly. If there was
any but the most superficial examination,
Pembroke would no
doubt be discovered and exterminated.
But since no one seemed
concerned about anything but his
own speech and behavior, he assumed
that they had all qualified
in every other respect. The reason
for transporting Earth People
to this planet was, of course,
to apply a corrective to any of
the Pacificos' aberrant mannerisms
or articulation. This was
the polishing up phase.
Pembroke began hobbling toward
the docks. Almost at once
he found himself face to face
with Mary Ann. She smiled happily
when she recognized him.
That
was a good thing.
"It is a sign of poor breeding
to smile at tramps," Pembroke
admonished her in a whisper.
"Walk on ahead."
She obeyed. He followed. The
crowd grew thicker. They neared
the docks and Pembroke saw that
there were now set up on the
roped-off wharves small interviewing
booths. When it was
their turn, he and Mary Ann
each went into separate ones.
Pembroke found himself alone in
the little room.
Then he saw that there was
another entity in his presence
confined beneath a glass dome. It
looked rather like a groundhog
and had seven fingers on each of
its six limbs. But it was larger
and hairier than the glass one
he had seen at the gift store.
With four of its limbs it tapped
on an intricate keyboard in front
of it.
"What is your name?" queried
a metallic voice from a speaker
on the wall.
"I'm Jerry Newton. Got no
middle initial," Pembroke said in
a surly voice.
"Occupation?"
"I work a lot o' trades. Fisherman,
fruit picker, fightin' range
fires, vineyards, car washer. Anything.
You name it. Been out of
work for a long time now,
though. Goin' on five months.
These here are hard times, no
matter what they say."
"What do you think of the
Chinese situation?" the voice inquired.
"Which situation's 'at?"
"Where's Seattle?"
"Seattle? State o' Washington."
And so it went for about five
minutes. Then he was told he
had qualified as a satisfactory
surrogate for a mid-twentieth
century American male, itinerant
type.
"You understand your mission,
Newton?" the voice asked. "You
are to establish yourself on
Earth. In time you will receive
instructions. Then you will attack.
You will not see us, your
masters, again until the atmosphere
has been sufficiently chlorinated.
In the meantime, serve
us well."
He stumbled out toward the
docks, then looked about for
Mary Ann. He saw her at last
behind the ropes, her lovely face
in tears.
Then she saw him. Waving
frantically, she called his name
several times. Pembroke mingled
with the crowd moving toward
the ship, ignoring her. But still
the woman persisted in her
shouting.
Sidling up to a well-dressed
man-about-town type, Pembroke
winked at him and snickered.
"You Frank?" he asked.
"Hell, no. But some poor
punk's sure red in the face, I'll
bet," the man-about-town said
with a chuckle. "Those high-strung
paramour types always
raising a ruckus. They never do
pass the interview. Don't know
why they even make 'em."
Suddenly Mary Ann was quiet.
"Ambulance squad," Pembroke's
companion explained.
"They'll take her off to the buggy
house for a few days and bring
her out fresh and ignorant as the
day she was assembled. Don't
know why they keep making 'em,
as I say. But I guess there's a
call for that type up there on
Earth."
"Yeah, I reckon there is at
that," said Pembroke, snickering
again as he moved away from the
other. "And why not? Hey?
Why not?"
Pembroke went right on hating
himself, however, till the
night he was deposited in a field
outside of Ensenada, broke but
happy, with two other itinerant
types. They separated in San
Diego, and it was not long before
Pembroke was explaining to the
police how he had drifted far
from the scene of the sinking of
the
Elena Mia
on a piece of
wreckage, and had been picked
up by a Chilean trawler. How he
had then made his way, with
much suffering, up the coast to
California. Two days later, his
identity established and his circumstances
again solvent, he was
headed for Los Angeles to begin
his save-Earth campaign.
Now, seated at his battered
desk in the shabby rented office
over Lemark's Liquors, Pembroke
gazed without emotion at
the two demolished Pacificos that
lay sprawled one atop the other
in the corner. His watch said
one-fifteen. The man from the
FBI should arrive soon.
There were footsteps on the
stairs for the third time that
day. Not the brisk, efficient steps
of a federal official, but the hesitant,
self-conscious steps of a
junior clerk type.
Pembroke rose as the young
man appeared at the door. His
face was smooth, unpimpled,
clean-shaven, without sweat on a
warm summer afternoon.
"Are you Dr. Von Schubert?"
the newcomer asked, peering into
the room. "You see, I've got a
problem—"
The four shots from Pembroke's
pistol solved his problem
effectively. Pembroke tossed his
third victim onto the pile, then
opened a can of lager, quaffing
it appreciatively. Seating himself
once more, he leaned back in
the chair, both feet upon the
desk.
He would be out of business
soon, once the FBI agent had got
there. Pembroke was only in it to
get the proof he would need to
convince people of the truth of
his tale. But in the meantime he
allowed himself to admire the
clipping of the newspaper ad he
had run in all the Los Angeles
papers for the past week. The
little ad that had saved mankind
from God-knew-what insidious
menace. It read:
ARE YOU IMPERFECT?
LET DR. VON SCHUBERT POINT OUT
YOUR FLAWS
IT IS HIS GOAL TO MAKE YOU THE
AVERAGE FOR YOUR TYPE
FEE—$3.75
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January 1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The man in the corner is one of the strangers. | The man in the corner is an android sent by alien masters to facilitate an invasion of Earth. | The man in the corner was an alien invader. | The man in the corner came to kill Pembrook. | 1 |
24977_63MMCMYX_3 | What is Puerto Pacifico? | THE PERFECTIONISTS
By ARNOLD CASTLE
ILLUSTRATED by SUMMERS
Is there something wrong with you?
Do you fail to fit in with your group?
Nervous, anxious, ill-at-ease? Happy
about it? Lucky you!
Frank Pembroke
sat behind
the desk of his shabby
little office over Lemark's Liquors
in downtown Los Angeles and
waited for his first customer. He
had been in business for a week
and as yet had had no callers.
Therefore, it was with a mingled
sense of excitement and satisfaction
that he greeted the tall,
dark, smooth-faced figure that
came up the stairs and into the
office shortly before noon.
"Good day, sir," said Pembroke
with an amiable smile. "I
see my advertisement has interested
you. Please stand in that
corner for just a moment."
Opening the desk drawer,
which was almost empty, Pembroke
removed an automatic pistol
fitted with a silencer. Pointing
it at the amazed customer, he
fired four .22 caliber longs into
the narrow chest. Then he made
a telephone call and sat down to
wait. He wondered how long it
would be before his next client
would arrive.
The series of events leading up
to Pembroke's present occupation
had commenced on a dismal,
overcast evening in the South
Pacific a year earlier. Bound for
Sydney, two days out of Valparaiso,
the Colombian tramp
steamer
Elena Mia
had encountered
a dense greenish fog which
seemed vaguely redolent of citrus
trees. Standing on the forward
deck, Pembroke was one of the
first to perceive the peculiar odor
and to spot the immense gray
hulk wallowing in the murky distance.
Then the explosion had come,
from far below the waterline,
and the decks were awash with
frantic crewmen, officers, and the
handful of passengers. Only two
lifeboats were launched before
the
Elena Mia
went down. Pembroke
was in the second. The
roar of the sinking ship was the
last thing he heard for some
time.
Pembroke came as close to being
a professional adventurer as
one can in these days of regimented
travel, organized peril,
and political restriction. He had
made for himself a substantial
fortune through speculation in a
great variety of properties, real
and otherwise. Life had given
him much and demanded little,
which was perhaps the reason
for his restiveness.
Loyalty to person or to people
was a trait Pembroke had never
recognized in himself, nor had it
ever been expected of him. And
yet he greatly envied those
staunch patriots and lovers who
could find it in themselves to
elevate the glory and safety of
others above that of themselves.
Lacking such loyalties, Pembroke
adapted quickly to the situation
in which he found himself
when he regained consciousness.
He awoke in a small room in
what appeared to be a typical
modern American hotel. The wallet
in his pocket contained exactly
what it should, approximately
three hundred dollars.
His next thought was of food.
He left the room and descended
via the elevator to the restaurant.
Here he observed that it
was early afternoon. Ordering
a full dinner, for he was unusually
hungry, he began to study the
others in the restaurant.
Many of the faces seemed familiar;
the crew of the ship,
probably. He also recognized several
of the passengers. However,
he made no attempt to speak to
them. After his meal, he bought
a good corona and went for a
walk. His situation could have
been any small western American
seacoast city. He heard the hiss
of the ocean in the direction the
afternoon sun was taking. In his
full-gaited walk, he was soon approaching
the beach.
On the sand he saw a number
of sun bathers. One in particular,
an attractive woman of about
thirty, tossed back her long,
chestnut locks and gazed up intently
at Pembroke as he passed.
Seldom had he enjoyed so ingenuous
an invitation. He halted
and stared down at her for a few
moments.
"You are looking for someone?"
she inquired.
"Much of the time," said the
man.
"Could it be me?"
"It could be."
"Yet you seem unsure," she
said.
Pembroke smiled, uneasily.
There was something not entirely
normal about her conversation.
Though the rest of her compensated
for that.
"Tell me what's wrong with
me," she went on urgently. "I'm
not good enough, am I? I mean,
there's something wrong with
the way I look or act. Isn't there?
Please help me, please!"
"You're not casual enough, for
one thing," said Pembroke, deciding
to play along with her for
the moment. "You're too tense.
Also you're a bit knock-kneed,
not that it matters. Is that what
you wanted to hear?"
"Yes, yes—I mean, I suppose
so. I can try to be more casual.
But I don't know what to do
about my knees," she said wistfully,
staring across at the
smooth, tan limbs. "Do you think
I'm okay otherwise? I mean, as a
whole I'm not so bad, am I? Oh,
please tell me."
"How about talking it over at
supper tonight?" Pembroke proposed.
"Maybe with less distraction
I'll have a better picture of
you—as a whole."
"Oh, that's very generous of
you," the woman told him. She
scribbled a name and an address
on a small piece of paper and
handed it to him. "Any time
after six," she said.
Pembroke left the beach and
walked through several small
specialty shops. He tried to get
the woman off his mind, but the
oddness of her conversation continued
to bother him. She was
right about being different, but
it was her concern about being
different that made her so. How
to explain
that
to her?
Then he saw the weird little
glass statuette among the usual
bric-a-brac. It rather resembled
a ground hog, had seven fingers
on each of its six limbs, and
smiled up at him as he stared.
"Can I help you, sir?" a middle-aged
saleswoman inquired.
"Oh, good heavens, whatever is
that thing doing here?"
Pembroke watched with lifted
eyebrows as the clerk whisked
the bizarre statuette underneath
the counter.
"What the hell was that?"
Pembroke demanded.
"Oh, you know—or don't you?
Oh, my," she concluded, "are you
one of the—strangers?"
"And if I were?"
"Well, I'd certainly appreciate
it if you'd tell me how I walk."
She came around in front of
the counter and strutted back
and forth a few times.
"They tell me I lean too far
forward," she confided. "But I
should think you'd fall down if
you didn't."
"Don't try to go so fast and
you won't fall down," suggested
Pembroke. "You're in too much
of a hurry. Also those fake flowers
on your blouse make you look
frumpy."
"Well, I'm supposed to look
frumpy," the woman retorted.
"That's the type of person I am.
But you can look frumpy and still
walk natural, can't you? Everyone
says you can."
"Well, they've got a point,"
said Pembroke. "Incidentally,
just where are we, anyway?
What city is this?"
"Puerto Pacifico," she told
him. "Isn't that a lovely name?
It means peaceful port. In Spanish."
That was fine. At least he now
knew where he was. But as he
left the shop he began checking
off every west coast state, city,
town, and inlet. None, to the best
of his knowledge, was called
Puerto Pacifico.
He headed for the nearest
service station and asked for a
map. The attendant gave him one
which showed the city, but nothing
beyond.
"Which way is it to San Francisco?"
asked Pembroke.
"That all depends on where
you are," the boy returned.
"Okay, then where am I?"
"Pardon me, there's a customer,"
the boy said. "This is
Puerto Pacifico."
Pembroke watched him hurry
off to service a car with a sense
of having been given the runaround.
To his surprise, the boy
came back a few minutes later
after servicing the automobile.
"Say, I've just figured out who
you are," the youngster told him.
"I'd sure appreciate it if you'd
give me a little help on my lingo.
Also, you gas up the car first,
then try to sell 'em the oil—right?"
"Right," said Pembroke wearily.
"What's wrong with your
lingo? Other than the fact that
it's not colloquial enough."
"Not enough slang, huh? Well,
I guess I'll have to concentrate
on that. How about the smile?"
"Perfect," Pembroke told him.
"Yeah?" said the boy delightedly.
"Say, come back again,
huh? I sure appreciate the help.
Keep the map."
"Thanks. One more thing,"
Pembroke said. "What's over
that way—outside the city?"
"Sand."
"How about that way?" he
asked, pointing north. "And that
way?" pointing south.
"More of the same."
"Any railroads?"
"That we ain't got."
"Buses? Airlines?"
The kid shook his head.
"Some city."
"Yeah, it's kinda isolated. A
lot of ships dock here, though."
"All cargo ships, I'll bet. No
passengers," said Pembroke.
"Right," said the attendant,
giving with his perfect smile.
"No getting out of here, is
there?"
"That's for sure," the boy said,
walking away to wait on another
customer. "If you don't like the
place, you've had it."
Pembroke returned to the
hotel. Going to the bar, he recognized
one of the
Elena Mia's
paying
passengers. He was a short,
rectangular little man in his fifties
named Spencer. He sat in a
booth with three young women,
all lovely, all effusive. The topic
of the conversation turned out
to be precisely what Pembroke
had predicted.
"Well, Louisa, I'd say your
only fault is the way you keep
wigglin' your shoulders up 'n'
down. Why'n'sha try holdin' 'em
straight?"
"I thought it made me look
sexy," the redhead said petulantly.
"Just be yourself, gal," Spencer
drawled, jabbing her intimately
with a fat elbow, "and
you'll qualify."
"Me, me," the blonde with a
feather cut was insisting. "What
is wrong with me?"
"You're perfect, sweetheart,"
he told her, taking her hand.
"Ah, come on," she pleaded.
"Everyone tells me I chew gum
with my mouth open. Don't you
hate that?"
"Naw, that's part of your
charm," Spencer assured her.
"How 'bout me, sugar," asked
the girl with the coal black hair.
"Ah, you're perfect, too. You
are all perfect. I've never seen
such a collection of dolls as parade
around this here city.
C'mon, kids—how 'bout another
round?"
But the dolls had apparently
lost interest in him. They got up
one by one and walked out of the
bar. Pembroke took his rum and
tonic and moved over to Spencer's
booth.
"Okay if I join you?"
"Sure," said the fat man.
"Wonder what the hell got into
those babes?"
"You said they were perfect.
They know they're not. You've
got to be rough with them in this
town," said Pembroke. "That's
all they want from us."
"Mister, you've been doing
some thinkin', I can see," said
Spencer, peering at him suspiciously.
"Maybe you've figured
out where we are."
"Your bet's as good as mine,"
said Pembroke. "It's not Wellington,
and it's not Brisbane, and
it's not Long Beach, and it's not
Tahiti. There are a lot of places
it's not. But where the hell it is,
you tell me.
"And, by the way," he added,
"I hope you like it in Puerto
Pacifico. Because there isn't any
place to go from here and there
isn't any way to get there if
there were."
"Pardon me, gentlemen, but
I'm Joe Valencia, manager of the
hotel. I would be very grateful if
you would give me a few minutes
of honest criticism."
"Ah, no, not you, too," groaned
Spencer. "Look, Joe, what's
the gag?"
"You are newcomers, Mr.
Spencer," Valencia explained.
"You are therefore in an excellent
position to point out our
faults as you see them."
"Well, so what?" demanded
Spencer. "I've got more important
things to do than to worry
about your troubles. You look
okay to me."
"Mr. Valencia," said Pembroke.
"I've noticed that you
walk with a very slight limp. If
you have a bad leg, I should
think you would do better to develop
a more pronounced limp.
Otherwise, you may appear to
be self-conscious about it."
Spencer opened his mouth to
protest, but saw with amazement
that it was exactly this that
Valencia was seeking. Pembroke
was amused at his companion's
reaction but observed that Spencer
still failed to see the point.
"Also, there is a certain effeminateness
in the way in which
you speak," said Pembroke. "Try
to be a little more direct, a little
more brusque. Speak in a monotone.
It will make you more acceptable."
"Thank you so much," said the
manager. "There is much food
for thought in what you have
said, Mr. Pembroke. However,
Mr. Spencer, your value has failed
to prove itself. You have only
yourself to blame. Cooperation is
all we require of you."
Valencia left. Spencer ordered
another martini. Neither he nor
Pembroke spoke for several minutes.
"Somebody's crazy around
here," the fat man muttered
after a few moments. "Is it me,
Frank?"
"No. You just don't belong
here, in this particular place,"
said Pembroke thoughtfully.
"You're the wrong type. But they
couldn't know that ahead of time.
The way they operate it's a
pretty hit-or-miss operation. But
they don't care one bit about us,
Spencer. Consider the men who
went down with the ship. That
was just part of the game."
"What the hell are you sayin'?"
asked Spencer in disbelief.
"You figure
they
sunk the ship?
Valencia and the waitress and
the three babes? Ah, come on."
"It's what you think that will
determine what you do, Spencer.
I suggest you change your attitude;
play along with them for a
few days till the picture becomes
a little clearer to you. We'll talk
about it again then."
Pembroke rose and started out
of the bar. A policeman entered
and walked directly to Spencer's
table. Loitering at the juke box,
Pembroke overheard the conversation.
"You Spencer?"
"That's right," said the fat
man sullenly.
"What don't you like about
me? The
truth
, buddy."
"Ah, hell! Nothin' wrong
with you at all, and nothin'll
make me say there is," said Spencer.
"You're the guy, all right. Too
bad, Mac," said the cop.
Pembroke heard the shots as
he strolled casually out into the
brightness of the hotel lobby.
While he waited for the elevator,
he saw them carrying the body
into the street. How many others,
he wondered, had gone out on
their backs during their first day
in Puerto Pacifico?
Pembroke shaved, showered,
and put on the new suit and shirt
he had bought. Then he took
Mary Ann, the woman he had
met on the beach, out to dinner.
She would look magnificent even
when fully clothed, he decided,
and the pale chartreuse gown she
wore hardly placed her in that
category. Her conversation seemed
considerably more normal
after the other denizens of
Puerto Pacifico Pembroke had
listened to that afternoon.
After eating they danced for
an hour, had a few more drinks,
then went to Pembroke's room.
He still knew nothing about her
and had almost exhausted his
critical capabilities, but not once
had she become annoyed with
him. She seemed to devour every
factual point of imperfection
about herself that Pembroke
brought to her attention. And,
fantastically enough, she actually
appeared to have overcome every
little imperfection he had been
able to communicate to her.
It was in the privacy of his
room that Pembroke became
aware of just how perfect, physically,
Mary Ann was. Too perfect.
No freckles or moles anywhere
on the visible surface of
her brown skin, which was more
than a mere sampling. Furthermore,
her face and body were
meticulously symmetrical. And
she seemed to be wholly ambidextrous.
"With so many beautiful
women in Puerto Pacifico," said
Pembroke probingly, "I find it
hard to understand why there are
so few children."
"Yes, children are decorative,
aren't they," said Mary Ann. "I
do wish there were more of
them."
"Why not have a couple of
your own?" he asked.
"Oh, they're only given to maternal
types. I'd never get one.
Anyway, I won't ever marry,"
she said. "I'm the paramour
type."
It was obvious that the liquor
had been having some effect.
Either that, or she had a basic
flaw of loquacity that no one else
had discovered. Pembroke decided
he would have to cover his
tracks carefully.
"What type am I?" he asked.
"Silly, you're real. You're not
a type at all."
"Mary Ann, I love you very
much," Pembroke murmured,
gambling everything on this one
throw. "When you go to Earth
I'll miss you terribly."
"Oh, but you'll be dead by
then," she pouted. "So I mustn't
fall in love with you. I don't want
to be miserable."
"If I pretended I was one of
you, if I left on the boat with
you, they'd let me go to Earth
with you. Wouldn't they?"
"Oh, yes, I'm sure they would."
"Mary Ann, you have two
other flaws I feel I should mention."
"Yes? Please tell me."
"In the first place," said Pembroke,
"you should be willing to
fall in love with me even if it
will eventually make you unhappy.
How can you be the paramour
type if you refuse to fall in
love foolishly? And when you
have fallen in love, you should be
very loyal."
"I'll try," she said unsurely.
"What else?"
"The other thing is that, as
my mistress, you must never
mention me to anyone. It would
place me in great danger."
"I'll never tell anyone anything
about you," she promised.
"Now try to love me," Pembroke
said, drawing her into his
arms and kissing with little
pleasure the smooth, warm perfection
of her tanned cheeks.
"Love me my sweet, beautiful,
affectionate Mary Ann. My paramour."
Making love to Mary Ann was
something short of ecstasy. Not
for any obvious reason, but because
of subtle little factors that
make a woman a woman. Mary
Ann had no pulse. Mary Ann did
not perspire. Mary Ann did not
fatigue gradually but all at once.
Mary Ann breathed regularly
under all circumstances. Mary
Ann talked and talked and talked.
But then, Mary Ann was not
a human being.
When she left the hotel at midnight,
Pembroke was quite sure
that she understood his plan and
that she was irrevocably in love
with him. Tomorrow might bring
his death, but it might also ensure
his escape. After forty-two
years of searching for a passion,
for a cause, for a loyalty, Frank
Pembroke had at last found his.
Earth and the human race that
peopled it. And Mary Ann would
help him to save it.
The next morning Pembroke
talked to Valencia about hunting.
He said that he planned to go
shooting out on the desert which
surrounded the city. Valencia
told him that there were no living
creatures anywhere but in
the city. Pembroke said he was
going out anyway.
He picked up Mary Ann at her
apartment and together they
went to a sporting goods store.
As he guessed there was a goodly
selection of firearms, despite the
fact that there was nothing to
hunt and only a single target
range within the city. Everything,
of course, had to be just
like Earth. That, after all, was
the purpose of Puerto Pacifico.
By noon they had rented a
jeep and were well away from
the city. Pembroke and Mary
Ann took turns firing at the paper
targets they had purchased. At
twilight they headed back to the
city. On the outskirts, where the
sand and soil were mixed and no
footprints would be left, Pembroke
hopped off. Mary Ann
would go straight to the police
and report that Pembroke had attacked
her and that she had shot
him. If necessary, she would conduct
the authorities to the place
where they had been target
shooting, but would be unable to
locate the spot where she had
buried the body. Why had she
buried it? Because at first she
was not going to report the incident.
She was frightened. It
was not airtight, but there would
probably be no further investigation.
And they certainly would
not prosecute Mary Ann for killing
an Earthman.
Now Pembroke had himself to
worry about. The first step was
to enter smoothly into the new
life he had planned. It wouldn't
be so comfortable as the previous
one, but should be considerably
safer. He headed slowly for the
"old" part of town, aging his
clothes against buildings and
fences as he walked. He had already
torn the collar of the shirt
and discarded his belt. By morning
his beard would grow to
blacken his face. And he would
look weary and hungry and aimless.
Only the last would be a deception.
Two weeks later Pembroke
phoned Mary Ann. The police
had accepted her story without
even checking. And when, when
would she be seeing him again?
He had aroused her passion and
no amount of long-distance love
could requite it. Soon, he assured
her, soon.
"Because, after all, you do owe
me something," she added.
And that was bad because it
sounded as if she had been giving
some womanly thought to the situation.
A little more of that and
she might go to the police again,
this time for vengeance.
Twice during his wanderings
Pembroke had seen the corpses
of Earthmen being carted out of
buildings. They had to be Earthmen
because they bled. Mary Ann
had admitted that she did not.
There would be very few Earthmen
left in Puerto Pacifico, and
it would be simple enough to locate
him if he were reported as
being on the loose. There was
no out but to do away with Mary
Ann.
Pembroke headed for the
beach. He knew she invariably
went there in the afternoon. He
loitered around the stalls where
hot dogs and soft drinks were
sold, leaning against a post in
the hot sun, hat pulled down over
his forehead. Then he noticed
that people all about him were
talking excitedly. They were discussing
a ship. It was leaving
that afternoon. Anyone who
could pass the interview would
be sent to Earth.
Pembroke had visited the
docks every day, without being
able to learn when the great
exodus would take place. Yet he
was certain the first lap would be
by water rather than by spaceship,
since no one he had talked
to in the city had ever heard of
spaceships. In fact, they knew
very little about their masters.
Now the ship had arrived and
was to leave shortly. If there was
any but the most superficial examination,
Pembroke would no
doubt be discovered and exterminated.
But since no one seemed
concerned about anything but his
own speech and behavior, he assumed
that they had all qualified
in every other respect. The reason
for transporting Earth People
to this planet was, of course,
to apply a corrective to any of
the Pacificos' aberrant mannerisms
or articulation. This was
the polishing up phase.
Pembroke began hobbling toward
the docks. Almost at once
he found himself face to face
with Mary Ann. She smiled happily
when she recognized him.
That
was a good thing.
"It is a sign of poor breeding
to smile at tramps," Pembroke
admonished her in a whisper.
"Walk on ahead."
She obeyed. He followed. The
crowd grew thicker. They neared
the docks and Pembroke saw that
there were now set up on the
roped-off wharves small interviewing
booths. When it was
their turn, he and Mary Ann
each went into separate ones.
Pembroke found himself alone in
the little room.
Then he saw that there was
another entity in his presence
confined beneath a glass dome. It
looked rather like a groundhog
and had seven fingers on each of
its six limbs. But it was larger
and hairier than the glass one
he had seen at the gift store.
With four of its limbs it tapped
on an intricate keyboard in front
of it.
"What is your name?" queried
a metallic voice from a speaker
on the wall.
"I'm Jerry Newton. Got no
middle initial," Pembroke said in
a surly voice.
"Occupation?"
"I work a lot o' trades. Fisherman,
fruit picker, fightin' range
fires, vineyards, car washer. Anything.
You name it. Been out of
work for a long time now,
though. Goin' on five months.
These here are hard times, no
matter what they say."
"What do you think of the
Chinese situation?" the voice inquired.
"Which situation's 'at?"
"Where's Seattle?"
"Seattle? State o' Washington."
And so it went for about five
minutes. Then he was told he
had qualified as a satisfactory
surrogate for a mid-twentieth
century American male, itinerant
type.
"You understand your mission,
Newton?" the voice asked. "You
are to establish yourself on
Earth. In time you will receive
instructions. Then you will attack.
You will not see us, your
masters, again until the atmosphere
has been sufficiently chlorinated.
In the meantime, serve
us well."
He stumbled out toward the
docks, then looked about for
Mary Ann. He saw her at last
behind the ropes, her lovely face
in tears.
Then she saw him. Waving
frantically, she called his name
several times. Pembroke mingled
with the crowd moving toward
the ship, ignoring her. But still
the woman persisted in her
shouting.
Sidling up to a well-dressed
man-about-town type, Pembroke
winked at him and snickered.
"You Frank?" he asked.
"Hell, no. But some poor
punk's sure red in the face, I'll
bet," the man-about-town said
with a chuckle. "Those high-strung
paramour types always
raising a ruckus. They never do
pass the interview. Don't know
why they even make 'em."
Suddenly Mary Ann was quiet.
"Ambulance squad," Pembroke's
companion explained.
"They'll take her off to the buggy
house for a few days and bring
her out fresh and ignorant as the
day she was assembled. Don't
know why they keep making 'em,
as I say. But I guess there's a
call for that type up there on
Earth."
"Yeah, I reckon there is at
that," said Pembroke, snickering
again as he moved away from the
other. "And why not? Hey?
Why not?"
Pembroke went right on hating
himself, however, till the
night he was deposited in a field
outside of Ensenada, broke but
happy, with two other itinerant
types. They separated in San
Diego, and it was not long before
Pembroke was explaining to the
police how he had drifted far
from the scene of the sinking of
the
Elena Mia
on a piece of
wreckage, and had been picked
up by a Chilean trawler. How he
had then made his way, with
much suffering, up the coast to
California. Two days later, his
identity established and his circumstances
again solvent, he was
headed for Los Angeles to begin
his save-Earth campaign.
Now, seated at his battered
desk in the shabby rented office
over Lemark's Liquors, Pembroke
gazed without emotion at
the two demolished Pacificos that
lay sprawled one atop the other
in the corner. His watch said
one-fifteen. The man from the
FBI should arrive soon.
There were footsteps on the
stairs for the third time that
day. Not the brisk, efficient steps
of a federal official, but the hesitant,
self-conscious steps of a
junior clerk type.
Pembroke rose as the young
man appeared at the door. His
face was smooth, unpimpled,
clean-shaven, without sweat on a
warm summer afternoon.
"Are you Dr. Von Schubert?"
the newcomer asked, peering into
the room. "You see, I've got a
problem—"
The four shots from Pembroke's
pistol solved his problem
effectively. Pembroke tossed his
third victim onto the pile, then
opened a can of lager, quaffing
it appreciatively. Seating himself
once more, he leaned back in
the chair, both feet upon the
desk.
He would be out of business
soon, once the FBI agent had got
there. Pembroke was only in it to
get the proof he would need to
convince people of the truth of
his tale. But in the meantime he
allowed himself to admire the
clipping of the newspaper ad he
had run in all the Los Angeles
papers for the past week. The
little ad that had saved mankind
from God-knew-what insidious
menace. It read:
ARE YOU IMPERFECT?
LET DR. VON SCHUBERT POINT OUT
YOUR FLAWS
IT IS HIS GOAL TO MAKE YOU THE
AVERAGE FOR YOUR TYPE
FEE—$3.75
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January 1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Puerto Pacifico is a training ground for the androids that the aliens are sending to prepare Earth for invasion. | Puerto Pacifico is a training ground for the android forces that are preparing to invade Earth. | Puerto Pacifico is a training ground for the aliens who will be replacing key humans on Earth in preparation for invasion. | Pembroke has died and Puerto Pacifico is his purgatory. | 0 |
24977_63MMCMYX_4 | What is wrong with the citizens of Puerto Pacifico? | THE PERFECTIONISTS
By ARNOLD CASTLE
ILLUSTRATED by SUMMERS
Is there something wrong with you?
Do you fail to fit in with your group?
Nervous, anxious, ill-at-ease? Happy
about it? Lucky you!
Frank Pembroke
sat behind
the desk of his shabby
little office over Lemark's Liquors
in downtown Los Angeles and
waited for his first customer. He
had been in business for a week
and as yet had had no callers.
Therefore, it was with a mingled
sense of excitement and satisfaction
that he greeted the tall,
dark, smooth-faced figure that
came up the stairs and into the
office shortly before noon.
"Good day, sir," said Pembroke
with an amiable smile. "I
see my advertisement has interested
you. Please stand in that
corner for just a moment."
Opening the desk drawer,
which was almost empty, Pembroke
removed an automatic pistol
fitted with a silencer. Pointing
it at the amazed customer, he
fired four .22 caliber longs into
the narrow chest. Then he made
a telephone call and sat down to
wait. He wondered how long it
would be before his next client
would arrive.
The series of events leading up
to Pembroke's present occupation
had commenced on a dismal,
overcast evening in the South
Pacific a year earlier. Bound for
Sydney, two days out of Valparaiso,
the Colombian tramp
steamer
Elena Mia
had encountered
a dense greenish fog which
seemed vaguely redolent of citrus
trees. Standing on the forward
deck, Pembroke was one of the
first to perceive the peculiar odor
and to spot the immense gray
hulk wallowing in the murky distance.
Then the explosion had come,
from far below the waterline,
and the decks were awash with
frantic crewmen, officers, and the
handful of passengers. Only two
lifeboats were launched before
the
Elena Mia
went down. Pembroke
was in the second. The
roar of the sinking ship was the
last thing he heard for some
time.
Pembroke came as close to being
a professional adventurer as
one can in these days of regimented
travel, organized peril,
and political restriction. He had
made for himself a substantial
fortune through speculation in a
great variety of properties, real
and otherwise. Life had given
him much and demanded little,
which was perhaps the reason
for his restiveness.
Loyalty to person or to people
was a trait Pembroke had never
recognized in himself, nor had it
ever been expected of him. And
yet he greatly envied those
staunch patriots and lovers who
could find it in themselves to
elevate the glory and safety of
others above that of themselves.
Lacking such loyalties, Pembroke
adapted quickly to the situation
in which he found himself
when he regained consciousness.
He awoke in a small room in
what appeared to be a typical
modern American hotel. The wallet
in his pocket contained exactly
what it should, approximately
three hundred dollars.
His next thought was of food.
He left the room and descended
via the elevator to the restaurant.
Here he observed that it
was early afternoon. Ordering
a full dinner, for he was unusually
hungry, he began to study the
others in the restaurant.
Many of the faces seemed familiar;
the crew of the ship,
probably. He also recognized several
of the passengers. However,
he made no attempt to speak to
them. After his meal, he bought
a good corona and went for a
walk. His situation could have
been any small western American
seacoast city. He heard the hiss
of the ocean in the direction the
afternoon sun was taking. In his
full-gaited walk, he was soon approaching
the beach.
On the sand he saw a number
of sun bathers. One in particular,
an attractive woman of about
thirty, tossed back her long,
chestnut locks and gazed up intently
at Pembroke as he passed.
Seldom had he enjoyed so ingenuous
an invitation. He halted
and stared down at her for a few
moments.
"You are looking for someone?"
she inquired.
"Much of the time," said the
man.
"Could it be me?"
"It could be."
"Yet you seem unsure," she
said.
Pembroke smiled, uneasily.
There was something not entirely
normal about her conversation.
Though the rest of her compensated
for that.
"Tell me what's wrong with
me," she went on urgently. "I'm
not good enough, am I? I mean,
there's something wrong with
the way I look or act. Isn't there?
Please help me, please!"
"You're not casual enough, for
one thing," said Pembroke, deciding
to play along with her for
the moment. "You're too tense.
Also you're a bit knock-kneed,
not that it matters. Is that what
you wanted to hear?"
"Yes, yes—I mean, I suppose
so. I can try to be more casual.
But I don't know what to do
about my knees," she said wistfully,
staring across at the
smooth, tan limbs. "Do you think
I'm okay otherwise? I mean, as a
whole I'm not so bad, am I? Oh,
please tell me."
"How about talking it over at
supper tonight?" Pembroke proposed.
"Maybe with less distraction
I'll have a better picture of
you—as a whole."
"Oh, that's very generous of
you," the woman told him. She
scribbled a name and an address
on a small piece of paper and
handed it to him. "Any time
after six," she said.
Pembroke left the beach and
walked through several small
specialty shops. He tried to get
the woman off his mind, but the
oddness of her conversation continued
to bother him. She was
right about being different, but
it was her concern about being
different that made her so. How
to explain
that
to her?
Then he saw the weird little
glass statuette among the usual
bric-a-brac. It rather resembled
a ground hog, had seven fingers
on each of its six limbs, and
smiled up at him as he stared.
"Can I help you, sir?" a middle-aged
saleswoman inquired.
"Oh, good heavens, whatever is
that thing doing here?"
Pembroke watched with lifted
eyebrows as the clerk whisked
the bizarre statuette underneath
the counter.
"What the hell was that?"
Pembroke demanded.
"Oh, you know—or don't you?
Oh, my," she concluded, "are you
one of the—strangers?"
"And if I were?"
"Well, I'd certainly appreciate
it if you'd tell me how I walk."
She came around in front of
the counter and strutted back
and forth a few times.
"They tell me I lean too far
forward," she confided. "But I
should think you'd fall down if
you didn't."
"Don't try to go so fast and
you won't fall down," suggested
Pembroke. "You're in too much
of a hurry. Also those fake flowers
on your blouse make you look
frumpy."
"Well, I'm supposed to look
frumpy," the woman retorted.
"That's the type of person I am.
But you can look frumpy and still
walk natural, can't you? Everyone
says you can."
"Well, they've got a point,"
said Pembroke. "Incidentally,
just where are we, anyway?
What city is this?"
"Puerto Pacifico," she told
him. "Isn't that a lovely name?
It means peaceful port. In Spanish."
That was fine. At least he now
knew where he was. But as he
left the shop he began checking
off every west coast state, city,
town, and inlet. None, to the best
of his knowledge, was called
Puerto Pacifico.
He headed for the nearest
service station and asked for a
map. The attendant gave him one
which showed the city, but nothing
beyond.
"Which way is it to San Francisco?"
asked Pembroke.
"That all depends on where
you are," the boy returned.
"Okay, then where am I?"
"Pardon me, there's a customer,"
the boy said. "This is
Puerto Pacifico."
Pembroke watched him hurry
off to service a car with a sense
of having been given the runaround.
To his surprise, the boy
came back a few minutes later
after servicing the automobile.
"Say, I've just figured out who
you are," the youngster told him.
"I'd sure appreciate it if you'd
give me a little help on my lingo.
Also, you gas up the car first,
then try to sell 'em the oil—right?"
"Right," said Pembroke wearily.
"What's wrong with your
lingo? Other than the fact that
it's not colloquial enough."
"Not enough slang, huh? Well,
I guess I'll have to concentrate
on that. How about the smile?"
"Perfect," Pembroke told him.
"Yeah?" said the boy delightedly.
"Say, come back again,
huh? I sure appreciate the help.
Keep the map."
"Thanks. One more thing,"
Pembroke said. "What's over
that way—outside the city?"
"Sand."
"How about that way?" he
asked, pointing north. "And that
way?" pointing south.
"More of the same."
"Any railroads?"
"That we ain't got."
"Buses? Airlines?"
The kid shook his head.
"Some city."
"Yeah, it's kinda isolated. A
lot of ships dock here, though."
"All cargo ships, I'll bet. No
passengers," said Pembroke.
"Right," said the attendant,
giving with his perfect smile.
"No getting out of here, is
there?"
"That's for sure," the boy said,
walking away to wait on another
customer. "If you don't like the
place, you've had it."
Pembroke returned to the
hotel. Going to the bar, he recognized
one of the
Elena Mia's
paying
passengers. He was a short,
rectangular little man in his fifties
named Spencer. He sat in a
booth with three young women,
all lovely, all effusive. The topic
of the conversation turned out
to be precisely what Pembroke
had predicted.
"Well, Louisa, I'd say your
only fault is the way you keep
wigglin' your shoulders up 'n'
down. Why'n'sha try holdin' 'em
straight?"
"I thought it made me look
sexy," the redhead said petulantly.
"Just be yourself, gal," Spencer
drawled, jabbing her intimately
with a fat elbow, "and
you'll qualify."
"Me, me," the blonde with a
feather cut was insisting. "What
is wrong with me?"
"You're perfect, sweetheart,"
he told her, taking her hand.
"Ah, come on," she pleaded.
"Everyone tells me I chew gum
with my mouth open. Don't you
hate that?"
"Naw, that's part of your
charm," Spencer assured her.
"How 'bout me, sugar," asked
the girl with the coal black hair.
"Ah, you're perfect, too. You
are all perfect. I've never seen
such a collection of dolls as parade
around this here city.
C'mon, kids—how 'bout another
round?"
But the dolls had apparently
lost interest in him. They got up
one by one and walked out of the
bar. Pembroke took his rum and
tonic and moved over to Spencer's
booth.
"Okay if I join you?"
"Sure," said the fat man.
"Wonder what the hell got into
those babes?"
"You said they were perfect.
They know they're not. You've
got to be rough with them in this
town," said Pembroke. "That's
all they want from us."
"Mister, you've been doing
some thinkin', I can see," said
Spencer, peering at him suspiciously.
"Maybe you've figured
out where we are."
"Your bet's as good as mine,"
said Pembroke. "It's not Wellington,
and it's not Brisbane, and
it's not Long Beach, and it's not
Tahiti. There are a lot of places
it's not. But where the hell it is,
you tell me.
"And, by the way," he added,
"I hope you like it in Puerto
Pacifico. Because there isn't any
place to go from here and there
isn't any way to get there if
there were."
"Pardon me, gentlemen, but
I'm Joe Valencia, manager of the
hotel. I would be very grateful if
you would give me a few minutes
of honest criticism."
"Ah, no, not you, too," groaned
Spencer. "Look, Joe, what's
the gag?"
"You are newcomers, Mr.
Spencer," Valencia explained.
"You are therefore in an excellent
position to point out our
faults as you see them."
"Well, so what?" demanded
Spencer. "I've got more important
things to do than to worry
about your troubles. You look
okay to me."
"Mr. Valencia," said Pembroke.
"I've noticed that you
walk with a very slight limp. If
you have a bad leg, I should
think you would do better to develop
a more pronounced limp.
Otherwise, you may appear to
be self-conscious about it."
Spencer opened his mouth to
protest, but saw with amazement
that it was exactly this that
Valencia was seeking. Pembroke
was amused at his companion's
reaction but observed that Spencer
still failed to see the point.
"Also, there is a certain effeminateness
in the way in which
you speak," said Pembroke. "Try
to be a little more direct, a little
more brusque. Speak in a monotone.
It will make you more acceptable."
"Thank you so much," said the
manager. "There is much food
for thought in what you have
said, Mr. Pembroke. However,
Mr. Spencer, your value has failed
to prove itself. You have only
yourself to blame. Cooperation is
all we require of you."
Valencia left. Spencer ordered
another martini. Neither he nor
Pembroke spoke for several minutes.
"Somebody's crazy around
here," the fat man muttered
after a few moments. "Is it me,
Frank?"
"No. You just don't belong
here, in this particular place,"
said Pembroke thoughtfully.
"You're the wrong type. But they
couldn't know that ahead of time.
The way they operate it's a
pretty hit-or-miss operation. But
they don't care one bit about us,
Spencer. Consider the men who
went down with the ship. That
was just part of the game."
"What the hell are you sayin'?"
asked Spencer in disbelief.
"You figure
they
sunk the ship?
Valencia and the waitress and
the three babes? Ah, come on."
"It's what you think that will
determine what you do, Spencer.
I suggest you change your attitude;
play along with them for a
few days till the picture becomes
a little clearer to you. We'll talk
about it again then."
Pembroke rose and started out
of the bar. A policeman entered
and walked directly to Spencer's
table. Loitering at the juke box,
Pembroke overheard the conversation.
"You Spencer?"
"That's right," said the fat
man sullenly.
"What don't you like about
me? The
truth
, buddy."
"Ah, hell! Nothin' wrong
with you at all, and nothin'll
make me say there is," said Spencer.
"You're the guy, all right. Too
bad, Mac," said the cop.
Pembroke heard the shots as
he strolled casually out into the
brightness of the hotel lobby.
While he waited for the elevator,
he saw them carrying the body
into the street. How many others,
he wondered, had gone out on
their backs during their first day
in Puerto Pacifico?
Pembroke shaved, showered,
and put on the new suit and shirt
he had bought. Then he took
Mary Ann, the woman he had
met on the beach, out to dinner.
She would look magnificent even
when fully clothed, he decided,
and the pale chartreuse gown she
wore hardly placed her in that
category. Her conversation seemed
considerably more normal
after the other denizens of
Puerto Pacifico Pembroke had
listened to that afternoon.
After eating they danced for
an hour, had a few more drinks,
then went to Pembroke's room.
He still knew nothing about her
and had almost exhausted his
critical capabilities, but not once
had she become annoyed with
him. She seemed to devour every
factual point of imperfection
about herself that Pembroke
brought to her attention. And,
fantastically enough, she actually
appeared to have overcome every
little imperfection he had been
able to communicate to her.
It was in the privacy of his
room that Pembroke became
aware of just how perfect, physically,
Mary Ann was. Too perfect.
No freckles or moles anywhere
on the visible surface of
her brown skin, which was more
than a mere sampling. Furthermore,
her face and body were
meticulously symmetrical. And
she seemed to be wholly ambidextrous.
"With so many beautiful
women in Puerto Pacifico," said
Pembroke probingly, "I find it
hard to understand why there are
so few children."
"Yes, children are decorative,
aren't they," said Mary Ann. "I
do wish there were more of
them."
"Why not have a couple of
your own?" he asked.
"Oh, they're only given to maternal
types. I'd never get one.
Anyway, I won't ever marry,"
she said. "I'm the paramour
type."
It was obvious that the liquor
had been having some effect.
Either that, or she had a basic
flaw of loquacity that no one else
had discovered. Pembroke decided
he would have to cover his
tracks carefully.
"What type am I?" he asked.
"Silly, you're real. You're not
a type at all."
"Mary Ann, I love you very
much," Pembroke murmured,
gambling everything on this one
throw. "When you go to Earth
I'll miss you terribly."
"Oh, but you'll be dead by
then," she pouted. "So I mustn't
fall in love with you. I don't want
to be miserable."
"If I pretended I was one of
you, if I left on the boat with
you, they'd let me go to Earth
with you. Wouldn't they?"
"Oh, yes, I'm sure they would."
"Mary Ann, you have two
other flaws I feel I should mention."
"Yes? Please tell me."
"In the first place," said Pembroke,
"you should be willing to
fall in love with me even if it
will eventually make you unhappy.
How can you be the paramour
type if you refuse to fall in
love foolishly? And when you
have fallen in love, you should be
very loyal."
"I'll try," she said unsurely.
"What else?"
"The other thing is that, as
my mistress, you must never
mention me to anyone. It would
place me in great danger."
"I'll never tell anyone anything
about you," she promised.
"Now try to love me," Pembroke
said, drawing her into his
arms and kissing with little
pleasure the smooth, warm perfection
of her tanned cheeks.
"Love me my sweet, beautiful,
affectionate Mary Ann. My paramour."
Making love to Mary Ann was
something short of ecstasy. Not
for any obvious reason, but because
of subtle little factors that
make a woman a woman. Mary
Ann had no pulse. Mary Ann did
not perspire. Mary Ann did not
fatigue gradually but all at once.
Mary Ann breathed regularly
under all circumstances. Mary
Ann talked and talked and talked.
But then, Mary Ann was not
a human being.
When she left the hotel at midnight,
Pembroke was quite sure
that she understood his plan and
that she was irrevocably in love
with him. Tomorrow might bring
his death, but it might also ensure
his escape. After forty-two
years of searching for a passion,
for a cause, for a loyalty, Frank
Pembroke had at last found his.
Earth and the human race that
peopled it. And Mary Ann would
help him to save it.
The next morning Pembroke
talked to Valencia about hunting.
He said that he planned to go
shooting out on the desert which
surrounded the city. Valencia
told him that there were no living
creatures anywhere but in
the city. Pembroke said he was
going out anyway.
He picked up Mary Ann at her
apartment and together they
went to a sporting goods store.
As he guessed there was a goodly
selection of firearms, despite the
fact that there was nothing to
hunt and only a single target
range within the city. Everything,
of course, had to be just
like Earth. That, after all, was
the purpose of Puerto Pacifico.
By noon they had rented a
jeep and were well away from
the city. Pembroke and Mary
Ann took turns firing at the paper
targets they had purchased. At
twilight they headed back to the
city. On the outskirts, where the
sand and soil were mixed and no
footprints would be left, Pembroke
hopped off. Mary Ann
would go straight to the police
and report that Pembroke had attacked
her and that she had shot
him. If necessary, she would conduct
the authorities to the place
where they had been target
shooting, but would be unable to
locate the spot where she had
buried the body. Why had she
buried it? Because at first she
was not going to report the incident.
She was frightened. It
was not airtight, but there would
probably be no further investigation.
And they certainly would
not prosecute Mary Ann for killing
an Earthman.
Now Pembroke had himself to
worry about. The first step was
to enter smoothly into the new
life he had planned. It wouldn't
be so comfortable as the previous
one, but should be considerably
safer. He headed slowly for the
"old" part of town, aging his
clothes against buildings and
fences as he walked. He had already
torn the collar of the shirt
and discarded his belt. By morning
his beard would grow to
blacken his face. And he would
look weary and hungry and aimless.
Only the last would be a deception.
Two weeks later Pembroke
phoned Mary Ann. The police
had accepted her story without
even checking. And when, when
would she be seeing him again?
He had aroused her passion and
no amount of long-distance love
could requite it. Soon, he assured
her, soon.
"Because, after all, you do owe
me something," she added.
And that was bad because it
sounded as if she had been giving
some womanly thought to the situation.
A little more of that and
she might go to the police again,
this time for vengeance.
Twice during his wanderings
Pembroke had seen the corpses
of Earthmen being carted out of
buildings. They had to be Earthmen
because they bled. Mary Ann
had admitted that she did not.
There would be very few Earthmen
left in Puerto Pacifico, and
it would be simple enough to locate
him if he were reported as
being on the loose. There was
no out but to do away with Mary
Ann.
Pembroke headed for the
beach. He knew she invariably
went there in the afternoon. He
loitered around the stalls where
hot dogs and soft drinks were
sold, leaning against a post in
the hot sun, hat pulled down over
his forehead. Then he noticed
that people all about him were
talking excitedly. They were discussing
a ship. It was leaving
that afternoon. Anyone who
could pass the interview would
be sent to Earth.
Pembroke had visited the
docks every day, without being
able to learn when the great
exodus would take place. Yet he
was certain the first lap would be
by water rather than by spaceship,
since no one he had talked
to in the city had ever heard of
spaceships. In fact, they knew
very little about their masters.
Now the ship had arrived and
was to leave shortly. If there was
any but the most superficial examination,
Pembroke would no
doubt be discovered and exterminated.
But since no one seemed
concerned about anything but his
own speech and behavior, he assumed
that they had all qualified
in every other respect. The reason
for transporting Earth People
to this planet was, of course,
to apply a corrective to any of
the Pacificos' aberrant mannerisms
or articulation. This was
the polishing up phase.
Pembroke began hobbling toward
the docks. Almost at once
he found himself face to face
with Mary Ann. She smiled happily
when she recognized him.
That
was a good thing.
"It is a sign of poor breeding
to smile at tramps," Pembroke
admonished her in a whisper.
"Walk on ahead."
She obeyed. He followed. The
crowd grew thicker. They neared
the docks and Pembroke saw that
there were now set up on the
roped-off wharves small interviewing
booths. When it was
their turn, he and Mary Ann
each went into separate ones.
Pembroke found himself alone in
the little room.
Then he saw that there was
another entity in his presence
confined beneath a glass dome. It
looked rather like a groundhog
and had seven fingers on each of
its six limbs. But it was larger
and hairier than the glass one
he had seen at the gift store.
With four of its limbs it tapped
on an intricate keyboard in front
of it.
"What is your name?" queried
a metallic voice from a speaker
on the wall.
"I'm Jerry Newton. Got no
middle initial," Pembroke said in
a surly voice.
"Occupation?"
"I work a lot o' trades. Fisherman,
fruit picker, fightin' range
fires, vineyards, car washer. Anything.
You name it. Been out of
work for a long time now,
though. Goin' on five months.
These here are hard times, no
matter what they say."
"What do you think of the
Chinese situation?" the voice inquired.
"Which situation's 'at?"
"Where's Seattle?"
"Seattle? State o' Washington."
And so it went for about five
minutes. Then he was told he
had qualified as a satisfactory
surrogate for a mid-twentieth
century American male, itinerant
type.
"You understand your mission,
Newton?" the voice asked. "You
are to establish yourself on
Earth. In time you will receive
instructions. Then you will attack.
You will not see us, your
masters, again until the atmosphere
has been sufficiently chlorinated.
In the meantime, serve
us well."
He stumbled out toward the
docks, then looked about for
Mary Ann. He saw her at last
behind the ropes, her lovely face
in tears.
Then she saw him. Waving
frantically, she called his name
several times. Pembroke mingled
with the crowd moving toward
the ship, ignoring her. But still
the woman persisted in her
shouting.
Sidling up to a well-dressed
man-about-town type, Pembroke
winked at him and snickered.
"You Frank?" he asked.
"Hell, no. But some poor
punk's sure red in the face, I'll
bet," the man-about-town said
with a chuckle. "Those high-strung
paramour types always
raising a ruckus. They never do
pass the interview. Don't know
why they even make 'em."
Suddenly Mary Ann was quiet.
"Ambulance squad," Pembroke's
companion explained.
"They'll take her off to the buggy
house for a few days and bring
her out fresh and ignorant as the
day she was assembled. Don't
know why they keep making 'em,
as I say. But I guess there's a
call for that type up there on
Earth."
"Yeah, I reckon there is at
that," said Pembroke, snickering
again as he moved away from the
other. "And why not? Hey?
Why not?"
Pembroke went right on hating
himself, however, till the
night he was deposited in a field
outside of Ensenada, broke but
happy, with two other itinerant
types. They separated in San
Diego, and it was not long before
Pembroke was explaining to the
police how he had drifted far
from the scene of the sinking of
the
Elena Mia
on a piece of
wreckage, and had been picked
up by a Chilean trawler. How he
had then made his way, with
much suffering, up the coast to
California. Two days later, his
identity established and his circumstances
again solvent, he was
headed for Los Angeles to begin
his save-Earth campaign.
Now, seated at his battered
desk in the shabby rented office
over Lemark's Liquors, Pembroke
gazed without emotion at
the two demolished Pacificos that
lay sprawled one atop the other
in the corner. His watch said
one-fifteen. The man from the
FBI should arrive soon.
There were footsteps on the
stairs for the third time that
day. Not the brisk, efficient steps
of a federal official, but the hesitant,
self-conscious steps of a
junior clerk type.
Pembroke rose as the young
man appeared at the door. His
face was smooth, unpimpled,
clean-shaven, without sweat on a
warm summer afternoon.
"Are you Dr. Von Schubert?"
the newcomer asked, peering into
the room. "You see, I've got a
problem—"
The four shots from Pembroke's
pistol solved his problem
effectively. Pembroke tossed his
third victim onto the pile, then
opened a can of lager, quaffing
it appreciatively. Seating himself
once more, he leaned back in
the chair, both feet upon the
desk.
He would be out of business
soon, once the FBI agent had got
there. Pembroke was only in it to
get the proof he would need to
convince people of the truth of
his tale. But in the meantime he
allowed himself to admire the
clipping of the newspaper ad he
had run in all the Los Angeles
papers for the past week. The
little ad that had saved mankind
from God-knew-what insidious
menace. It read:
ARE YOU IMPERFECT?
LET DR. VON SCHUBERT POINT OUT
YOUR FLAWS
IT IS HIS GOAL TO MAKE YOU THE
AVERAGE FOR YOUR TYPE
FEE—$3.75
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January 1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The citizens of Puerto Pacifico are aliens, not humans. | The citizens of Puerto Pacifico are newly-awakened AI beings, trying to blend in with humanity. | The citizens of Puerto Pacifico don't realize they are dead. | The citizens of Puerto Pacifico are androids, not humans. | 3 |
24977_63MMCMYX_5 | How did Pembroke get to Puerto Pacifico? | THE PERFECTIONISTS
By ARNOLD CASTLE
ILLUSTRATED by SUMMERS
Is there something wrong with you?
Do you fail to fit in with your group?
Nervous, anxious, ill-at-ease? Happy
about it? Lucky you!
Frank Pembroke
sat behind
the desk of his shabby
little office over Lemark's Liquors
in downtown Los Angeles and
waited for his first customer. He
had been in business for a week
and as yet had had no callers.
Therefore, it was with a mingled
sense of excitement and satisfaction
that he greeted the tall,
dark, smooth-faced figure that
came up the stairs and into the
office shortly before noon.
"Good day, sir," said Pembroke
with an amiable smile. "I
see my advertisement has interested
you. Please stand in that
corner for just a moment."
Opening the desk drawer,
which was almost empty, Pembroke
removed an automatic pistol
fitted with a silencer. Pointing
it at the amazed customer, he
fired four .22 caliber longs into
the narrow chest. Then he made
a telephone call and sat down to
wait. He wondered how long it
would be before his next client
would arrive.
The series of events leading up
to Pembroke's present occupation
had commenced on a dismal,
overcast evening in the South
Pacific a year earlier. Bound for
Sydney, two days out of Valparaiso,
the Colombian tramp
steamer
Elena Mia
had encountered
a dense greenish fog which
seemed vaguely redolent of citrus
trees. Standing on the forward
deck, Pembroke was one of the
first to perceive the peculiar odor
and to spot the immense gray
hulk wallowing in the murky distance.
Then the explosion had come,
from far below the waterline,
and the decks were awash with
frantic crewmen, officers, and the
handful of passengers. Only two
lifeboats were launched before
the
Elena Mia
went down. Pembroke
was in the second. The
roar of the sinking ship was the
last thing he heard for some
time.
Pembroke came as close to being
a professional adventurer as
one can in these days of regimented
travel, organized peril,
and political restriction. He had
made for himself a substantial
fortune through speculation in a
great variety of properties, real
and otherwise. Life had given
him much and demanded little,
which was perhaps the reason
for his restiveness.
Loyalty to person or to people
was a trait Pembroke had never
recognized in himself, nor had it
ever been expected of him. And
yet he greatly envied those
staunch patriots and lovers who
could find it in themselves to
elevate the glory and safety of
others above that of themselves.
Lacking such loyalties, Pembroke
adapted quickly to the situation
in which he found himself
when he regained consciousness.
He awoke in a small room in
what appeared to be a typical
modern American hotel. The wallet
in his pocket contained exactly
what it should, approximately
three hundred dollars.
His next thought was of food.
He left the room and descended
via the elevator to the restaurant.
Here he observed that it
was early afternoon. Ordering
a full dinner, for he was unusually
hungry, he began to study the
others in the restaurant.
Many of the faces seemed familiar;
the crew of the ship,
probably. He also recognized several
of the passengers. However,
he made no attempt to speak to
them. After his meal, he bought
a good corona and went for a
walk. His situation could have
been any small western American
seacoast city. He heard the hiss
of the ocean in the direction the
afternoon sun was taking. In his
full-gaited walk, he was soon approaching
the beach.
On the sand he saw a number
of sun bathers. One in particular,
an attractive woman of about
thirty, tossed back her long,
chestnut locks and gazed up intently
at Pembroke as he passed.
Seldom had he enjoyed so ingenuous
an invitation. He halted
and stared down at her for a few
moments.
"You are looking for someone?"
she inquired.
"Much of the time," said the
man.
"Could it be me?"
"It could be."
"Yet you seem unsure," she
said.
Pembroke smiled, uneasily.
There was something not entirely
normal about her conversation.
Though the rest of her compensated
for that.
"Tell me what's wrong with
me," she went on urgently. "I'm
not good enough, am I? I mean,
there's something wrong with
the way I look or act. Isn't there?
Please help me, please!"
"You're not casual enough, for
one thing," said Pembroke, deciding
to play along with her for
the moment. "You're too tense.
Also you're a bit knock-kneed,
not that it matters. Is that what
you wanted to hear?"
"Yes, yes—I mean, I suppose
so. I can try to be more casual.
But I don't know what to do
about my knees," she said wistfully,
staring across at the
smooth, tan limbs. "Do you think
I'm okay otherwise? I mean, as a
whole I'm not so bad, am I? Oh,
please tell me."
"How about talking it over at
supper tonight?" Pembroke proposed.
"Maybe with less distraction
I'll have a better picture of
you—as a whole."
"Oh, that's very generous of
you," the woman told him. She
scribbled a name and an address
on a small piece of paper and
handed it to him. "Any time
after six," she said.
Pembroke left the beach and
walked through several small
specialty shops. He tried to get
the woman off his mind, but the
oddness of her conversation continued
to bother him. She was
right about being different, but
it was her concern about being
different that made her so. How
to explain
that
to her?
Then he saw the weird little
glass statuette among the usual
bric-a-brac. It rather resembled
a ground hog, had seven fingers
on each of its six limbs, and
smiled up at him as he stared.
"Can I help you, sir?" a middle-aged
saleswoman inquired.
"Oh, good heavens, whatever is
that thing doing here?"
Pembroke watched with lifted
eyebrows as the clerk whisked
the bizarre statuette underneath
the counter.
"What the hell was that?"
Pembroke demanded.
"Oh, you know—or don't you?
Oh, my," she concluded, "are you
one of the—strangers?"
"And if I were?"
"Well, I'd certainly appreciate
it if you'd tell me how I walk."
She came around in front of
the counter and strutted back
and forth a few times.
"They tell me I lean too far
forward," she confided. "But I
should think you'd fall down if
you didn't."
"Don't try to go so fast and
you won't fall down," suggested
Pembroke. "You're in too much
of a hurry. Also those fake flowers
on your blouse make you look
frumpy."
"Well, I'm supposed to look
frumpy," the woman retorted.
"That's the type of person I am.
But you can look frumpy and still
walk natural, can't you? Everyone
says you can."
"Well, they've got a point,"
said Pembroke. "Incidentally,
just where are we, anyway?
What city is this?"
"Puerto Pacifico," she told
him. "Isn't that a lovely name?
It means peaceful port. In Spanish."
That was fine. At least he now
knew where he was. But as he
left the shop he began checking
off every west coast state, city,
town, and inlet. None, to the best
of his knowledge, was called
Puerto Pacifico.
He headed for the nearest
service station and asked for a
map. The attendant gave him one
which showed the city, but nothing
beyond.
"Which way is it to San Francisco?"
asked Pembroke.
"That all depends on where
you are," the boy returned.
"Okay, then where am I?"
"Pardon me, there's a customer,"
the boy said. "This is
Puerto Pacifico."
Pembroke watched him hurry
off to service a car with a sense
of having been given the runaround.
To his surprise, the boy
came back a few minutes later
after servicing the automobile.
"Say, I've just figured out who
you are," the youngster told him.
"I'd sure appreciate it if you'd
give me a little help on my lingo.
Also, you gas up the car first,
then try to sell 'em the oil—right?"
"Right," said Pembroke wearily.
"What's wrong with your
lingo? Other than the fact that
it's not colloquial enough."
"Not enough slang, huh? Well,
I guess I'll have to concentrate
on that. How about the smile?"
"Perfect," Pembroke told him.
"Yeah?" said the boy delightedly.
"Say, come back again,
huh? I sure appreciate the help.
Keep the map."
"Thanks. One more thing,"
Pembroke said. "What's over
that way—outside the city?"
"Sand."
"How about that way?" he
asked, pointing north. "And that
way?" pointing south.
"More of the same."
"Any railroads?"
"That we ain't got."
"Buses? Airlines?"
The kid shook his head.
"Some city."
"Yeah, it's kinda isolated. A
lot of ships dock here, though."
"All cargo ships, I'll bet. No
passengers," said Pembroke.
"Right," said the attendant,
giving with his perfect smile.
"No getting out of here, is
there?"
"That's for sure," the boy said,
walking away to wait on another
customer. "If you don't like the
place, you've had it."
Pembroke returned to the
hotel. Going to the bar, he recognized
one of the
Elena Mia's
paying
passengers. He was a short,
rectangular little man in his fifties
named Spencer. He sat in a
booth with three young women,
all lovely, all effusive. The topic
of the conversation turned out
to be precisely what Pembroke
had predicted.
"Well, Louisa, I'd say your
only fault is the way you keep
wigglin' your shoulders up 'n'
down. Why'n'sha try holdin' 'em
straight?"
"I thought it made me look
sexy," the redhead said petulantly.
"Just be yourself, gal," Spencer
drawled, jabbing her intimately
with a fat elbow, "and
you'll qualify."
"Me, me," the blonde with a
feather cut was insisting. "What
is wrong with me?"
"You're perfect, sweetheart,"
he told her, taking her hand.
"Ah, come on," she pleaded.
"Everyone tells me I chew gum
with my mouth open. Don't you
hate that?"
"Naw, that's part of your
charm," Spencer assured her.
"How 'bout me, sugar," asked
the girl with the coal black hair.
"Ah, you're perfect, too. You
are all perfect. I've never seen
such a collection of dolls as parade
around this here city.
C'mon, kids—how 'bout another
round?"
But the dolls had apparently
lost interest in him. They got up
one by one and walked out of the
bar. Pembroke took his rum and
tonic and moved over to Spencer's
booth.
"Okay if I join you?"
"Sure," said the fat man.
"Wonder what the hell got into
those babes?"
"You said they were perfect.
They know they're not. You've
got to be rough with them in this
town," said Pembroke. "That's
all they want from us."
"Mister, you've been doing
some thinkin', I can see," said
Spencer, peering at him suspiciously.
"Maybe you've figured
out where we are."
"Your bet's as good as mine,"
said Pembroke. "It's not Wellington,
and it's not Brisbane, and
it's not Long Beach, and it's not
Tahiti. There are a lot of places
it's not. But where the hell it is,
you tell me.
"And, by the way," he added,
"I hope you like it in Puerto
Pacifico. Because there isn't any
place to go from here and there
isn't any way to get there if
there were."
"Pardon me, gentlemen, but
I'm Joe Valencia, manager of the
hotel. I would be very grateful if
you would give me a few minutes
of honest criticism."
"Ah, no, not you, too," groaned
Spencer. "Look, Joe, what's
the gag?"
"You are newcomers, Mr.
Spencer," Valencia explained.
"You are therefore in an excellent
position to point out our
faults as you see them."
"Well, so what?" demanded
Spencer. "I've got more important
things to do than to worry
about your troubles. You look
okay to me."
"Mr. Valencia," said Pembroke.
"I've noticed that you
walk with a very slight limp. If
you have a bad leg, I should
think you would do better to develop
a more pronounced limp.
Otherwise, you may appear to
be self-conscious about it."
Spencer opened his mouth to
protest, but saw with amazement
that it was exactly this that
Valencia was seeking. Pembroke
was amused at his companion's
reaction but observed that Spencer
still failed to see the point.
"Also, there is a certain effeminateness
in the way in which
you speak," said Pembroke. "Try
to be a little more direct, a little
more brusque. Speak in a monotone.
It will make you more acceptable."
"Thank you so much," said the
manager. "There is much food
for thought in what you have
said, Mr. Pembroke. However,
Mr. Spencer, your value has failed
to prove itself. You have only
yourself to blame. Cooperation is
all we require of you."
Valencia left. Spencer ordered
another martini. Neither he nor
Pembroke spoke for several minutes.
"Somebody's crazy around
here," the fat man muttered
after a few moments. "Is it me,
Frank?"
"No. You just don't belong
here, in this particular place,"
said Pembroke thoughtfully.
"You're the wrong type. But they
couldn't know that ahead of time.
The way they operate it's a
pretty hit-or-miss operation. But
they don't care one bit about us,
Spencer. Consider the men who
went down with the ship. That
was just part of the game."
"What the hell are you sayin'?"
asked Spencer in disbelief.
"You figure
they
sunk the ship?
Valencia and the waitress and
the three babes? Ah, come on."
"It's what you think that will
determine what you do, Spencer.
I suggest you change your attitude;
play along with them for a
few days till the picture becomes
a little clearer to you. We'll talk
about it again then."
Pembroke rose and started out
of the bar. A policeman entered
and walked directly to Spencer's
table. Loitering at the juke box,
Pembroke overheard the conversation.
"You Spencer?"
"That's right," said the fat
man sullenly.
"What don't you like about
me? The
truth
, buddy."
"Ah, hell! Nothin' wrong
with you at all, and nothin'll
make me say there is," said Spencer.
"You're the guy, all right. Too
bad, Mac," said the cop.
Pembroke heard the shots as
he strolled casually out into the
brightness of the hotel lobby.
While he waited for the elevator,
he saw them carrying the body
into the street. How many others,
he wondered, had gone out on
their backs during their first day
in Puerto Pacifico?
Pembroke shaved, showered,
and put on the new suit and shirt
he had bought. Then he took
Mary Ann, the woman he had
met on the beach, out to dinner.
She would look magnificent even
when fully clothed, he decided,
and the pale chartreuse gown she
wore hardly placed her in that
category. Her conversation seemed
considerably more normal
after the other denizens of
Puerto Pacifico Pembroke had
listened to that afternoon.
After eating they danced for
an hour, had a few more drinks,
then went to Pembroke's room.
He still knew nothing about her
and had almost exhausted his
critical capabilities, but not once
had she become annoyed with
him. She seemed to devour every
factual point of imperfection
about herself that Pembroke
brought to her attention. And,
fantastically enough, she actually
appeared to have overcome every
little imperfection he had been
able to communicate to her.
It was in the privacy of his
room that Pembroke became
aware of just how perfect, physically,
Mary Ann was. Too perfect.
No freckles or moles anywhere
on the visible surface of
her brown skin, which was more
than a mere sampling. Furthermore,
her face and body were
meticulously symmetrical. And
she seemed to be wholly ambidextrous.
"With so many beautiful
women in Puerto Pacifico," said
Pembroke probingly, "I find it
hard to understand why there are
so few children."
"Yes, children are decorative,
aren't they," said Mary Ann. "I
do wish there were more of
them."
"Why not have a couple of
your own?" he asked.
"Oh, they're only given to maternal
types. I'd never get one.
Anyway, I won't ever marry,"
she said. "I'm the paramour
type."
It was obvious that the liquor
had been having some effect.
Either that, or she had a basic
flaw of loquacity that no one else
had discovered. Pembroke decided
he would have to cover his
tracks carefully.
"What type am I?" he asked.
"Silly, you're real. You're not
a type at all."
"Mary Ann, I love you very
much," Pembroke murmured,
gambling everything on this one
throw. "When you go to Earth
I'll miss you terribly."
"Oh, but you'll be dead by
then," she pouted. "So I mustn't
fall in love with you. I don't want
to be miserable."
"If I pretended I was one of
you, if I left on the boat with
you, they'd let me go to Earth
with you. Wouldn't they?"
"Oh, yes, I'm sure they would."
"Mary Ann, you have two
other flaws I feel I should mention."
"Yes? Please tell me."
"In the first place," said Pembroke,
"you should be willing to
fall in love with me even if it
will eventually make you unhappy.
How can you be the paramour
type if you refuse to fall in
love foolishly? And when you
have fallen in love, you should be
very loyal."
"I'll try," she said unsurely.
"What else?"
"The other thing is that, as
my mistress, you must never
mention me to anyone. It would
place me in great danger."
"I'll never tell anyone anything
about you," she promised.
"Now try to love me," Pembroke
said, drawing her into his
arms and kissing with little
pleasure the smooth, warm perfection
of her tanned cheeks.
"Love me my sweet, beautiful,
affectionate Mary Ann. My paramour."
Making love to Mary Ann was
something short of ecstasy. Not
for any obvious reason, but because
of subtle little factors that
make a woman a woman. Mary
Ann had no pulse. Mary Ann did
not perspire. Mary Ann did not
fatigue gradually but all at once.
Mary Ann breathed regularly
under all circumstances. Mary
Ann talked and talked and talked.
But then, Mary Ann was not
a human being.
When she left the hotel at midnight,
Pembroke was quite sure
that she understood his plan and
that she was irrevocably in love
with him. Tomorrow might bring
his death, but it might also ensure
his escape. After forty-two
years of searching for a passion,
for a cause, for a loyalty, Frank
Pembroke had at last found his.
Earth and the human race that
peopled it. And Mary Ann would
help him to save it.
The next morning Pembroke
talked to Valencia about hunting.
He said that he planned to go
shooting out on the desert which
surrounded the city. Valencia
told him that there were no living
creatures anywhere but in
the city. Pembroke said he was
going out anyway.
He picked up Mary Ann at her
apartment and together they
went to a sporting goods store.
As he guessed there was a goodly
selection of firearms, despite the
fact that there was nothing to
hunt and only a single target
range within the city. Everything,
of course, had to be just
like Earth. That, after all, was
the purpose of Puerto Pacifico.
By noon they had rented a
jeep and were well away from
the city. Pembroke and Mary
Ann took turns firing at the paper
targets they had purchased. At
twilight they headed back to the
city. On the outskirts, where the
sand and soil were mixed and no
footprints would be left, Pembroke
hopped off. Mary Ann
would go straight to the police
and report that Pembroke had attacked
her and that she had shot
him. If necessary, she would conduct
the authorities to the place
where they had been target
shooting, but would be unable to
locate the spot where she had
buried the body. Why had she
buried it? Because at first she
was not going to report the incident.
She was frightened. It
was not airtight, but there would
probably be no further investigation.
And they certainly would
not prosecute Mary Ann for killing
an Earthman.
Now Pembroke had himself to
worry about. The first step was
to enter smoothly into the new
life he had planned. It wouldn't
be so comfortable as the previous
one, but should be considerably
safer. He headed slowly for the
"old" part of town, aging his
clothes against buildings and
fences as he walked. He had already
torn the collar of the shirt
and discarded his belt. By morning
his beard would grow to
blacken his face. And he would
look weary and hungry and aimless.
Only the last would be a deception.
Two weeks later Pembroke
phoned Mary Ann. The police
had accepted her story without
even checking. And when, when
would she be seeing him again?
He had aroused her passion and
no amount of long-distance love
could requite it. Soon, he assured
her, soon.
"Because, after all, you do owe
me something," she added.
And that was bad because it
sounded as if she had been giving
some womanly thought to the situation.
A little more of that and
she might go to the police again,
this time for vengeance.
Twice during his wanderings
Pembroke had seen the corpses
of Earthmen being carted out of
buildings. They had to be Earthmen
because they bled. Mary Ann
had admitted that she did not.
There would be very few Earthmen
left in Puerto Pacifico, and
it would be simple enough to locate
him if he were reported as
being on the loose. There was
no out but to do away with Mary
Ann.
Pembroke headed for the
beach. He knew she invariably
went there in the afternoon. He
loitered around the stalls where
hot dogs and soft drinks were
sold, leaning against a post in
the hot sun, hat pulled down over
his forehead. Then he noticed
that people all about him were
talking excitedly. They were discussing
a ship. It was leaving
that afternoon. Anyone who
could pass the interview would
be sent to Earth.
Pembroke had visited the
docks every day, without being
able to learn when the great
exodus would take place. Yet he
was certain the first lap would be
by water rather than by spaceship,
since no one he had talked
to in the city had ever heard of
spaceships. In fact, they knew
very little about their masters.
Now the ship had arrived and
was to leave shortly. If there was
any but the most superficial examination,
Pembroke would no
doubt be discovered and exterminated.
But since no one seemed
concerned about anything but his
own speech and behavior, he assumed
that they had all qualified
in every other respect. The reason
for transporting Earth People
to this planet was, of course,
to apply a corrective to any of
the Pacificos' aberrant mannerisms
or articulation. This was
the polishing up phase.
Pembroke began hobbling toward
the docks. Almost at once
he found himself face to face
with Mary Ann. She smiled happily
when she recognized him.
That
was a good thing.
"It is a sign of poor breeding
to smile at tramps," Pembroke
admonished her in a whisper.
"Walk on ahead."
She obeyed. He followed. The
crowd grew thicker. They neared
the docks and Pembroke saw that
there were now set up on the
roped-off wharves small interviewing
booths. When it was
their turn, he and Mary Ann
each went into separate ones.
Pembroke found himself alone in
the little room.
Then he saw that there was
another entity in his presence
confined beneath a glass dome. It
looked rather like a groundhog
and had seven fingers on each of
its six limbs. But it was larger
and hairier than the glass one
he had seen at the gift store.
With four of its limbs it tapped
on an intricate keyboard in front
of it.
"What is your name?" queried
a metallic voice from a speaker
on the wall.
"I'm Jerry Newton. Got no
middle initial," Pembroke said in
a surly voice.
"Occupation?"
"I work a lot o' trades. Fisherman,
fruit picker, fightin' range
fires, vineyards, car washer. Anything.
You name it. Been out of
work for a long time now,
though. Goin' on five months.
These here are hard times, no
matter what they say."
"What do you think of the
Chinese situation?" the voice inquired.
"Which situation's 'at?"
"Where's Seattle?"
"Seattle? State o' Washington."
And so it went for about five
minutes. Then he was told he
had qualified as a satisfactory
surrogate for a mid-twentieth
century American male, itinerant
type.
"You understand your mission,
Newton?" the voice asked. "You
are to establish yourself on
Earth. In time you will receive
instructions. Then you will attack.
You will not see us, your
masters, again until the atmosphere
has been sufficiently chlorinated.
In the meantime, serve
us well."
He stumbled out toward the
docks, then looked about for
Mary Ann. He saw her at last
behind the ropes, her lovely face
in tears.
Then she saw him. Waving
frantically, she called his name
several times. Pembroke mingled
with the crowd moving toward
the ship, ignoring her. But still
the woman persisted in her
shouting.
Sidling up to a well-dressed
man-about-town type, Pembroke
winked at him and snickered.
"You Frank?" he asked.
"Hell, no. But some poor
punk's sure red in the face, I'll
bet," the man-about-town said
with a chuckle. "Those high-strung
paramour types always
raising a ruckus. They never do
pass the interview. Don't know
why they even make 'em."
Suddenly Mary Ann was quiet.
"Ambulance squad," Pembroke's
companion explained.
"They'll take her off to the buggy
house for a few days and bring
her out fresh and ignorant as the
day she was assembled. Don't
know why they keep making 'em,
as I say. But I guess there's a
call for that type up there on
Earth."
"Yeah, I reckon there is at
that," said Pembroke, snickering
again as he moved away from the
other. "And why not? Hey?
Why not?"
Pembroke went right on hating
himself, however, till the
night he was deposited in a field
outside of Ensenada, broke but
happy, with two other itinerant
types. They separated in San
Diego, and it was not long before
Pembroke was explaining to the
police how he had drifted far
from the scene of the sinking of
the
Elena Mia
on a piece of
wreckage, and had been picked
up by a Chilean trawler. How he
had then made his way, with
much suffering, up the coast to
California. Two days later, his
identity established and his circumstances
again solvent, he was
headed for Los Angeles to begin
his save-Earth campaign.
Now, seated at his battered
desk in the shabby rented office
over Lemark's Liquors, Pembroke
gazed without emotion at
the two demolished Pacificos that
lay sprawled one atop the other
in the corner. His watch said
one-fifteen. The man from the
FBI should arrive soon.
There were footsteps on the
stairs for the third time that
day. Not the brisk, efficient steps
of a federal official, but the hesitant,
self-conscious steps of a
junior clerk type.
Pembroke rose as the young
man appeared at the door. His
face was smooth, unpimpled,
clean-shaven, without sweat on a
warm summer afternoon.
"Are you Dr. Von Schubert?"
the newcomer asked, peering into
the room. "You see, I've got a
problem—"
The four shots from Pembroke's
pistol solved his problem
effectively. Pembroke tossed his
third victim onto the pile, then
opened a can of lager, quaffing
it appreciatively. Seating himself
once more, he leaned back in
the chair, both feet upon the
desk.
He would be out of business
soon, once the FBI agent had got
there. Pembroke was only in it to
get the proof he would need to
convince people of the truth of
his tale. But in the meantime he
allowed himself to admire the
clipping of the newspaper ad he
had run in all the Los Angeles
papers for the past week. The
little ad that had saved mankind
from God-knew-what insidious
menace. It read:
ARE YOU IMPERFECT?
LET DR. VON SCHUBERT POINT OUT
YOUR FLAWS
IT IS HIS GOAL TO MAKE YOU THE
AVERAGE FOR YOUR TYPE
FEE—$3.75
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January 1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Pembroke traveled to Puerto Pacifico on a ship called the Elena Mia. | Pembroke traveled to Puerto Pacifico on a Colombian ship called The Valparaiso. | Pembroke arrived in Puerto Pacifico on the lifeboat he used to escape the sinking ship. | The aliens placed Pembroke in Puerto Pacifico after destroying his ship. | 3 |
24977_63MMCMYX_6 | Why do the cops shoot Spencer? | THE PERFECTIONISTS
By ARNOLD CASTLE
ILLUSTRATED by SUMMERS
Is there something wrong with you?
Do you fail to fit in with your group?
Nervous, anxious, ill-at-ease? Happy
about it? Lucky you!
Frank Pembroke
sat behind
the desk of his shabby
little office over Lemark's Liquors
in downtown Los Angeles and
waited for his first customer. He
had been in business for a week
and as yet had had no callers.
Therefore, it was with a mingled
sense of excitement and satisfaction
that he greeted the tall,
dark, smooth-faced figure that
came up the stairs and into the
office shortly before noon.
"Good day, sir," said Pembroke
with an amiable smile. "I
see my advertisement has interested
you. Please stand in that
corner for just a moment."
Opening the desk drawer,
which was almost empty, Pembroke
removed an automatic pistol
fitted with a silencer. Pointing
it at the amazed customer, he
fired four .22 caliber longs into
the narrow chest. Then he made
a telephone call and sat down to
wait. He wondered how long it
would be before his next client
would arrive.
The series of events leading up
to Pembroke's present occupation
had commenced on a dismal,
overcast evening in the South
Pacific a year earlier. Bound for
Sydney, two days out of Valparaiso,
the Colombian tramp
steamer
Elena Mia
had encountered
a dense greenish fog which
seemed vaguely redolent of citrus
trees. Standing on the forward
deck, Pembroke was one of the
first to perceive the peculiar odor
and to spot the immense gray
hulk wallowing in the murky distance.
Then the explosion had come,
from far below the waterline,
and the decks were awash with
frantic crewmen, officers, and the
handful of passengers. Only two
lifeboats were launched before
the
Elena Mia
went down. Pembroke
was in the second. The
roar of the sinking ship was the
last thing he heard for some
time.
Pembroke came as close to being
a professional adventurer as
one can in these days of regimented
travel, organized peril,
and political restriction. He had
made for himself a substantial
fortune through speculation in a
great variety of properties, real
and otherwise. Life had given
him much and demanded little,
which was perhaps the reason
for his restiveness.
Loyalty to person or to people
was a trait Pembroke had never
recognized in himself, nor had it
ever been expected of him. And
yet he greatly envied those
staunch patriots and lovers who
could find it in themselves to
elevate the glory and safety of
others above that of themselves.
Lacking such loyalties, Pembroke
adapted quickly to the situation
in which he found himself
when he regained consciousness.
He awoke in a small room in
what appeared to be a typical
modern American hotel. The wallet
in his pocket contained exactly
what it should, approximately
three hundred dollars.
His next thought was of food.
He left the room and descended
via the elevator to the restaurant.
Here he observed that it
was early afternoon. Ordering
a full dinner, for he was unusually
hungry, he began to study the
others in the restaurant.
Many of the faces seemed familiar;
the crew of the ship,
probably. He also recognized several
of the passengers. However,
he made no attempt to speak to
them. After his meal, he bought
a good corona and went for a
walk. His situation could have
been any small western American
seacoast city. He heard the hiss
of the ocean in the direction the
afternoon sun was taking. In his
full-gaited walk, he was soon approaching
the beach.
On the sand he saw a number
of sun bathers. One in particular,
an attractive woman of about
thirty, tossed back her long,
chestnut locks and gazed up intently
at Pembroke as he passed.
Seldom had he enjoyed so ingenuous
an invitation. He halted
and stared down at her for a few
moments.
"You are looking for someone?"
she inquired.
"Much of the time," said the
man.
"Could it be me?"
"It could be."
"Yet you seem unsure," she
said.
Pembroke smiled, uneasily.
There was something not entirely
normal about her conversation.
Though the rest of her compensated
for that.
"Tell me what's wrong with
me," she went on urgently. "I'm
not good enough, am I? I mean,
there's something wrong with
the way I look or act. Isn't there?
Please help me, please!"
"You're not casual enough, for
one thing," said Pembroke, deciding
to play along with her for
the moment. "You're too tense.
Also you're a bit knock-kneed,
not that it matters. Is that what
you wanted to hear?"
"Yes, yes—I mean, I suppose
so. I can try to be more casual.
But I don't know what to do
about my knees," she said wistfully,
staring across at the
smooth, tan limbs. "Do you think
I'm okay otherwise? I mean, as a
whole I'm not so bad, am I? Oh,
please tell me."
"How about talking it over at
supper tonight?" Pembroke proposed.
"Maybe with less distraction
I'll have a better picture of
you—as a whole."
"Oh, that's very generous of
you," the woman told him. She
scribbled a name and an address
on a small piece of paper and
handed it to him. "Any time
after six," she said.
Pembroke left the beach and
walked through several small
specialty shops. He tried to get
the woman off his mind, but the
oddness of her conversation continued
to bother him. She was
right about being different, but
it was her concern about being
different that made her so. How
to explain
that
to her?
Then he saw the weird little
glass statuette among the usual
bric-a-brac. It rather resembled
a ground hog, had seven fingers
on each of its six limbs, and
smiled up at him as he stared.
"Can I help you, sir?" a middle-aged
saleswoman inquired.
"Oh, good heavens, whatever is
that thing doing here?"
Pembroke watched with lifted
eyebrows as the clerk whisked
the bizarre statuette underneath
the counter.
"What the hell was that?"
Pembroke demanded.
"Oh, you know—or don't you?
Oh, my," she concluded, "are you
one of the—strangers?"
"And if I were?"
"Well, I'd certainly appreciate
it if you'd tell me how I walk."
She came around in front of
the counter and strutted back
and forth a few times.
"They tell me I lean too far
forward," she confided. "But I
should think you'd fall down if
you didn't."
"Don't try to go so fast and
you won't fall down," suggested
Pembroke. "You're in too much
of a hurry. Also those fake flowers
on your blouse make you look
frumpy."
"Well, I'm supposed to look
frumpy," the woman retorted.
"That's the type of person I am.
But you can look frumpy and still
walk natural, can't you? Everyone
says you can."
"Well, they've got a point,"
said Pembroke. "Incidentally,
just where are we, anyway?
What city is this?"
"Puerto Pacifico," she told
him. "Isn't that a lovely name?
It means peaceful port. In Spanish."
That was fine. At least he now
knew where he was. But as he
left the shop he began checking
off every west coast state, city,
town, and inlet. None, to the best
of his knowledge, was called
Puerto Pacifico.
He headed for the nearest
service station and asked for a
map. The attendant gave him one
which showed the city, but nothing
beyond.
"Which way is it to San Francisco?"
asked Pembroke.
"That all depends on where
you are," the boy returned.
"Okay, then where am I?"
"Pardon me, there's a customer,"
the boy said. "This is
Puerto Pacifico."
Pembroke watched him hurry
off to service a car with a sense
of having been given the runaround.
To his surprise, the boy
came back a few minutes later
after servicing the automobile.
"Say, I've just figured out who
you are," the youngster told him.
"I'd sure appreciate it if you'd
give me a little help on my lingo.
Also, you gas up the car first,
then try to sell 'em the oil—right?"
"Right," said Pembroke wearily.
"What's wrong with your
lingo? Other than the fact that
it's not colloquial enough."
"Not enough slang, huh? Well,
I guess I'll have to concentrate
on that. How about the smile?"
"Perfect," Pembroke told him.
"Yeah?" said the boy delightedly.
"Say, come back again,
huh? I sure appreciate the help.
Keep the map."
"Thanks. One more thing,"
Pembroke said. "What's over
that way—outside the city?"
"Sand."
"How about that way?" he
asked, pointing north. "And that
way?" pointing south.
"More of the same."
"Any railroads?"
"That we ain't got."
"Buses? Airlines?"
The kid shook his head.
"Some city."
"Yeah, it's kinda isolated. A
lot of ships dock here, though."
"All cargo ships, I'll bet. No
passengers," said Pembroke.
"Right," said the attendant,
giving with his perfect smile.
"No getting out of here, is
there?"
"That's for sure," the boy said,
walking away to wait on another
customer. "If you don't like the
place, you've had it."
Pembroke returned to the
hotel. Going to the bar, he recognized
one of the
Elena Mia's
paying
passengers. He was a short,
rectangular little man in his fifties
named Spencer. He sat in a
booth with three young women,
all lovely, all effusive. The topic
of the conversation turned out
to be precisely what Pembroke
had predicted.
"Well, Louisa, I'd say your
only fault is the way you keep
wigglin' your shoulders up 'n'
down. Why'n'sha try holdin' 'em
straight?"
"I thought it made me look
sexy," the redhead said petulantly.
"Just be yourself, gal," Spencer
drawled, jabbing her intimately
with a fat elbow, "and
you'll qualify."
"Me, me," the blonde with a
feather cut was insisting. "What
is wrong with me?"
"You're perfect, sweetheart,"
he told her, taking her hand.
"Ah, come on," she pleaded.
"Everyone tells me I chew gum
with my mouth open. Don't you
hate that?"
"Naw, that's part of your
charm," Spencer assured her.
"How 'bout me, sugar," asked
the girl with the coal black hair.
"Ah, you're perfect, too. You
are all perfect. I've never seen
such a collection of dolls as parade
around this here city.
C'mon, kids—how 'bout another
round?"
But the dolls had apparently
lost interest in him. They got up
one by one and walked out of the
bar. Pembroke took his rum and
tonic and moved over to Spencer's
booth.
"Okay if I join you?"
"Sure," said the fat man.
"Wonder what the hell got into
those babes?"
"You said they were perfect.
They know they're not. You've
got to be rough with them in this
town," said Pembroke. "That's
all they want from us."
"Mister, you've been doing
some thinkin', I can see," said
Spencer, peering at him suspiciously.
"Maybe you've figured
out where we are."
"Your bet's as good as mine,"
said Pembroke. "It's not Wellington,
and it's not Brisbane, and
it's not Long Beach, and it's not
Tahiti. There are a lot of places
it's not. But where the hell it is,
you tell me.
"And, by the way," he added,
"I hope you like it in Puerto
Pacifico. Because there isn't any
place to go from here and there
isn't any way to get there if
there were."
"Pardon me, gentlemen, but
I'm Joe Valencia, manager of the
hotel. I would be very grateful if
you would give me a few minutes
of honest criticism."
"Ah, no, not you, too," groaned
Spencer. "Look, Joe, what's
the gag?"
"You are newcomers, Mr.
Spencer," Valencia explained.
"You are therefore in an excellent
position to point out our
faults as you see them."
"Well, so what?" demanded
Spencer. "I've got more important
things to do than to worry
about your troubles. You look
okay to me."
"Mr. Valencia," said Pembroke.
"I've noticed that you
walk with a very slight limp. If
you have a bad leg, I should
think you would do better to develop
a more pronounced limp.
Otherwise, you may appear to
be self-conscious about it."
Spencer opened his mouth to
protest, but saw with amazement
that it was exactly this that
Valencia was seeking. Pembroke
was amused at his companion's
reaction but observed that Spencer
still failed to see the point.
"Also, there is a certain effeminateness
in the way in which
you speak," said Pembroke. "Try
to be a little more direct, a little
more brusque. Speak in a monotone.
It will make you more acceptable."
"Thank you so much," said the
manager. "There is much food
for thought in what you have
said, Mr. Pembroke. However,
Mr. Spencer, your value has failed
to prove itself. You have only
yourself to blame. Cooperation is
all we require of you."
Valencia left. Spencer ordered
another martini. Neither he nor
Pembroke spoke for several minutes.
"Somebody's crazy around
here," the fat man muttered
after a few moments. "Is it me,
Frank?"
"No. You just don't belong
here, in this particular place,"
said Pembroke thoughtfully.
"You're the wrong type. But they
couldn't know that ahead of time.
The way they operate it's a
pretty hit-or-miss operation. But
they don't care one bit about us,
Spencer. Consider the men who
went down with the ship. That
was just part of the game."
"What the hell are you sayin'?"
asked Spencer in disbelief.
"You figure
they
sunk the ship?
Valencia and the waitress and
the three babes? Ah, come on."
"It's what you think that will
determine what you do, Spencer.
I suggest you change your attitude;
play along with them for a
few days till the picture becomes
a little clearer to you. We'll talk
about it again then."
Pembroke rose and started out
of the bar. A policeman entered
and walked directly to Spencer's
table. Loitering at the juke box,
Pembroke overheard the conversation.
"You Spencer?"
"That's right," said the fat
man sullenly.
"What don't you like about
me? The
truth
, buddy."
"Ah, hell! Nothin' wrong
with you at all, and nothin'll
make me say there is," said Spencer.
"You're the guy, all right. Too
bad, Mac," said the cop.
Pembroke heard the shots as
he strolled casually out into the
brightness of the hotel lobby.
While he waited for the elevator,
he saw them carrying the body
into the street. How many others,
he wondered, had gone out on
their backs during their first day
in Puerto Pacifico?
Pembroke shaved, showered,
and put on the new suit and shirt
he had bought. Then he took
Mary Ann, the woman he had
met on the beach, out to dinner.
She would look magnificent even
when fully clothed, he decided,
and the pale chartreuse gown she
wore hardly placed her in that
category. Her conversation seemed
considerably more normal
after the other denizens of
Puerto Pacifico Pembroke had
listened to that afternoon.
After eating they danced for
an hour, had a few more drinks,
then went to Pembroke's room.
He still knew nothing about her
and had almost exhausted his
critical capabilities, but not once
had she become annoyed with
him. She seemed to devour every
factual point of imperfection
about herself that Pembroke
brought to her attention. And,
fantastically enough, she actually
appeared to have overcome every
little imperfection he had been
able to communicate to her.
It was in the privacy of his
room that Pembroke became
aware of just how perfect, physically,
Mary Ann was. Too perfect.
No freckles or moles anywhere
on the visible surface of
her brown skin, which was more
than a mere sampling. Furthermore,
her face and body were
meticulously symmetrical. And
she seemed to be wholly ambidextrous.
"With so many beautiful
women in Puerto Pacifico," said
Pembroke probingly, "I find it
hard to understand why there are
so few children."
"Yes, children are decorative,
aren't they," said Mary Ann. "I
do wish there were more of
them."
"Why not have a couple of
your own?" he asked.
"Oh, they're only given to maternal
types. I'd never get one.
Anyway, I won't ever marry,"
she said. "I'm the paramour
type."
It was obvious that the liquor
had been having some effect.
Either that, or she had a basic
flaw of loquacity that no one else
had discovered. Pembroke decided
he would have to cover his
tracks carefully.
"What type am I?" he asked.
"Silly, you're real. You're not
a type at all."
"Mary Ann, I love you very
much," Pembroke murmured,
gambling everything on this one
throw. "When you go to Earth
I'll miss you terribly."
"Oh, but you'll be dead by
then," she pouted. "So I mustn't
fall in love with you. I don't want
to be miserable."
"If I pretended I was one of
you, if I left on the boat with
you, they'd let me go to Earth
with you. Wouldn't they?"
"Oh, yes, I'm sure they would."
"Mary Ann, you have two
other flaws I feel I should mention."
"Yes? Please tell me."
"In the first place," said Pembroke,
"you should be willing to
fall in love with me even if it
will eventually make you unhappy.
How can you be the paramour
type if you refuse to fall in
love foolishly? And when you
have fallen in love, you should be
very loyal."
"I'll try," she said unsurely.
"What else?"
"The other thing is that, as
my mistress, you must never
mention me to anyone. It would
place me in great danger."
"I'll never tell anyone anything
about you," she promised.
"Now try to love me," Pembroke
said, drawing her into his
arms and kissing with little
pleasure the smooth, warm perfection
of her tanned cheeks.
"Love me my sweet, beautiful,
affectionate Mary Ann. My paramour."
Making love to Mary Ann was
something short of ecstasy. Not
for any obvious reason, but because
of subtle little factors that
make a woman a woman. Mary
Ann had no pulse. Mary Ann did
not perspire. Mary Ann did not
fatigue gradually but all at once.
Mary Ann breathed regularly
under all circumstances. Mary
Ann talked and talked and talked.
But then, Mary Ann was not
a human being.
When she left the hotel at midnight,
Pembroke was quite sure
that she understood his plan and
that she was irrevocably in love
with him. Tomorrow might bring
his death, but it might also ensure
his escape. After forty-two
years of searching for a passion,
for a cause, for a loyalty, Frank
Pembroke had at last found his.
Earth and the human race that
peopled it. And Mary Ann would
help him to save it.
The next morning Pembroke
talked to Valencia about hunting.
He said that he planned to go
shooting out on the desert which
surrounded the city. Valencia
told him that there were no living
creatures anywhere but in
the city. Pembroke said he was
going out anyway.
He picked up Mary Ann at her
apartment and together they
went to a sporting goods store.
As he guessed there was a goodly
selection of firearms, despite the
fact that there was nothing to
hunt and only a single target
range within the city. Everything,
of course, had to be just
like Earth. That, after all, was
the purpose of Puerto Pacifico.
By noon they had rented a
jeep and were well away from
the city. Pembroke and Mary
Ann took turns firing at the paper
targets they had purchased. At
twilight they headed back to the
city. On the outskirts, where the
sand and soil were mixed and no
footprints would be left, Pembroke
hopped off. Mary Ann
would go straight to the police
and report that Pembroke had attacked
her and that she had shot
him. If necessary, she would conduct
the authorities to the place
where they had been target
shooting, but would be unable to
locate the spot where she had
buried the body. Why had she
buried it? Because at first she
was not going to report the incident.
She was frightened. It
was not airtight, but there would
probably be no further investigation.
And they certainly would
not prosecute Mary Ann for killing
an Earthman.
Now Pembroke had himself to
worry about. The first step was
to enter smoothly into the new
life he had planned. It wouldn't
be so comfortable as the previous
one, but should be considerably
safer. He headed slowly for the
"old" part of town, aging his
clothes against buildings and
fences as he walked. He had already
torn the collar of the shirt
and discarded his belt. By morning
his beard would grow to
blacken his face. And he would
look weary and hungry and aimless.
Only the last would be a deception.
Two weeks later Pembroke
phoned Mary Ann. The police
had accepted her story without
even checking. And when, when
would she be seeing him again?
He had aroused her passion and
no amount of long-distance love
could requite it. Soon, he assured
her, soon.
"Because, after all, you do owe
me something," she added.
And that was bad because it
sounded as if she had been giving
some womanly thought to the situation.
A little more of that and
she might go to the police again,
this time for vengeance.
Twice during his wanderings
Pembroke had seen the corpses
of Earthmen being carted out of
buildings. They had to be Earthmen
because they bled. Mary Ann
had admitted that she did not.
There would be very few Earthmen
left in Puerto Pacifico, and
it would be simple enough to locate
him if he were reported as
being on the loose. There was
no out but to do away with Mary
Ann.
Pembroke headed for the
beach. He knew she invariably
went there in the afternoon. He
loitered around the stalls where
hot dogs and soft drinks were
sold, leaning against a post in
the hot sun, hat pulled down over
his forehead. Then he noticed
that people all about him were
talking excitedly. They were discussing
a ship. It was leaving
that afternoon. Anyone who
could pass the interview would
be sent to Earth.
Pembroke had visited the
docks every day, without being
able to learn when the great
exodus would take place. Yet he
was certain the first lap would be
by water rather than by spaceship,
since no one he had talked
to in the city had ever heard of
spaceships. In fact, they knew
very little about their masters.
Now the ship had arrived and
was to leave shortly. If there was
any but the most superficial examination,
Pembroke would no
doubt be discovered and exterminated.
But since no one seemed
concerned about anything but his
own speech and behavior, he assumed
that they had all qualified
in every other respect. The reason
for transporting Earth People
to this planet was, of course,
to apply a corrective to any of
the Pacificos' aberrant mannerisms
or articulation. This was
the polishing up phase.
Pembroke began hobbling toward
the docks. Almost at once
he found himself face to face
with Mary Ann. She smiled happily
when she recognized him.
That
was a good thing.
"It is a sign of poor breeding
to smile at tramps," Pembroke
admonished her in a whisper.
"Walk on ahead."
She obeyed. He followed. The
crowd grew thicker. They neared
the docks and Pembroke saw that
there were now set up on the
roped-off wharves small interviewing
booths. When it was
their turn, he and Mary Ann
each went into separate ones.
Pembroke found himself alone in
the little room.
Then he saw that there was
another entity in his presence
confined beneath a glass dome. It
looked rather like a groundhog
and had seven fingers on each of
its six limbs. But it was larger
and hairier than the glass one
he had seen at the gift store.
With four of its limbs it tapped
on an intricate keyboard in front
of it.
"What is your name?" queried
a metallic voice from a speaker
on the wall.
"I'm Jerry Newton. Got no
middle initial," Pembroke said in
a surly voice.
"Occupation?"
"I work a lot o' trades. Fisherman,
fruit picker, fightin' range
fires, vineyards, car washer. Anything.
You name it. Been out of
work for a long time now,
though. Goin' on five months.
These here are hard times, no
matter what they say."
"What do you think of the
Chinese situation?" the voice inquired.
"Which situation's 'at?"
"Where's Seattle?"
"Seattle? State o' Washington."
And so it went for about five
minutes. Then he was told he
had qualified as a satisfactory
surrogate for a mid-twentieth
century American male, itinerant
type.
"You understand your mission,
Newton?" the voice asked. "You
are to establish yourself on
Earth. In time you will receive
instructions. Then you will attack.
You will not see us, your
masters, again until the atmosphere
has been sufficiently chlorinated.
In the meantime, serve
us well."
He stumbled out toward the
docks, then looked about for
Mary Ann. He saw her at last
behind the ropes, her lovely face
in tears.
Then she saw him. Waving
frantically, she called his name
several times. Pembroke mingled
with the crowd moving toward
the ship, ignoring her. But still
the woman persisted in her
shouting.
Sidling up to a well-dressed
man-about-town type, Pembroke
winked at him and snickered.
"You Frank?" he asked.
"Hell, no. But some poor
punk's sure red in the face, I'll
bet," the man-about-town said
with a chuckle. "Those high-strung
paramour types always
raising a ruckus. They never do
pass the interview. Don't know
why they even make 'em."
Suddenly Mary Ann was quiet.
"Ambulance squad," Pembroke's
companion explained.
"They'll take her off to the buggy
house for a few days and bring
her out fresh and ignorant as the
day she was assembled. Don't
know why they keep making 'em,
as I say. But I guess there's a
call for that type up there on
Earth."
"Yeah, I reckon there is at
that," said Pembroke, snickering
again as he moved away from the
other. "And why not? Hey?
Why not?"
Pembroke went right on hating
himself, however, till the
night he was deposited in a field
outside of Ensenada, broke but
happy, with two other itinerant
types. They separated in San
Diego, and it was not long before
Pembroke was explaining to the
police how he had drifted far
from the scene of the sinking of
the
Elena Mia
on a piece of
wreckage, and had been picked
up by a Chilean trawler. How he
had then made his way, with
much suffering, up the coast to
California. Two days later, his
identity established and his circumstances
again solvent, he was
headed for Los Angeles to begin
his save-Earth campaign.
Now, seated at his battered
desk in the shabby rented office
over Lemark's Liquors, Pembroke
gazed without emotion at
the two demolished Pacificos that
lay sprawled one atop the other
in the corner. His watch said
one-fifteen. The man from the
FBI should arrive soon.
There were footsteps on the
stairs for the third time that
day. Not the brisk, efficient steps
of a federal official, but the hesitant,
self-conscious steps of a
junior clerk type.
Pembroke rose as the young
man appeared at the door. His
face was smooth, unpimpled,
clean-shaven, without sweat on a
warm summer afternoon.
"Are you Dr. Von Schubert?"
the newcomer asked, peering into
the room. "You see, I've got a
problem—"
The four shots from Pembroke's
pistol solved his problem
effectively. Pembroke tossed his
third victim onto the pile, then
opened a can of lager, quaffing
it appreciatively. Seating himself
once more, he leaned back in
the chair, both feet upon the
desk.
He would be out of business
soon, once the FBI agent had got
there. Pembroke was only in it to
get the proof he would need to
convince people of the truth of
his tale. But in the meantime he
allowed himself to admire the
clipping of the newspaper ad he
had run in all the Los Angeles
papers for the past week. The
little ad that had saved mankind
from God-knew-what insidious
menace. It read:
ARE YOU IMPERFECT?
LET DR. VON SCHUBERT POINT OUT
YOUR FLAWS
IT IS HIS GOAL TO MAKE YOU THE
AVERAGE FOR YOUR TYPE
FEE—$3.75
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January 1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Spencer is not cooperating. | Spencer was on to them. He was about to expose their whole operation. | They thought Spencer was an android. | Spencer was speaking too brusquely to the three women in the bar. | 0 |
24977_63MMCMYX_7 | Why is the qualification interviewer under a glass dome? | THE PERFECTIONISTS
By ARNOLD CASTLE
ILLUSTRATED by SUMMERS
Is there something wrong with you?
Do you fail to fit in with your group?
Nervous, anxious, ill-at-ease? Happy
about it? Lucky you!
Frank Pembroke
sat behind
the desk of his shabby
little office over Lemark's Liquors
in downtown Los Angeles and
waited for his first customer. He
had been in business for a week
and as yet had had no callers.
Therefore, it was with a mingled
sense of excitement and satisfaction
that he greeted the tall,
dark, smooth-faced figure that
came up the stairs and into the
office shortly before noon.
"Good day, sir," said Pembroke
with an amiable smile. "I
see my advertisement has interested
you. Please stand in that
corner for just a moment."
Opening the desk drawer,
which was almost empty, Pembroke
removed an automatic pistol
fitted with a silencer. Pointing
it at the amazed customer, he
fired four .22 caliber longs into
the narrow chest. Then he made
a telephone call and sat down to
wait. He wondered how long it
would be before his next client
would arrive.
The series of events leading up
to Pembroke's present occupation
had commenced on a dismal,
overcast evening in the South
Pacific a year earlier. Bound for
Sydney, two days out of Valparaiso,
the Colombian tramp
steamer
Elena Mia
had encountered
a dense greenish fog which
seemed vaguely redolent of citrus
trees. Standing on the forward
deck, Pembroke was one of the
first to perceive the peculiar odor
and to spot the immense gray
hulk wallowing in the murky distance.
Then the explosion had come,
from far below the waterline,
and the decks were awash with
frantic crewmen, officers, and the
handful of passengers. Only two
lifeboats were launched before
the
Elena Mia
went down. Pembroke
was in the second. The
roar of the sinking ship was the
last thing he heard for some
time.
Pembroke came as close to being
a professional adventurer as
one can in these days of regimented
travel, organized peril,
and political restriction. He had
made for himself a substantial
fortune through speculation in a
great variety of properties, real
and otherwise. Life had given
him much and demanded little,
which was perhaps the reason
for his restiveness.
Loyalty to person or to people
was a trait Pembroke had never
recognized in himself, nor had it
ever been expected of him. And
yet he greatly envied those
staunch patriots and lovers who
could find it in themselves to
elevate the glory and safety of
others above that of themselves.
Lacking such loyalties, Pembroke
adapted quickly to the situation
in which he found himself
when he regained consciousness.
He awoke in a small room in
what appeared to be a typical
modern American hotel. The wallet
in his pocket contained exactly
what it should, approximately
three hundred dollars.
His next thought was of food.
He left the room and descended
via the elevator to the restaurant.
Here he observed that it
was early afternoon. Ordering
a full dinner, for he was unusually
hungry, he began to study the
others in the restaurant.
Many of the faces seemed familiar;
the crew of the ship,
probably. He also recognized several
of the passengers. However,
he made no attempt to speak to
them. After his meal, he bought
a good corona and went for a
walk. His situation could have
been any small western American
seacoast city. He heard the hiss
of the ocean in the direction the
afternoon sun was taking. In his
full-gaited walk, he was soon approaching
the beach.
On the sand he saw a number
of sun bathers. One in particular,
an attractive woman of about
thirty, tossed back her long,
chestnut locks and gazed up intently
at Pembroke as he passed.
Seldom had he enjoyed so ingenuous
an invitation. He halted
and stared down at her for a few
moments.
"You are looking for someone?"
she inquired.
"Much of the time," said the
man.
"Could it be me?"
"It could be."
"Yet you seem unsure," she
said.
Pembroke smiled, uneasily.
There was something not entirely
normal about her conversation.
Though the rest of her compensated
for that.
"Tell me what's wrong with
me," she went on urgently. "I'm
not good enough, am I? I mean,
there's something wrong with
the way I look or act. Isn't there?
Please help me, please!"
"You're not casual enough, for
one thing," said Pembroke, deciding
to play along with her for
the moment. "You're too tense.
Also you're a bit knock-kneed,
not that it matters. Is that what
you wanted to hear?"
"Yes, yes—I mean, I suppose
so. I can try to be more casual.
But I don't know what to do
about my knees," she said wistfully,
staring across at the
smooth, tan limbs. "Do you think
I'm okay otherwise? I mean, as a
whole I'm not so bad, am I? Oh,
please tell me."
"How about talking it over at
supper tonight?" Pembroke proposed.
"Maybe with less distraction
I'll have a better picture of
you—as a whole."
"Oh, that's very generous of
you," the woman told him. She
scribbled a name and an address
on a small piece of paper and
handed it to him. "Any time
after six," she said.
Pembroke left the beach and
walked through several small
specialty shops. He tried to get
the woman off his mind, but the
oddness of her conversation continued
to bother him. She was
right about being different, but
it was her concern about being
different that made her so. How
to explain
that
to her?
Then he saw the weird little
glass statuette among the usual
bric-a-brac. It rather resembled
a ground hog, had seven fingers
on each of its six limbs, and
smiled up at him as he stared.
"Can I help you, sir?" a middle-aged
saleswoman inquired.
"Oh, good heavens, whatever is
that thing doing here?"
Pembroke watched with lifted
eyebrows as the clerk whisked
the bizarre statuette underneath
the counter.
"What the hell was that?"
Pembroke demanded.
"Oh, you know—or don't you?
Oh, my," she concluded, "are you
one of the—strangers?"
"And if I were?"
"Well, I'd certainly appreciate
it if you'd tell me how I walk."
She came around in front of
the counter and strutted back
and forth a few times.
"They tell me I lean too far
forward," she confided. "But I
should think you'd fall down if
you didn't."
"Don't try to go so fast and
you won't fall down," suggested
Pembroke. "You're in too much
of a hurry. Also those fake flowers
on your blouse make you look
frumpy."
"Well, I'm supposed to look
frumpy," the woman retorted.
"That's the type of person I am.
But you can look frumpy and still
walk natural, can't you? Everyone
says you can."
"Well, they've got a point,"
said Pembroke. "Incidentally,
just where are we, anyway?
What city is this?"
"Puerto Pacifico," she told
him. "Isn't that a lovely name?
It means peaceful port. In Spanish."
That was fine. At least he now
knew where he was. But as he
left the shop he began checking
off every west coast state, city,
town, and inlet. None, to the best
of his knowledge, was called
Puerto Pacifico.
He headed for the nearest
service station and asked for a
map. The attendant gave him one
which showed the city, but nothing
beyond.
"Which way is it to San Francisco?"
asked Pembroke.
"That all depends on where
you are," the boy returned.
"Okay, then where am I?"
"Pardon me, there's a customer,"
the boy said. "This is
Puerto Pacifico."
Pembroke watched him hurry
off to service a car with a sense
of having been given the runaround.
To his surprise, the boy
came back a few minutes later
after servicing the automobile.
"Say, I've just figured out who
you are," the youngster told him.
"I'd sure appreciate it if you'd
give me a little help on my lingo.
Also, you gas up the car first,
then try to sell 'em the oil—right?"
"Right," said Pembroke wearily.
"What's wrong with your
lingo? Other than the fact that
it's not colloquial enough."
"Not enough slang, huh? Well,
I guess I'll have to concentrate
on that. How about the smile?"
"Perfect," Pembroke told him.
"Yeah?" said the boy delightedly.
"Say, come back again,
huh? I sure appreciate the help.
Keep the map."
"Thanks. One more thing,"
Pembroke said. "What's over
that way—outside the city?"
"Sand."
"How about that way?" he
asked, pointing north. "And that
way?" pointing south.
"More of the same."
"Any railroads?"
"That we ain't got."
"Buses? Airlines?"
The kid shook his head.
"Some city."
"Yeah, it's kinda isolated. A
lot of ships dock here, though."
"All cargo ships, I'll bet. No
passengers," said Pembroke.
"Right," said the attendant,
giving with his perfect smile.
"No getting out of here, is
there?"
"That's for sure," the boy said,
walking away to wait on another
customer. "If you don't like the
place, you've had it."
Pembroke returned to the
hotel. Going to the bar, he recognized
one of the
Elena Mia's
paying
passengers. He was a short,
rectangular little man in his fifties
named Spencer. He sat in a
booth with three young women,
all lovely, all effusive. The topic
of the conversation turned out
to be precisely what Pembroke
had predicted.
"Well, Louisa, I'd say your
only fault is the way you keep
wigglin' your shoulders up 'n'
down. Why'n'sha try holdin' 'em
straight?"
"I thought it made me look
sexy," the redhead said petulantly.
"Just be yourself, gal," Spencer
drawled, jabbing her intimately
with a fat elbow, "and
you'll qualify."
"Me, me," the blonde with a
feather cut was insisting. "What
is wrong with me?"
"You're perfect, sweetheart,"
he told her, taking her hand.
"Ah, come on," she pleaded.
"Everyone tells me I chew gum
with my mouth open. Don't you
hate that?"
"Naw, that's part of your
charm," Spencer assured her.
"How 'bout me, sugar," asked
the girl with the coal black hair.
"Ah, you're perfect, too. You
are all perfect. I've never seen
such a collection of dolls as parade
around this here city.
C'mon, kids—how 'bout another
round?"
But the dolls had apparently
lost interest in him. They got up
one by one and walked out of the
bar. Pembroke took his rum and
tonic and moved over to Spencer's
booth.
"Okay if I join you?"
"Sure," said the fat man.
"Wonder what the hell got into
those babes?"
"You said they were perfect.
They know they're not. You've
got to be rough with them in this
town," said Pembroke. "That's
all they want from us."
"Mister, you've been doing
some thinkin', I can see," said
Spencer, peering at him suspiciously.
"Maybe you've figured
out where we are."
"Your bet's as good as mine,"
said Pembroke. "It's not Wellington,
and it's not Brisbane, and
it's not Long Beach, and it's not
Tahiti. There are a lot of places
it's not. But where the hell it is,
you tell me.
"And, by the way," he added,
"I hope you like it in Puerto
Pacifico. Because there isn't any
place to go from here and there
isn't any way to get there if
there were."
"Pardon me, gentlemen, but
I'm Joe Valencia, manager of the
hotel. I would be very grateful if
you would give me a few minutes
of honest criticism."
"Ah, no, not you, too," groaned
Spencer. "Look, Joe, what's
the gag?"
"You are newcomers, Mr.
Spencer," Valencia explained.
"You are therefore in an excellent
position to point out our
faults as you see them."
"Well, so what?" demanded
Spencer. "I've got more important
things to do than to worry
about your troubles. You look
okay to me."
"Mr. Valencia," said Pembroke.
"I've noticed that you
walk with a very slight limp. If
you have a bad leg, I should
think you would do better to develop
a more pronounced limp.
Otherwise, you may appear to
be self-conscious about it."
Spencer opened his mouth to
protest, but saw with amazement
that it was exactly this that
Valencia was seeking. Pembroke
was amused at his companion's
reaction but observed that Spencer
still failed to see the point.
"Also, there is a certain effeminateness
in the way in which
you speak," said Pembroke. "Try
to be a little more direct, a little
more brusque. Speak in a monotone.
It will make you more acceptable."
"Thank you so much," said the
manager. "There is much food
for thought in what you have
said, Mr. Pembroke. However,
Mr. Spencer, your value has failed
to prove itself. You have only
yourself to blame. Cooperation is
all we require of you."
Valencia left. Spencer ordered
another martini. Neither he nor
Pembroke spoke for several minutes.
"Somebody's crazy around
here," the fat man muttered
after a few moments. "Is it me,
Frank?"
"No. You just don't belong
here, in this particular place,"
said Pembroke thoughtfully.
"You're the wrong type. But they
couldn't know that ahead of time.
The way they operate it's a
pretty hit-or-miss operation. But
they don't care one bit about us,
Spencer. Consider the men who
went down with the ship. That
was just part of the game."
"What the hell are you sayin'?"
asked Spencer in disbelief.
"You figure
they
sunk the ship?
Valencia and the waitress and
the three babes? Ah, come on."
"It's what you think that will
determine what you do, Spencer.
I suggest you change your attitude;
play along with them for a
few days till the picture becomes
a little clearer to you. We'll talk
about it again then."
Pembroke rose and started out
of the bar. A policeman entered
and walked directly to Spencer's
table. Loitering at the juke box,
Pembroke overheard the conversation.
"You Spencer?"
"That's right," said the fat
man sullenly.
"What don't you like about
me? The
truth
, buddy."
"Ah, hell! Nothin' wrong
with you at all, and nothin'll
make me say there is," said Spencer.
"You're the guy, all right. Too
bad, Mac," said the cop.
Pembroke heard the shots as
he strolled casually out into the
brightness of the hotel lobby.
While he waited for the elevator,
he saw them carrying the body
into the street. How many others,
he wondered, had gone out on
their backs during their first day
in Puerto Pacifico?
Pembroke shaved, showered,
and put on the new suit and shirt
he had bought. Then he took
Mary Ann, the woman he had
met on the beach, out to dinner.
She would look magnificent even
when fully clothed, he decided,
and the pale chartreuse gown she
wore hardly placed her in that
category. Her conversation seemed
considerably more normal
after the other denizens of
Puerto Pacifico Pembroke had
listened to that afternoon.
After eating they danced for
an hour, had a few more drinks,
then went to Pembroke's room.
He still knew nothing about her
and had almost exhausted his
critical capabilities, but not once
had she become annoyed with
him. She seemed to devour every
factual point of imperfection
about herself that Pembroke
brought to her attention. And,
fantastically enough, she actually
appeared to have overcome every
little imperfection he had been
able to communicate to her.
It was in the privacy of his
room that Pembroke became
aware of just how perfect, physically,
Mary Ann was. Too perfect.
No freckles or moles anywhere
on the visible surface of
her brown skin, which was more
than a mere sampling. Furthermore,
her face and body were
meticulously symmetrical. And
she seemed to be wholly ambidextrous.
"With so many beautiful
women in Puerto Pacifico," said
Pembroke probingly, "I find it
hard to understand why there are
so few children."
"Yes, children are decorative,
aren't they," said Mary Ann. "I
do wish there were more of
them."
"Why not have a couple of
your own?" he asked.
"Oh, they're only given to maternal
types. I'd never get one.
Anyway, I won't ever marry,"
she said. "I'm the paramour
type."
It was obvious that the liquor
had been having some effect.
Either that, or she had a basic
flaw of loquacity that no one else
had discovered. Pembroke decided
he would have to cover his
tracks carefully.
"What type am I?" he asked.
"Silly, you're real. You're not
a type at all."
"Mary Ann, I love you very
much," Pembroke murmured,
gambling everything on this one
throw. "When you go to Earth
I'll miss you terribly."
"Oh, but you'll be dead by
then," she pouted. "So I mustn't
fall in love with you. I don't want
to be miserable."
"If I pretended I was one of
you, if I left on the boat with
you, they'd let me go to Earth
with you. Wouldn't they?"
"Oh, yes, I'm sure they would."
"Mary Ann, you have two
other flaws I feel I should mention."
"Yes? Please tell me."
"In the first place," said Pembroke,
"you should be willing to
fall in love with me even if it
will eventually make you unhappy.
How can you be the paramour
type if you refuse to fall in
love foolishly? And when you
have fallen in love, you should be
very loyal."
"I'll try," she said unsurely.
"What else?"
"The other thing is that, as
my mistress, you must never
mention me to anyone. It would
place me in great danger."
"I'll never tell anyone anything
about you," she promised.
"Now try to love me," Pembroke
said, drawing her into his
arms and kissing with little
pleasure the smooth, warm perfection
of her tanned cheeks.
"Love me my sweet, beautiful,
affectionate Mary Ann. My paramour."
Making love to Mary Ann was
something short of ecstasy. Not
for any obvious reason, but because
of subtle little factors that
make a woman a woman. Mary
Ann had no pulse. Mary Ann did
not perspire. Mary Ann did not
fatigue gradually but all at once.
Mary Ann breathed regularly
under all circumstances. Mary
Ann talked and talked and talked.
But then, Mary Ann was not
a human being.
When she left the hotel at midnight,
Pembroke was quite sure
that she understood his plan and
that she was irrevocably in love
with him. Tomorrow might bring
his death, but it might also ensure
his escape. After forty-two
years of searching for a passion,
for a cause, for a loyalty, Frank
Pembroke had at last found his.
Earth and the human race that
peopled it. And Mary Ann would
help him to save it.
The next morning Pembroke
talked to Valencia about hunting.
He said that he planned to go
shooting out on the desert which
surrounded the city. Valencia
told him that there were no living
creatures anywhere but in
the city. Pembroke said he was
going out anyway.
He picked up Mary Ann at her
apartment and together they
went to a sporting goods store.
As he guessed there was a goodly
selection of firearms, despite the
fact that there was nothing to
hunt and only a single target
range within the city. Everything,
of course, had to be just
like Earth. That, after all, was
the purpose of Puerto Pacifico.
By noon they had rented a
jeep and were well away from
the city. Pembroke and Mary
Ann took turns firing at the paper
targets they had purchased. At
twilight they headed back to the
city. On the outskirts, where the
sand and soil were mixed and no
footprints would be left, Pembroke
hopped off. Mary Ann
would go straight to the police
and report that Pembroke had attacked
her and that she had shot
him. If necessary, she would conduct
the authorities to the place
where they had been target
shooting, but would be unable to
locate the spot where she had
buried the body. Why had she
buried it? Because at first she
was not going to report the incident.
She was frightened. It
was not airtight, but there would
probably be no further investigation.
And they certainly would
not prosecute Mary Ann for killing
an Earthman.
Now Pembroke had himself to
worry about. The first step was
to enter smoothly into the new
life he had planned. It wouldn't
be so comfortable as the previous
one, but should be considerably
safer. He headed slowly for the
"old" part of town, aging his
clothes against buildings and
fences as he walked. He had already
torn the collar of the shirt
and discarded his belt. By morning
his beard would grow to
blacken his face. And he would
look weary and hungry and aimless.
Only the last would be a deception.
Two weeks later Pembroke
phoned Mary Ann. The police
had accepted her story without
even checking. And when, when
would she be seeing him again?
He had aroused her passion and
no amount of long-distance love
could requite it. Soon, he assured
her, soon.
"Because, after all, you do owe
me something," she added.
And that was bad because it
sounded as if she had been giving
some womanly thought to the situation.
A little more of that and
she might go to the police again,
this time for vengeance.
Twice during his wanderings
Pembroke had seen the corpses
of Earthmen being carted out of
buildings. They had to be Earthmen
because they bled. Mary Ann
had admitted that she did not.
There would be very few Earthmen
left in Puerto Pacifico, and
it would be simple enough to locate
him if he were reported as
being on the loose. There was
no out but to do away with Mary
Ann.
Pembroke headed for the
beach. He knew she invariably
went there in the afternoon. He
loitered around the stalls where
hot dogs and soft drinks were
sold, leaning against a post in
the hot sun, hat pulled down over
his forehead. Then he noticed
that people all about him were
talking excitedly. They were discussing
a ship. It was leaving
that afternoon. Anyone who
could pass the interview would
be sent to Earth.
Pembroke had visited the
docks every day, without being
able to learn when the great
exodus would take place. Yet he
was certain the first lap would be
by water rather than by spaceship,
since no one he had talked
to in the city had ever heard of
spaceships. In fact, they knew
very little about their masters.
Now the ship had arrived and
was to leave shortly. If there was
any but the most superficial examination,
Pembroke would no
doubt be discovered and exterminated.
But since no one seemed
concerned about anything but his
own speech and behavior, he assumed
that they had all qualified
in every other respect. The reason
for transporting Earth People
to this planet was, of course,
to apply a corrective to any of
the Pacificos' aberrant mannerisms
or articulation. This was
the polishing up phase.
Pembroke began hobbling toward
the docks. Almost at once
he found himself face to face
with Mary Ann. She smiled happily
when she recognized him.
That
was a good thing.
"It is a sign of poor breeding
to smile at tramps," Pembroke
admonished her in a whisper.
"Walk on ahead."
She obeyed. He followed. The
crowd grew thicker. They neared
the docks and Pembroke saw that
there were now set up on the
roped-off wharves small interviewing
booths. When it was
their turn, he and Mary Ann
each went into separate ones.
Pembroke found himself alone in
the little room.
Then he saw that there was
another entity in his presence
confined beneath a glass dome. It
looked rather like a groundhog
and had seven fingers on each of
its six limbs. But it was larger
and hairier than the glass one
he had seen at the gift store.
With four of its limbs it tapped
on an intricate keyboard in front
of it.
"What is your name?" queried
a metallic voice from a speaker
on the wall.
"I'm Jerry Newton. Got no
middle initial," Pembroke said in
a surly voice.
"Occupation?"
"I work a lot o' trades. Fisherman,
fruit picker, fightin' range
fires, vineyards, car washer. Anything.
You name it. Been out of
work for a long time now,
though. Goin' on five months.
These here are hard times, no
matter what they say."
"What do you think of the
Chinese situation?" the voice inquired.
"Which situation's 'at?"
"Where's Seattle?"
"Seattle? State o' Washington."
And so it went for about five
minutes. Then he was told he
had qualified as a satisfactory
surrogate for a mid-twentieth
century American male, itinerant
type.
"You understand your mission,
Newton?" the voice asked. "You
are to establish yourself on
Earth. In time you will receive
instructions. Then you will attack.
You will not see us, your
masters, again until the atmosphere
has been sufficiently chlorinated.
In the meantime, serve
us well."
He stumbled out toward the
docks, then looked about for
Mary Ann. He saw her at last
behind the ropes, her lovely face
in tears.
Then she saw him. Waving
frantically, she called his name
several times. Pembroke mingled
with the crowd moving toward
the ship, ignoring her. But still
the woman persisted in her
shouting.
Sidling up to a well-dressed
man-about-town type, Pembroke
winked at him and snickered.
"You Frank?" he asked.
"Hell, no. But some poor
punk's sure red in the face, I'll
bet," the man-about-town said
with a chuckle. "Those high-strung
paramour types always
raising a ruckus. They never do
pass the interview. Don't know
why they even make 'em."
Suddenly Mary Ann was quiet.
"Ambulance squad," Pembroke's
companion explained.
"They'll take her off to the buggy
house for a few days and bring
her out fresh and ignorant as the
day she was assembled. Don't
know why they keep making 'em,
as I say. But I guess there's a
call for that type up there on
Earth."
"Yeah, I reckon there is at
that," said Pembroke, snickering
again as he moved away from the
other. "And why not? Hey?
Why not?"
Pembroke went right on hating
himself, however, till the
night he was deposited in a field
outside of Ensenada, broke but
happy, with two other itinerant
types. They separated in San
Diego, and it was not long before
Pembroke was explaining to the
police how he had drifted far
from the scene of the sinking of
the
Elena Mia
on a piece of
wreckage, and had been picked
up by a Chilean trawler. How he
had then made his way, with
much suffering, up the coast to
California. Two days later, his
identity established and his circumstances
again solvent, he was
headed for Los Angeles to begin
his save-Earth campaign.
Now, seated at his battered
desk in the shabby rented office
over Lemark's Liquors, Pembroke
gazed without emotion at
the two demolished Pacificos that
lay sprawled one atop the other
in the corner. His watch said
one-fifteen. The man from the
FBI should arrive soon.
There were footsteps on the
stairs for the third time that
day. Not the brisk, efficient steps
of a federal official, but the hesitant,
self-conscious steps of a
junior clerk type.
Pembroke rose as the young
man appeared at the door. His
face was smooth, unpimpled,
clean-shaven, without sweat on a
warm summer afternoon.
"Are you Dr. Von Schubert?"
the newcomer asked, peering into
the room. "You see, I've got a
problem—"
The four shots from Pembroke's
pistol solved his problem
effectively. Pembroke tossed his
third victim onto the pile, then
opened a can of lager, quaffing
it appreciatively. Seating himself
once more, he leaned back in
the chair, both feet upon the
desk.
He would be out of business
soon, once the FBI agent had got
there. Pembroke was only in it to
get the proof he would need to
convince people of the truth of
his tale. But in the meantime he
allowed himself to admire the
clipping of the newspaper ad he
had run in all the Los Angeles
papers for the past week. The
little ad that had saved mankind
from God-knew-what insidious
menace. It read:
ARE YOU IMPERFECT?
LET DR. VON SCHUBERT POINT OUT
YOUR FLAWS
IT IS HIS GOAL TO MAKE YOU THE
AVERAGE FOR YOUR TYPE
FEE—$3.75
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January 1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The interviewer is protecting themself from aliens. | The glass dome is to protect the interviewer from human contact. | The interviewer has a compromised immune system. | The interviewer is an alien, and it does not breathe oxygen. | 3 |
24977_63MMCMYX_8 | What caused the explosion that sunk the Elena Mia? | THE PERFECTIONISTS
By ARNOLD CASTLE
ILLUSTRATED by SUMMERS
Is there something wrong with you?
Do you fail to fit in with your group?
Nervous, anxious, ill-at-ease? Happy
about it? Lucky you!
Frank Pembroke
sat behind
the desk of his shabby
little office over Lemark's Liquors
in downtown Los Angeles and
waited for his first customer. He
had been in business for a week
and as yet had had no callers.
Therefore, it was with a mingled
sense of excitement and satisfaction
that he greeted the tall,
dark, smooth-faced figure that
came up the stairs and into the
office shortly before noon.
"Good day, sir," said Pembroke
with an amiable smile. "I
see my advertisement has interested
you. Please stand in that
corner for just a moment."
Opening the desk drawer,
which was almost empty, Pembroke
removed an automatic pistol
fitted with a silencer. Pointing
it at the amazed customer, he
fired four .22 caliber longs into
the narrow chest. Then he made
a telephone call and sat down to
wait. He wondered how long it
would be before his next client
would arrive.
The series of events leading up
to Pembroke's present occupation
had commenced on a dismal,
overcast evening in the South
Pacific a year earlier. Bound for
Sydney, two days out of Valparaiso,
the Colombian tramp
steamer
Elena Mia
had encountered
a dense greenish fog which
seemed vaguely redolent of citrus
trees. Standing on the forward
deck, Pembroke was one of the
first to perceive the peculiar odor
and to spot the immense gray
hulk wallowing in the murky distance.
Then the explosion had come,
from far below the waterline,
and the decks were awash with
frantic crewmen, officers, and the
handful of passengers. Only two
lifeboats were launched before
the
Elena Mia
went down. Pembroke
was in the second. The
roar of the sinking ship was the
last thing he heard for some
time.
Pembroke came as close to being
a professional adventurer as
one can in these days of regimented
travel, organized peril,
and political restriction. He had
made for himself a substantial
fortune through speculation in a
great variety of properties, real
and otherwise. Life had given
him much and demanded little,
which was perhaps the reason
for his restiveness.
Loyalty to person or to people
was a trait Pembroke had never
recognized in himself, nor had it
ever been expected of him. And
yet he greatly envied those
staunch patriots and lovers who
could find it in themselves to
elevate the glory and safety of
others above that of themselves.
Lacking such loyalties, Pembroke
adapted quickly to the situation
in which he found himself
when he regained consciousness.
He awoke in a small room in
what appeared to be a typical
modern American hotel. The wallet
in his pocket contained exactly
what it should, approximately
three hundred dollars.
His next thought was of food.
He left the room and descended
via the elevator to the restaurant.
Here he observed that it
was early afternoon. Ordering
a full dinner, for he was unusually
hungry, he began to study the
others in the restaurant.
Many of the faces seemed familiar;
the crew of the ship,
probably. He also recognized several
of the passengers. However,
he made no attempt to speak to
them. After his meal, he bought
a good corona and went for a
walk. His situation could have
been any small western American
seacoast city. He heard the hiss
of the ocean in the direction the
afternoon sun was taking. In his
full-gaited walk, he was soon approaching
the beach.
On the sand he saw a number
of sun bathers. One in particular,
an attractive woman of about
thirty, tossed back her long,
chestnut locks and gazed up intently
at Pembroke as he passed.
Seldom had he enjoyed so ingenuous
an invitation. He halted
and stared down at her for a few
moments.
"You are looking for someone?"
she inquired.
"Much of the time," said the
man.
"Could it be me?"
"It could be."
"Yet you seem unsure," she
said.
Pembroke smiled, uneasily.
There was something not entirely
normal about her conversation.
Though the rest of her compensated
for that.
"Tell me what's wrong with
me," she went on urgently. "I'm
not good enough, am I? I mean,
there's something wrong with
the way I look or act. Isn't there?
Please help me, please!"
"You're not casual enough, for
one thing," said Pembroke, deciding
to play along with her for
the moment. "You're too tense.
Also you're a bit knock-kneed,
not that it matters. Is that what
you wanted to hear?"
"Yes, yes—I mean, I suppose
so. I can try to be more casual.
But I don't know what to do
about my knees," she said wistfully,
staring across at the
smooth, tan limbs. "Do you think
I'm okay otherwise? I mean, as a
whole I'm not so bad, am I? Oh,
please tell me."
"How about talking it over at
supper tonight?" Pembroke proposed.
"Maybe with less distraction
I'll have a better picture of
you—as a whole."
"Oh, that's very generous of
you," the woman told him. She
scribbled a name and an address
on a small piece of paper and
handed it to him. "Any time
after six," she said.
Pembroke left the beach and
walked through several small
specialty shops. He tried to get
the woman off his mind, but the
oddness of her conversation continued
to bother him. She was
right about being different, but
it was her concern about being
different that made her so. How
to explain
that
to her?
Then he saw the weird little
glass statuette among the usual
bric-a-brac. It rather resembled
a ground hog, had seven fingers
on each of its six limbs, and
smiled up at him as he stared.
"Can I help you, sir?" a middle-aged
saleswoman inquired.
"Oh, good heavens, whatever is
that thing doing here?"
Pembroke watched with lifted
eyebrows as the clerk whisked
the bizarre statuette underneath
the counter.
"What the hell was that?"
Pembroke demanded.
"Oh, you know—or don't you?
Oh, my," she concluded, "are you
one of the—strangers?"
"And if I were?"
"Well, I'd certainly appreciate
it if you'd tell me how I walk."
She came around in front of
the counter and strutted back
and forth a few times.
"They tell me I lean too far
forward," she confided. "But I
should think you'd fall down if
you didn't."
"Don't try to go so fast and
you won't fall down," suggested
Pembroke. "You're in too much
of a hurry. Also those fake flowers
on your blouse make you look
frumpy."
"Well, I'm supposed to look
frumpy," the woman retorted.
"That's the type of person I am.
But you can look frumpy and still
walk natural, can't you? Everyone
says you can."
"Well, they've got a point,"
said Pembroke. "Incidentally,
just where are we, anyway?
What city is this?"
"Puerto Pacifico," she told
him. "Isn't that a lovely name?
It means peaceful port. In Spanish."
That was fine. At least he now
knew where he was. But as he
left the shop he began checking
off every west coast state, city,
town, and inlet. None, to the best
of his knowledge, was called
Puerto Pacifico.
He headed for the nearest
service station and asked for a
map. The attendant gave him one
which showed the city, but nothing
beyond.
"Which way is it to San Francisco?"
asked Pembroke.
"That all depends on where
you are," the boy returned.
"Okay, then where am I?"
"Pardon me, there's a customer,"
the boy said. "This is
Puerto Pacifico."
Pembroke watched him hurry
off to service a car with a sense
of having been given the runaround.
To his surprise, the boy
came back a few minutes later
after servicing the automobile.
"Say, I've just figured out who
you are," the youngster told him.
"I'd sure appreciate it if you'd
give me a little help on my lingo.
Also, you gas up the car first,
then try to sell 'em the oil—right?"
"Right," said Pembroke wearily.
"What's wrong with your
lingo? Other than the fact that
it's not colloquial enough."
"Not enough slang, huh? Well,
I guess I'll have to concentrate
on that. How about the smile?"
"Perfect," Pembroke told him.
"Yeah?" said the boy delightedly.
"Say, come back again,
huh? I sure appreciate the help.
Keep the map."
"Thanks. One more thing,"
Pembroke said. "What's over
that way—outside the city?"
"Sand."
"How about that way?" he
asked, pointing north. "And that
way?" pointing south.
"More of the same."
"Any railroads?"
"That we ain't got."
"Buses? Airlines?"
The kid shook his head.
"Some city."
"Yeah, it's kinda isolated. A
lot of ships dock here, though."
"All cargo ships, I'll bet. No
passengers," said Pembroke.
"Right," said the attendant,
giving with his perfect smile.
"No getting out of here, is
there?"
"That's for sure," the boy said,
walking away to wait on another
customer. "If you don't like the
place, you've had it."
Pembroke returned to the
hotel. Going to the bar, he recognized
one of the
Elena Mia's
paying
passengers. He was a short,
rectangular little man in his fifties
named Spencer. He sat in a
booth with three young women,
all lovely, all effusive. The topic
of the conversation turned out
to be precisely what Pembroke
had predicted.
"Well, Louisa, I'd say your
only fault is the way you keep
wigglin' your shoulders up 'n'
down. Why'n'sha try holdin' 'em
straight?"
"I thought it made me look
sexy," the redhead said petulantly.
"Just be yourself, gal," Spencer
drawled, jabbing her intimately
with a fat elbow, "and
you'll qualify."
"Me, me," the blonde with a
feather cut was insisting. "What
is wrong with me?"
"You're perfect, sweetheart,"
he told her, taking her hand.
"Ah, come on," she pleaded.
"Everyone tells me I chew gum
with my mouth open. Don't you
hate that?"
"Naw, that's part of your
charm," Spencer assured her.
"How 'bout me, sugar," asked
the girl with the coal black hair.
"Ah, you're perfect, too. You
are all perfect. I've never seen
such a collection of dolls as parade
around this here city.
C'mon, kids—how 'bout another
round?"
But the dolls had apparently
lost interest in him. They got up
one by one and walked out of the
bar. Pembroke took his rum and
tonic and moved over to Spencer's
booth.
"Okay if I join you?"
"Sure," said the fat man.
"Wonder what the hell got into
those babes?"
"You said they were perfect.
They know they're not. You've
got to be rough with them in this
town," said Pembroke. "That's
all they want from us."
"Mister, you've been doing
some thinkin', I can see," said
Spencer, peering at him suspiciously.
"Maybe you've figured
out where we are."
"Your bet's as good as mine,"
said Pembroke. "It's not Wellington,
and it's not Brisbane, and
it's not Long Beach, and it's not
Tahiti. There are a lot of places
it's not. But where the hell it is,
you tell me.
"And, by the way," he added,
"I hope you like it in Puerto
Pacifico. Because there isn't any
place to go from here and there
isn't any way to get there if
there were."
"Pardon me, gentlemen, but
I'm Joe Valencia, manager of the
hotel. I would be very grateful if
you would give me a few minutes
of honest criticism."
"Ah, no, not you, too," groaned
Spencer. "Look, Joe, what's
the gag?"
"You are newcomers, Mr.
Spencer," Valencia explained.
"You are therefore in an excellent
position to point out our
faults as you see them."
"Well, so what?" demanded
Spencer. "I've got more important
things to do than to worry
about your troubles. You look
okay to me."
"Mr. Valencia," said Pembroke.
"I've noticed that you
walk with a very slight limp. If
you have a bad leg, I should
think you would do better to develop
a more pronounced limp.
Otherwise, you may appear to
be self-conscious about it."
Spencer opened his mouth to
protest, but saw with amazement
that it was exactly this that
Valencia was seeking. Pembroke
was amused at his companion's
reaction but observed that Spencer
still failed to see the point.
"Also, there is a certain effeminateness
in the way in which
you speak," said Pembroke. "Try
to be a little more direct, a little
more brusque. Speak in a monotone.
It will make you more acceptable."
"Thank you so much," said the
manager. "There is much food
for thought in what you have
said, Mr. Pembroke. However,
Mr. Spencer, your value has failed
to prove itself. You have only
yourself to blame. Cooperation is
all we require of you."
Valencia left. Spencer ordered
another martini. Neither he nor
Pembroke spoke for several minutes.
"Somebody's crazy around
here," the fat man muttered
after a few moments. "Is it me,
Frank?"
"No. You just don't belong
here, in this particular place,"
said Pembroke thoughtfully.
"You're the wrong type. But they
couldn't know that ahead of time.
The way they operate it's a
pretty hit-or-miss operation. But
they don't care one bit about us,
Spencer. Consider the men who
went down with the ship. That
was just part of the game."
"What the hell are you sayin'?"
asked Spencer in disbelief.
"You figure
they
sunk the ship?
Valencia and the waitress and
the three babes? Ah, come on."
"It's what you think that will
determine what you do, Spencer.
I suggest you change your attitude;
play along with them for a
few days till the picture becomes
a little clearer to you. We'll talk
about it again then."
Pembroke rose and started out
of the bar. A policeman entered
and walked directly to Spencer's
table. Loitering at the juke box,
Pembroke overheard the conversation.
"You Spencer?"
"That's right," said the fat
man sullenly.
"What don't you like about
me? The
truth
, buddy."
"Ah, hell! Nothin' wrong
with you at all, and nothin'll
make me say there is," said Spencer.
"You're the guy, all right. Too
bad, Mac," said the cop.
Pembroke heard the shots as
he strolled casually out into the
brightness of the hotel lobby.
While he waited for the elevator,
he saw them carrying the body
into the street. How many others,
he wondered, had gone out on
their backs during their first day
in Puerto Pacifico?
Pembroke shaved, showered,
and put on the new suit and shirt
he had bought. Then he took
Mary Ann, the woman he had
met on the beach, out to dinner.
She would look magnificent even
when fully clothed, he decided,
and the pale chartreuse gown she
wore hardly placed her in that
category. Her conversation seemed
considerably more normal
after the other denizens of
Puerto Pacifico Pembroke had
listened to that afternoon.
After eating they danced for
an hour, had a few more drinks,
then went to Pembroke's room.
He still knew nothing about her
and had almost exhausted his
critical capabilities, but not once
had she become annoyed with
him. She seemed to devour every
factual point of imperfection
about herself that Pembroke
brought to her attention. And,
fantastically enough, she actually
appeared to have overcome every
little imperfection he had been
able to communicate to her.
It was in the privacy of his
room that Pembroke became
aware of just how perfect, physically,
Mary Ann was. Too perfect.
No freckles or moles anywhere
on the visible surface of
her brown skin, which was more
than a mere sampling. Furthermore,
her face and body were
meticulously symmetrical. And
she seemed to be wholly ambidextrous.
"With so many beautiful
women in Puerto Pacifico," said
Pembroke probingly, "I find it
hard to understand why there are
so few children."
"Yes, children are decorative,
aren't they," said Mary Ann. "I
do wish there were more of
them."
"Why not have a couple of
your own?" he asked.
"Oh, they're only given to maternal
types. I'd never get one.
Anyway, I won't ever marry,"
she said. "I'm the paramour
type."
It was obvious that the liquor
had been having some effect.
Either that, or she had a basic
flaw of loquacity that no one else
had discovered. Pembroke decided
he would have to cover his
tracks carefully.
"What type am I?" he asked.
"Silly, you're real. You're not
a type at all."
"Mary Ann, I love you very
much," Pembroke murmured,
gambling everything on this one
throw. "When you go to Earth
I'll miss you terribly."
"Oh, but you'll be dead by
then," she pouted. "So I mustn't
fall in love with you. I don't want
to be miserable."
"If I pretended I was one of
you, if I left on the boat with
you, they'd let me go to Earth
with you. Wouldn't they?"
"Oh, yes, I'm sure they would."
"Mary Ann, you have two
other flaws I feel I should mention."
"Yes? Please tell me."
"In the first place," said Pembroke,
"you should be willing to
fall in love with me even if it
will eventually make you unhappy.
How can you be the paramour
type if you refuse to fall in
love foolishly? And when you
have fallen in love, you should be
very loyal."
"I'll try," she said unsurely.
"What else?"
"The other thing is that, as
my mistress, you must never
mention me to anyone. It would
place me in great danger."
"I'll never tell anyone anything
about you," she promised.
"Now try to love me," Pembroke
said, drawing her into his
arms and kissing with little
pleasure the smooth, warm perfection
of her tanned cheeks.
"Love me my sweet, beautiful,
affectionate Mary Ann. My paramour."
Making love to Mary Ann was
something short of ecstasy. Not
for any obvious reason, but because
of subtle little factors that
make a woman a woman. Mary
Ann had no pulse. Mary Ann did
not perspire. Mary Ann did not
fatigue gradually but all at once.
Mary Ann breathed regularly
under all circumstances. Mary
Ann talked and talked and talked.
But then, Mary Ann was not
a human being.
When she left the hotel at midnight,
Pembroke was quite sure
that she understood his plan and
that she was irrevocably in love
with him. Tomorrow might bring
his death, but it might also ensure
his escape. After forty-two
years of searching for a passion,
for a cause, for a loyalty, Frank
Pembroke had at last found his.
Earth and the human race that
peopled it. And Mary Ann would
help him to save it.
The next morning Pembroke
talked to Valencia about hunting.
He said that he planned to go
shooting out on the desert which
surrounded the city. Valencia
told him that there were no living
creatures anywhere but in
the city. Pembroke said he was
going out anyway.
He picked up Mary Ann at her
apartment and together they
went to a sporting goods store.
As he guessed there was a goodly
selection of firearms, despite the
fact that there was nothing to
hunt and only a single target
range within the city. Everything,
of course, had to be just
like Earth. That, after all, was
the purpose of Puerto Pacifico.
By noon they had rented a
jeep and were well away from
the city. Pembroke and Mary
Ann took turns firing at the paper
targets they had purchased. At
twilight they headed back to the
city. On the outskirts, where the
sand and soil were mixed and no
footprints would be left, Pembroke
hopped off. Mary Ann
would go straight to the police
and report that Pembroke had attacked
her and that she had shot
him. If necessary, she would conduct
the authorities to the place
where they had been target
shooting, but would be unable to
locate the spot where she had
buried the body. Why had she
buried it? Because at first she
was not going to report the incident.
She was frightened. It
was not airtight, but there would
probably be no further investigation.
And they certainly would
not prosecute Mary Ann for killing
an Earthman.
Now Pembroke had himself to
worry about. The first step was
to enter smoothly into the new
life he had planned. It wouldn't
be so comfortable as the previous
one, but should be considerably
safer. He headed slowly for the
"old" part of town, aging his
clothes against buildings and
fences as he walked. He had already
torn the collar of the shirt
and discarded his belt. By morning
his beard would grow to
blacken his face. And he would
look weary and hungry and aimless.
Only the last would be a deception.
Two weeks later Pembroke
phoned Mary Ann. The police
had accepted her story without
even checking. And when, when
would she be seeing him again?
He had aroused her passion and
no amount of long-distance love
could requite it. Soon, he assured
her, soon.
"Because, after all, you do owe
me something," she added.
And that was bad because it
sounded as if she had been giving
some womanly thought to the situation.
A little more of that and
she might go to the police again,
this time for vengeance.
Twice during his wanderings
Pembroke had seen the corpses
of Earthmen being carted out of
buildings. They had to be Earthmen
because they bled. Mary Ann
had admitted that she did not.
There would be very few Earthmen
left in Puerto Pacifico, and
it would be simple enough to locate
him if he were reported as
being on the loose. There was
no out but to do away with Mary
Ann.
Pembroke headed for the
beach. He knew she invariably
went there in the afternoon. He
loitered around the stalls where
hot dogs and soft drinks were
sold, leaning against a post in
the hot sun, hat pulled down over
his forehead. Then he noticed
that people all about him were
talking excitedly. They were discussing
a ship. It was leaving
that afternoon. Anyone who
could pass the interview would
be sent to Earth.
Pembroke had visited the
docks every day, without being
able to learn when the great
exodus would take place. Yet he
was certain the first lap would be
by water rather than by spaceship,
since no one he had talked
to in the city had ever heard of
spaceships. In fact, they knew
very little about their masters.
Now the ship had arrived and
was to leave shortly. If there was
any but the most superficial examination,
Pembroke would no
doubt be discovered and exterminated.
But since no one seemed
concerned about anything but his
own speech and behavior, he assumed
that they had all qualified
in every other respect. The reason
for transporting Earth People
to this planet was, of course,
to apply a corrective to any of
the Pacificos' aberrant mannerisms
or articulation. This was
the polishing up phase.
Pembroke began hobbling toward
the docks. Almost at once
he found himself face to face
with Mary Ann. She smiled happily
when she recognized him.
That
was a good thing.
"It is a sign of poor breeding
to smile at tramps," Pembroke
admonished her in a whisper.
"Walk on ahead."
She obeyed. He followed. The
crowd grew thicker. They neared
the docks and Pembroke saw that
there were now set up on the
roped-off wharves small interviewing
booths. When it was
their turn, he and Mary Ann
each went into separate ones.
Pembroke found himself alone in
the little room.
Then he saw that there was
another entity in his presence
confined beneath a glass dome. It
looked rather like a groundhog
and had seven fingers on each of
its six limbs. But it was larger
and hairier than the glass one
he had seen at the gift store.
With four of its limbs it tapped
on an intricate keyboard in front
of it.
"What is your name?" queried
a metallic voice from a speaker
on the wall.
"I'm Jerry Newton. Got no
middle initial," Pembroke said in
a surly voice.
"Occupation?"
"I work a lot o' trades. Fisherman,
fruit picker, fightin' range
fires, vineyards, car washer. Anything.
You name it. Been out of
work for a long time now,
though. Goin' on five months.
These here are hard times, no
matter what they say."
"What do you think of the
Chinese situation?" the voice inquired.
"Which situation's 'at?"
"Where's Seattle?"
"Seattle? State o' Washington."
And so it went for about five
minutes. Then he was told he
had qualified as a satisfactory
surrogate for a mid-twentieth
century American male, itinerant
type.
"You understand your mission,
Newton?" the voice asked. "You
are to establish yourself on
Earth. In time you will receive
instructions. Then you will attack.
You will not see us, your
masters, again until the atmosphere
has been sufficiently chlorinated.
In the meantime, serve
us well."
He stumbled out toward the
docks, then looked about for
Mary Ann. He saw her at last
behind the ropes, her lovely face
in tears.
Then she saw him. Waving
frantically, she called his name
several times. Pembroke mingled
with the crowd moving toward
the ship, ignoring her. But still
the woman persisted in her
shouting.
Sidling up to a well-dressed
man-about-town type, Pembroke
winked at him and snickered.
"You Frank?" he asked.
"Hell, no. But some poor
punk's sure red in the face, I'll
bet," the man-about-town said
with a chuckle. "Those high-strung
paramour types always
raising a ruckus. They never do
pass the interview. Don't know
why they even make 'em."
Suddenly Mary Ann was quiet.
"Ambulance squad," Pembroke's
companion explained.
"They'll take her off to the buggy
house for a few days and bring
her out fresh and ignorant as the
day she was assembled. Don't
know why they keep making 'em,
as I say. But I guess there's a
call for that type up there on
Earth."
"Yeah, I reckon there is at
that," said Pembroke, snickering
again as he moved away from the
other. "And why not? Hey?
Why not?"
Pembroke went right on hating
himself, however, till the
night he was deposited in a field
outside of Ensenada, broke but
happy, with two other itinerant
types. They separated in San
Diego, and it was not long before
Pembroke was explaining to the
police how he had drifted far
from the scene of the sinking of
the
Elena Mia
on a piece of
wreckage, and had been picked
up by a Chilean trawler. How he
had then made his way, with
much suffering, up the coast to
California. Two days later, his
identity established and his circumstances
again solvent, he was
headed for Los Angeles to begin
his save-Earth campaign.
Now, seated at his battered
desk in the shabby rented office
over Lemark's Liquors, Pembroke
gazed without emotion at
the two demolished Pacificos that
lay sprawled one atop the other
in the corner. His watch said
one-fifteen. The man from the
FBI should arrive soon.
There were footsteps on the
stairs for the third time that
day. Not the brisk, efficient steps
of a federal official, but the hesitant,
self-conscious steps of a
junior clerk type.
Pembroke rose as the young
man appeared at the door. His
face was smooth, unpimpled,
clean-shaven, without sweat on a
warm summer afternoon.
"Are you Dr. Von Schubert?"
the newcomer asked, peering into
the room. "You see, I've got a
problem—"
The four shots from Pembroke's
pistol solved his problem
effectively. Pembroke tossed his
third victim onto the pile, then
opened a can of lager, quaffing
it appreciatively. Seating himself
once more, he leaned back in
the chair, both feet upon the
desk.
He would be out of business
soon, once the FBI agent had got
there. Pembroke was only in it to
get the proof he would need to
convince people of the truth of
his tale. But in the meantime he
allowed himself to admire the
clipping of the newspaper ad he
had run in all the Los Angeles
papers for the past week. The
little ad that had saved mankind
from God-knew-what insidious
menace. It read:
ARE YOU IMPERFECT?
LET DR. VON SCHUBERT POINT OUT
YOUR FLAWS
IT IS HIS GOAL TO MAKE YOU THE
AVERAGE FOR YOUR TYPE
FEE—$3.75
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Amazing Science Fiction Stories
January 1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | An alien craft fired on the Elena Mia from under the water. | A Colombian ship fired a torpedo on the Elena Mia, causing it to explode. | The Elena Mia ran into an iceberg. The ice pierced the ship's electronics causing an explosion. | The androids tampered with the Elena Mia's electronics causing an explosion. | 0 |
23588_T922WCPI_1 | Which group of people shares the most similarities with the group of patients in the mental institution, as they are described by the author? | Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Astounding Science Fiction November 1959. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
A FILBERT IS A NUT
BY RICK RAPHAEL
That the gentleman in question was a nut was beyond question. He was an institutionalized
psychotic. He was nutty enough to think he could make an atom bomb out of modeling clay!
Illustrated by Freas
Miss Abercrombie, the manual therapist patted the old man on the
shoulder. "You're doing just fine, Mr. Lieberman. Show it to me when you
have finished."
The oldster in the stained convalescent suit gave her a quick, shy smile
and went back to his aimless smearing in the finger paints.
Miss Abercrombie smoothed her smock down over trim hips and surveyed the
other patients working at the long tables in the hospital's arts and
crafts shop. Two muscular and bored attendants in spotless whites,
lounged beside the locked door and chatted idly about the Dodgers'
prospects for the pennant.
Through the barred windows of the workshop, rolling green hills were
seen, their tree-studded flanks making a pleasant setting for the mental
institution. The crafts building was a good mile away from the main
buildings of the hospital and the hills blocked the view of the austere
complex of buildings that housed the main wards.
The therapist strolled down the line of tables, pausing to give a word
of advice here, and a suggestion there.
She stopped behind a frowning, intense patient, rapidly shaping blobs of
clay into odd-sized strips and forms. As he finished each piece, he
carefully placed it into a hollow shell hemisphere of clay.
"And what are we making today, Mr. Funston?" Miss Abercrombie asked.
The flying fingers continued to whip out the bits of shaped clay as the
patient ignored the question. He hunched closer to his table as if to
draw away from the woman.
"We mustn't be antisocial, Mr. Funston," Miss Abercrombie said lightly,
but firmly. "You've been coming along famously and you must remember to
answer when someone talks to you. Now what are you making? It looks very
complicated." She stared professionally at the maze of clay parts.
Thaddeus Funston continued to mold the clay bits and put them in place.
Without looking up from his bench he muttered a reply.
"Atom bomb."
A puzzled look crossed the therapist's face. "Pardon me, Mr. Funston. I
thought you said an 'atom bomb.'"
"Did," Funston murmured.
Safely behind the patient's back, Miss Abercrombie smiled ever so
slightly. "Why that's very good, Mr. Funston. That shows real creative
thought. I'm very pleased."
She patted him on the shoulder and moved down the line of patients.
A few minutes later, one of the attendants glanced at his watch, stood
up and stretched.
"All right, fellows," he called out, "time to go back. Put up your
things."
There was a rustle of paint boxes and papers being shuffled and chairs
being moved back. A tall, blond patient with a flowing mustache, put one
more dab of paint on his canvas and stood back to survey the meaningless
smears. He sighed happily and laid down his palette.
At the clay table, Funston feverishly fabricated the last odd-shaped bit
of clay and slapped it into place. With a furtive glance around him, he
clapped the other half of the clay sphere over the filled hemisphere and
then stood up. The patients lined up at the door, waiting for the walk
back across the green hills to the main hospital. The attendants made a
quick count and then unlocked the door. The group shuffled out into the
warm, afternoon sunlight and the door closed behind them.
Miss Abercrombie gazed around the cluttered room and picked up her chart
book of patient progress. Moving slowly down the line of benches, she
made short, precise notes on the day's work accomplished by each
patient.
At the clay table, she carefully lifted the top half of the clay ball
and stared thoughtfully at the jumbled maze of clay strips laced through
the lower hemisphere. She placed the lid back in place and jotted
lengthily in her chart book.
When she had completed her rounds, she slipped out of the smock, tucked
the chart book under her arm and left the crafts building for the day.
The late afternoon sun felt warm and comfortable as she walked the mile
to the main administration building where her car was parked.
As she drove out of the hospital grounds, Thaddeus Funston stood at the
barred window of his locked ward and stared vacantly over the hills
towards the craft shop. He stood there unmoving until a ward attendant
came and took his arm an hour later to lead him off to the patients'
mess hall.
The sun set, darkness fell over the stilled hospital grounds and the
ward lights winked out at nine o'clock, leaving just a single light
burning in each ward office. A quiet wind sighed over the still-warm
hills.
At 3:01 a.m., Thaddeus Funston stirred in his sleep and awakened. He sat
up in bed and looked around the dark ward. The quiet breathing and
occasional snores of thirty other sleeping patients filled the room.
Funston turned to the window and stared out across the black hills that
sheltered the deserted crafts building.
He gave a quick cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
The brilliance of a hundred suns glared in the night and threw stark
shadows on the walls of the suddenly-illuminated ward.
An instant later, the shattering roar and blast of the explosion struck
the hospital buildings in a wave of force and the bursting crash of a
thousand windows was lost in the fury of the explosion and the wild
screams of the frightened and demented patients.
It was over in an instant, and a stunned moment later, recessed ceiling
lights began flashing on throughout the big institution.
Beyond the again-silent hills, a great pillar of smoke, topped by a
small mushroom-shaped cloud, rose above the gaping hole that had been
the arts and crafts building.
Thaddeus Funston took his hands from his face and lay back in his bed
with a small, secret smile on his lips. Attendants and nurses scurried
through the hospital, seeing how many had been injured in the
explosion.
None had. The hills had absorbed most of the shock and apart from a
welter of broken glass, the damage had been surprisingly slight.
The roar and flash of the explosion had lighted and rocked the
surrounding countryside. Soon firemen and civil defense disaster units
from a half-dozen neighboring communities had gathered at the
still-smoking hole that marked the site of the vanished crafts building.
Within fifteen minutes, the disaster-trained crews had detected heavy
radiation emanating from the crater and there was a scurry of men and
equipment back to a safe distance, a few hundred yards away.
At 5:30 a.m., a plane landed at a nearby airfield and a platoon of
Atomic Energy Commission experts, military intelligence men, four FBI
agents and an Army full colonel disembarked.
At 5:45 a.m. a cordon was thrown around both the hospital and the blast
crater.
In Ward 4-C, Thaddeus Funston slept peacefully and happily.
"It's impossible and unbelievable," Colonel Thomas Thurgood said for the
fifteenth time, later that morning, as he looked around the group of
experts gathered in the tent erected on the hill overlooking the crater.
"How can an atom bomb go off in a nut house?"
"It apparently was a very small bomb, colonel," one of the haggard AEC
men offered timidly. "Not over three kilotons."
"I don't care if it was the size of a peanut," Thurgood screamed. "How
did it get here?"
A military intelligence agent spoke up. "If we knew, sir, we wouldn't be
standing around here. We don't know, but the fact remains that it WAS an
atomic explosion."
Thurgood turned wearily to the small, white-haired man at his side.
"Let's go over it once more, Dr. Crane. Are you sure you knew everything
that was in that building?" Thurgood swept his hand in the general
direction of the blast crater.
"Colonel, I've told you a dozen times," the hospital administrator said
with exasperation, "this was our manual therapy room. We gave our
patients art work. It was a means of getting out of their systems,
through the use of their hands, some of the frustrations and problems
that led them to this hospital. They worked with oil and water paints
and clay. If you can make an atomic bomb from vermillion pigments, then
Madame Curie was a misguided scrubwoman."
"All I know is that you say this was a crafts building. O.K. So it was,"
Thurgood sighed. "I also know that an atomic explosion at 3:02 this
morning blew it to hell and gone.
"And I've got to find out how it happened."
Thurgood slumped into a field chair and gazed tiredly up at the little
doctor.
"Where's that girl you said was in charge of this place?"
"We've already called for Miss Abercrombie and she's on her way here
now," the doctor snapped.
Outside the tent, a small army of military men and AEC technicians moved
around the perimeter of the crater, scintillators in hand, examining
every tiny scrap that might have been a part of the building at one
time.
A jeep raced down the road from the hospital and drew up in front of the
tent. An armed MP helped Miss Abercrombie from the vehicle.
She walked to the edge of the hill and looked down with a stunned
expression.
"He did make an atom bomb," she cried.
Colonel Thurgood, who had snapped from his chair at her words, leaped
forward to catch her as she collapsed in a faint.
At 4:00 p.m., the argument was still raging in the long, narrow staff
room of the hospital administration building.
Colonel Thurgood, looking more like a patient every minute, sat on the
edge of his chair at the head of a long table and pounded with his fist
on the wooden surface, making Miss Abercrombie's chart book bounce with
every beat.
"It's ridiculous," Thurgood roared. "We'll all be the laughingstocks of
the world if this ever gets out. An atomic bomb made out of clay. You
are all nuts. You're in the right place, but count me out."
At his left, Miss Abercrombie cringed deeper into her chair at the
broadside. Down both sides of the long table, psychiatrists, physicists,
strategists and radiologists sat in various stages of nerve-shattered
weariness.
"Miss Abercrombie," one of the physicists spoke up gently, "you say that
after the patients had departed the building, you looked again at
Funston's work?"
The therapist nodded unhappily.
"And you say that, to the best of your knowledge," the physicist
continued, "there was nothing inside the ball but other pieces of clay."
"I'm positive that's all there was in it," Miss Abercrombie cried.
There was a renewed buzz of conversation at the table and the senior AEC
man present got heads together with the senior intelligence man. They
conferred briefly and then the intelligence officer spoke.
"That seems to settle it, colonel. We've got to give this Funston
another chance to repeat his bomb. But this time under our supervision."
Thurgood leaped to his feet, his face purpling.
"Are you crazy?" he screamed. "You want to get us all thrown into this
filbert factory? Do you know what the newspapers would do to us if they
ever got wind of the fact, that for one, tiny fraction of a second,
anyone of us here entertained the notion that a paranoidal idiot with
the IQ of an ape could make an atomic bomb out of kid's modeling clay?
"They'd crucify us, that's what they'd do!"
At 8:30 that night, Thaddeus Funston, swathed in an Army officer's
greatcoat that concealed the strait jacket binding him and with an
officer's cap jammed far down over his face, was hustled out of a small
side door of the hospital and into a waiting staff car. A few minutes
later, the car pulled into the flying field at the nearby community and
drove directly to the military transport plane that stood at the end of
the runway with propellers turning.
Two military policemen and a brace of staff psychiatrists sworn to
secrecy under the National Atomic Secrets Act, bundled Thaddeus aboard
the plane. They plopped him into a seat directly in front of Miss
Abercrombie and with a roar, the plane raced down the runway and into
the night skies.
The plane landed the next morning at the AEC's atomic testing grounds in
the Nevada desert and two hours later, in a small hot, wooden shack
miles up the barren desert wastelands, a cluster of scientists and
military men huddled around a small wooden table.
There was nothing on the table but a bowl of water and a great lump of
modeling clay. While the psychiatrists were taking the strait jacket off
Thaddeus in the staff car outside, Colonel Thurgood spoke to the weary
Miss Abercrombie.
"Now you're positive this is just about the same amount and the same
kind of clay he used before?"
"I brought it along from the same batch we had in the store room at the
hospital," she replied, "and it's the same amount."
Thurgood signaled to the doctors and they entered the shack with
Thaddeus Funston between them. The colonel nudged Miss Abercrombie.
She smiled at Funston.
"Now isn't this nice, Mr. Funston," she said. "These nice men have
brought us way out here just to see you make another atom bomb like the
one you made for me yesterday."
A flicker of interest lightened Thaddeus' face. He looked around the
shack and then spotted the clay on the table. Without hesitation, he
walked to the table and sat down. His fingers began working the damp
clay, making first the hollow, half-round shell while the nation's top
atomic scientists watched in fascination.
His busy fingers flew through the clay, shaping odd, flat bits and clay
parts that were dropped almost aimlessly into the open hemisphere in
front of him.
Miss Abercrombie stood at his shoulder as Thaddeus hunched over the
table just as he had done the previous day. From time to time she
glanced at her watch. The maze of clay strips grew and as Funston
finished shaping the other half hemisphere of clay, she broke the tense
silence.
"Time to go back now, Mr. Funston. You can work some more tomorrow." She
looked at the men and nodded her head.
The two psychiatrists went to Thaddeus' side as he put the upper lid of
clay carefully in place. Funston stood up and the doctors escorted him
from the shack.
There was a moment of hushed silence and then pandemonium burst. The
experts converged on the clay ball, instruments blossoming from nowhere
and cameras clicking.
For two hours they studied and gently probed the mass of child's clay
and photographed it from every angle.
Then they left for the concrete observatory bunker, several miles down
range where Thaddeus and the psychiatrists waited inside a ring of
stony-faced military policemen.
"I told you this whole thing was asinine," Thurgood snarled as the
scientific teams trooped into the bunker.
Thaddeus Funston stared out over the heads of the MPs through the open
door, looking uprange over the heat-shimmering desert. He gave a sudden
cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
A brilliance a hundred times brighter than the glaring Nevada sun lit
the dim interior of the bunker and the pneumatically-operated door
slammed shut just before the wave of the blast hit the structure.
Six hours and a jet plane trip later, Thaddeus, once again in his strait
jacket, sat between his armed escorts in a small room in the Pentagon.
Through the window he could see the hurried bustle of traffic over the
Potomac and beyond, the domed roof of the Capitol.
In the conference room next door, the joint chiefs of staff were
closeted with a gray-faced and bone-weary Colonel Thurgood and his
baker's dozen of AEC brains. Scraps of the hot and scornful talk drifted
across a half-opened transom into the room where Thaddeus Funston sat in
a neatly-tied bundle.
In the conference room, a red-faced, four-star general cast a chilling
glance at the rumpled figure of Colonel Thurgood.
"I've listened to some silly stories in my life, colonel," the general
said coldly, "but this takes the cake. You come in here with an insane
asylum inmate in a strait jacket and you have the colossal gall to sit
there and tell me that this poor soul has made not one, but two atomic
devices out of modeling clay and then has detonated them."
The general paused.
"Why don't you just tell me, colonel, that he can also make spaceships
out of sponge rubber?" the general added bitingly.
In the next room, Thaddeus Funston stared out over the sweeping panorama
of the Washington landscape. He stared hard.
In the distance, a white cloud began billowing up from the base of the
Washington Monument, and with an ear-shattering, glass-splintering roar,
the great shaft rose majestically from its base and vanished into space
on a tail of flame.
THE END | A circus troupe | A disorderly mob | An artists' collective | A Kindergarten class | 3 |
23588_T922WCPI_2 | Why does Thaddeus Funston smile at the sight of the demolished arts and crafts building? | Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Astounding Science Fiction November 1959. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
A FILBERT IS A NUT
BY RICK RAPHAEL
That the gentleman in question was a nut was beyond question. He was an institutionalized
psychotic. He was nutty enough to think he could make an atom bomb out of modeling clay!
Illustrated by Freas
Miss Abercrombie, the manual therapist patted the old man on the
shoulder. "You're doing just fine, Mr. Lieberman. Show it to me when you
have finished."
The oldster in the stained convalescent suit gave her a quick, shy smile
and went back to his aimless smearing in the finger paints.
Miss Abercrombie smoothed her smock down over trim hips and surveyed the
other patients working at the long tables in the hospital's arts and
crafts shop. Two muscular and bored attendants in spotless whites,
lounged beside the locked door and chatted idly about the Dodgers'
prospects for the pennant.
Through the barred windows of the workshop, rolling green hills were
seen, their tree-studded flanks making a pleasant setting for the mental
institution. The crafts building was a good mile away from the main
buildings of the hospital and the hills blocked the view of the austere
complex of buildings that housed the main wards.
The therapist strolled down the line of tables, pausing to give a word
of advice here, and a suggestion there.
She stopped behind a frowning, intense patient, rapidly shaping blobs of
clay into odd-sized strips and forms. As he finished each piece, he
carefully placed it into a hollow shell hemisphere of clay.
"And what are we making today, Mr. Funston?" Miss Abercrombie asked.
The flying fingers continued to whip out the bits of shaped clay as the
patient ignored the question. He hunched closer to his table as if to
draw away from the woman.
"We mustn't be antisocial, Mr. Funston," Miss Abercrombie said lightly,
but firmly. "You've been coming along famously and you must remember to
answer when someone talks to you. Now what are you making? It looks very
complicated." She stared professionally at the maze of clay parts.
Thaddeus Funston continued to mold the clay bits and put them in place.
Without looking up from his bench he muttered a reply.
"Atom bomb."
A puzzled look crossed the therapist's face. "Pardon me, Mr. Funston. I
thought you said an 'atom bomb.'"
"Did," Funston murmured.
Safely behind the patient's back, Miss Abercrombie smiled ever so
slightly. "Why that's very good, Mr. Funston. That shows real creative
thought. I'm very pleased."
She patted him on the shoulder and moved down the line of patients.
A few minutes later, one of the attendants glanced at his watch, stood
up and stretched.
"All right, fellows," he called out, "time to go back. Put up your
things."
There was a rustle of paint boxes and papers being shuffled and chairs
being moved back. A tall, blond patient with a flowing mustache, put one
more dab of paint on his canvas and stood back to survey the meaningless
smears. He sighed happily and laid down his palette.
At the clay table, Funston feverishly fabricated the last odd-shaped bit
of clay and slapped it into place. With a furtive glance around him, he
clapped the other half of the clay sphere over the filled hemisphere and
then stood up. The patients lined up at the door, waiting for the walk
back across the green hills to the main hospital. The attendants made a
quick count and then unlocked the door. The group shuffled out into the
warm, afternoon sunlight and the door closed behind them.
Miss Abercrombie gazed around the cluttered room and picked up her chart
book of patient progress. Moving slowly down the line of benches, she
made short, precise notes on the day's work accomplished by each
patient.
At the clay table, she carefully lifted the top half of the clay ball
and stared thoughtfully at the jumbled maze of clay strips laced through
the lower hemisphere. She placed the lid back in place and jotted
lengthily in her chart book.
When she had completed her rounds, she slipped out of the smock, tucked
the chart book under her arm and left the crafts building for the day.
The late afternoon sun felt warm and comfortable as she walked the mile
to the main administration building where her car was parked.
As she drove out of the hospital grounds, Thaddeus Funston stood at the
barred window of his locked ward and stared vacantly over the hills
towards the craft shop. He stood there unmoving until a ward attendant
came and took his arm an hour later to lead him off to the patients'
mess hall.
The sun set, darkness fell over the stilled hospital grounds and the
ward lights winked out at nine o'clock, leaving just a single light
burning in each ward office. A quiet wind sighed over the still-warm
hills.
At 3:01 a.m., Thaddeus Funston stirred in his sleep and awakened. He sat
up in bed and looked around the dark ward. The quiet breathing and
occasional snores of thirty other sleeping patients filled the room.
Funston turned to the window and stared out across the black hills that
sheltered the deserted crafts building.
He gave a quick cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
The brilliance of a hundred suns glared in the night and threw stark
shadows on the walls of the suddenly-illuminated ward.
An instant later, the shattering roar and blast of the explosion struck
the hospital buildings in a wave of force and the bursting crash of a
thousand windows was lost in the fury of the explosion and the wild
screams of the frightened and demented patients.
It was over in an instant, and a stunned moment later, recessed ceiling
lights began flashing on throughout the big institution.
Beyond the again-silent hills, a great pillar of smoke, topped by a
small mushroom-shaped cloud, rose above the gaping hole that had been
the arts and crafts building.
Thaddeus Funston took his hands from his face and lay back in his bed
with a small, secret smile on his lips. Attendants and nurses scurried
through the hospital, seeing how many had been injured in the
explosion.
None had. The hills had absorbed most of the shock and apart from a
welter of broken glass, the damage had been surprisingly slight.
The roar and flash of the explosion had lighted and rocked the
surrounding countryside. Soon firemen and civil defense disaster units
from a half-dozen neighboring communities had gathered at the
still-smoking hole that marked the site of the vanished crafts building.
Within fifteen minutes, the disaster-trained crews had detected heavy
radiation emanating from the crater and there was a scurry of men and
equipment back to a safe distance, a few hundred yards away.
At 5:30 a.m., a plane landed at a nearby airfield and a platoon of
Atomic Energy Commission experts, military intelligence men, four FBI
agents and an Army full colonel disembarked.
At 5:45 a.m. a cordon was thrown around both the hospital and the blast
crater.
In Ward 4-C, Thaddeus Funston slept peacefully and happily.
"It's impossible and unbelievable," Colonel Thomas Thurgood said for the
fifteenth time, later that morning, as he looked around the group of
experts gathered in the tent erected on the hill overlooking the crater.
"How can an atom bomb go off in a nut house?"
"It apparently was a very small bomb, colonel," one of the haggard AEC
men offered timidly. "Not over three kilotons."
"I don't care if it was the size of a peanut," Thurgood screamed. "How
did it get here?"
A military intelligence agent spoke up. "If we knew, sir, we wouldn't be
standing around here. We don't know, but the fact remains that it WAS an
atomic explosion."
Thurgood turned wearily to the small, white-haired man at his side.
"Let's go over it once more, Dr. Crane. Are you sure you knew everything
that was in that building?" Thurgood swept his hand in the general
direction of the blast crater.
"Colonel, I've told you a dozen times," the hospital administrator said
with exasperation, "this was our manual therapy room. We gave our
patients art work. It was a means of getting out of their systems,
through the use of their hands, some of the frustrations and problems
that led them to this hospital. They worked with oil and water paints
and clay. If you can make an atomic bomb from vermillion pigments, then
Madame Curie was a misguided scrubwoman."
"All I know is that you say this was a crafts building. O.K. So it was,"
Thurgood sighed. "I also know that an atomic explosion at 3:02 this
morning blew it to hell and gone.
"And I've got to find out how it happened."
Thurgood slumped into a field chair and gazed tiredly up at the little
doctor.
"Where's that girl you said was in charge of this place?"
"We've already called for Miss Abercrombie and she's on her way here
now," the doctor snapped.
Outside the tent, a small army of military men and AEC technicians moved
around the perimeter of the crater, scintillators in hand, examining
every tiny scrap that might have been a part of the building at one
time.
A jeep raced down the road from the hospital and drew up in front of the
tent. An armed MP helped Miss Abercrombie from the vehicle.
She walked to the edge of the hill and looked down with a stunned
expression.
"He did make an atom bomb," she cried.
Colonel Thurgood, who had snapped from his chair at her words, leaped
forward to catch her as she collapsed in a faint.
At 4:00 p.m., the argument was still raging in the long, narrow staff
room of the hospital administration building.
Colonel Thurgood, looking more like a patient every minute, sat on the
edge of his chair at the head of a long table and pounded with his fist
on the wooden surface, making Miss Abercrombie's chart book bounce with
every beat.
"It's ridiculous," Thurgood roared. "We'll all be the laughingstocks of
the world if this ever gets out. An atomic bomb made out of clay. You
are all nuts. You're in the right place, but count me out."
At his left, Miss Abercrombie cringed deeper into her chair at the
broadside. Down both sides of the long table, psychiatrists, physicists,
strategists and radiologists sat in various stages of nerve-shattered
weariness.
"Miss Abercrombie," one of the physicists spoke up gently, "you say that
after the patients had departed the building, you looked again at
Funston's work?"
The therapist nodded unhappily.
"And you say that, to the best of your knowledge," the physicist
continued, "there was nothing inside the ball but other pieces of clay."
"I'm positive that's all there was in it," Miss Abercrombie cried.
There was a renewed buzz of conversation at the table and the senior AEC
man present got heads together with the senior intelligence man. They
conferred briefly and then the intelligence officer spoke.
"That seems to settle it, colonel. We've got to give this Funston
another chance to repeat his bomb. But this time under our supervision."
Thurgood leaped to his feet, his face purpling.
"Are you crazy?" he screamed. "You want to get us all thrown into this
filbert factory? Do you know what the newspapers would do to us if they
ever got wind of the fact, that for one, tiny fraction of a second,
anyone of us here entertained the notion that a paranoidal idiot with
the IQ of an ape could make an atomic bomb out of kid's modeling clay?
"They'd crucify us, that's what they'd do!"
At 8:30 that night, Thaddeus Funston, swathed in an Army officer's
greatcoat that concealed the strait jacket binding him and with an
officer's cap jammed far down over his face, was hustled out of a small
side door of the hospital and into a waiting staff car. A few minutes
later, the car pulled into the flying field at the nearby community and
drove directly to the military transport plane that stood at the end of
the runway with propellers turning.
Two military policemen and a brace of staff psychiatrists sworn to
secrecy under the National Atomic Secrets Act, bundled Thaddeus aboard
the plane. They plopped him into a seat directly in front of Miss
Abercrombie and with a roar, the plane raced down the runway and into
the night skies.
The plane landed the next morning at the AEC's atomic testing grounds in
the Nevada desert and two hours later, in a small hot, wooden shack
miles up the barren desert wastelands, a cluster of scientists and
military men huddled around a small wooden table.
There was nothing on the table but a bowl of water and a great lump of
modeling clay. While the psychiatrists were taking the strait jacket off
Thaddeus in the staff car outside, Colonel Thurgood spoke to the weary
Miss Abercrombie.
"Now you're positive this is just about the same amount and the same
kind of clay he used before?"
"I brought it along from the same batch we had in the store room at the
hospital," she replied, "and it's the same amount."
Thurgood signaled to the doctors and they entered the shack with
Thaddeus Funston between them. The colonel nudged Miss Abercrombie.
She smiled at Funston.
"Now isn't this nice, Mr. Funston," she said. "These nice men have
brought us way out here just to see you make another atom bomb like the
one you made for me yesterday."
A flicker of interest lightened Thaddeus' face. He looked around the
shack and then spotted the clay on the table. Without hesitation, he
walked to the table and sat down. His fingers began working the damp
clay, making first the hollow, half-round shell while the nation's top
atomic scientists watched in fascination.
His busy fingers flew through the clay, shaping odd, flat bits and clay
parts that were dropped almost aimlessly into the open hemisphere in
front of him.
Miss Abercrombie stood at his shoulder as Thaddeus hunched over the
table just as he had done the previous day. From time to time she
glanced at her watch. The maze of clay strips grew and as Funston
finished shaping the other half hemisphere of clay, she broke the tense
silence.
"Time to go back now, Mr. Funston. You can work some more tomorrow." She
looked at the men and nodded her head.
The two psychiatrists went to Thaddeus' side as he put the upper lid of
clay carefully in place. Funston stood up and the doctors escorted him
from the shack.
There was a moment of hushed silence and then pandemonium burst. The
experts converged on the clay ball, instruments blossoming from nowhere
and cameras clicking.
For two hours they studied and gently probed the mass of child's clay
and photographed it from every angle.
Then they left for the concrete observatory bunker, several miles down
range where Thaddeus and the psychiatrists waited inside a ring of
stony-faced military policemen.
"I told you this whole thing was asinine," Thurgood snarled as the
scientific teams trooped into the bunker.
Thaddeus Funston stared out over the heads of the MPs through the open
door, looking uprange over the heat-shimmering desert. He gave a sudden
cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
A brilliance a hundred times brighter than the glaring Nevada sun lit
the dim interior of the bunker and the pneumatically-operated door
slammed shut just before the wave of the blast hit the structure.
Six hours and a jet plane trip later, Thaddeus, once again in his strait
jacket, sat between his armed escorts in a small room in the Pentagon.
Through the window he could see the hurried bustle of traffic over the
Potomac and beyond, the domed roof of the Capitol.
In the conference room next door, the joint chiefs of staff were
closeted with a gray-faced and bone-weary Colonel Thurgood and his
baker's dozen of AEC brains. Scraps of the hot and scornful talk drifted
across a half-opened transom into the room where Thaddeus Funston sat in
a neatly-tied bundle.
In the conference room, a red-faced, four-star general cast a chilling
glance at the rumpled figure of Colonel Thurgood.
"I've listened to some silly stories in my life, colonel," the general
said coldly, "but this takes the cake. You come in here with an insane
asylum inmate in a strait jacket and you have the colossal gall to sit
there and tell me that this poor soul has made not one, but two atomic
devices out of modeling clay and then has detonated them."
The general paused.
"Why don't you just tell me, colonel, that he can also make spaceships
out of sponge rubber?" the general added bitingly.
In the next room, Thaddeus Funston stared out over the sweeping panorama
of the Washington landscape. He stared hard.
In the distance, a white cloud began billowing up from the base of the
Washington Monument, and with an ear-shattering, glass-splintering roar,
the great shaft rose majestically from its base and vanished into space
on a tail of flame.
THE END | His prophecy of an alien invasion was fulfilled | He is gleeful at the idea of part of the mental hospital being destroyed | His self-constructed clay atom bomb was effectively detonated | He knows the explosion will distract the hospital staff and give him an opportunity to escape | 2 |
23588_T922WCPI_3 | What is Thurgood's primary fear regarding the explosion at the arts and crafts building? | Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Astounding Science Fiction November 1959. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
A FILBERT IS A NUT
BY RICK RAPHAEL
That the gentleman in question was a nut was beyond question. He was an institutionalized
psychotic. He was nutty enough to think he could make an atom bomb out of modeling clay!
Illustrated by Freas
Miss Abercrombie, the manual therapist patted the old man on the
shoulder. "You're doing just fine, Mr. Lieberman. Show it to me when you
have finished."
The oldster in the stained convalescent suit gave her a quick, shy smile
and went back to his aimless smearing in the finger paints.
Miss Abercrombie smoothed her smock down over trim hips and surveyed the
other patients working at the long tables in the hospital's arts and
crafts shop. Two muscular and bored attendants in spotless whites,
lounged beside the locked door and chatted idly about the Dodgers'
prospects for the pennant.
Through the barred windows of the workshop, rolling green hills were
seen, their tree-studded flanks making a pleasant setting for the mental
institution. The crafts building was a good mile away from the main
buildings of the hospital and the hills blocked the view of the austere
complex of buildings that housed the main wards.
The therapist strolled down the line of tables, pausing to give a word
of advice here, and a suggestion there.
She stopped behind a frowning, intense patient, rapidly shaping blobs of
clay into odd-sized strips and forms. As he finished each piece, he
carefully placed it into a hollow shell hemisphere of clay.
"And what are we making today, Mr. Funston?" Miss Abercrombie asked.
The flying fingers continued to whip out the bits of shaped clay as the
patient ignored the question. He hunched closer to his table as if to
draw away from the woman.
"We mustn't be antisocial, Mr. Funston," Miss Abercrombie said lightly,
but firmly. "You've been coming along famously and you must remember to
answer when someone talks to you. Now what are you making? It looks very
complicated." She stared professionally at the maze of clay parts.
Thaddeus Funston continued to mold the clay bits and put them in place.
Without looking up from his bench he muttered a reply.
"Atom bomb."
A puzzled look crossed the therapist's face. "Pardon me, Mr. Funston. I
thought you said an 'atom bomb.'"
"Did," Funston murmured.
Safely behind the patient's back, Miss Abercrombie smiled ever so
slightly. "Why that's very good, Mr. Funston. That shows real creative
thought. I'm very pleased."
She patted him on the shoulder and moved down the line of patients.
A few minutes later, one of the attendants glanced at his watch, stood
up and stretched.
"All right, fellows," he called out, "time to go back. Put up your
things."
There was a rustle of paint boxes and papers being shuffled and chairs
being moved back. A tall, blond patient with a flowing mustache, put one
more dab of paint on his canvas and stood back to survey the meaningless
smears. He sighed happily and laid down his palette.
At the clay table, Funston feverishly fabricated the last odd-shaped bit
of clay and slapped it into place. With a furtive glance around him, he
clapped the other half of the clay sphere over the filled hemisphere and
then stood up. The patients lined up at the door, waiting for the walk
back across the green hills to the main hospital. The attendants made a
quick count and then unlocked the door. The group shuffled out into the
warm, afternoon sunlight and the door closed behind them.
Miss Abercrombie gazed around the cluttered room and picked up her chart
book of patient progress. Moving slowly down the line of benches, she
made short, precise notes on the day's work accomplished by each
patient.
At the clay table, she carefully lifted the top half of the clay ball
and stared thoughtfully at the jumbled maze of clay strips laced through
the lower hemisphere. She placed the lid back in place and jotted
lengthily in her chart book.
When she had completed her rounds, she slipped out of the smock, tucked
the chart book under her arm and left the crafts building for the day.
The late afternoon sun felt warm and comfortable as she walked the mile
to the main administration building where her car was parked.
As she drove out of the hospital grounds, Thaddeus Funston stood at the
barred window of his locked ward and stared vacantly over the hills
towards the craft shop. He stood there unmoving until a ward attendant
came and took his arm an hour later to lead him off to the patients'
mess hall.
The sun set, darkness fell over the stilled hospital grounds and the
ward lights winked out at nine o'clock, leaving just a single light
burning in each ward office. A quiet wind sighed over the still-warm
hills.
At 3:01 a.m., Thaddeus Funston stirred in his sleep and awakened. He sat
up in bed and looked around the dark ward. The quiet breathing and
occasional snores of thirty other sleeping patients filled the room.
Funston turned to the window and stared out across the black hills that
sheltered the deserted crafts building.
He gave a quick cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
The brilliance of a hundred suns glared in the night and threw stark
shadows on the walls of the suddenly-illuminated ward.
An instant later, the shattering roar and blast of the explosion struck
the hospital buildings in a wave of force and the bursting crash of a
thousand windows was lost in the fury of the explosion and the wild
screams of the frightened and demented patients.
It was over in an instant, and a stunned moment later, recessed ceiling
lights began flashing on throughout the big institution.
Beyond the again-silent hills, a great pillar of smoke, topped by a
small mushroom-shaped cloud, rose above the gaping hole that had been
the arts and crafts building.
Thaddeus Funston took his hands from his face and lay back in his bed
with a small, secret smile on his lips. Attendants and nurses scurried
through the hospital, seeing how many had been injured in the
explosion.
None had. The hills had absorbed most of the shock and apart from a
welter of broken glass, the damage had been surprisingly slight.
The roar and flash of the explosion had lighted and rocked the
surrounding countryside. Soon firemen and civil defense disaster units
from a half-dozen neighboring communities had gathered at the
still-smoking hole that marked the site of the vanished crafts building.
Within fifteen minutes, the disaster-trained crews had detected heavy
radiation emanating from the crater and there was a scurry of men and
equipment back to a safe distance, a few hundred yards away.
At 5:30 a.m., a plane landed at a nearby airfield and a platoon of
Atomic Energy Commission experts, military intelligence men, four FBI
agents and an Army full colonel disembarked.
At 5:45 a.m. a cordon was thrown around both the hospital and the blast
crater.
In Ward 4-C, Thaddeus Funston slept peacefully and happily.
"It's impossible and unbelievable," Colonel Thomas Thurgood said for the
fifteenth time, later that morning, as he looked around the group of
experts gathered in the tent erected on the hill overlooking the crater.
"How can an atom bomb go off in a nut house?"
"It apparently was a very small bomb, colonel," one of the haggard AEC
men offered timidly. "Not over three kilotons."
"I don't care if it was the size of a peanut," Thurgood screamed. "How
did it get here?"
A military intelligence agent spoke up. "If we knew, sir, we wouldn't be
standing around here. We don't know, but the fact remains that it WAS an
atomic explosion."
Thurgood turned wearily to the small, white-haired man at his side.
"Let's go over it once more, Dr. Crane. Are you sure you knew everything
that was in that building?" Thurgood swept his hand in the general
direction of the blast crater.
"Colonel, I've told you a dozen times," the hospital administrator said
with exasperation, "this was our manual therapy room. We gave our
patients art work. It was a means of getting out of their systems,
through the use of their hands, some of the frustrations and problems
that led them to this hospital. They worked with oil and water paints
and clay. If you can make an atomic bomb from vermillion pigments, then
Madame Curie was a misguided scrubwoman."
"All I know is that you say this was a crafts building. O.K. So it was,"
Thurgood sighed. "I also know that an atomic explosion at 3:02 this
morning blew it to hell and gone.
"And I've got to find out how it happened."
Thurgood slumped into a field chair and gazed tiredly up at the little
doctor.
"Where's that girl you said was in charge of this place?"
"We've already called for Miss Abercrombie and she's on her way here
now," the doctor snapped.
Outside the tent, a small army of military men and AEC technicians moved
around the perimeter of the crater, scintillators in hand, examining
every tiny scrap that might have been a part of the building at one
time.
A jeep raced down the road from the hospital and drew up in front of the
tent. An armed MP helped Miss Abercrombie from the vehicle.
She walked to the edge of the hill and looked down with a stunned
expression.
"He did make an atom bomb," she cried.
Colonel Thurgood, who had snapped from his chair at her words, leaped
forward to catch her as she collapsed in a faint.
At 4:00 p.m., the argument was still raging in the long, narrow staff
room of the hospital administration building.
Colonel Thurgood, looking more like a patient every minute, sat on the
edge of his chair at the head of a long table and pounded with his fist
on the wooden surface, making Miss Abercrombie's chart book bounce with
every beat.
"It's ridiculous," Thurgood roared. "We'll all be the laughingstocks of
the world if this ever gets out. An atomic bomb made out of clay. You
are all nuts. You're in the right place, but count me out."
At his left, Miss Abercrombie cringed deeper into her chair at the
broadside. Down both sides of the long table, psychiatrists, physicists,
strategists and radiologists sat in various stages of nerve-shattered
weariness.
"Miss Abercrombie," one of the physicists spoke up gently, "you say that
after the patients had departed the building, you looked again at
Funston's work?"
The therapist nodded unhappily.
"And you say that, to the best of your knowledge," the physicist
continued, "there was nothing inside the ball but other pieces of clay."
"I'm positive that's all there was in it," Miss Abercrombie cried.
There was a renewed buzz of conversation at the table and the senior AEC
man present got heads together with the senior intelligence man. They
conferred briefly and then the intelligence officer spoke.
"That seems to settle it, colonel. We've got to give this Funston
another chance to repeat his bomb. But this time under our supervision."
Thurgood leaped to his feet, his face purpling.
"Are you crazy?" he screamed. "You want to get us all thrown into this
filbert factory? Do you know what the newspapers would do to us if they
ever got wind of the fact, that for one, tiny fraction of a second,
anyone of us here entertained the notion that a paranoidal idiot with
the IQ of an ape could make an atomic bomb out of kid's modeling clay?
"They'd crucify us, that's what they'd do!"
At 8:30 that night, Thaddeus Funston, swathed in an Army officer's
greatcoat that concealed the strait jacket binding him and with an
officer's cap jammed far down over his face, was hustled out of a small
side door of the hospital and into a waiting staff car. A few minutes
later, the car pulled into the flying field at the nearby community and
drove directly to the military transport plane that stood at the end of
the runway with propellers turning.
Two military policemen and a brace of staff psychiatrists sworn to
secrecy under the National Atomic Secrets Act, bundled Thaddeus aboard
the plane. They plopped him into a seat directly in front of Miss
Abercrombie and with a roar, the plane raced down the runway and into
the night skies.
The plane landed the next morning at the AEC's atomic testing grounds in
the Nevada desert and two hours later, in a small hot, wooden shack
miles up the barren desert wastelands, a cluster of scientists and
military men huddled around a small wooden table.
There was nothing on the table but a bowl of water and a great lump of
modeling clay. While the psychiatrists were taking the strait jacket off
Thaddeus in the staff car outside, Colonel Thurgood spoke to the weary
Miss Abercrombie.
"Now you're positive this is just about the same amount and the same
kind of clay he used before?"
"I brought it along from the same batch we had in the store room at the
hospital," she replied, "and it's the same amount."
Thurgood signaled to the doctors and they entered the shack with
Thaddeus Funston between them. The colonel nudged Miss Abercrombie.
She smiled at Funston.
"Now isn't this nice, Mr. Funston," she said. "These nice men have
brought us way out here just to see you make another atom bomb like the
one you made for me yesterday."
A flicker of interest lightened Thaddeus' face. He looked around the
shack and then spotted the clay on the table. Without hesitation, he
walked to the table and sat down. His fingers began working the damp
clay, making first the hollow, half-round shell while the nation's top
atomic scientists watched in fascination.
His busy fingers flew through the clay, shaping odd, flat bits and clay
parts that were dropped almost aimlessly into the open hemisphere in
front of him.
Miss Abercrombie stood at his shoulder as Thaddeus hunched over the
table just as he had done the previous day. From time to time she
glanced at her watch. The maze of clay strips grew and as Funston
finished shaping the other half hemisphere of clay, she broke the tense
silence.
"Time to go back now, Mr. Funston. You can work some more tomorrow." She
looked at the men and nodded her head.
The two psychiatrists went to Thaddeus' side as he put the upper lid of
clay carefully in place. Funston stood up and the doctors escorted him
from the shack.
There was a moment of hushed silence and then pandemonium burst. The
experts converged on the clay ball, instruments blossoming from nowhere
and cameras clicking.
For two hours they studied and gently probed the mass of child's clay
and photographed it from every angle.
Then they left for the concrete observatory bunker, several miles down
range where Thaddeus and the psychiatrists waited inside a ring of
stony-faced military policemen.
"I told you this whole thing was asinine," Thurgood snarled as the
scientific teams trooped into the bunker.
Thaddeus Funston stared out over the heads of the MPs through the open
door, looking uprange over the heat-shimmering desert. He gave a sudden
cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
A brilliance a hundred times brighter than the glaring Nevada sun lit
the dim interior of the bunker and the pneumatically-operated door
slammed shut just before the wave of the blast hit the structure.
Six hours and a jet plane trip later, Thaddeus, once again in his strait
jacket, sat between his armed escorts in a small room in the Pentagon.
Through the window he could see the hurried bustle of traffic over the
Potomac and beyond, the domed roof of the Capitol.
In the conference room next door, the joint chiefs of staff were
closeted with a gray-faced and bone-weary Colonel Thurgood and his
baker's dozen of AEC brains. Scraps of the hot and scornful talk drifted
across a half-opened transom into the room where Thaddeus Funston sat in
a neatly-tied bundle.
In the conference room, a red-faced, four-star general cast a chilling
glance at the rumpled figure of Colonel Thurgood.
"I've listened to some silly stories in my life, colonel," the general
said coldly, "but this takes the cake. You come in here with an insane
asylum inmate in a strait jacket and you have the colossal gall to sit
there and tell me that this poor soul has made not one, but two atomic
devices out of modeling clay and then has detonated them."
The general paused.
"Why don't you just tell me, colonel, that he can also make spaceships
out of sponge rubber?" the general added bitingly.
In the next room, Thaddeus Funston stared out over the sweeping panorama
of the Washington landscape. He stared hard.
In the distance, a white cloud began billowing up from the base of the
Washington Monument, and with an ear-shattering, glass-splintering roar,
the great shaft rose majestically from its base and vanished into space
on a tail of flame.
THE END | Job demotion | Additional detonations | Radiation poisoning | Reputational damage | 3 |
23588_T922WCPI_4 | What is the main theme of this story? | Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Astounding Science Fiction November 1959. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
A FILBERT IS A NUT
BY RICK RAPHAEL
That the gentleman in question was a nut was beyond question. He was an institutionalized
psychotic. He was nutty enough to think he could make an atom bomb out of modeling clay!
Illustrated by Freas
Miss Abercrombie, the manual therapist patted the old man on the
shoulder. "You're doing just fine, Mr. Lieberman. Show it to me when you
have finished."
The oldster in the stained convalescent suit gave her a quick, shy smile
and went back to his aimless smearing in the finger paints.
Miss Abercrombie smoothed her smock down over trim hips and surveyed the
other patients working at the long tables in the hospital's arts and
crafts shop. Two muscular and bored attendants in spotless whites,
lounged beside the locked door and chatted idly about the Dodgers'
prospects for the pennant.
Through the barred windows of the workshop, rolling green hills were
seen, their tree-studded flanks making a pleasant setting for the mental
institution. The crafts building was a good mile away from the main
buildings of the hospital and the hills blocked the view of the austere
complex of buildings that housed the main wards.
The therapist strolled down the line of tables, pausing to give a word
of advice here, and a suggestion there.
She stopped behind a frowning, intense patient, rapidly shaping blobs of
clay into odd-sized strips and forms. As he finished each piece, he
carefully placed it into a hollow shell hemisphere of clay.
"And what are we making today, Mr. Funston?" Miss Abercrombie asked.
The flying fingers continued to whip out the bits of shaped clay as the
patient ignored the question. He hunched closer to his table as if to
draw away from the woman.
"We mustn't be antisocial, Mr. Funston," Miss Abercrombie said lightly,
but firmly. "You've been coming along famously and you must remember to
answer when someone talks to you. Now what are you making? It looks very
complicated." She stared professionally at the maze of clay parts.
Thaddeus Funston continued to mold the clay bits and put them in place.
Without looking up from his bench he muttered a reply.
"Atom bomb."
A puzzled look crossed the therapist's face. "Pardon me, Mr. Funston. I
thought you said an 'atom bomb.'"
"Did," Funston murmured.
Safely behind the patient's back, Miss Abercrombie smiled ever so
slightly. "Why that's very good, Mr. Funston. That shows real creative
thought. I'm very pleased."
She patted him on the shoulder and moved down the line of patients.
A few minutes later, one of the attendants glanced at his watch, stood
up and stretched.
"All right, fellows," he called out, "time to go back. Put up your
things."
There was a rustle of paint boxes and papers being shuffled and chairs
being moved back. A tall, blond patient with a flowing mustache, put one
more dab of paint on his canvas and stood back to survey the meaningless
smears. He sighed happily and laid down his palette.
At the clay table, Funston feverishly fabricated the last odd-shaped bit
of clay and slapped it into place. With a furtive glance around him, he
clapped the other half of the clay sphere over the filled hemisphere and
then stood up. The patients lined up at the door, waiting for the walk
back across the green hills to the main hospital. The attendants made a
quick count and then unlocked the door. The group shuffled out into the
warm, afternoon sunlight and the door closed behind them.
Miss Abercrombie gazed around the cluttered room and picked up her chart
book of patient progress. Moving slowly down the line of benches, she
made short, precise notes on the day's work accomplished by each
patient.
At the clay table, she carefully lifted the top half of the clay ball
and stared thoughtfully at the jumbled maze of clay strips laced through
the lower hemisphere. She placed the lid back in place and jotted
lengthily in her chart book.
When she had completed her rounds, she slipped out of the smock, tucked
the chart book under her arm and left the crafts building for the day.
The late afternoon sun felt warm and comfortable as she walked the mile
to the main administration building where her car was parked.
As she drove out of the hospital grounds, Thaddeus Funston stood at the
barred window of his locked ward and stared vacantly over the hills
towards the craft shop. He stood there unmoving until a ward attendant
came and took his arm an hour later to lead him off to the patients'
mess hall.
The sun set, darkness fell over the stilled hospital grounds and the
ward lights winked out at nine o'clock, leaving just a single light
burning in each ward office. A quiet wind sighed over the still-warm
hills.
At 3:01 a.m., Thaddeus Funston stirred in his sleep and awakened. He sat
up in bed and looked around the dark ward. The quiet breathing and
occasional snores of thirty other sleeping patients filled the room.
Funston turned to the window and stared out across the black hills that
sheltered the deserted crafts building.
He gave a quick cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
The brilliance of a hundred suns glared in the night and threw stark
shadows on the walls of the suddenly-illuminated ward.
An instant later, the shattering roar and blast of the explosion struck
the hospital buildings in a wave of force and the bursting crash of a
thousand windows was lost in the fury of the explosion and the wild
screams of the frightened and demented patients.
It was over in an instant, and a stunned moment later, recessed ceiling
lights began flashing on throughout the big institution.
Beyond the again-silent hills, a great pillar of smoke, topped by a
small mushroom-shaped cloud, rose above the gaping hole that had been
the arts and crafts building.
Thaddeus Funston took his hands from his face and lay back in his bed
with a small, secret smile on his lips. Attendants and nurses scurried
through the hospital, seeing how many had been injured in the
explosion.
None had. The hills had absorbed most of the shock and apart from a
welter of broken glass, the damage had been surprisingly slight.
The roar and flash of the explosion had lighted and rocked the
surrounding countryside. Soon firemen and civil defense disaster units
from a half-dozen neighboring communities had gathered at the
still-smoking hole that marked the site of the vanished crafts building.
Within fifteen minutes, the disaster-trained crews had detected heavy
radiation emanating from the crater and there was a scurry of men and
equipment back to a safe distance, a few hundred yards away.
At 5:30 a.m., a plane landed at a nearby airfield and a platoon of
Atomic Energy Commission experts, military intelligence men, four FBI
agents and an Army full colonel disembarked.
At 5:45 a.m. a cordon was thrown around both the hospital and the blast
crater.
In Ward 4-C, Thaddeus Funston slept peacefully and happily.
"It's impossible and unbelievable," Colonel Thomas Thurgood said for the
fifteenth time, later that morning, as he looked around the group of
experts gathered in the tent erected on the hill overlooking the crater.
"How can an atom bomb go off in a nut house?"
"It apparently was a very small bomb, colonel," one of the haggard AEC
men offered timidly. "Not over three kilotons."
"I don't care if it was the size of a peanut," Thurgood screamed. "How
did it get here?"
A military intelligence agent spoke up. "If we knew, sir, we wouldn't be
standing around here. We don't know, but the fact remains that it WAS an
atomic explosion."
Thurgood turned wearily to the small, white-haired man at his side.
"Let's go over it once more, Dr. Crane. Are you sure you knew everything
that was in that building?" Thurgood swept his hand in the general
direction of the blast crater.
"Colonel, I've told you a dozen times," the hospital administrator said
with exasperation, "this was our manual therapy room. We gave our
patients art work. It was a means of getting out of their systems,
through the use of their hands, some of the frustrations and problems
that led them to this hospital. They worked with oil and water paints
and clay. If you can make an atomic bomb from vermillion pigments, then
Madame Curie was a misguided scrubwoman."
"All I know is that you say this was a crafts building. O.K. So it was,"
Thurgood sighed. "I also know that an atomic explosion at 3:02 this
morning blew it to hell and gone.
"And I've got to find out how it happened."
Thurgood slumped into a field chair and gazed tiredly up at the little
doctor.
"Where's that girl you said was in charge of this place?"
"We've already called for Miss Abercrombie and she's on her way here
now," the doctor snapped.
Outside the tent, a small army of military men and AEC technicians moved
around the perimeter of the crater, scintillators in hand, examining
every tiny scrap that might have been a part of the building at one
time.
A jeep raced down the road from the hospital and drew up in front of the
tent. An armed MP helped Miss Abercrombie from the vehicle.
She walked to the edge of the hill and looked down with a stunned
expression.
"He did make an atom bomb," she cried.
Colonel Thurgood, who had snapped from his chair at her words, leaped
forward to catch her as she collapsed in a faint.
At 4:00 p.m., the argument was still raging in the long, narrow staff
room of the hospital administration building.
Colonel Thurgood, looking more like a patient every minute, sat on the
edge of his chair at the head of a long table and pounded with his fist
on the wooden surface, making Miss Abercrombie's chart book bounce with
every beat.
"It's ridiculous," Thurgood roared. "We'll all be the laughingstocks of
the world if this ever gets out. An atomic bomb made out of clay. You
are all nuts. You're in the right place, but count me out."
At his left, Miss Abercrombie cringed deeper into her chair at the
broadside. Down both sides of the long table, psychiatrists, physicists,
strategists and radiologists sat in various stages of nerve-shattered
weariness.
"Miss Abercrombie," one of the physicists spoke up gently, "you say that
after the patients had departed the building, you looked again at
Funston's work?"
The therapist nodded unhappily.
"And you say that, to the best of your knowledge," the physicist
continued, "there was nothing inside the ball but other pieces of clay."
"I'm positive that's all there was in it," Miss Abercrombie cried.
There was a renewed buzz of conversation at the table and the senior AEC
man present got heads together with the senior intelligence man. They
conferred briefly and then the intelligence officer spoke.
"That seems to settle it, colonel. We've got to give this Funston
another chance to repeat his bomb. But this time under our supervision."
Thurgood leaped to his feet, his face purpling.
"Are you crazy?" he screamed. "You want to get us all thrown into this
filbert factory? Do you know what the newspapers would do to us if they
ever got wind of the fact, that for one, tiny fraction of a second,
anyone of us here entertained the notion that a paranoidal idiot with
the IQ of an ape could make an atomic bomb out of kid's modeling clay?
"They'd crucify us, that's what they'd do!"
At 8:30 that night, Thaddeus Funston, swathed in an Army officer's
greatcoat that concealed the strait jacket binding him and with an
officer's cap jammed far down over his face, was hustled out of a small
side door of the hospital and into a waiting staff car. A few minutes
later, the car pulled into the flying field at the nearby community and
drove directly to the military transport plane that stood at the end of
the runway with propellers turning.
Two military policemen and a brace of staff psychiatrists sworn to
secrecy under the National Atomic Secrets Act, bundled Thaddeus aboard
the plane. They plopped him into a seat directly in front of Miss
Abercrombie and with a roar, the plane raced down the runway and into
the night skies.
The plane landed the next morning at the AEC's atomic testing grounds in
the Nevada desert and two hours later, in a small hot, wooden shack
miles up the barren desert wastelands, a cluster of scientists and
military men huddled around a small wooden table.
There was nothing on the table but a bowl of water and a great lump of
modeling clay. While the psychiatrists were taking the strait jacket off
Thaddeus in the staff car outside, Colonel Thurgood spoke to the weary
Miss Abercrombie.
"Now you're positive this is just about the same amount and the same
kind of clay he used before?"
"I brought it along from the same batch we had in the store room at the
hospital," she replied, "and it's the same amount."
Thurgood signaled to the doctors and they entered the shack with
Thaddeus Funston between them. The colonel nudged Miss Abercrombie.
She smiled at Funston.
"Now isn't this nice, Mr. Funston," she said. "These nice men have
brought us way out here just to see you make another atom bomb like the
one you made for me yesterday."
A flicker of interest lightened Thaddeus' face. He looked around the
shack and then spotted the clay on the table. Without hesitation, he
walked to the table and sat down. His fingers began working the damp
clay, making first the hollow, half-round shell while the nation's top
atomic scientists watched in fascination.
His busy fingers flew through the clay, shaping odd, flat bits and clay
parts that were dropped almost aimlessly into the open hemisphere in
front of him.
Miss Abercrombie stood at his shoulder as Thaddeus hunched over the
table just as he had done the previous day. From time to time she
glanced at her watch. The maze of clay strips grew and as Funston
finished shaping the other half hemisphere of clay, she broke the tense
silence.
"Time to go back now, Mr. Funston. You can work some more tomorrow." She
looked at the men and nodded her head.
The two psychiatrists went to Thaddeus' side as he put the upper lid of
clay carefully in place. Funston stood up and the doctors escorted him
from the shack.
There was a moment of hushed silence and then pandemonium burst. The
experts converged on the clay ball, instruments blossoming from nowhere
and cameras clicking.
For two hours they studied and gently probed the mass of child's clay
and photographed it from every angle.
Then they left for the concrete observatory bunker, several miles down
range where Thaddeus and the psychiatrists waited inside a ring of
stony-faced military policemen.
"I told you this whole thing was asinine," Thurgood snarled as the
scientific teams trooped into the bunker.
Thaddeus Funston stared out over the heads of the MPs through the open
door, looking uprange over the heat-shimmering desert. He gave a sudden
cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
A brilliance a hundred times brighter than the glaring Nevada sun lit
the dim interior of the bunker and the pneumatically-operated door
slammed shut just before the wave of the blast hit the structure.
Six hours and a jet plane trip later, Thaddeus, once again in his strait
jacket, sat between his armed escorts in a small room in the Pentagon.
Through the window he could see the hurried bustle of traffic over the
Potomac and beyond, the domed roof of the Capitol.
In the conference room next door, the joint chiefs of staff were
closeted with a gray-faced and bone-weary Colonel Thurgood and his
baker's dozen of AEC brains. Scraps of the hot and scornful talk drifted
across a half-opened transom into the room where Thaddeus Funston sat in
a neatly-tied bundle.
In the conference room, a red-faced, four-star general cast a chilling
glance at the rumpled figure of Colonel Thurgood.
"I've listened to some silly stories in my life, colonel," the general
said coldly, "but this takes the cake. You come in here with an insane
asylum inmate in a strait jacket and you have the colossal gall to sit
there and tell me that this poor soul has made not one, but two atomic
devices out of modeling clay and then has detonated them."
The general paused.
"Why don't you just tell me, colonel, that he can also make spaceships
out of sponge rubber?" the general added bitingly.
In the next room, Thaddeus Funston stared out over the sweeping panorama
of the Washington landscape. He stared hard.
In the distance, a white cloud began billowing up from the base of the
Washington Monument, and with an ear-shattering, glass-splintering roar,
the great shaft rose majestically from its base and vanished into space
on a tail of flame.
THE END | Fear and exploitation of the mentally ill | The perilous impact of government secrets | The damaging impact of mental illness on perception | Society's rejection of divergent thought | 3 |
23588_T922WCPI_5 | What is the significance of the lifting-off of the Washington Monument at the story's conclusion? | Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Astounding Science Fiction November 1959. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
A FILBERT IS A NUT
BY RICK RAPHAEL
That the gentleman in question was a nut was beyond question. He was an institutionalized
psychotic. He was nutty enough to think he could make an atom bomb out of modeling clay!
Illustrated by Freas
Miss Abercrombie, the manual therapist patted the old man on the
shoulder. "You're doing just fine, Mr. Lieberman. Show it to me when you
have finished."
The oldster in the stained convalescent suit gave her a quick, shy smile
and went back to his aimless smearing in the finger paints.
Miss Abercrombie smoothed her smock down over trim hips and surveyed the
other patients working at the long tables in the hospital's arts and
crafts shop. Two muscular and bored attendants in spotless whites,
lounged beside the locked door and chatted idly about the Dodgers'
prospects for the pennant.
Through the barred windows of the workshop, rolling green hills were
seen, their tree-studded flanks making a pleasant setting for the mental
institution. The crafts building was a good mile away from the main
buildings of the hospital and the hills blocked the view of the austere
complex of buildings that housed the main wards.
The therapist strolled down the line of tables, pausing to give a word
of advice here, and a suggestion there.
She stopped behind a frowning, intense patient, rapidly shaping blobs of
clay into odd-sized strips and forms. As he finished each piece, he
carefully placed it into a hollow shell hemisphere of clay.
"And what are we making today, Mr. Funston?" Miss Abercrombie asked.
The flying fingers continued to whip out the bits of shaped clay as the
patient ignored the question. He hunched closer to his table as if to
draw away from the woman.
"We mustn't be antisocial, Mr. Funston," Miss Abercrombie said lightly,
but firmly. "You've been coming along famously and you must remember to
answer when someone talks to you. Now what are you making? It looks very
complicated." She stared professionally at the maze of clay parts.
Thaddeus Funston continued to mold the clay bits and put them in place.
Without looking up from his bench he muttered a reply.
"Atom bomb."
A puzzled look crossed the therapist's face. "Pardon me, Mr. Funston. I
thought you said an 'atom bomb.'"
"Did," Funston murmured.
Safely behind the patient's back, Miss Abercrombie smiled ever so
slightly. "Why that's very good, Mr. Funston. That shows real creative
thought. I'm very pleased."
She patted him on the shoulder and moved down the line of patients.
A few minutes later, one of the attendants glanced at his watch, stood
up and stretched.
"All right, fellows," he called out, "time to go back. Put up your
things."
There was a rustle of paint boxes and papers being shuffled and chairs
being moved back. A tall, blond patient with a flowing mustache, put one
more dab of paint on his canvas and stood back to survey the meaningless
smears. He sighed happily and laid down his palette.
At the clay table, Funston feverishly fabricated the last odd-shaped bit
of clay and slapped it into place. With a furtive glance around him, he
clapped the other half of the clay sphere over the filled hemisphere and
then stood up. The patients lined up at the door, waiting for the walk
back across the green hills to the main hospital. The attendants made a
quick count and then unlocked the door. The group shuffled out into the
warm, afternoon sunlight and the door closed behind them.
Miss Abercrombie gazed around the cluttered room and picked up her chart
book of patient progress. Moving slowly down the line of benches, she
made short, precise notes on the day's work accomplished by each
patient.
At the clay table, she carefully lifted the top half of the clay ball
and stared thoughtfully at the jumbled maze of clay strips laced through
the lower hemisphere. She placed the lid back in place and jotted
lengthily in her chart book.
When she had completed her rounds, she slipped out of the smock, tucked
the chart book under her arm and left the crafts building for the day.
The late afternoon sun felt warm and comfortable as she walked the mile
to the main administration building where her car was parked.
As she drove out of the hospital grounds, Thaddeus Funston stood at the
barred window of his locked ward and stared vacantly over the hills
towards the craft shop. He stood there unmoving until a ward attendant
came and took his arm an hour later to lead him off to the patients'
mess hall.
The sun set, darkness fell over the stilled hospital grounds and the
ward lights winked out at nine o'clock, leaving just a single light
burning in each ward office. A quiet wind sighed over the still-warm
hills.
At 3:01 a.m., Thaddeus Funston stirred in his sleep and awakened. He sat
up in bed and looked around the dark ward. The quiet breathing and
occasional snores of thirty other sleeping patients filled the room.
Funston turned to the window and stared out across the black hills that
sheltered the deserted crafts building.
He gave a quick cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
The brilliance of a hundred suns glared in the night and threw stark
shadows on the walls of the suddenly-illuminated ward.
An instant later, the shattering roar and blast of the explosion struck
the hospital buildings in a wave of force and the bursting crash of a
thousand windows was lost in the fury of the explosion and the wild
screams of the frightened and demented patients.
It was over in an instant, and a stunned moment later, recessed ceiling
lights began flashing on throughout the big institution.
Beyond the again-silent hills, a great pillar of smoke, topped by a
small mushroom-shaped cloud, rose above the gaping hole that had been
the arts and crafts building.
Thaddeus Funston took his hands from his face and lay back in his bed
with a small, secret smile on his lips. Attendants and nurses scurried
through the hospital, seeing how many had been injured in the
explosion.
None had. The hills had absorbed most of the shock and apart from a
welter of broken glass, the damage had been surprisingly slight.
The roar and flash of the explosion had lighted and rocked the
surrounding countryside. Soon firemen and civil defense disaster units
from a half-dozen neighboring communities had gathered at the
still-smoking hole that marked the site of the vanished crafts building.
Within fifteen minutes, the disaster-trained crews had detected heavy
radiation emanating from the crater and there was a scurry of men and
equipment back to a safe distance, a few hundred yards away.
At 5:30 a.m., a plane landed at a nearby airfield and a platoon of
Atomic Energy Commission experts, military intelligence men, four FBI
agents and an Army full colonel disembarked.
At 5:45 a.m. a cordon was thrown around both the hospital and the blast
crater.
In Ward 4-C, Thaddeus Funston slept peacefully and happily.
"It's impossible and unbelievable," Colonel Thomas Thurgood said for the
fifteenth time, later that morning, as he looked around the group of
experts gathered in the tent erected on the hill overlooking the crater.
"How can an atom bomb go off in a nut house?"
"It apparently was a very small bomb, colonel," one of the haggard AEC
men offered timidly. "Not over three kilotons."
"I don't care if it was the size of a peanut," Thurgood screamed. "How
did it get here?"
A military intelligence agent spoke up. "If we knew, sir, we wouldn't be
standing around here. We don't know, but the fact remains that it WAS an
atomic explosion."
Thurgood turned wearily to the small, white-haired man at his side.
"Let's go over it once more, Dr. Crane. Are you sure you knew everything
that was in that building?" Thurgood swept his hand in the general
direction of the blast crater.
"Colonel, I've told you a dozen times," the hospital administrator said
with exasperation, "this was our manual therapy room. We gave our
patients art work. It was a means of getting out of their systems,
through the use of their hands, some of the frustrations and problems
that led them to this hospital. They worked with oil and water paints
and clay. If you can make an atomic bomb from vermillion pigments, then
Madame Curie was a misguided scrubwoman."
"All I know is that you say this was a crafts building. O.K. So it was,"
Thurgood sighed. "I also know that an atomic explosion at 3:02 this
morning blew it to hell and gone.
"And I've got to find out how it happened."
Thurgood slumped into a field chair and gazed tiredly up at the little
doctor.
"Where's that girl you said was in charge of this place?"
"We've already called for Miss Abercrombie and she's on her way here
now," the doctor snapped.
Outside the tent, a small army of military men and AEC technicians moved
around the perimeter of the crater, scintillators in hand, examining
every tiny scrap that might have been a part of the building at one
time.
A jeep raced down the road from the hospital and drew up in front of the
tent. An armed MP helped Miss Abercrombie from the vehicle.
She walked to the edge of the hill and looked down with a stunned
expression.
"He did make an atom bomb," she cried.
Colonel Thurgood, who had snapped from his chair at her words, leaped
forward to catch her as she collapsed in a faint.
At 4:00 p.m., the argument was still raging in the long, narrow staff
room of the hospital administration building.
Colonel Thurgood, looking more like a patient every minute, sat on the
edge of his chair at the head of a long table and pounded with his fist
on the wooden surface, making Miss Abercrombie's chart book bounce with
every beat.
"It's ridiculous," Thurgood roared. "We'll all be the laughingstocks of
the world if this ever gets out. An atomic bomb made out of clay. You
are all nuts. You're in the right place, but count me out."
At his left, Miss Abercrombie cringed deeper into her chair at the
broadside. Down both sides of the long table, psychiatrists, physicists,
strategists and radiologists sat in various stages of nerve-shattered
weariness.
"Miss Abercrombie," one of the physicists spoke up gently, "you say that
after the patients had departed the building, you looked again at
Funston's work?"
The therapist nodded unhappily.
"And you say that, to the best of your knowledge," the physicist
continued, "there was nothing inside the ball but other pieces of clay."
"I'm positive that's all there was in it," Miss Abercrombie cried.
There was a renewed buzz of conversation at the table and the senior AEC
man present got heads together with the senior intelligence man. They
conferred briefly and then the intelligence officer spoke.
"That seems to settle it, colonel. We've got to give this Funston
another chance to repeat his bomb. But this time under our supervision."
Thurgood leaped to his feet, his face purpling.
"Are you crazy?" he screamed. "You want to get us all thrown into this
filbert factory? Do you know what the newspapers would do to us if they
ever got wind of the fact, that for one, tiny fraction of a second,
anyone of us here entertained the notion that a paranoidal idiot with
the IQ of an ape could make an atomic bomb out of kid's modeling clay?
"They'd crucify us, that's what they'd do!"
At 8:30 that night, Thaddeus Funston, swathed in an Army officer's
greatcoat that concealed the strait jacket binding him and with an
officer's cap jammed far down over his face, was hustled out of a small
side door of the hospital and into a waiting staff car. A few minutes
later, the car pulled into the flying field at the nearby community and
drove directly to the military transport plane that stood at the end of
the runway with propellers turning.
Two military policemen and a brace of staff psychiatrists sworn to
secrecy under the National Atomic Secrets Act, bundled Thaddeus aboard
the plane. They plopped him into a seat directly in front of Miss
Abercrombie and with a roar, the plane raced down the runway and into
the night skies.
The plane landed the next morning at the AEC's atomic testing grounds in
the Nevada desert and two hours later, in a small hot, wooden shack
miles up the barren desert wastelands, a cluster of scientists and
military men huddled around a small wooden table.
There was nothing on the table but a bowl of water and a great lump of
modeling clay. While the psychiatrists were taking the strait jacket off
Thaddeus in the staff car outside, Colonel Thurgood spoke to the weary
Miss Abercrombie.
"Now you're positive this is just about the same amount and the same
kind of clay he used before?"
"I brought it along from the same batch we had in the store room at the
hospital," she replied, "and it's the same amount."
Thurgood signaled to the doctors and they entered the shack with
Thaddeus Funston between them. The colonel nudged Miss Abercrombie.
She smiled at Funston.
"Now isn't this nice, Mr. Funston," she said. "These nice men have
brought us way out here just to see you make another atom bomb like the
one you made for me yesterday."
A flicker of interest lightened Thaddeus' face. He looked around the
shack and then spotted the clay on the table. Without hesitation, he
walked to the table and sat down. His fingers began working the damp
clay, making first the hollow, half-round shell while the nation's top
atomic scientists watched in fascination.
His busy fingers flew through the clay, shaping odd, flat bits and clay
parts that were dropped almost aimlessly into the open hemisphere in
front of him.
Miss Abercrombie stood at his shoulder as Thaddeus hunched over the
table just as he had done the previous day. From time to time she
glanced at her watch. The maze of clay strips grew and as Funston
finished shaping the other half hemisphere of clay, she broke the tense
silence.
"Time to go back now, Mr. Funston. You can work some more tomorrow." She
looked at the men and nodded her head.
The two psychiatrists went to Thaddeus' side as he put the upper lid of
clay carefully in place. Funston stood up and the doctors escorted him
from the shack.
There was a moment of hushed silence and then pandemonium burst. The
experts converged on the clay ball, instruments blossoming from nowhere
and cameras clicking.
For two hours they studied and gently probed the mass of child's clay
and photographed it from every angle.
Then they left for the concrete observatory bunker, several miles down
range where Thaddeus and the psychiatrists waited inside a ring of
stony-faced military policemen.
"I told you this whole thing was asinine," Thurgood snarled as the
scientific teams trooped into the bunker.
Thaddeus Funston stared out over the heads of the MPs through the open
door, looking uprange over the heat-shimmering desert. He gave a sudden
cry, shut his eyes and clapped his hands over his face.
A brilliance a hundred times brighter than the glaring Nevada sun lit
the dim interior of the bunker and the pneumatically-operated door
slammed shut just before the wave of the blast hit the structure.
Six hours and a jet plane trip later, Thaddeus, once again in his strait
jacket, sat between his armed escorts in a small room in the Pentagon.
Through the window he could see the hurried bustle of traffic over the
Potomac and beyond, the domed roof of the Capitol.
In the conference room next door, the joint chiefs of staff were
closeted with a gray-faced and bone-weary Colonel Thurgood and his
baker's dozen of AEC brains. Scraps of the hot and scornful talk drifted
across a half-opened transom into the room where Thaddeus Funston sat in
a neatly-tied bundle.
In the conference room, a red-faced, four-star general cast a chilling
glance at the rumpled figure of Colonel Thurgood.
"I've listened to some silly stories in my life, colonel," the general
said coldly, "but this takes the cake. You come in here with an insane
asylum inmate in a strait jacket and you have the colossal gall to sit
there and tell me that this poor soul has made not one, but two atomic
devices out of modeling clay and then has detonated them."
The general paused.
"Why don't you just tell me, colonel, that he can also make spaceships
out of sponge rubber?" the general added bitingly.
In the next room, Thaddeus Funston stared out over the sweeping panorama
of the Washington landscape. He stared hard.
In the distance, a white cloud began billowing up from the base of the
Washington Monument, and with an ear-shattering, glass-splintering roar,
the great shaft rose majestically from its base and vanished into space
on a tail of flame.
THE END | Mental 'illness' could and should, in many cases, be viewed as an asset, rather than a deficit | Society is too quick to dismiss the thoughts and behaviors of people living with mental illness as irrational or absurd | People living with mental illness pose risks and/or threats to society and should be entrusted to government care | People living with mental illness(es) may possess abilities not understood by humans living without mental illness | 1 |
23592_VR4F2QJE_1 | Which two terms, respectively, most accurately describe Phil's and Mary's sentiments about Phil becoming a space pilot? | Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Astounding Science
Fiction December 1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence
that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
BREAKAWAY
BY STANLEY GIMBLE
Illustrated by Freas
She surely got her wish ... but there was some question about getting
what she wanted.
Phil Conover pulled the zipper of his flight suit up the front of his
long, thin body and came into the living room. His face, usually serious
and quietly handsome, had an alive, excited look. And the faint lines
around his dark, deep-set eyes were accentuated when he smiled at his
wife.
"All set, honey. How do I look in my monkey suit?"
His wife was sitting stiffly on the flowered couch that was still not
theirs completely. In her fingers she held a cigarette burned down too
far. She said, "You look fine, Phil. You look just right." She managed a
smile. Then she leaned forward and crushed the cigarette in the ash
tray on the maple coffee table and took another from the pack.
He came to her and touched his hands to her soft blond hair, raising her
face until she was looking into his eyes. "You're the most beautiful
girl I know. Did I ever tell you that?"
"Yes, I think so. Yes, I'm sure you did," she said, finishing the
ritual; but her voice broke, and she turned her head away. Phil sat
beside her and put his arm around her small shoulders. He had stopped
smiling.
"Honey, look at me," he said. "It isn't going to be bad. Honestly it
isn't. We know exactly how it will be. If anything could go wrong, they
wouldn't be sending me; you know that. I told you that we've sent five
un-manned ships up and everyone came back without a hitch."
She turned, facing him. There were tears starting in the corners of her
wide, brown eyes, and she brushed them away with her hand.
"Phil, don't go. Please don't. They can send Sammy. Sammy doesn't have a
wife. Can't he go? They'd understand, Phil. Please!" She was holding his
arms tightly with her hands, and the color had drained from her cheeks.
"Mary, you know I can't back out now. How could I? It's been three
years. You know how much I've wanted to be the first man to go. Nothing
would ever be right with me again if I didn't go. Please don't make it
hard." He stopped talking and held her to him and stroked the back of
her head. He could feel her shoulders shaking with quiet sobs. He
released her and stood up.
"I've got to get started, Mary. Will you come to the field with me?"
"Yes, I'll come to say good-by." She paused and dropped her eyes. "Phil,
if you go, I won't be here when you get back—if you get back. I won't
be here because I won't be the wife of a space pilot for the rest of my
life. It isn't the kind of life I bargained for. No matter how much I
love you, I just couldn't take that, Phil. I'm sorry. I guess I'm not
the noble sort of wife."
She finished and took another cigarette from the pack on the coffee
table and put it to her lips. Her hand was trembling as she touched the
lighter to the end of the cigarette and drew deeply. Phil stood watching
her, the excitement completely gone from his eyes.
"I wish you had told me this a long time ago, Mary," Phil said. His
voice was dry and low. "I didn't know you felt this way about it."
"Yes, you did. I told you how I felt. I told you I could never be the
wife of a space pilot. But I don't think I ever really believed it was
possible—not until this morning when you said tonight was the take-off.
It's so stupid to jeopardize everything we've got for a ridiculous
dream!"
He sat down on the edge of the couch and took her hands between his.
"Mary, listen to me," he said. "It isn't a dream. It's real. There's
nothing means anything more to me than you do—you know that. But no
man ever had the chance to do what I'm going to do tonight—no man ever.
If I backed out now for any reason, I'd never be able to look at the sky
again. I'd be through."
She looked at him without seeing him, and there was nothing at all in
her eyes.
"Let's go, if you're still going," she finally said.
They drove through the streets of the small town with its small
bungalows, each alike. There were no trees and very little grass. It was
a new town, a government built town, and it had no personality yet. It
existed only because of the huge ship standing poised in the take-off
zone five miles away in the desert. Its future as a town rested with the
ship, and the town seemed to feel the uncertainty of its future, seemed
ready to stop existing as a town and to give itself back to the desert,
if such was its destiny.
Phil turned the car off the highway onto the rutted dirt road that led
across the sand to the field where the ship waited. In the distance they
could see the beams of the searchlights as they played across the
take-off zone and swept along the top of the high wire fence stretching
out of sight to right and left. At the gate they were stopped by the
guard. He read Phil's pass, shined his flashlight in their faces, and
then saluted. "Good luck, colonel," he said, and shook Phil's hand.
"Thanks, sergeant. I'll be seeing you next week," Phil said, and smiled.
They drove between the rows of wooden buildings that lined the field,
and he parked near the low barbed fence ringing the take-off zone. He
turned off the ignition, and sat quietly for a moment before lighting a
cigarette. Then he looked at his wife. She was staring through the
windshield at the rocket two hundred yards away. Its smooth polished
surface gleamed in the spotlight glare, and it sloped up and up until
the eye lost the tip against the stars.
"She's beautiful, Mary. You've never seen her before, have you?"
"No, I've never seen her before," she said. "Hadn't you better go?" Her
voice was strained and she held her hands closed tightly in her lap.
"Please go now, Phil," she said.
He leaned toward her and touched her cheek. Then she was in his arms,
her head buried against his shoulder.
"Good-by, darling," she said.
"Wish me luck, Mary?" he asked.
"Yes, good luck, Phil," she said. He opened the car door and got out.
The noise of men and machines scurrying around the ship broke the spell
of the rocket waiting silently for flight.
"Mary, I—" he began, and then turned and strode toward the
administration building without looking back.
Inside the building it was like a locker room before the big game. The
tension stood alone, and each man had the same happy, excited look that
Phil had worn earlier. When he came into the room, the noise and bustle
stopped. They turned as one man toward him, and General Small came up to
him and took his hand.
"Hello, Phil. We were beginning to think you weren't coming. You all
set, son?"
"Yes, sir, I'm all set, I guess," Phil said.
"I'd like you to meet the Secretary of Defense, Phil. He's over here by
the radar."
As they crossed the room, familiar faces smiled, and each man shook his
hand or touched his arm. He saw Sammy, alone, by the coffee urn. Sammy
waved to him, but he didn't smile. Phil wanted to talk to him, to say
something; but there was nothing to be said now. Sammy's turn would come
later.
"Mr. Secretary," the general said, "this is Colonel Conover. He'll be
the first man in history to see the other side of the Moon. Colonel—the
Secretary of Defense."
"How do you do, sir. I'm very proud to meet you," Phil said.
"On the contrary, colonel. I'm very proud to meet you. I've been looking
at that ship out there and wondering. I almost wish I were a young man
again. I'd like to be going. It's a thrilling thought—man's first
adventure into the universe. You're lighting a new dawn of history,
colonel. It's a privilege few men have ever had; and those who have had
it didn't realize it at the time. Good luck, and God be with you."
"Thank you, sir. I'm aware of all you say. It frightens me a little."
The general took Phil's arm and they walked to the briefing room. There
were chairs set up for the scientists and Air Force officers directly
connected with the take-off. They were seated now in a semicircle in
front of a huge chart of the solar system. Phil took his seat, and the
last minute briefing began. It was a routine he knew by heart. He had
gone over and over it a thousand times, and he only half listened now.
He kept thinking of Mary outside, alone by the fence.
The voice of the briefing officer was a dull hum in his ears.
"... And orbit at 18,000-mph. You will then accelerate for the breakaway
to 24,900-mph for five minutes and then free-coast for 116 hours
until—"
Phil asked a few questions about weather and solar conditions. And then
the session was done. They rose and looked at each other, the same
unanswered questions on each man's face. There were forced smiles and
handshakes. They were ready now.
"Phil," the general said, and took him aside.
"Sir?"
"Phil, you're ... you feel all right, don't you, son?"
"Yes, sir. I feel fine. Why?"
"Phil, I've spent nearly every day with you for three years. I know you
better than I know myself in many ways. And I've studied the
psychologist's reports on you carefully. Maybe it's just nervousness,
Phil, but I think there's something wrong. Is there?"
"No, sir. There's nothing wrong," Phil said, but his voice didn't carry
conviction. He reached for a cigarette.
"Phil, if there is anything—anything at all—you know what it might
mean. You've got to be in the best mental and physical condition of your
life tonight. You know better than any man here what that means to our
success. I think there is something more than just natural apprehension
wrong with you. Want to tell me?"
Outside, the take-off zone crawled with men and machines at the base of
the rocket. For ten hours, the final check-outs had been in progress;
and now the men were checking again, on their own time. The thing they
had worked toward for six years was ready to happen, and each one felt
that he was sending just a little bit of himself into the sky. Beyond
the ring of lights and moving men, on the edge of the field, Mary stood.
Her hands moved slowly over the top of the fence, twisting the barbs of
wire. But her eyes were on the ship.
And then they were ready. A small group of excited men came out from the
administration building and moved forward. The check-out crews climbed
into their machines and drove back outside the take-off zone. And,
alone, one man climbed the steel ladder up the side of the
rocket—ninety feet into the air. At the top he waved to the men on the
ground and then disappeared through a small port.
Mary waved to him. "Good-by," she said to herself, but the words stuck
tight in her throat.
The small group at the base of the ship turned and walked back to the
fence. And for an eternity the great ship stood alone, waiting. Then,
from deep inside, a rumble came, increasing in volume to a gigantic roar
that shook the earth and tore at the ears. Slowly, the first manned
rocket to the Moon lifted up and up to the sky.
For a long time after the rocket had become a tiny speck of light in the
heavens, she stood holding her face in her hands and crying softly to
herself. And then she felt the touch of a hand on her arm. She turned.
"Phil! Oh, Phil." She held tightly to him and repeated his name over and
over.
"They wouldn't let me go, Mary," he said finally. "The general would not
let me go."
She looked at him. His face was drawn tight, and there were tears on his
cheeks. "Thank, God," she said. "It doesn't matter, darling. The only
thing that matters is you didn't go."
"You're right, Mary," he said. His voice was low—so low she could
hardly hear him. "It doesn't matter. Nothing matters now." He stood with
his hands at his sides, watching her. And then turned away and walked
toward the car.
THE END | Adamant; ambivalent | Open-minded; resentful | Content; reluctant | Enthusiastic; resistant | 3 |
23592_VR4F2QJE_2 | How might the story's conclusion have differed if Phil, in the beginning of the story, had agreed to Mary's wish? | Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Astounding Science
Fiction December 1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence
that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
BREAKAWAY
BY STANLEY GIMBLE
Illustrated by Freas
She surely got her wish ... but there was some question about getting
what she wanted.
Phil Conover pulled the zipper of his flight suit up the front of his
long, thin body and came into the living room. His face, usually serious
and quietly handsome, had an alive, excited look. And the faint lines
around his dark, deep-set eyes were accentuated when he smiled at his
wife.
"All set, honey. How do I look in my monkey suit?"
His wife was sitting stiffly on the flowered couch that was still not
theirs completely. In her fingers she held a cigarette burned down too
far. She said, "You look fine, Phil. You look just right." She managed a
smile. Then she leaned forward and crushed the cigarette in the ash
tray on the maple coffee table and took another from the pack.
He came to her and touched his hands to her soft blond hair, raising her
face until she was looking into his eyes. "You're the most beautiful
girl I know. Did I ever tell you that?"
"Yes, I think so. Yes, I'm sure you did," she said, finishing the
ritual; but her voice broke, and she turned her head away. Phil sat
beside her and put his arm around her small shoulders. He had stopped
smiling.
"Honey, look at me," he said. "It isn't going to be bad. Honestly it
isn't. We know exactly how it will be. If anything could go wrong, they
wouldn't be sending me; you know that. I told you that we've sent five
un-manned ships up and everyone came back without a hitch."
She turned, facing him. There were tears starting in the corners of her
wide, brown eyes, and she brushed them away with her hand.
"Phil, don't go. Please don't. They can send Sammy. Sammy doesn't have a
wife. Can't he go? They'd understand, Phil. Please!" She was holding his
arms tightly with her hands, and the color had drained from her cheeks.
"Mary, you know I can't back out now. How could I? It's been three
years. You know how much I've wanted to be the first man to go. Nothing
would ever be right with me again if I didn't go. Please don't make it
hard." He stopped talking and held her to him and stroked the back of
her head. He could feel her shoulders shaking with quiet sobs. He
released her and stood up.
"I've got to get started, Mary. Will you come to the field with me?"
"Yes, I'll come to say good-by." She paused and dropped her eyes. "Phil,
if you go, I won't be here when you get back—if you get back. I won't
be here because I won't be the wife of a space pilot for the rest of my
life. It isn't the kind of life I bargained for. No matter how much I
love you, I just couldn't take that, Phil. I'm sorry. I guess I'm not
the noble sort of wife."
She finished and took another cigarette from the pack on the coffee
table and put it to her lips. Her hand was trembling as she touched the
lighter to the end of the cigarette and drew deeply. Phil stood watching
her, the excitement completely gone from his eyes.
"I wish you had told me this a long time ago, Mary," Phil said. His
voice was dry and low. "I didn't know you felt this way about it."
"Yes, you did. I told you how I felt. I told you I could never be the
wife of a space pilot. But I don't think I ever really believed it was
possible—not until this morning when you said tonight was the take-off.
It's so stupid to jeopardize everything we've got for a ridiculous
dream!"
He sat down on the edge of the couch and took her hands between his.
"Mary, listen to me," he said. "It isn't a dream. It's real. There's
nothing means anything more to me than you do—you know that. But no
man ever had the chance to do what I'm going to do tonight—no man ever.
If I backed out now for any reason, I'd never be able to look at the sky
again. I'd be through."
She looked at him without seeing him, and there was nothing at all in
her eyes.
"Let's go, if you're still going," she finally said.
They drove through the streets of the small town with its small
bungalows, each alike. There were no trees and very little grass. It was
a new town, a government built town, and it had no personality yet. It
existed only because of the huge ship standing poised in the take-off
zone five miles away in the desert. Its future as a town rested with the
ship, and the town seemed to feel the uncertainty of its future, seemed
ready to stop existing as a town and to give itself back to the desert,
if such was its destiny.
Phil turned the car off the highway onto the rutted dirt road that led
across the sand to the field where the ship waited. In the distance they
could see the beams of the searchlights as they played across the
take-off zone and swept along the top of the high wire fence stretching
out of sight to right and left. At the gate they were stopped by the
guard. He read Phil's pass, shined his flashlight in their faces, and
then saluted. "Good luck, colonel," he said, and shook Phil's hand.
"Thanks, sergeant. I'll be seeing you next week," Phil said, and smiled.
They drove between the rows of wooden buildings that lined the field,
and he parked near the low barbed fence ringing the take-off zone. He
turned off the ignition, and sat quietly for a moment before lighting a
cigarette. Then he looked at his wife. She was staring through the
windshield at the rocket two hundred yards away. Its smooth polished
surface gleamed in the spotlight glare, and it sloped up and up until
the eye lost the tip against the stars.
"She's beautiful, Mary. You've never seen her before, have you?"
"No, I've never seen her before," she said. "Hadn't you better go?" Her
voice was strained and she held her hands closed tightly in her lap.
"Please go now, Phil," she said.
He leaned toward her and touched her cheek. Then she was in his arms,
her head buried against his shoulder.
"Good-by, darling," she said.
"Wish me luck, Mary?" he asked.
"Yes, good luck, Phil," she said. He opened the car door and got out.
The noise of men and machines scurrying around the ship broke the spell
of the rocket waiting silently for flight.
"Mary, I—" he began, and then turned and strode toward the
administration building without looking back.
Inside the building it was like a locker room before the big game. The
tension stood alone, and each man had the same happy, excited look that
Phil had worn earlier. When he came into the room, the noise and bustle
stopped. They turned as one man toward him, and General Small came up to
him and took his hand.
"Hello, Phil. We were beginning to think you weren't coming. You all
set, son?"
"Yes, sir, I'm all set, I guess," Phil said.
"I'd like you to meet the Secretary of Defense, Phil. He's over here by
the radar."
As they crossed the room, familiar faces smiled, and each man shook his
hand or touched his arm. He saw Sammy, alone, by the coffee urn. Sammy
waved to him, but he didn't smile. Phil wanted to talk to him, to say
something; but there was nothing to be said now. Sammy's turn would come
later.
"Mr. Secretary," the general said, "this is Colonel Conover. He'll be
the first man in history to see the other side of the Moon. Colonel—the
Secretary of Defense."
"How do you do, sir. I'm very proud to meet you," Phil said.
"On the contrary, colonel. I'm very proud to meet you. I've been looking
at that ship out there and wondering. I almost wish I were a young man
again. I'd like to be going. It's a thrilling thought—man's first
adventure into the universe. You're lighting a new dawn of history,
colonel. It's a privilege few men have ever had; and those who have had
it didn't realize it at the time. Good luck, and God be with you."
"Thank you, sir. I'm aware of all you say. It frightens me a little."
The general took Phil's arm and they walked to the briefing room. There
were chairs set up for the scientists and Air Force officers directly
connected with the take-off. They were seated now in a semicircle in
front of a huge chart of the solar system. Phil took his seat, and the
last minute briefing began. It was a routine he knew by heart. He had
gone over and over it a thousand times, and he only half listened now.
He kept thinking of Mary outside, alone by the fence.
The voice of the briefing officer was a dull hum in his ears.
"... And orbit at 18,000-mph. You will then accelerate for the breakaway
to 24,900-mph for five minutes and then free-coast for 116 hours
until—"
Phil asked a few questions about weather and solar conditions. And then
the session was done. They rose and looked at each other, the same
unanswered questions on each man's face. There were forced smiles and
handshakes. They were ready now.
"Phil," the general said, and took him aside.
"Sir?"
"Phil, you're ... you feel all right, don't you, son?"
"Yes, sir. I feel fine. Why?"
"Phil, I've spent nearly every day with you for three years. I know you
better than I know myself in many ways. And I've studied the
psychologist's reports on you carefully. Maybe it's just nervousness,
Phil, but I think there's something wrong. Is there?"
"No, sir. There's nothing wrong," Phil said, but his voice didn't carry
conviction. He reached for a cigarette.
"Phil, if there is anything—anything at all—you know what it might
mean. You've got to be in the best mental and physical condition of your
life tonight. You know better than any man here what that means to our
success. I think there is something more than just natural apprehension
wrong with you. Want to tell me?"
Outside, the take-off zone crawled with men and machines at the base of
the rocket. For ten hours, the final check-outs had been in progress;
and now the men were checking again, on their own time. The thing they
had worked toward for six years was ready to happen, and each one felt
that he was sending just a little bit of himself into the sky. Beyond
the ring of lights and moving men, on the edge of the field, Mary stood.
Her hands moved slowly over the top of the fence, twisting the barbs of
wire. But her eyes were on the ship.
And then they were ready. A small group of excited men came out from the
administration building and moved forward. The check-out crews climbed
into their machines and drove back outside the take-off zone. And,
alone, one man climbed the steel ladder up the side of the
rocket—ninety feet into the air. At the top he waved to the men on the
ground and then disappeared through a small port.
Mary waved to him. "Good-by," she said to herself, but the words stuck
tight in her throat.
The small group at the base of the ship turned and walked back to the
fence. And for an eternity the great ship stood alone, waiting. Then,
from deep inside, a rumble came, increasing in volume to a gigantic roar
that shook the earth and tore at the ears. Slowly, the first manned
rocket to the Moon lifted up and up to the sky.
For a long time after the rocket had become a tiny speck of light in the
heavens, she stood holding her face in her hands and crying softly to
herself. And then she felt the touch of a hand on her arm. She turned.
"Phil! Oh, Phil." She held tightly to him and repeated his name over and
over.
"They wouldn't let me go, Mary," he said finally. "The general would not
let me go."
She looked at him. His face was drawn tight, and there were tears on his
cheeks. "Thank, God," she said. "It doesn't matter, darling. The only
thing that matters is you didn't go."
"You're right, Mary," he said. His voice was low—so low she could
hardly hear him. "It doesn't matter. Nothing matters now." He stood with
his hands at his sides, watching her. And then turned away and walked
toward the car.
THE END | The conclusion would likely not have differed -- Phil would lose his sense of purpose and thus his vitality in a relationship | Phil would have agreed to Mary's wishes, but left to go on the mission without telling here | Phil would eventually come to accept Mary's fear and let go of his dream to go to the moon | Phil would have tried to keep a positive attitude and wait his turn for the next mission | 0 |
23592_VR4F2QJE_3 | What term best describes Phil's personality change from the introduction of the story to the conclusion? | Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Astounding Science
Fiction December 1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence
that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
BREAKAWAY
BY STANLEY GIMBLE
Illustrated by Freas
She surely got her wish ... but there was some question about getting
what she wanted.
Phil Conover pulled the zipper of his flight suit up the front of his
long, thin body and came into the living room. His face, usually serious
and quietly handsome, had an alive, excited look. And the faint lines
around his dark, deep-set eyes were accentuated when he smiled at his
wife.
"All set, honey. How do I look in my monkey suit?"
His wife was sitting stiffly on the flowered couch that was still not
theirs completely. In her fingers she held a cigarette burned down too
far. She said, "You look fine, Phil. You look just right." She managed a
smile. Then she leaned forward and crushed the cigarette in the ash
tray on the maple coffee table and took another from the pack.
He came to her and touched his hands to her soft blond hair, raising her
face until she was looking into his eyes. "You're the most beautiful
girl I know. Did I ever tell you that?"
"Yes, I think so. Yes, I'm sure you did," she said, finishing the
ritual; but her voice broke, and she turned her head away. Phil sat
beside her and put his arm around her small shoulders. He had stopped
smiling.
"Honey, look at me," he said. "It isn't going to be bad. Honestly it
isn't. We know exactly how it will be. If anything could go wrong, they
wouldn't be sending me; you know that. I told you that we've sent five
un-manned ships up and everyone came back without a hitch."
She turned, facing him. There were tears starting in the corners of her
wide, brown eyes, and she brushed them away with her hand.
"Phil, don't go. Please don't. They can send Sammy. Sammy doesn't have a
wife. Can't he go? They'd understand, Phil. Please!" She was holding his
arms tightly with her hands, and the color had drained from her cheeks.
"Mary, you know I can't back out now. How could I? It's been three
years. You know how much I've wanted to be the first man to go. Nothing
would ever be right with me again if I didn't go. Please don't make it
hard." He stopped talking and held her to him and stroked the back of
her head. He could feel her shoulders shaking with quiet sobs. He
released her and stood up.
"I've got to get started, Mary. Will you come to the field with me?"
"Yes, I'll come to say good-by." She paused and dropped her eyes. "Phil,
if you go, I won't be here when you get back—if you get back. I won't
be here because I won't be the wife of a space pilot for the rest of my
life. It isn't the kind of life I bargained for. No matter how much I
love you, I just couldn't take that, Phil. I'm sorry. I guess I'm not
the noble sort of wife."
She finished and took another cigarette from the pack on the coffee
table and put it to her lips. Her hand was trembling as she touched the
lighter to the end of the cigarette and drew deeply. Phil stood watching
her, the excitement completely gone from his eyes.
"I wish you had told me this a long time ago, Mary," Phil said. His
voice was dry and low. "I didn't know you felt this way about it."
"Yes, you did. I told you how I felt. I told you I could never be the
wife of a space pilot. But I don't think I ever really believed it was
possible—not until this morning when you said tonight was the take-off.
It's so stupid to jeopardize everything we've got for a ridiculous
dream!"
He sat down on the edge of the couch and took her hands between his.
"Mary, listen to me," he said. "It isn't a dream. It's real. There's
nothing means anything more to me than you do—you know that. But no
man ever had the chance to do what I'm going to do tonight—no man ever.
If I backed out now for any reason, I'd never be able to look at the sky
again. I'd be through."
She looked at him without seeing him, and there was nothing at all in
her eyes.
"Let's go, if you're still going," she finally said.
They drove through the streets of the small town with its small
bungalows, each alike. There were no trees and very little grass. It was
a new town, a government built town, and it had no personality yet. It
existed only because of the huge ship standing poised in the take-off
zone five miles away in the desert. Its future as a town rested with the
ship, and the town seemed to feel the uncertainty of its future, seemed
ready to stop existing as a town and to give itself back to the desert,
if such was its destiny.
Phil turned the car off the highway onto the rutted dirt road that led
across the sand to the field where the ship waited. In the distance they
could see the beams of the searchlights as they played across the
take-off zone and swept along the top of the high wire fence stretching
out of sight to right and left. At the gate they were stopped by the
guard. He read Phil's pass, shined his flashlight in their faces, and
then saluted. "Good luck, colonel," he said, and shook Phil's hand.
"Thanks, sergeant. I'll be seeing you next week," Phil said, and smiled.
They drove between the rows of wooden buildings that lined the field,
and he parked near the low barbed fence ringing the take-off zone. He
turned off the ignition, and sat quietly for a moment before lighting a
cigarette. Then he looked at his wife. She was staring through the
windshield at the rocket two hundred yards away. Its smooth polished
surface gleamed in the spotlight glare, and it sloped up and up until
the eye lost the tip against the stars.
"She's beautiful, Mary. You've never seen her before, have you?"
"No, I've never seen her before," she said. "Hadn't you better go?" Her
voice was strained and she held her hands closed tightly in her lap.
"Please go now, Phil," she said.
He leaned toward her and touched her cheek. Then she was in his arms,
her head buried against his shoulder.
"Good-by, darling," she said.
"Wish me luck, Mary?" he asked.
"Yes, good luck, Phil," she said. He opened the car door and got out.
The noise of men and machines scurrying around the ship broke the spell
of the rocket waiting silently for flight.
"Mary, I—" he began, and then turned and strode toward the
administration building without looking back.
Inside the building it was like a locker room before the big game. The
tension stood alone, and each man had the same happy, excited look that
Phil had worn earlier. When he came into the room, the noise and bustle
stopped. They turned as one man toward him, and General Small came up to
him and took his hand.
"Hello, Phil. We were beginning to think you weren't coming. You all
set, son?"
"Yes, sir, I'm all set, I guess," Phil said.
"I'd like you to meet the Secretary of Defense, Phil. He's over here by
the radar."
As they crossed the room, familiar faces smiled, and each man shook his
hand or touched his arm. He saw Sammy, alone, by the coffee urn. Sammy
waved to him, but he didn't smile. Phil wanted to talk to him, to say
something; but there was nothing to be said now. Sammy's turn would come
later.
"Mr. Secretary," the general said, "this is Colonel Conover. He'll be
the first man in history to see the other side of the Moon. Colonel—the
Secretary of Defense."
"How do you do, sir. I'm very proud to meet you," Phil said.
"On the contrary, colonel. I'm very proud to meet you. I've been looking
at that ship out there and wondering. I almost wish I were a young man
again. I'd like to be going. It's a thrilling thought—man's first
adventure into the universe. You're lighting a new dawn of history,
colonel. It's a privilege few men have ever had; and those who have had
it didn't realize it at the time. Good luck, and God be with you."
"Thank you, sir. I'm aware of all you say. It frightens me a little."
The general took Phil's arm and they walked to the briefing room. There
were chairs set up for the scientists and Air Force officers directly
connected with the take-off. They were seated now in a semicircle in
front of a huge chart of the solar system. Phil took his seat, and the
last minute briefing began. It was a routine he knew by heart. He had
gone over and over it a thousand times, and he only half listened now.
He kept thinking of Mary outside, alone by the fence.
The voice of the briefing officer was a dull hum in his ears.
"... And orbit at 18,000-mph. You will then accelerate for the breakaway
to 24,900-mph for five minutes and then free-coast for 116 hours
until—"
Phil asked a few questions about weather and solar conditions. And then
the session was done. They rose and looked at each other, the same
unanswered questions on each man's face. There were forced smiles and
handshakes. They were ready now.
"Phil," the general said, and took him aside.
"Sir?"
"Phil, you're ... you feel all right, don't you, son?"
"Yes, sir. I feel fine. Why?"
"Phil, I've spent nearly every day with you for three years. I know you
better than I know myself in many ways. And I've studied the
psychologist's reports on you carefully. Maybe it's just nervousness,
Phil, but I think there's something wrong. Is there?"
"No, sir. There's nothing wrong," Phil said, but his voice didn't carry
conviction. He reached for a cigarette.
"Phil, if there is anything—anything at all—you know what it might
mean. You've got to be in the best mental and physical condition of your
life tonight. You know better than any man here what that means to our
success. I think there is something more than just natural apprehension
wrong with you. Want to tell me?"
Outside, the take-off zone crawled with men and machines at the base of
the rocket. For ten hours, the final check-outs had been in progress;
and now the men were checking again, on their own time. The thing they
had worked toward for six years was ready to happen, and each one felt
that he was sending just a little bit of himself into the sky. Beyond
the ring of lights and moving men, on the edge of the field, Mary stood.
Her hands moved slowly over the top of the fence, twisting the barbs of
wire. But her eyes were on the ship.
And then they were ready. A small group of excited men came out from the
administration building and moved forward. The check-out crews climbed
into their machines and drove back outside the take-off zone. And,
alone, one man climbed the steel ladder up the side of the
rocket—ninety feet into the air. At the top he waved to the men on the
ground and then disappeared through a small port.
Mary waved to him. "Good-by," she said to herself, but the words stuck
tight in her throat.
The small group at the base of the ship turned and walked back to the
fence. And for an eternity the great ship stood alone, waiting. Then,
from deep inside, a rumble came, increasing in volume to a gigantic roar
that shook the earth and tore at the ears. Slowly, the first manned
rocket to the Moon lifted up and up to the sky.
For a long time after the rocket had become a tiny speck of light in the
heavens, she stood holding her face in her hands and crying softly to
herself. And then she felt the touch of a hand on her arm. She turned.
"Phil! Oh, Phil." She held tightly to him and repeated his name over and
over.
"They wouldn't let me go, Mary," he said finally. "The general would not
let me go."
She looked at him. His face was drawn tight, and there were tears on his
cheeks. "Thank, God," she said. "It doesn't matter, darling. The only
thing that matters is you didn't go."
"You're right, Mary," he said. His voice was low—so low she could
hardly hear him. "It doesn't matter. Nothing matters now." He stood with
his hands at his sides, watching her. And then turned away and walked
toward the car.
THE END | Distressed | Delirious | Despondent | Deflated | 3 |