Table of Contents
Moorcock, Michael - The Time Dweller
The Time DwellerA short stories collection by Michael MoorcockVersion 1.0THE TIME DWELLERDUSK HAD COME to the universe, albeit the small universeinhabited by Man. The sun of Earth had dimmed, the moonhad retreated and salt clogged the sluggish oceans, filled therivers that toiled slowly between white, crystalline banks, beneathdarkened, moody skies that slumbered in eternal evening.Of course, in the sun's long life this stage was merely oneinterlude. In perhaps a few thousand years, it would flare tofull splendour again. But for the meantime it kept its lightin close rein, grumbling in its mighty depths and preparingitself for the next step in its evolution.It had taken time in its fading and those few creatures whohad remained on its planets had managed to adapt. Among themwas Man, indefatigable; undeserving, really, considering thelengths he had gone to, in previous epochs, to dispose of him-self. But here he was, in his small universe consisting of oneplanet without even the satellite which had slid away into spacelong since and, in its passing, left legends on his lips.Brown clouds, brown light, brown rocks and brown oceanflecked with white. A pale rider on a pale beast thumpingalong the shore, the dry taste of ocean salt in his mouth, thestink of a dead oozer in his nostrils.His name was the Scar-faced Brooder, son of the Sleepy-eyed Smiler, his father and the Pinch-cheeked Worrier, hismother. The seal-beast he rode was called Urge. Its glossy coatwas still sleek with the salt-rain that had recently ceased, itssnout pointed eagerly forward and its two strong leg-finsthwacked the encrusted shore as it galloped along, dragging itsrazor-edged tail with scant effort. The Scar-faced Brooder wassupported on his steed's sloping back by a built-up saddle ofpolished silicon that flashed whenever it reflected the salt-patches studding the ground like worn teeth. In his head, heldat its butt by a stirrup grip, was his long gun, the piercer withan everlasting ruby as its life. He was dressed in sealskin dyedin sombre rust-red and dark yellow.Behind him, the Scar-faced Brooder heard the sound ofanother rider, one whom he had tried to avoid since morning.Now, as evening quietly flowed brown and misty into blacknight, she still followed, He turned his calm face to look, hismouth tight and white as the scar which rose from its corner tofollow his left cheek-bone. She was in the distance, still, butgaining.He increased his speed.Brown clouds boiled low like foam across the dark sand ofthe flat, and their seals slapped loudly over the damp shore asshe neared him.He came to a pool of salt-thick water and Urge splashed intoit. It was warm. Still she followed him, even into the water, sothat he turned his steed and waited, half-trembling, until sherode up, a tall, well-formed woman with light brown hair longand loose in the breeze.' Dearest Tall Laugher,' he told his sister, ' for me there isno amusement in this game.'Frowning, she smiled.He pressed his point, disturbed, his calm face earnest in thefading brown light that was all the clouds would let pass.' I wish to ride alone.''Where would you go, alone, when together we might becarried to more exotic adventure ?'He paused, unwilling and unable to answer.' Will you come back?'' I would prefer not to,'A cold, silent wind began to buffet them as it came in sud-denly from the sea. Urge moved nervously.' You fear what the Chronarch might do?''The Chronarch has no love for me-but neither has hehatred. He would prefer me gone from Lanjis Liho, to cross thegreat salt plains of the west and seek my fortune in the landof fronds. He would not trust me with a small part of theFuture, as you know, nor give a fraction of the Past into mysafekeeping. I go to shape my own destiny!'' So - you sulk!' she cried as the wind began to mewl.' Yousulk because the Chronarch delegates no honours. Meanwhile,your loving sister aches and is miserable.''Marry the Big-brained Boaster! He has trust of Past andFuture both!'He forced his restless seal-beast through the thick water andinto the night. As it moved, he reached into the saddle sheathand took out his torch to light his way. He depressed its gripand it blazed out, illuminating the surrounding beach for severalyards around. Turning, he saw her for a moment in the circle oflight, motionless, her eyes aghast as if he had betrayed her.Oh, I am lonely now, he thought, as the wind blew cold andstrong against his body.He headed inland, over the salt-rocks, towards the west. Herode all night until his eyes were heavy with tiredness, but stillhe rode, away from Lanjis Liho where Chronarch, Lord ofTime, ruled past and present and watched the future come,away from family, home and city, his heart racked with thestrain of the breaking, his mind fevered fire and his body allstiff from the demands he made of it.Into the night, into the west, with his torch burning in hissaddle and loyal Urge responding to his affectionate whisper-ing. To the west, until dawn came slowly up from behind himand covered the barren land with soft light.A little further through the morning he heard a sound as ofcloth flapping in the wind and when he turned his head he sawa green tent pitched beside a shallow crevasse, its front flapdancing. He readied his long piercer and halted Urge.Drawn out, perhaps, by the noise of the seal-beast's move-ment, a man's head poked from the tent like a tortoise emerg-ing from the recesses of its shell. He had a beak of a nose anda fish-like pecker of a mouth, his large eyes were heavy-liddedand a tight-fitting hood hid hair and neck.' Aha,' said the Scar-faced Brooder in recognition.' Hmm,' said the Hooknosed Wanderer, also recognizing themounted man confronting him. 'You are some distance fromLanjis Liho. Where are you bound?'' For the land of fronds.'He resheathed his piercer and clambered down from thehigh saddle. He passed the tent, its occupant's head craninground to follow him and stared into the crevasse. It had beenwidened and deepened by human tools, revealing pieces ofancient wreckage.' What's this?'' Nothing but the remains of a crashed spaceship,' repliedthe Hooknosed Wanderer in such obvious disappointment thathe could not have been lying. ' My metal diviner found it andI had hoped for a capsule with books or film.'' There were never many of those. I'd say they had all beengathered by now.'' That's my belief, too, but one hopes. Have you break-fasted?'' No. Thank you.'The hooded head withdrew into the tent and a thin handheld back the flap. The Scar-faced Brooder bent and enteredthe cluttered tent. There was a great deal of equipment therein;the Hooknosed Wanderer's livelihood, for he sustained himselfby bartering some of the objects he found with his metal divinerand other instruments.' Apparently, you have no riding animal,' said the Scar-facedBrooder as he sat down and crossed his legs between a softbundle and an angular statuette of steel and concrete.'It was necessary to abandon her when my water wasexhausted and I could find none to replace it. That is whyI was heading for the sea. I am exceedingly thirsty, am suffer-ing from salt-deficiency since I have no liking for the salt whichgrows in these parts.'' I have plenty in my saddle barrel,' he said. ' Help yourself- good salt water, slightly diluted with fresh, if that suits yourtaste.' He leant back on the bundle as the Wanderer, noddingsharply, scrambled up, clasping.a canteen and left the tent.He returned smiling. ' Thanks. I can last for several days,now.' He pushed aside his clutter of antiques, discovering asmall stove. He activated it, placed a pan on top and beganfrying the leg-fish he had trapped recently. 'Which city was your destination. Brooder? Only two are ineasy reach from here-and both lie still many leagues hence.Is it Barbart or Piorha?'' Barbart in the land of fronds, I think, for I should like tosee green vegetation instead of grey or brown. And the ancientplaces thereabouts have, I must admit, romantic connotationsfor me. I should like to go and wallow in racial memory, sensethe danger of uncontrolled Past, insignificant Present and ran-dom Future...'' Some feel it as that,' the Wanderer smiled, shuffling theleg-fish on to plates. ' Especially those from Lanjis Liho wherethe Chronarchy holds sway. But remember, much will be inyour mind. You may see Barbart and the land of fronds, butits significance will be decided by you, not by it. Try to do asI do - make no judgments or descriptions of this world of ours.Do that, and it will treat you better.'' Your words seem wise, Wanderer, but I have no precedentsby which to judge them. Perhaps when I have placed some ofthe Future in the Past, I will know.'' You seem tired,' said the Wanderer when they were finishedeating,' would you like to sleep?''I would. Thanks.' And while the Hooknosed Wandererwent about his business, the Brooder slept.He rose in the mellow afternoon, roused Urge who had takenadvantage of his master's slumber to rest also, and wished theWanderer goodbye.' May your blood stay thick,' said the Wanderer formally,' and your mind remain open.'He rode away and by dusk had come to the moss whichwas primarily grey and brown, but tinted in places with patchesof light green. He took out his torch and fixed it in its saddlebracket, unwilling to sleep at night because of the potentialdanger of predatory life.Once the light from his torch showed him a school ofoozers, moving at right angles to his path. They were far inlandfor their kind, these great white slug-creatures that raised theirheads to observe him. He felt he could hear them sniffing at hisbody salt as perhaps their leech ancestors had sniffed out theblood of his own forefathers. Urge, without prompting, increasedhis speed.As he left them, he felt that the oozers represented the truenative of Earth now. Man's place was no longer easy to define,but it seemed that he had been superseded. By remaining aliveon the salt-heavy Earth he was outstaying his welcome. If therewas another home for Man, it did not lie here but in someother region; perhaps not even the region of space at all but indimensions where natural evolution could not affect him.Brooding, as was his bent, he continued to ride for Barbartand, by the following day, had reached the delicate frondforests that waved golden green in the soft sunlight, all silenceand sweet scent. Urge's bounding gait became almost merryas they fled over the cushions of moss between the shadedspaces left by the web-thin fronds waving and flowing in thegusts of air which occasionally swept the forest.He dismounted soon and lay back on a bank of comfortablemoss, breathing the scented breeze in luxurious self-indulgence.His mind began to receive disjointed images, he heard hissister's voice, the sonorous tones of the Chronarch denying hima function in the House of Time-a function which he hadexpected as of right, for had not his grand-uncle been theprevious Chronarch? He saw the twisting many dimensionedTower of Time, that wonder-work of an ancient architect withits colours and strange, moving angles and curves. And then heslept.When he awoke it was night and Urge was hooting at himto wake. He got up sleepily and hauled himself into the saddle,settled himself, reached for his torch and adjusting it rodethrough what seemed to be a network of black and stirringthreads that were the fronds seen in the cold torchlight.The next morning he could see the low-roofed houses ofBarbart lying in a valley walled by gentle hills. High abovethe roofs, a great contrivance of burnished brass glowered likerich red gold. He speculated momentarily upon its function.Now a road became evident, a hard track winding amongthe moss dimes and leading towards the city. As he followedit he heard the muffled thud of a rider approaching and,somewhat wary for he knew little of Barbart or its inhabitants,reined in Urge, his piercer ready.Riding towards him on a heavy old walrus came a young man,long-haired and pleasant-featured in a jerkin of light bluethat matched his eyes. He stopped the walrus and looked quizzi-cally at the Scar-faced Brooder.' Stranger,' he said cheerfully, ' it is a pleasant morning.''Yes it is-and a pleasant land you dwell in. Is that cityBarbart?''Barbart, certainly. There's none other hereabouts. Fromwhere are you?'' From Lanjis Liho by the sea.'' I had the inkling that men from Lanjis Liho never travelledfar.'' I am the first. My name is the Scar-faced Brooder.''Mine is Domm and I welcome you to Barbart. I wouldescort you there save for the fact that I have a mission frommy mother to seek herbs among the fronds. I am already late,I fear. What time is it?'' Time? Why the present, of course.'' Ha! Ha! But the hour - what is that?''What is "the hour"?' asked the Brooder, greatly puzzled.' That's my question.'' I am afraid your local vernacular is beyond me,' said theBrooder politely, but nonplussed. The lad's question had beenstrange to begin with, but now it had become incomprehen-sible.' No matter,' Domm decided with a smile.' I have heard youpeople of Lanjis Liho have some peculiar customs. I will notdelay you. Follow the road and you should be in Barbart in lessthan an hour.'' Hour' - the word again. Was it some division of the leagueused here? He gave up wondering and wished the youth ' thickblood' as he rode on.The mosaiced buildings of Barbart were built in orderlygeometric patterns about the central quadrangle in which laythe towering machine of burnished brass with its ridges andknobs and curlicues. Set in the centre of the machine was agreat round plaque, divided into twelve units with each unit oftwelve divided into a further five units. From the centre arosetwo pointers, one shorter than the other and the Scar-facedBrooder saw them move slowly. As he rode through Barbart, henoticed that facsimiles of this object were everywhere and hejudged, at last, that it was some holy object or heraldic device.Barbart seemed a pleasant place, though with a somewhatrestless atmosphere epitomized by the frantic market-place wheremen and women rushed from stall to stall shouting at oneanother, tugging at bales of bright cloth, fingering salt-freefruits and vegetables, pawing meats and confectioneries amidthe constant babble of the vendors crying their wares.Enjoying the scene, the Scar-faced Brooder led his seal-beastthrough the square and discovered a tavern in one of the sideplazas. The plaza itself contained a small fountain in its centreand benches and tables had been placed close by outside thetavern. The Brooder seated himself upon one of these and gave' his order to the fat girl who came to ask it.'Beer?' she said, folding her plump, brown arms over herred bodice. 'We have only a little and it is expensive. Thefermented peach juice is. cheaper.''Then bring me that,' he said pleasantly and turned towatch the thin fountain water, noting that it smelt of brinehardly at all.Hearing, perhaps, a strange accent, a man emerged fromthe shadowy doorway of the tavern and, tankard in hand, stoodlooking down at the Scar-faced Brooder, an amiable expressionon his face.' Where are you from, traveller?' he asked.The Brooder told him and the Barbartian seemed surprised.He seated himself on another bench.' You are the second visitor from strange parts we have hadhere in a week. The other was an emissary from Moon. Theyhave changed much, those Moonites, you know. Tall, they are,and thin as a frond with aesthetic faces. They dress in cloth ofmetal. He told us he had sailed space for many weeks to reachus...'At this second reference to the unfamiliar word ' week', theBrooder turned his head to look at the Barbartian. ' Forgiveme,' he said,' but as a stranger I am curious at certain words Ihave heard here. What would you mean by " week " exactly?'' Why - a week - seven days - what else?'The Brooder laughed apologetically. 'There you are, yousee. Another word - days. What is a days?'The Barbartian scratched his head, a wry expression on hisface. He was a middle-aged man with a slight stoop, dressedin a robe of yellow cloth. He put down his tankard and raisedhis hand. ' Come with me and I will do my best to show you.'' That would please me greatly,' said the Brooder gratefully.He finished his wine and called for the girl. When she appearedhe asked her to take care of his steed and to make him up a bedsince he would be staying through the next darkness.The Barbartian introduced himself as Mokof, took theBrooder's arm and led him through the series of squares,triangles and circles formed by the buildings, to come at lengthto the great central plaza and stare up at the pulsing, monstrousmachine of burnished bronze.' This machine supplies the-city with its life,' Mokof informedhim.' And also regulates our lives.' He pointed at the disc whichthe Brooder had noted earlier. ' Do you know what that is, myfriend?'' No. I am afraid I do not. Could you explain?'' It's a clock. It measures the hours of the day,' he broke off,noting the Brooder's puzzlement. ' That is to say it measurestime.''Ah! I am with you at last. But a strange device, surely,for it cannot measure a great deal of time with that littlecircular dial. How does it note the flow...?'' We call a period of sunlight" day " and a period of darkness" night." We divide each into twelve hours -''Then the period of sunlight and the period of darknessare equal? I had thought...''No, we call them equal for convenience, since they vary.The twelve divisions are called hours. When the hands reachtwelve, they begin to count around again...''Fantastic!' the Brooder was astounded. 'You mean yourecycle the same period of time round and round again. Amarvellous idea. Wonderful! I had not thought it possible.''Not exactly,' Mokof said patiently. 'However, the hoursare divided into sixty units. These are called minutes. Theminutes are also divided into sixty units, each unit is called asecond. The seconds are...''Stop! Stop! I am confounded, bewildered, dazzled! Howdo you control the flow of time that you can thus manipulateit at will? You must tell me. The Chronarch in Lanjis Lihowould be overawed to learn of your discoveries!''You fail to understand, my friend. We do not control time.If anything, it controls us. We simply measure it.''You don't control...but if that's so why- ?' The Brooderbroke off, unable to see the logic of the Barbartian's words.'You tell me you recycle a given period of time which youdivided into twelve. And yet you then tell me you recycle ashorter period and then an even shorter period. It would soonbecome apparent if this were true, for you would be performingthe same action over and over again and I see you are not. Or,if you were using the same time without being in its power,the sun would cease to move across the sky and I see it stillmoves. Given that you can release yourself from the influence oftime, why am I not conscious of it since that instrument,' hepointed at the dock, 'exerts its influence over the entire city.Or, again, if it is a natural talent, why are we in Lanjis Liho sobusily concerned with categorizing and investigating ourresearches into the flow if you have mastered it so completely?'A broad smile crossed the face of Mokof. He shook his head.'I told you-we have no mastery over it. The instrumentmerely tells us what time it is.'' That is ridiculous,' the Brooder said, dazed. His brain foughtto retain its sanity. ' There is only the present. Your words areillogical!'Mokof stared at his face in concern. ' Are you unwell?'' I'm well enough. Thank you for the trouble you have taken,I will return to the tavern now, before I lose all hold of sanity!' The clutter in his head was too much. Mokof made a state-ment and then denied it in the same breath. He decided hewould cogitate it over a meal.When he reached the tavern he found the door closed andno amount of banging could get those inside to open it. Henoticed that his saddle and saddle-bags were resting outsideand he knew he had some food in one of the bags, so he sat onthe bench and began to munch on a large hunk of bread.Suddenly, from above him, he heard a cry and looking up hesaw an old woman's head regarding him from a top-storeywindow.' Ah!' she cried.' Aah! What are you doing?'' Why, eating this piece of bread, madame,' he said in sur-prise.' Filthy!' she shrieked.' Filthy, immoral pig!''Really, I fail to-''Watch! Watch!' the old woman cried from the window,Very swiftly, three armed men came running into the plaza.They screwed up their faces in disgust when they saw the Scar-faced Brooder.'A disgusting exhibitionist as well as a pervert!' said theleader.They seized the startled Brooder.' What's happening?' he gasped. ' What have I done?'' Ask the judge,' snarled one of his captors and they hauledhim towards the central plaza and took him to a tall housewhich appeared to be their headquarters.There he was flung into a cell and they went away.An overdressed youth in the next cell said with a grin:' Greetings, stranger. What's your offence?"' I have no idea,' said the Brooder. ' I merely sat down tohave my lunch when, all at once...'' Your lunch? But it is not lunch-time for another tenminutes!'' Lunch-time. You mean you set aside a special period toeat — oh, this is too much for me.'The overdressed youth drew away from the bars and wentto the other side of his cell, his nose wrinkling in disgust.' Ugh-you deserve the maximum penalty for a crime like that!"Sadly puzzled, the Brooder sat down on his bench, com-pletely mystified and hopeless. Evidently the strange customsof these people were connected with their clock which seemedto be a virtual deity to them. If the hands did not point toa certain figure when you did something, then that act becamean offence. He wondered what the maximum penalty would be.Very much later, the guards came to him and made him walkthrough a series of corridors and into a room where a man ina long purple gown wearing a metallic mask was seated at acarved table. The guards made the Brooder sit before the manand then they went and stood by the door.The masked man said in a sonorous voice: ' You have beenaccused of eating outside the proper hour and of doing it in apublic place for all to see. A serious charge. What is yourdefence?'' Only that I am a stranger and do not understand yourcustoms,' said the Brooder.' A poor excuse. Where are you from?'' From Lanjis Liho by the sea.'' I have heard rumours of the immoralities practised there.You will learn that you cannot bring your filthy habits to anothercity and hope to continue with them. I will be lenient withyou, however and sentence you to one year in the antiquemines.'' But it is unjust!''Unjust, is it? Watch your tongue or I will extend thesentence!'Depressed and without hope, the Brooder allowed the guardsto take him back to his cell.The night passed and morning came and then the guardsarrived. ' Get up,' said the leader,' the judge wishes to see youagain!'' Does he intend to increase my sentence, after all?''Ask him.'The judge was tapping his desk nervously as the Brooderand his guards entered.' You know of machines in Lanjis Liho, do you not? Youhave some strange ones I've heard. Do you wish to be released?'' I wish to be released, of course. Yes, we know something ofmachines, but...'' Our Great Regulator is out of control. I would not be sur-prised if your crime did not provide the shock which caused itto behave erratically. Something has gone wrong with its lifecore and we may have to evacuate Barbart if it cannot beadjusted. We have forgotten our old knowledge of machines.If you adjust the Great Regulator, we shall let you go. Withoutit, we do not know when to sleep, eat or perform any of ourother functions. We shall go mad if we lose its guidance!'Scarcely understanding the rest of the judge's statement, theBrooder heard only the fact that he was to be released if hemended their machine. On the other hand, he had left LanjisLiho for the very reason that the Chronarch would not givehim trust of any instruments. He had little experience, yet, ifit meant his release, he would try.When he arrived again in the central plaza, he noted that themachine of burnished bronze - the Great Regulator, they calledit - was making a peculiar grumbling noise and shaking mightily.Around it, trembling in unison, stood a dozen old men, wavingtheir hands.' Here is the man from Lanjis Liho!' called the guard. Theylooked anxiously at the Scar-faced Brooder.' The life-core. It must certainly be the life-core,' said anancient, tugging at his jerkin.'Let me see,' said the Scar-faced Brooder, not at all sure thathe could be of help,They wound off several of the machine's outer plates and hestared through thick glass and looked at the luminous life-core.He had seen them before and knew a little about them. He knewenough, certainly/to understand that this should not be glow-ing bright purple and showering particles with such constancy.He knew, suddenly, that in an exceedingly short space oftime - one of these people's ' minutes', perhaps - the life-corewould reach a critical state, it would swell and burst from itsconfines and its radiation would destroy everything living. But,he ignored their shouts as he became lost in the problem, hewould need considerably longer than that if he was to deal withit.Soon, he realized helplessly, they would all be dead.He turned to tell them this, and then it struck him. Whycould not he, as he had guessed these citizens capable of,recycle that moment, personally?Since the previous day, his mind had been trying to see thelogic in what Mokof had told him and, using parts of thingsthe Chronarch had told him, he had constructed an idea of whatthe process must be like.Experimentally, he eased himself backwards in time. Yes, itworked. The core was now as he had first seen it.He had never thought of doing this before, but now he sawthat it was easy, requiring merely a degree of concentration.He was grateful for the Barbartians, with their weird timedevice, for giving him the idea.All he had to do was to remember what the Chronarch hadtaught him about the nature of time-how it constantly andimperceptibly to ordinary beings re-formed its constituents togive it the apparently forward movement which affected, sobroadly, the organization of matter.Shifting himself into the time-area he had occupied a shortwhile before, he began to study the temporal co-ordinates of thelife-core. He could think of no physical means of stopping it,but if he could, in some manner, lock it in time, it would thencease to be a danger. But he would still have to work speedily,since, sooner or later, the temporal structure would fail to holdand he would sweep onwards, losing time continuously., untilhe was brought to the moment when the life-core began tospread its radiation.Again and again he let himself drift up almost to the ultimatemoment, shifting himself backwards, losing a few grains of timewith every shift.Then, at last, he understood the temporal construction of thecore, With an effort of will he reduced the temporal co-ordinatesto zero. It could not progress through time. It Was frozen andno longer a danger.He fell back into his normal, time-stream, his body wet withsweat. They crowded about him, questioning in shrill, excitedvoices.' What have you done? What have you done? Are wesafe?'' You are safe,' he said.They seized him, thanking him with generous words, hisearlier crime forgotten.' You must be rewarded.'But he scarcely heard them, as they bore him back to thejudge, for he was brooding on what he had just accomplished.As a man might step backwards to regain lost ground, hehad stepped backwards to regain lost time. He had his reward.He was most grateful to these people now, for with their weirdideas about time, they had shown him that it was possible toexist at will in a point in time-just as it was possible toexist in a point in space. It was, he realized, merely a matter ofknowing such a thing was possible. Then it became easy.The judge had doffed his mask and smiled his gratitude.' The wise men tell me that you worked a miracle. They sawyour body flickering like a candle flame, disappearing andappearing constantly. How did you achieve this?'He spread his hands: ' It was extraordinarily simple. UntilI came to Barbart and saw the thing you call clock, I did notrealize the possibilities of moving through time as I could movethrough space. It seemed to me that since you appeared capableof recycling the same period of time, I could do likewise. ThisI did. Then I studied the life-core and saw that, by manipula-tion of its time structure, I could fix it in a certain point, thusarresting its progress. So simple-and yet it might never haveoccurred to me if I had not come here.'The judge passed a hand over his puzzled eyes. 'Ah...' hesaid.' And now,' the Brooder said cheerfully, ' I thank you foryour hospitality. I intend to leave Barbart immediately, sinceI shall obviously never understand your customs. I return toLanjis Liho to tell the Chronarch of my discoveries. Farewell.'He left the court-room, crossed the plaza through crowds ofgrateful citizens, and was soon saddling Urge and riding awayfrom Barbart in the land of fronds.Two days later he came upon the Hooknosed Wanderergrubbing in a ditch he had just dug.' Greetings, Wanderer,' he called from the saddle.The Wanderer looked up, wiping salty earth from his face.' Oh, 'tis you, Brooder. I thought you had decided to journeyto the land of fronds.''I did. I went to Barbart and there-' briefly the Brooderexplained what had happened.' Aha,' nodded the Wanderer. ' So the Chronarch is edu-cating his people well, after all. I frankly considered what hewas doing impossible. But you have proved me wrong.'' What do you mean?'' I think I can tell you. Come into my tent and drink somewine.'' Willingly,' the Brooder said, dismounting.From a plastic flask, the Wanderer poured wine into twocut-glass goblets.' Lanjis Liho,' he said, ' was founded in ancient times as anexperimental village where new-born children were taken andeducated according to the teachings of a certain philosophercalled Rashin. Rashin regarded people's attitude towards Timeas being imposed on their consciousness by their method ofrecording and measuring it-by the state of mind which said"the past is the past and cannot be changed," " we cannot knowwhat the future holds" and so forth; Our minds, he decided,were biased and while we continued to think in this way weshould never be free of the shackles of time. It was, he felt, themost necessary shackle to cast off. He said, for instance thatwhen the temperature becomes too hot, a man devises a meansof keeping himself cool. When it rains he enters a shelter ordevises a shelter he can transport with him. If he comes to ariver, he builds a bridge, or if to the sea-a boat. Physicaldifficulties of a certain intensity can be overcome in a physicalway. But what if the difficulties intensify to the degree wherephysical means can no longer work against them?'The Brooder shrugged. 'We perish-or find some meansother than physical to combat them.'' Exactly. Rashin said that if Time moves too swiftly for aman to accomplish what he desires he accepts the fact passively.Rashin thought that with re-education Man might rid himselfof his reconception and take as easily to adjusting Time to hisrequirements as he adjusts nature. A non-physical means yousee.'' I think I understand a little of what you mean,' said theScar-faced Brooder. ' But why is it necessary, I wonder?' Thequestion was rhetorical, but the Wanderer chose to answer.' On this world,' he said, ' we must admit it, Man is ananachronism. He has adapted to a degree but not sufficientlyto the point where he could sustain himself without artifice.The planet has never been particularly suitable for him, ofcourse, but it has never been so inhospitable as now.' The Chronarchy, as I have said, is a conscious experiment.Time and Matter are both ideas. Matter makes a more im-mediate impression on Man, but Time's effects are longer last-ing. Therefore the Chronarchy, down the ages, has sought toeducate its people into thinking of Time in a similar way asthey think of Matter. In this way it has been possible to producea science of time, like the science of physics. But it has onlybeen possible to study time until now - not manipulate it.' We may soon master Time as we once mastered the atom.And our mastery will give us far greater freedom than did ournuclear science. Time may be explored as our ancestors ex-plored space. Your descendants, Scar-faced Brooder, shall beheir to continents of time as we have continents of space. Theyshall travel about in time, the old view of Past, Present andFuture abolished. Even now you regard these in an entirelydifferent light-merely as convenient classifications for thestudy of Time.'' That is true," he nodded, ' I had never considered themanything else. But now I am unsure what to do, for I fled toBarbart originally to settle and forget Lanjis Liho where I wentunhonoured.'The Wanderer smiled a little. ' I do not think you will gounhonoured now, my friend,' he said.The Brooder saw the point and smiled also. ' Perhaps not,'he agreed.The Wanderer sipped his wine. ' Your journeyings in spaceare all but ended, anyway. For space is becoming increasinglyhostile to Man and will soon refuse to sustain him, howevermuch he adapts physically. You and your like must enter thenew dimensions you've discovered and dwell there. Go backto Lanjis Liho of your birth and tell the Chronarch whatyou did In Barbart, show him what you did and he will wel-come you. Your reason for leaving no longer exists. You arethe first of the Time Dwellers and I salute you as the salva-tion of mankind.' The Wanderer drained his glass.Somewhat overwhelmed by this speech, the Brooder badethe Wanderer farewell and thick blood, left the tent andclimbed upon the back of Urge.The Wanderer stood beside the tent, smiling at him. ' Oneday you must tell me how you did it,' he said.' It is such a simple thing - you just live through the sameperiod of time instead of different ones. Perhaps this is justthe start and soon I will be able to explore further abroad-or is the word "a-time"? But now I will be off for I'mimpatient to tell my news to the Chronarch!'The Wanderer watched him ride away, feeling a trifle likethe last dinosaur must have felt so many millions of yearsbefore.Once again, the Scar-faced Brooder rode along the seashore,staring over the sluggish waves at the brown sky beyond.Salt shone everywhere across the land, perhaps heraldingan age where crystalline life-forms would develop in conditionsabsolutely unsuitable for animal life as he knew it.Yes, the period when Man must change his environmentradically had come, if Man were to survive at all.The Earth would cease to support him soon, the sun ceaseto warm him. He had the choice of living for a while in artificialconditions such as the Moonites already did, or of completelychanging his environment - from a physical one to a temporalone!Definitely, the latter was the better choice. As the skydarkened over the sea, he took out his torch, depressed thehandle and sent a great blaze of light spreading across theinhospitable Earth.The first of the Time Dwellers goaded his seal-beast intoa faster pace, impatient to tell the Chronarch his welcome news,impatient to begin the exploration of a new environment.ESCAPE FROM EVENINGON MOON it was white like ice. An endless series of blocksand spikes, like an ancient cubist painting. But white; glaring,though the sun was almost dead, a red featureless disc in thedark sky.In his artificial cavern, full of synthetic, meaningless thingsthat contained no mythology or mood, Pepin Hunchback bentover his book so that the tears from his eyes fell upon theplastic pages and lay there glistening.Of all the things that the glass cavern contained - pumpsand pipes and flinching dials-only Pepin had warmth. Histwisted body was a-throb with life and large emotions. Hisimagination was alive and active as each word in the booksparked off great chords of yearning within him. His narrowface, utterly pale save for the bright black eyes, was intense.His clumsy hands moved to turn the pages. He was dressed,as were all his fellow Moonites, in cloth-of-metal which, witha helmet fitted to its hauberk, protected his life from an im-possibility - the threat of the System collapsing.The System was Moon's imitation of life. It aped an olderEarth than that which now existed far away, barely visible inspace. It aped its plants and its animals and its elements-forthe System was Moon's artificial ecology. Moon was a planet ofgoodish size-had been for centuries since it had ceased to beEarth's satellite and had drifted into the asteroids and attractedmany of them to itself.And Pepin hated the System for what it was. Pepin was athrow-back, unsuited to his present Time or Space. Pepin'slife was not the System, for with just that he would have died.It was his imagination, his sorrow and his ambition, fed by hisfew old books.He read the familiar pages and realized again that the intel-lect had triumphed over the spirit, and both had conqueredemotion. The men of Moon, at least, had become as barren astheir accident of a planet.Pepin knew much of Earth as his people's traders had des-cribed it. Knew that it was changing and was no longer asit was when his books were written. Yet still he yearned to gothere and see if he could find some trace of what he needed -though he would only know what he needed when he found it.For some time he had planned to visit Earth and his peoplewere willing that he should go, if he did not return, for he dis-comfited them. His name-his true name-was on the list,close to the top. Soon a ship would be ready for him. His truename was P Karr.Now he thought of the ship and decided to go to the list. Hewent to the list infrequently for in his atavism he was supersti-tious and believed completely that the more he looked at it, theless chance there would be of his name being at the top.Pepin jerked his body off his stool and slammed the bookshut. On the hushed world of Moon, he made as much noiseas he could.He limped, more evidently high-shouldered now that he wasmoving, towards the door section of his dome. He took downhis helmet and fitted it on to his shoulders, activated the doorsection, and crossed the sharp, bright ground covering the dis-tance between himself and the city. By choice, and to the reliefof his people, he lived, outside the city.On the surface, there was little to see of the city. Merelya storey or two, perhaps three in places. All the prominenceswere square and transparent, to absorb as much energy fromthe waning sun as possible.Another door section in one of the buildings opened to himand he went inside, hardly realizing that he had left the surface.He entered a funnel containing a disc-shaped platform and theplatform began to fall downwards, slowing as it reached thebottom.Here the light was completely artificial and the walls were ofmetal - plain, undecorated tubes twice the height of a tall, thinMoonite. Pepin was not typical of his race.He limped along this tube for a short distance, until the floorbegan to move. He let it carry him through the labyrinthineintestines of the city until he came to the hall he wanted.The hall was quite unpopulated until Pepin entered. It hada domed ceiling and was covered by screens, charts, indicators,conveying every item of information which a citizen mightrequire to know in the day-to-day life of the city. Pepin wentto the list, craning his head to look at it. He started at thebottom and followed the list of names up.His name was at the top. He must go immediately to ShipController and apply for his ship. If he did not, his namewould go back to the bottom, according to regulations.As he turned to leave the hall, another Moonite entered.His helmet was flung back, lying against his shoulder blades.His golden hair was long and his thin face smiled.This was G Nak, the greatest of the trader-pilots, and hedid not need to look at the list, for he had a permanent shipof his own. The population of Moon was small, and G Nakknew Pepin as well as anyone.He stopped sharply, arms akimbo, and contemplated the list.' So you journey to Earth, P Karr. You will find it decadentand unpleasant. Take plenty of food-you will not like theirsalty grub.'' Thank you,' bobbed Pepin as he left.As if mutated by their constant contact with the mother planet,only the ships of Moon had character. They were burnished andpatterned with fancifully wrought images. Ancient animalsprowled along their hulls, gargoyles glowered from indentationscreated by heavily moulded figures of famous men, tentacledhands curled themselves over the curves like the arms ofwrecked sailors clinging to spars, or else like the protectivehands of a she-baboon about her young. The ships were soheavily decorated that in the light they looked like frozen lava,all lumps and gulleys in obsidian or brass.Pepin, luggage on back, paused before he put foot on theshort, moving ramp which would deliver him to the entranceof his allotted ship. He allowed himself time to study the raisedimages, then stepped upon the ramp and was whisked up to theairlock which opened for him.The inside of the ship was very cramped and consistedmainly of cargo space. The cargo, which would go with Pepinand be delivered to an Earth-city called Barbart, was alreadystowed. Pepin lowered himself on to the couch where he wouldspend the journey. After Pepin and cargo had been delivered,the ship would return, as it had left, automatically.A whisper of noise, hushed like all Moon sounds, warnedhim that the ship was about to take-off. He braced himself;felt no sensation as the ship rose on course for Earth. The bright ship sped through the soft darks of weary space,a bold spark intruding the blackness. It flickered along its pathuntil at length Pepin's screen picked up the growing globe ofEarth-brown, yellow and white, turning slowly in the scantwarmth of the dormant sun.The planet seemed vaguely unreal, perhaps because it wasimperfectly focused on the screen, yet the stuff of space seemedto drift through it as if the planet's very fabric was worn thin.Pepin felt the hard metal rocket would not stop when it reachedEarth, but tear through it easily and continue on into emptyspace where more vital stars pulsed. At one time, Pepin knew,the universe had been even thicker with bright stars, and evenhis own sun had possessed more than the three planets thatnow circled it.Silently, the ship went into orbit, easing itself by stagesinto the atmosphere, down through the clear, purple sky, downinto the brown cloud-banks that hung close to the ground,through the clouds until it had levelled out again and movedwith decreasing speed across sluggish seas and wastes of darkyellow, brown and black, studded by great white patches of salt.Much further inland, grey moss became apparent, and laterthe waving light green of the fragile fronds that marked whatEarth's inhabitants called the Land of Fronds. In the Land ofFronds were two principal cities, two towns and a village. Bar-bart, the trading port between Moon and Earth, lay in a gentlevalley. The hills, were covered in fronds that from above seemedlike a rolling sea.- more sea-like than the salt-heavy waters farto the east.Barbart was laid out precisely, in quadrangles, triangles andstar-shaped plazas. The roofs of the low houses were of darkgreen and brick-brown, yet seemed brightly coloured com-pared with their surroundings. The ship passed over the hugered-gold machine which rose high above the other buildings.This, Pepin knew, was called the Great Regulator and suppliednecessary power to the city. Behind the Great Regulator, in thecity's central plaza, was a cradlepad ready for his ship. Ithovered and then dropped down on to the cradlepad.Pepin shivered suddenly and did not rise immediately butwatched his screen as people began to enter the plaza, movingspeedily towards the ship.Barbart was the city most like those he had read about inhis books. It was considerably smaller than the Golden Agecities had been and resembled best a medieval Italian city.From the ground, even the frond-covered hills might be a forestof oaks and elms if they were not looked at closely. Also Pepinknew that the folk of Barbart were quite similar to the ancientfolk of Earth. Yet he could not convince himself, though he tried,that he had returned to the Earth of his books. For one thingthe light was fainter, the air darker, the drifting brown cloudsunlike any that had existed in Earth's past. Pepin was not asdisappointed as he expected. Whatever deficiencies existed here,at least the planet was natural and Pepin placed much value onthe naturalness of things.The airlock had opened and the Barbartians grouped them-selves outside it, waiting for the pilot to appear.Pepin took up his luggage from beside the couch, swunghis well-shaped legs to the floor and limped out of the cabinand through the airlock.The heavy, brine-laden air half-choked him. The smell ofsalt was so marked that he felt faintly sick. He swung hishelmet up so that it enclosed his head. He turned on his emer-gency oxygen supply, deciding to give himself time to adjust.The merchants of Barbart stood around the ramp leadingfrom the cradlepad. They looked at him eagerly.' May we inspect the cargo, Pilot?' enquired a heavy-shouldered man with broad cheek-bones and a flaking skinhalf-invisible beneath his thick, black beard. He wore a quiltedcoat, belted at his chest. This was a rusty black. A whitestock was tied at his throat and he wore baggy yellow trouserstucked into furry boots.Pepin looked at him, wanting to greet him in some mannerthat would convey the pleasure he felt at seeing a human-being of heavy build, with muscles and flaws on his skin.' Pilot?' said the merchant.Pepin began to limp slowly down the ramp. He stood asideto let the bulky merchant move up it and duck his head to.enter the airlock. Three others followed him, glancing ratherquizzically at the silent Moonite.A man smaller than Pepin with the narrow face of a reptile,dressed in dull red and black, sidled up clutching a hand-written list. Fascinated, Pepin looked at it, not understandingthe words. He would like to have taken off his gauntlets andfingered the parchment, but he would wait for a little.' Pilot? When do you return?'Pepin smiled. ' I do not return. I have come to live here.The man was startled. He took the parchment back andturned his head, did not see what he looked for and gazedup the ramp towards the open airlock.' Then be welcome,' he said absently, still not looking atPepin. He excused himself and walked with short, rapid stepsback to the warehouse at the side of the plaza.Pepin waited until the merchant and his friends reappeared.They looked satisfied and were nodding to one another. Theblack-bearded merchant bustled down the ramp and slappedPepin's arm.'I admit it,' he grinned, 'a very generous cargo. We havethe best of this month's bargain I think. Gold and alcohol forour fertilizers. May I begin unloading?'' As you wish,' Pepin said courteously, wondering at thisman who could delight in receiving such useless things in returnfor valuable fertilizers.' You are new,' said the merchant, taking Pepin's arm andleading him towards the warehouse where the other man hadgone.' What do you think of our city ?'' It is wonderful,' sighed Pepin. ' I admire it. I should like,to live here.'' Ha! Ha! With all those marvels and comforts in Moonyou have. You'd miss them after a while. Pilot. And everyyear we hear of cities dying, populations shrinking, fewerchildren than ever being born. No, I envy you Moonites withyour safety and stability - you don't have to worry about thefuture, for you can plan efficiently. But we here can make noplans - we merely hope that things will not alter too much inour own lifetimes.'' At least you are part of the natural order, sir,' Pepin saidhesitantly. ' You might adapt further as the Earth changes.'The merchant laughed again. ' No - we of Earth will all bedead. We accept this, now. The human race has had a longrun. No one would have expected us to last this time, but soonthe point will be reached where we can adapt no longer. It isalready happening in less fortunate areas. Man is dying out onEarth. Yet while you have your System, that is not possibleon Moon.'' But our System is artificial - your planet is natural,'They reached the warehouse. Men were already foldingback the heavy doors. The casks of fertilizer were stacked ina cool, dark corner of the place. The man with the reptile faceglanced at Pepin as he counted the casks.' There is the matter of the pilot's gift,' said the merchant.'The traditional gift of gratitude to the man who brings thecargo safely to us. Is there anything we have which you desire?'Traditionally, the pilot asked for a small token gift of nogreat value and Pepin knew what was expected of him.' You mine antiques in Barbart I believe?' he said politely.' Yes. It provides employment for our criminals. Forty citieshave stood where Barbart now stands.'Pepin smiled with pleasure. Such history!' I am fond of books,' he said.' Books?' The merchant frowned.' Why, yes, we have a stackof those somewhere. Have the folk of Moon taken to reading?Ha! ha!'' You do not read them yourselves?''A lost art, Pilot. Those ancient languages are impossible.We have no scholars in Barbart, save for our elders-andtheir wisdom comes from here,' he tapped his head,' not fromany books. We've little use for the old knowledge-it was aknowledge suitable for a younger Earth.'Though Pepin understood, he felt a pang of sorrow anddisappointment. Intellectually he had known that the folk ofEarth would not be like his idealized picture of them, yetemotionally he could not accept this.' Then I would like some books,' he said.' As many as your ship has room for when our cargo'sloaded!' promised the merchant. 'What language do you readin? I'll let you sort them out for yourself.'' I read in all the ancient tongues,' said Pepin proudly. Hisfellows thought his a useless skill and it probably was, but hedid not care.He added: 'And there is no need to load them. I shall notbe returning with the ship. That will go back to Moon auto-matically.'' You'll not be - ? Are you then to be some sort of permanentrepresentative of Moon on Earth?'' No. I wish to live on Earth as one of her folk.'The merchant scratched his nose. 'Aha, I see. Aha...'' Is there reason why I should not be welcome.'' Oh, no - no -I was merely astonished that you should electto stay with us. I gather you Moonites regard us as primitives,doomed to die with the planet.' His tone was now mildly resent-ful. ' Your regulations admitting no one of Earth to Moon havebeen strict for centuries. No Earth-man has visited Moon, even.You have your stability to consider, of course. But why shouldyou elect to suffer the discomforts of our wasted planet?''You will note,' said Pepin carefully, 'that I am not likeother Moonites. I am, I suppose, some sort of romantic throw-back-or it may be that my original difference has fosteredmental differences, I do not know. However, I alone amongstmy race have an admiration for Earth and the folk of Earth.I have a yearning for the past whereas my people look alwaysto the future-a future which they are pledged to keep stableand as much like the present as possible.'' I see...' The merchant folded his arms. ' Well, you arewelcome to stay here as a guest-until you wish to return toMoon.'' I never wish to return.'' My friend,' the merchant smiled. ' You will wish to returnsoon enough. Spend a month with us-a year-but I warrantyou'll stay no longer.'He paused before saying: 'You'll find plenty of signs of thepast here-for the past is all we have. There is no future forEarth.'The clock, centrepiece of the Great Regulator, had measuredoff six weeks before Pepin Hunchback became restless andfrustrated by the uncaring ignorance of the Barbartians. Thecitizens were pleasant enough and treated him well consideringtheir covert antipathy towards the Moonites. But he made nofriends and found no sympathizers.He rejoiced in those books which were not technical manualsor technical fiction. He enjoyed the poetry and the legendsand the history books and the adventure stories. But there werefewer than he had expected and did not last him long.He lived in a room at an Inn. He grew used to the heavy,briny air and the dull colours, he began to enjoy the gloomwhich shadowed the Earth, for it mirrored something of hisown mood. He would go for walks over the hills and watchthe heavy brown clouds course towards him from the horizon,smell the sweetish scent of the frond forests, climb the crumb-ling rocks that stood against the purple sky, worn by the windand scoured by the salt.Unlike Moon, this planet still lived, still held surprises in thesudden winds that blew its surface, the odd animals whichcrawled over it.Pepin was afraid only of the animals, for these had becometruly alien. The principal life-form other than man was theoozer-a giant leech which normally prowled the bleak seashores but which was being seen increasingly further inland.If Man's time was ending, then the time of the oozer wasbeginning. As Man died out, the oozer multiplied. They movedin schools varying from a dozen to a hundred, depending onthe species-they grew from two feet to ten feet long. Somewere blade, some brown, some yellow-but the most disgustingwas the white variety which was also the largest and mostferocious, a great grub of a thing capable of fast speeds, able tooutdistance a running man and bring him down. When this hap-pened, the oozer, like its leech ancestor, fed off the blood onlyand left the body drained and dry.Pepin saw a school moving through a. glade once as he saton a rock staring down into the frond forest.' The new tenants,' he said aloud, after he'd conquered hisnausea, ' are arriving - and the Earth ignores Man. She is nothostile, she is not friendly. She no longer supports him. She hasforgotten him. Now she fosters new children.'Pepin was given to talking to himself. It was the only timewhen words came easily-when he was alone.Pepin tried to talk with Kop, the merchant and his fellow resi-dents at the Inn, but though they were polite enough, his ques-tions, his statements and his arguments made them frown andpuzzle and excuse themselves early.One fellow resident, a mild-mannered and friendly mancalled Mokof, middle-aged with a slight stoop, made greaterattempts to understand Pepin, but was incapable, rather thanunwilling, of helping him.' With your talk of the past and philosophy, you would behappier in that odd city of Lanjis Liho by the sea,' he saidpleasantly one day as they sat outside the Inn, tankards at theirsides, watching the fountain play in the plaza.Pepin had heard Lanjis Liho mentioned, but had been socurious about other matters, that he had not asked of the citybefore. Now he raised one fair, near-invisible eyebrow.' I once knew a man from Lanjis Liho,' Mokof continued inanswer.' He had a strange name which I forget-it was similarto your last name in type. He had a scar on his face. Got intotrouble by eating his food at the wrong time, saved himself byfixing the Great Regulator for us. We know nothing of thesemachines these days. He believed that he could travel in Time,though I saw little evidence of this while he was here. All thefolk of Lanjis Liho are like him, I hear-bizarre, if you followme-they know nothing of clocks, for instance, have no meansof measuring the hours. Their ruler is called Chronarch and helives in a palace called the House of Time, though only an oozerknows why they should emphasize Time when they can't eventell it.'Mokof could tell Pepin very little more that was not merelyopinion or speculation, but Lanjis Liho by the sea sounded aninteresting place. Also Pepin was attracted by the words ' timetravel' - for his true wish was to return to Earth's past.During the seventh week of his stay in Barbart, he decidedto journey eastwards towards Lanjis Liho by the sea.Pepin Hunchback set off on foot for Lanjis Liho. Mokofin particular tried to dissuade him - it was a long journey andthe land was dangerous with oozers. He could easily lose hisdirection without a good steed.-But he had tried to ride the seal-beasts which were the mountsof most Earthmen. These creatures, with their strongly muscledforefins and razor-sharp tails, were reliable and fairly fast.They had built-up saddles of silicon to give the rider a straightseat. Part of their equipment also included a long gun, called apiercer, which fired a ray from its ruby core, and a torch fed bybatteries which supplied the traveller with light in the moonless,near-starless night.Pepin Hunchback took a torch and balanced a piercer overhis shoulder. He liked the feeling both gave him. But he did nottrust himself to a seal-beast.He left in the dark morning, with food and a flask in thepack on his back, still dressed in his cloth-of-metal suit.The citizens of Barbart, like those of Moon, were not regret-ful when he had gone. He had disturbed them when theybelieved they had conquered all disturbances within themselves.For seven weeks he had interrupted their purpose and the pur-pose they wished to transmit to any children they might have.That purpose was to die peacefully and generously on anEarth which no longer desired their presence.Pepin was disappointed as he limped away from Barbartin the Land of Fronds. He had expected to find dynamic vitalityon Earth - people prepared for change, but not for death. Some-where on the planet - possibly in Lanjis Liho by the sea-hewould find heroes. From what Mokof had hinted, he might evenfind a means of travelling into the past. This is what he wantedmost, but he had never expected to achieve it.The moss of the frond forests was springy and helped hiswalking, but by evening it was beginning to give way to hard,brown earth over which dust scurried. Ahead of him, ominousin the waning light, was a barren plain, cracked and almostfeatureless. Here and there chunks of rock stood up. He selectedone as his goal, realizing, even as night fell, cold and pitch dark,that to sleep would be to risk his life. Oozers, he had been told,only slept when they had fed-and there was little to feed onsave Man.He depressed the grip of his torch and its light illuminateda distance of a few yards round him. He continued to walk,warm enough in his suit. As he walked, his mind became almostblank. He was so weary that he could not tell how long he hadmarched by the degrees of weariness. But when a silhouette ofrock became apparent in the torch-light, he stopped, took off hispack, leant his back against the rock and slid down it. He didnot care about the oozers and he was fortunate because no oozersscented his blood and came to care about him.Dawn came dark brown, the muddy clouds streaming acrossthe sky, blocking out much of the sun's dim light. Pepin openedhis pack and took out the flask of specially distilled fresh water.He could not drink the salt-water which the folk of Earth drank.They, in turn, had adapted to the extent where they could notbear to drink fresh water. He took two tablets from a box andswallowed them. Having breakfasted, he heaved his aching bodyup, adjusted the pack on his back, slung the torch into itssheath at his side, shouldered the piercer and looked abouthim.In the west, the frond forests were out of sight and the plainlooked as endless in that direction as it did in the other. Yet theplain to the east was now further broken by low hills and manymore rocks.He set off eastwards. In the east, he reflected, our ancestorsbelieved Paradise lay. Perhaps I will find my Paradise in theeast.If Paradise existed, and Pepin was entitled to enter, he camevery close to entering two days later as he collapsed descendinga salt-encrusted hill and rolled many feet down it, knockinghimself unconscious.As it was, the Hooknosed Wanderer saved him from this chanceof Paradise.The Hooknosed Wanderer was a burrower, a gossiper, aquester after secrets. Amongst all the Earth folk he was perhapsthe only aimless nomad. No one knew his origin, no one thoughtto ask. He was as familiar in Barbart as he was in Lanjis Liho.His knowledge of Earth, past and present, was extensive, butfew ever availed themselves of it. He was a short man with ahuge nose, receding chin, and a close-fitting hood and jerkinwhich made him resemble a beaked turtle.He saw the fallen tangle that was Pepin Hunchback at muchthe same time as the school of oozers scented Pepin's blood.He was riding a big, fat seal-beast and leading another onwhich was heaped a preposterous burden of rolled fabric, dig-ging equipment, a small stove, angular bundles-in fact theHooknosed Wanderer's entire household tied precariously to theseal-beast's back. The seal-beast seemed mildly pleased withitself that it was capable of carrying this load.In the Hooknosed Wanderer's right hand, borne like a lanceresting in a special grip on his stirrup, was his piercer. He sawPepin, he saw the oozers.He rode closer, raised his piercer, pressed the charger andthen the trigger-stud. The concentrated light was scarcelyvisible, but it bit into the oozer school instantaneously. Theywere of the black variety. The Hooknosed Wanderer moved thepiercer about very gradually and burned, every oozer to death.It gave him satisfaction.Then he rode up to where Pepin lay and looked down athim. Pepin was not badly hurt, he was even beginning to stiron the ground. The Hooknosed Wanderer saw that he was aMoonite by his dress. He wondered where Pepin had got thepiercer and torch which lay near him.He dismounted and helped the Moonite to his feet. Pepinrubbed his head and looked rather nervously at the HooknosedWanderer.' I fell down,' he said.' Just so,' said the Hooknosed Wanderer. ' Where is yourspaceship? Has it crashed nearby?''I have no spaceship,' Pepin explained, 'I was journeyingfrom Barbart, where I landed some seven weeks ago, to LanjisLiho, which I am told lies close to the shores of the sea.'' You were foolish to go on foot,' said the Wanderer. ' It isstill a long way.'He continued eagerly: ' But you must guest with me and wewill talk about Moon. I should be happy to add to my know-ledge.'Pepin's head was aching. He was glad that this odd strangerhad come upon him. He agreed willingly and even tried to helpthe Wanderer raise his tent.When the tent was finally erected and the Wanderer's goodsdistributed about it, Pepin and he went inside.The Wanderer offered him leg-fish and salt-water, but Pepinrefused politely and swallowed his own food.Then he told the Wanderer of his coming from Moon toEarth, of his stay in Barbart, of his frustration and disappoint-ment, and of his ambition. The Wanderer listened, asking ques-tions that showed he was more interested in Moon than Pepin.Listlessly, Pepin replied to these questions and then asked oneof his own.'What do you know of Lanjis Liho, sir?'' Everything but the most recent events,' said the Wandererwith a smile.' Lanjis Liho is very ancient and has its origin inan experimental village where a philosopher tried to educatepeople to regard Time as they regard Matter - something thatcan be moved through, manipulated and so on. From this, theChronarchy was formed and it became traditional in Lanjis Lihoto investigate Time and little else. Perhaps by mutation, perhapsby the awakening of some power we have always possessed,a race of people exist in Lanjis Liho who can move themselvesthrough Time!' I had the good fortune to know the young man who firstdiscovered this talent within himself and trained others in its use.A man called the Scar-faced Brooder-he is the presentChronarch.'' He can travel into the past?''And future, so I hear. Once the chronopathic talent isreleased in Man, he can move through Time at will.'' But the past,' said Pepin excitedly. ' We can journey backto Earth's Golden Age and not worry about natural death orartificial living. We can do things!'' Um,' said the Wanderer. ' I share your love for the past,Pepin Hunchback - my tent is full of antiques I have excavated-but is it possible to return to the past? Would not that actchange the future-for there is no record in our history of menfrom the future settling in the past?'Pepin nodded.' It is a mystery - yet surely one man, who didnot admit he was from the future, could settle in the past?'The Hooknosed Wanderer smiled.' I see what you mean.'' I realize now,' said Pepin seriously, ' that I have little incommon with either my own people or the folk of Earth. Myonly hope is to return to the past where I shall find the things Ineed to exist fully. I am a man out of. my time.'' You are not the first. Earth's ancient history is full of suchmen.'' But I shall be the first, perhaps able to find the Age whichmost suits him.''Perhaps,' said the Hooknosed Wanderer dubiously. 'Butyour wishes are scarcely constructive.'' Are they not? What, then, has this Earth to offer mankind?We on Moon live an artificial life, turning year by year intomachines less perfect than those which support us. And you hereaccept death passively - are only concerned with the business offacing extinction " well"! My race will not be human within acentury - yours will not exist. Are we to perish? Are the valuesof humanity to perish-have the strivings of the last millionyears been pointless? Is there no escape from Earth's evening?I will not accept that!'' You are not logical, my friend,' smiled the Wanderer.' Youtake the least positive line of all-by refusing to face the future-by your desire to return to the past. How will that benefit therest of us?'Pepin clutched his head. ' Ah,' he murmured.' Ah...'The Hooknosed Wanderer continued. 'I have no wish tosurvive the evening. You have seen something of the horrorswhich will multiply as Earth's evening turns to night.'Pepin did not reply. He had become inarticulate withemotion.The Hooknosed Wanderer took him outside and pointed intothe east. ' That way lies Lanjis Liho and her chronopaths,' hesaid.' I pity you, Pepin, for I think you will find no solution toyour problem - and it is your problem, not humanity's.'Pepin limped from weariness as well as deformity. He limpedalong a beach. It was morning and the dull, red sun was risingslowly from the sea as he moved down the dark shore towardsLanjis Liho. It was cold.Grey-brown mist hung over the sea and drifted towards thebleak landscape that was dominated by the solid black outlineof cliffs to his right. The brown beach glistened with patches ofhard salt and the salt-sluggish sea was motionless, for there wasno longer a nearby moon to move it.Pepin still considered his conversation with the strange Wan-derer. Was this the end of Earth, or merely one phase in acycle? Night must come-but would it be followed by a newday? If so, then perhaps the future was attractive. Yet theEarth had slowly destroyed the greater part of the human race.Would the rest die before the new morning?Suddenly, Pepin slipped into a pool of thick water. Hefloundered in the clinging stuff, dragging himself back byclutching a spur of hardened salt, but the salt wouldn't bear hisweight and he fell into the pool again. Finally he crawled backto dry land. Everything was crumbling or changing.He continued along the shore more carefully. Leg-fishscuttled away as he approached. They sought the deeper shadowof the crags of rock which rose from the beach like jaggedteeth, corroded by wind-borne salt. They hid and were silentand the whole shore was quiet. Pepin Hunchback found no peaceof mind here, but the solitude seemed to absorb his tangledthoughts and eased his brain a little.The disc of the sun took a long time to rise above the horizon,and brought little light with it, and even less warmth. Hepaused and turned to stare over the sea which changed fromblack to brown as the sun came up. He sighed and looked at thesun which caught his face in its dull glow and stained it a deeppink, bringing a look of radiance to his native pallor.Later, he heard a sound which he first took to be the squawk-ing of fighting leg-fish. Then he recognized it as a human voice.Without moving his head, he listened more intently.Then he turned.A tiny figure sat a seal on the cliff above. Jutting upwardsfrom it like a lance was the barrel of a long piercer. The figurewas half-shadowed by the ruin of an ancient watch-tower and,as he looked, jerked at the reins impatiently, disappeared intothe whole shadow and was gone.Pepin frowned and wondered if this could be an enemy. Hereadied his own piercer.Now the rider had descended the cliff and was nearing him.He heard the distant thwack of the beast's fins against the dampbeach. He levelled the gun.The rider was a woman. A woman from out of his books.She was tall, long-legged, with the collar of her seal-leatherjacket raised to frame her sharp-jawed face. Her brown hairdrifted over it and flew behind. One hand, protected by a loose-fitting glove, clutched the pommel of her high, silicon saddle.The other held her beast's reins. Her wide, full-lipped mouthseemed pursed by the cold, for she held it tight.Then her seal entered a deep pool of sluggish water and began,swimming through it with great difficulty. The strong smell ofthe brine-thick liquid came to his awareness then and he saw heras a woman out of mythology-a mermaid astride a seal. Yet,she frightened him. She was unexpected.Was she from Lanjis Liho? It was likely. And were they alllike her?Now, as she reached firm ground again, she began to laughin rhythm with the seal's movement. It was rich, delightfullaughter, but as she came towards him, the heavy drops of waterrolling slowly from her mount, his stomach contracted in panic.He backed away a few paces.At this moment she seemed to personify the bleak insanity ofthe dying planet.She halted her beast close to him. She lowered her chinand opened her grey-green eyes. She still smiled.' Stranger, you are from Moon by your garb. Are you lost?'He put the piercer over his shoulder. 'No. I seek LanjisLiho.'She pointed backwards up the beach.' You are close to ourcity. I am Tall Laugher, sister to the Scar-faced Brooder,Chronarch of the City of Time. I will take you there.'' I am Pepin Hunchback, without kin or rank.'' Climb up on my seal-beast's back, hang on to my saddleand we will soon be in Lanjis Liho.'He obeyed her, clinging desperately to the slippery siliconas she wheeled the seal about and sped back the way she hadcome.She called to him once or twice on the journey up the saltybeach, but he could not make out the sense.It had begun to rain a little before they reached Lanjis Liho.Built upon a huge and heavy cliff, the city was smaller eventhan Barbart, but its houses were tower-like - slim and ancientwith conical roofs and small windows. Lanjis Liho was domi-nated by the Tower of Time which rose from a building called,according to Tall Laugher's shouted description, the Hall ofTime, palace of the Chronarch.Both Hall and Tower were impressive, though puzzling.Their design was an impossibility of curves and angles, brightcolours bordering on the indefinable, and creating an emotion inPepin similar to the emotion created in him by pictures ofGothic architecture - though whereas Gothic took the mindsoaring upwards, this took the mind in all directions.The pale sun shone down on the city streets and the salt-rainfell, washing the gleaming salt deposits off the walls and roofsand leaving fresh ones. The drops even fell between the bladesand domes of the Hall and Tower of Time.There were few people in the streets, and yet there seemedto be an air of activity about the city - almost as if the peoplewere preparing to abandon it.Although quite similar in their various types to the folk ofBarbart, these people seemed livelier - eager.Pepin wondered if he had arrived at a festival time, as TallLaugher reined in her beast on the corner of a narrow street.He clambered down, his bones throbbing. She also dismountedand pointed at the nearest house. ' This is where I live. Sinceyou claimed no rank, I gather you have come here as a visitorand not as an official emissary from Moon. What do you seekin Lanjis Liho?'' Transport to the past,' he said at once.She paused.' Why should you want that?'' I have nothing in common with the present.'She looked at him through her cool, intelligent eyes. Thenshe smiled. ' There is nothing in the past that would attractyou.'' Let me decide.'' Very well,' she shrugged,' but how do you propose to findthe past?'' I,' his momentary confidence disappeared,' I had hoped foryour help.'' You will have to speak with the Chronarch.'' When?'She looked at him, frowning slightly. She did not seem un-sympathetic. ' Come,' she said, ' we will go to the Hall of Timenow.'As Pepin followed the girl, walking quickly to keep up withher long strides, he wondered if perhaps the people of LanjisLiho were bent on keeping the secrets of Time to themselves.Though they glanced at him curiously as they passed him,the citizens did not pause. The mood of hurried activity seemedeven stronger as they reached the spiralling steps which ledupwards to the great gates of the Hall.The guards did not challenge them as they entered an echoingcorridor, the tall walls of which were decorated with peculiarcryptographs inlaid in silver, bronze and platinum.Ahead of them were double-doors of yellow gold. TallLaugher pushed against these and they entered a large, oblongwall with a high ceiling. At the far end, on a dais, was a seatedman talking to a couple of others who turned as Tall Laugherand Pepin Hunchback entered.The seated man smiled calmly as he saw Tall Laugher. Hemurmured to the other two who left by a door at the side ofthe dais. The man's pale face bore a scar running from the leftcorner of his mouth along his cheek-bone. His black hair sweptfrom a widow's peak to his wide shoulders. He wore clothes thatdid not suit him - evidently the clothes of his office. His shirtwas of yellow cloth and his cravat, knotted high at his chin, wasblack. He wore a long-sleeved jacket of quilted blue velvet andbreeches of wine-red. His feet were shod in black slippers.The hall itself was strange. At regular intervals the wallswere set alternately with symbolic mosaics and computers.Behind the seated man, close to the far wall, which was blank,was a metal bench bearing the ancient tools of alchemy. Theyseemed in bizarre contrast to the rest of the hall.'Well, Tall Laugher,' said the man, 'who is this visitor?'' He is from Moon, Brooder - and seeks to journey into thepast!'The Scar-faced Brooder, Chronarch of Lanjis Liho, laughedand then, looking sharply at Pepin, stopped.Pepin said eagerly: ' I have heard that you can travel inTime at will. This is true?'' Yes,' said the Brooder,' but...'' Do you plan to go backward or forward?'The Scar-faced Brooder seemed nonplussed. 'Forward, Isuppose-but what makes you think you have the ability fortravelling in Time?''Ability?'' It is a special skill - only the folk of Lanjis Liho possessit.'' Have you no machines'?' Pepin demanded, his spirits sinking.' We do not need machines. Our skill is natural.''But I must return to the past-I must!' Pepin limpedtowards the dais, ignoring the restraining hand of the TallLaugher.' You want no one else to share your chance of escape!You must know much about Time - you must know how to helpme return to the past!'' It would do you no good if you went back.'' How do you know?''We know,' said the Chronarch bleakly. 'My friend, giveup this obsession. There is nothing we can do for you in LanjisLiho.''You are lying!' Pepin changed his tone and said morelevelly: 'I beg you to help me. I-I need the past as othersneed air to survive!'' You speak from ignorance.'' What do you mean?'' I mean that the secrets of Time are more complex than youbelieve.' The Chronarch stood up. ' Now I must leave you. Ihave a mission in the future.'He frowned, as if concentrating - and vanished.Pepin was startled.' Where has he gone?'' Into the future - to join others of our folk. He will returnsoon, I hope. Come, Pepin Hunchback, I will take you to myhouse and let you eat and rest there. After that, if you'll acceptmy advice, you had best arrange to go back to Moon.''You must be able to construct a machine!' he shouted.' There must be a way! I must return!''Return?' she said, raising an eyebrow. 'Return? How canyou return to somewhere you have never been? Come.' She ledthe way out of the hall.Pepin Hunchback had calmed down by the time he had eatena little of the salty food in Tall Laugher's house. They satin a small room with a bay window which overlooked the street.He sat on one side of a table, she on the other. He did notspeak. His mood had become apathetic. She seemed sympatheticand he was attracted to her for the qualities which he had firstnoted on the beach, and for her warm womanliness, but hisdespair was greater. He stared at the table, his twisted body bentover it, his hands stretched out in front of him.' Your yearning, Pepin Hunchback, is not for the past as itwas,' she was saying softly. ' It is for a world that never existed— a Paradise, a Golden Age. Men have always spoken of such atime in history-but such an idyllic world is. a yearning forchildhood, not the past, for lost innocence. It is childhood wewish to return to.'He looked up and smiled bitterly. 'My childhood was notidyllic,' he said. ' I was a mistake. My birth was an accident.I had no friends, no peace of mind.'' You had your wonderment, your illusion, your hopes. Evenif you could return to Earth's past-you would not be happy.'' Earth's present Is decadent. Here 'the decadence is part of theprocess of evolution, on Moon it is artificial, that is all. Earth'spast was never truly decadent.'' One cannot recapture the past.'' An old saying - yet your ability disproves that.'' You do not know, Pepin Hunchback,' she said almost sadly.' Even if you used the ship, you could not...?'' Ship?''A Time craft, an earlier, cruder experiment we abandoned.We have no need of such devices now.''It still exists?'' Yes - it stands behind the Hall of Time,' she spoke vaguely,her thoughts on something else.Afraid that she-would soon guess what was in his mind,Pepin changed the subject.' Maybe you are right, Tall Laugher. Old Earth has noneto love her any longer-her appearance does not inspire love.If I am the last who loves Earth, then I should stay with her.'Part of him meant what he said, he realized. The words hadcome spontaneously, he had never considered this before.She had only half-heard his words. She gave him a slightly-startled look as he spoke. She rose from the table.' I will showyou to your room,' she said.' You need sleep.'He pretended to agree and followed her out. There wouldbe no sleep now. He must seize his opportunity. Outside, in .thefading light of evening, lay a Time craft. Soon, perhaps, he couldreturn to the past, to security, to a green, golden Earth, leavingthis tired ball of salt forever!There was enough light coming from the houses to show him theway through the twisting streets to the Tower of Time. He wasunobserved as he circled around the great building, searchingfor the ship which Tall Laugher had said was there.At last, half-seen in shadows, he noticed a shape lying in asmall square at the back of the Tower.Resting in davits was a ship of cold, blue metal. It could onlybe the Time craft. It was large enough to contain three or fourmen. Several other machines stood nearby, showing signs ofneglect. Pepin limped cautiously forward until he stood by theship. He touched it. It swayed slightly and the davits squealed.Pepin tried to steady it, looking nervously around him, butno one had noticed. The ship was roughly egg-shaped, with asmall airlock in its side. Running his hand over it, Pepin founda stud which he pressed. The outer door slid open.With considerable difficulty, Pepin managed to heave him-self into the violently swinging ship. The noise of the squealingdavits was ghastly. He shut the door and crouched in the utterblackness of the interior as it swayed back and forth.It was likely that a light-stud was near the door. His search-ing hand found a projection and hesitated. Then, risking thepossibility that it was not for the light, he pressed it.The light came on. It was a bluish, mellow light, but it servedadequately to show the interior of the ship. There were no seatsand most of the machinery seemed hidden behind squat casings.At the centre of the ship was a column on which was set, at handheight, four controls. The ship was still swaying as Pepin wentover to the controls and inspected them. His life on Moon hadmade him very familiar with all kinds of machinery, and henoted that the system of measurement was the same. The largestdial was in the middle. A division on the right was marked witha minus sign and on the left with a plus sign - obviously indicat-ing past and future. Yet Pepin had expected such a control tobe marked off with dates. There were none. Instead there werefigures—units from one to ten. One trip, however, was all hewould need in order to equate these numbers with the actualperiod of time they measured.Another dial seemed to indicate speed. A switch was marked'Emergency Return' and another, mysteriously, 'MegaflowTuner'.Now all Pepin had to discover was whether the ship was stillpowered.He limped over to another bank of instruments. There wasa lever set into it. At the moment the indicator on its handlesaid OFF. His heart beating rapidly, Pepin pushed the leverdown. A light flashed on the indicator and now it read ON. Analmost inaudible humming came from the bank of instrumentsas needles swung and screens gleamed. Pepin returned to thecolumn and put his large hand on the central dial. It movedeasily to the right. He. left it at — 3.The ship no longer swung on its davits. There was no sen-sation of speed, but the banks of instruments began to click andwhirr noisily and Pepin felt suddenly dizzy.The ship was moving backwards in Time.Soon, he would be in the past at last!Perhaps it was something to do with the ship's motion, theeruptions of colour which blossomed and faded on the screens,or the weird sounds of the instruments that made Pepin becomealmost hysterical. He began to laugh with joy. He had suc-ceeded! His ambition was close to fruition!At last the sounds died down, the sensation of sickness lefthim, the ship no longer seemed to move.Pepin trembled as he raised his helmet and set it overhis head. He knew enough to realize that the air of an earlierEarth would probably be too rich for him at first. This actionsaved his life.He went to the door and pressed the stud to open it. Thedoor moved backwards slowly and Pepin stepped into the air-lock. The door closed. Pepin opened the outer door.He looked out at absolutely nothing.A lightless void lay around the ship. No stars, no planets —nothing at all.Where was he? Had the ship's instruments been faulty? Hadhe been borne into an area of space so far away from anymaterial body?He felt vertigo seize him, backed into the airlock for as faras he could go, frightened that the vacuum would suck him intoitself. He closed the outer door and. returned to the ship.In panic he went to the control column and again twisted thedial. This time to —8. Again the screens filled with colour,again lights blinked and needles swung, again he felt sick. Againthe ship came to a stop.More cautiously, he opened the inner door, closed it, openedthe outer door.Nothing.Shouting inarticulately, he hurried back into the ship andturned the dial to — io. The same sensations. Another stop.And outside was the same featureless pit of empty space.There was only one thing left to do to test the ship. Set thedial for the future and see what lay there. If it was the same, hecould switch to Emergency Return.He swung the dial right round to +2.The humming rose to a shrill. Lightning exploded on thescreens, the needles sped around the dials and Pepin flung him-self to the floor in panic as his head began to ache horribly. Theship seemed to be tossed from side to side and yet he remainedin the same position on the floor.At last the ship came to a halt. He got up slowly, passedthrough the airlock.He saw everything.He saw gold-flecked bands of blue spiralling away into infinity.He saw streamers of cerise and violet light. He saw heavingmountains of black and green. He saw clouds of orange andpurple. Shapes formed and melted. It seemed he was a giant atone moment and a midget at the next. His mind was notequipped to take in so much.Quickly, he shut the airlock.What had he seen? A vision of chaos? The sight seemedto him to have been metaphysical rather than physical. Butwhat had it signified? It had been the very opposite of thevacuum - it had been space filled with everything imaginable,or the components of everything. The ship could not be a Timecraft after all, but a vessel for journeying-where? Anotherdimension? An alternate universe? But why the plus and minussigns on the controls? Why had Tall Laugher called this a Timeship? Had he been tricked?He pushed back his helmet and wiped the sweat from his face.His eyes felt sore and his headache was worse. He was incapableof logical thought.He was tempted to turn the dial marked 'EmergencyReturn', but there was still the mysterious dial marked ' Mega-flow Tuner'. Filled with hysterical recklessness, he turned itand was flung back as the ship jerked into normal motion. Onthe screens he saw a little of what he had observed outside.All kinds of images appeared and disappeared. Once humanfigures-like golden shadows-were seen for a moment. Hiseyes fixed insanely on the screens, Pepin Hunchback could onlystare.Much, much later, he fell back to the floor. He had fainted.At the sound of Tall Laugher's voice, he opened his eyes. Hisinitial question was scarcely original, but it was the thing hemost needed to know.' Where am I?' he said, looking up at her.'On the Megaflow,' she replied. 'You are a fool, PepinHunchback. The Brooder and I have had a considerable amountof difficulty locating you. It is a wonder you are not insane.'' I think I am. How did you get here?'' We travelled up the Megaflow after you. But your speedwas so great we wasted a great deal of energy catching you. Isee from the instruments that you went into the past. Were yousatisfied?'He got up slowly. 'Was that-that vacuum the pasty'Yes.'' But it was not Earth's past?'' It is the only past there is.' She was at the controls, mani-pulating them. He turned his head and saw the Chronarch stand-ing, head bowed, at the back of the ship.He looked up and pursed his lips at Pepin.' I attempted to explain - but I knew you would not believeme. It is a pity that you know the truth, for it will not consoleyou, my friend.''What truth?'The Scar-faced Brooder sighed. He spread his hands. ' Theonly truth there is. The past is nothing but limbo-the futureis what you have observed - chaos, save for the Megaflow.''You mean Earth only has existence in the present?''As far as we are concerned, yes.' The Brooder folded hisarms across his chest. 'It means little to us of Lanjis Liho —but I knew how it would affect you. We are Time Dwellers, yousee-you are still a Space Dweller. Your mind is not adjustedto understand and exist in the dimensions of Time-without-space.''Time without space is an impossibility!' Pepin shouted.The Brooder grimaced. 'Is it? Then what do you think ofthe future - of the Megaflow? Admittedly something exists here,but it is not the stuff of space as you would understand it. It is -well, the physical manifestation of Time-without-space.' Hesighed as he noted Pepin's expression.' You will never properlyunderstand, my friend.'Tall Laugher spoke. ' We are nearly at Present, Brooder.'' I will explain further when we return to Earth,' said theChronarch kindly.' You have my sympathy, Pepin Hunchback.'In the Hall of Time, the Scar-faced Brooder walked up to hisdais and lowered himself into his chair. ' Sit down, Pepin,' hesaid, indicating the edge of the dais. Dazedly, Pepin obeyed.' What do you think of the past?' said the Chronarch ironic-ally, as Tall Laugher joined them. Pepin looked up at her andthen at her brother. He shook his head.Tall Laugher put her hand on his shoulder.' Poor Pepin...'He did not have enough emotion left to feel anything at this.He rubbed his face and stared at the floor. His eyes were fullof tears.'Do you want the Chronarch to explain, Pepin?' she asked.Looking into her face, he saw that she, too, seemed extraordin-arily sad. Somehow she could understand his hopelessness. Ifonly she were normal, he thought, and we had met in differentcircumstances. Even here, life would be more than bearable withher. He had never seen such a look of sympathy directed athim before. She was repeating her question. He nodded.' At first we were as astonished as you at the true nature ofTime,' said the Chronarch. ' But, of course, it was much easierfor us to accept it. We are capable of moving through Time asothers move through space. Time is now our natural element.We have adapted in a peculiar way - we are able to journey intothe past or future merely by an effort of will. We have reachedthe stage where we no longer need space to exist. In Time-with-space our physical requirements are manifold and increasinglyhard to meet on this changing planet. But in Time-without-spacethese physical requirements no longer exist.'' Brooder,' put in Tall Laugher, ' I do not think he is inter-ested in us. Tell him why he found only limbo in the past.'' Yes,' said Pepin, turning to stare at the Chronarch. ' Tellme.''I'll try. Imagine Time as a straight line along which thephysical universe is moving. At a certain point on that line thephysical universe exists. But if we move away from the present,backward or forward, what do we find?'Again Pepin shook his head.' We find what you found - for by leaving the present, wealso leave the physical universe. You see, Pepin, when we leaveour native Time stream, we move into others which are, inrelation to us, above Time. There is a central stream alongwhich our universe moves-we call this the Megaflow. As itmoves it absorbs the stuff of Time - absorbs the chronons, as wecall them, but leaves nothing behind. Chronons constitute thefuture-they are infinite. The reason you found nothing in thepast is because, in a sense, space eats the chronons but cannotreplace them.'' You mean Earth absorbs this - this temporal energy butemits none herself-like a beast prowling through Time gob-bling it up but excreting nothing.' Pepin spoke with a faintreturn of interest.' Yes, I understand.'The Chronarch leaned back. ' So when you came to me ask-ing to return to the past, I almost told you this, but you wouldnot have believed me. You did not want to. You cannot returnto Earth's past because, simply, it no longer exists. Neither isthere a future in terms of space, only in terms of the chronon-constituted Megaflow and its offshoots. We have managed tomove ourselves where we wish, individually absorbing the chro-nons we need. Thus, the human race will continue - possibly weshall be immortal, ranging the continents of Time at will,exploring, acquiring knowledge which will be useful to us.'' While the rest of us die or turn into little better thanmachines,' said Pepin flatly.'Yes.'* Now I have no hope at all,' said Pepin, rising. He limpedup to Tall Laugher.' When do you leave for good?'' Shortly.''I thank you for your sympathy and courtesy,' he said.He left them standing silently in the Hall of Time.Pepin walked along the beach, still moving towards the east,away from Lanjis Liho by the sea. The morning was a brownshroud covering the endlessness of sluggish sea and salt-frostedland, illuminated by a dying sun, blown by a cold wind.Ah, he thought, this is a morning for tears and self-contempt.Loneliness sits upon me like a great oozer with its mouth at mythroat, sucking me dry of optimism. If only I could give myselfup to this pitiless morning, let it engulf me, freeze me, toss meon its frigid wind and sink me in its slow-yielding sea, to losesight of sun and sky, such as they are, and return to MotherEarth's ever-greedy womb...Oh, this alien Earth!And yet he did not envy the Time Dwellers. Like theMoonites, they were renouncing their humanity. At least hestill had his.He turned as he heard his name called—a thin cry like thatof an ancient seabird.Tall Laugher was riding towards him, waving to him. Sherode beneath the brown and heaving sky, her back straight anda smile on her lips and for some reason it seemed to him thatshe was riding to him out of the past, as when he had first seenher, a goddess from an age of mythology.The red disc of the sun glowed behind her and again henoticed the strong smell of brine.He waited by the edge of the thick, salt sea and, as he waited,he knew that his journey had been worth while.THE DEEP FIXONEQUICKENING SOUNDS in the early dusk. Beat of hearts, surgeof blood.Seward turned his head on the bed and looked towards thewindow. They were coming again. He raised his drug-wastedbody and lowered his feet to the floor. He felt nausea sweep upand through him. Dizzily, he stumbled towards the window,parted the blind and stared out over the white ruins.The sea splashed far away, down by the harbour, and themob was again rushing through the broken streets towards theResearch Lab. They were raggedly dressed and raggedly organ-ized, their faces were thin and contorted with madness, but theywere numerous.Seward decided to activate the Towers once more. He walkedshakily to the steel-lined room on his left. He reached out agrey, trembling hand and flicked down three switches on a bankof hundreds. Lights blinked on the board above the switches.Seward walked over to the monitor-computer and spoke to it.His voice was harsh, tired and cracking.' GREEN 9/7—0 Frequency. RED 8/5—8 Frequency.' Hedidn't bother with the other Towers. Two were enough to dealwith the mob outside. Two wouldn't harm anybody too badly.'He walked back into the other room and parted the blindagain. He saw the mob pause and look towards the roof wherethe Towers GREEN 9/7 and RED 8/5 were already beginningto spin. Once their gaze had been fixed on the Towers, theycouldn't get it away. A few saw their companions look up andthese automatically shut their eyes and dropped to the ground.But the others were now-held completely rigid.One by one, then many at a time, those who stared at theTowers began to jerk and thresh, eyes rolling, foaming at themouth, screaming (he heard their screams faintly) - exhibitingevery sign of. an advanced epileptic fit.Seward leaned against the wall feeling sick. Outside, those who'descaped were crawling round and inching down the street ontheir bellies. Then, eyes averted from the Towers, they rose totheir feet and began to run away through the ruins.' Saved again,' he thought bitterly.What was the point? Could he bring himself to go .on acti-vating the Towers every time? 'Wouldn't there come a day whenhe would let the mob get into the laboratory, search him out,kill him, smash his equipment? He deserved it, after all. Theworld was in ruins because of him, because of the Towers andthe other Hallucinomats which he'd perfected. The mob wantedits revenge. It was fair.Yet, while he lived, there might be a way of saving somethingfrom the wreckage he had made of mankind's minds. The mobswere not seriously hurt by the Towers; It had been the othermachines which had created the real damage. Machines like theParamats, Schizomats, Engramoscopes, even Michelson's Stro-boscope Type 8. A range of instruments which had beendesigned to help the world and had, instead, virtually destroyedcivilization;The memory was all too clear. He wished it wasn't. Havinglost track of time almost from the beginning of the disaster, hehad no idea how long this had been going on. A year, maybe?His life had become divided into two sections: drug-stimulatedworking-period; exhausted, troubled, tranquillized sleeping-:period. Sometimes, when the mobs saw the inactive Towers, andcharged towards the laboratory, he had to protect himself. Hehad learned to sense the coming of a mob. They never cameindividually. Mob hysteria had become the universal conditionof mankind-for all except Seward who had created it.Hallucinomatics, neural stimulators, mechanical psychosimu-latory devices, hallucinogenic drugs and machines, all had beendeveloped to perfection at the Hampton Research Laboratoryunder the brilliant direction of Prof. Lee W. Seward (33),psychophysicist extraordinary, one of, the youngest pioneers inthe field of hallucinogenic research.Better for the world if he hadn't been, thought Seward wearilyas he lowered his worn-out body into the chair and stared atthe table full of notebooks and loose sheets of paper on which,he'd been working ever since the result of Experiment Restor-ation.Experiment Restoration. A fine name. Fine ideals to inspire it.Fine brains to make it. But something had gone wrong.Originally developed to help in the work of curing mental dis-orders of all kinds, whether slight or extreme, the Hallucino-mats had been an extension on the old hallucinogenic drugssuch as CO2, Mescalin and Lysergic Acid derivatives. Their im-mediate ancestor was the stroboscope and machines like it. Thestroboscope, spinning rapidly, flashing brightly coloured patternsinto the eyes of a subject, often inducing epilepsy or a similardisorder; the research of Burroughs and his followers into theearly types of crude hallucinomats, had all helped to contributeto a better understanding of mental disorders.But, as research continued, so did the incidence of mentalillness rise rapidly throughout the world.The Hampton Research Laboratory and others like it wereformed to combat that rise with what had hitherto been con-sidered near-useless experiments in the field of Hallucinomatics.Seward who had been stressing the potential importance of hischosen field since university, came into his own. He .was madeDirector of the Hampton Lab.People had earlier thought of Seward as a crank and of thehallucinomats as being at. best toys. and at worse ' madnessmachines,' irresponsibly created by a madman.But psychiatrists specially trained to work with them, hadfound them invaluable aids to their studies of mental disorders.It had become possible for a trained psychiatrist to induce inhimself a temporary state of mental abnormality by use of thesemachines. Thus he was better able to understand and help hispatients. By different methods -light, sound-waves, simulatedbrain-waves, and so on-the machines created the symptoms ofdozens of basic abnormalities and thousands of permutations.They became an essential part of modern psychiatry.The result: hundreds and hundreds of patients, hitherto vir-tually incurable, had been cured completely.But the birth-rate was rising even faster than had been pre-dicted in the middle part of the century, And mental illness rosefaster than the birth-rate. Hundreds of cases could be cured.But there were millions to be cured. There was no mass-treat-ment for mental illness.Not yet.Work at the Hampton Research Lab became a frantic raceto get ahead of the increase. Nobody slept much as, in the greatbig world outside, individual victims of mental illness turnedinto groups of - the world had only recently forgotten the oldword and now remembered it again - maniacs.An overcrowded, over-pressured world, living on its nerves,cracked up.The majority of people, of course, did not succumb to totalmadness. But those who did became a terrible problem.Governments, threatened by anarchy, were forced to re-insti-tute the cruel, old laws in order to combat the threat. All overthe world prisons, hospitals, mental homes, institutions of manykinds, all were turned into Bedlams. This hardly solved theproblem. Soon, if the rise continued, the sane would be in aminority.A dark tide of madness, far worse even than that which hadswept Europe in the Middle Ages, threatened to submergecivilization.Work at the Hampton Research Laboratory speeded up andspeeded up - arid members of the team began to crack. Not allthese cases were noticeable to the over-worked men whoremained sane. They were too busy with their frantic experi-ments.Only Lee Seward and a small group of assistants kept going,making increasing use of stimulant-drugs, and depressant-drugsto do so.But, now that Seward thought back, they had not been sane,they had not remained cool and efficient, any more than theothers. They had seemed to, that was all. Perhaps the drugshad deceived them.The fact was, they had panicked-though the signs of panichad been hidden, even to themselves, under the disciplined guiseof sober thinking.Their work on tranquillizing machines had not kept up with,their perfection of stimulatory devices. This was because theyhad had to study the reasons for mental abnormalities beforethey could begin to devise machines for curing them.Soon, they decided, the whole world would be mad, wellbefore they could perfect their tranquilomatic machines. Theycould see no way of speeding up this work any more.Seward was the first to put it to his team. He rememberedhis words.'Gentlemen, as you know, our work on hallucinomats forthe actual curing of mental disorders is going too slowly. Thereis no sign of our perfecting, such machines in the near future.I have an alternative proposal.'The alternative proposal had been Experiment Restoration.The tide, now Seward thought about it, had been euphemistic.It should have been called Experiment Diversion. The existing,hallucinomats would be set up throughout the world and usedto induce passive disorders in the minds of the greater part ofthe human race. The co-operation of national governments andWorld Council was sought and given. The machines were set upsecretly at key points all over the globe.They began to 'send' the depressive symptoms of various dis-orders. They, worked. People became quiet and passive. A largenumber went into catatonic states. Others - a great many others,who were potentially inclined to melancholia, manic-depression,certain kinds of schizophrenia - committed suicide. Rivers be-came clogged with corpses, roads awash with the blood and fleshof those who'd thrown themselves in front of cars. Every timea plane or rocket was seen in the sky, people expected to see atleast one body come falling from it. Often, whole cargoes ofpeople, .were killed by the suicide of a captain, driver or pilotof a vehicle.Even Seward had not suspected the extent of the potentialSuicides. He was shocked. So was his team. So were the World Council and the national governments.They told Seward and his team to turn off their machines andreverse the damage they had done, as much as possible.Seward had warned them of the possible result of doing this.He had been ignored. His machines had been confiscated andthe World Council had put untrained or ill-trained operatorson them. This was one of the last acts of the World Council.It was one of the last rational-however ill-judged - acts theworld knew.The real disaster had come about when the bungling operatorsthat the World Council had chosen set the hallucinomats to sendthe full effects of the conditions they'd originally been designedto produce. The operators may have been fools-they wereprobably mad themselves to do what they did. Seward couldn'tknow. Most of them had been killed by bands of psychopathicmurderers who killed their victims by the hundreds in weird andhorrible rites which seemed to mirror those of pre-history - orthose of the insane South American cultures before theSpaniards.Chaos had come swiftly-the chaos that now existed.Seward and his three remaining assistants had protected them-selves the only way they could, by erecting the stroboscopicTowers on. the roof of the laboratory building. This kept themobs off. But it did not help their consciences. One by oneSeward's assistants had committed suicide.Only Seward, keeping himself alive on a series of ever-more-potent drugs, somehow retained his sanity. And, he thoughtironically, this sanity was only comparative.A hypodermic syringe lay on the table and beside it a smallbottle marked M-A 19-Mescalin-Andrenol Nineteen-a drughitherto only tested on animals, never on human beings. But allthe other drugs he had used to keep himself going had eitherrun out or now had poor effects. The M-A 19 was his lasthope of being able to continue his work on the tranquilomats heneeded to perfect and thus rectify his mistake in the only wayhe could.As he reached for the bottle and the hypodermic, he thoughtcoolly that, now he looked back, the whole world had beensuffering from insanity well before he had even consideredExperiment Restoration. The decision, to make the experimenthad been just another symptom of the world-disease. Some-thing like it would have happened sooner or later, whether bynatural or artificial means. It wasn't really his fault. He hadbeen nothing much more than fate's tool.But logic didn't help. In a way it was his fault. By now, withan efficient team, he might have been able to have constructeda few experimental tranquilomats, at least.'Now I've got to do it alone,' he thought as. he pulled up histrouser leg and sought a vein he could use in his clammy, greyflesh. He had long since given up dabbing the area with anaes-thetic. He found a blue vein, depressed the plunger of theneedle and sat back in his chair to await results.TWOTHEY CAME SUDDENLY and were drastic.His brain and body exploded in a torrent of mingled ecstasyand pain which surged through him. Waves of pale light flick-ered. Rich darkness followed. He rode a ferris-wheel of eruptingsensations and emotions. He fell down a never-ending slope ofobsidian rock, surrounded by clouds of green, purple, yellow,black. The rock vanished, but he continued to fall.Then there was the smell of disease and corruption in hisnostrils, but even that passed and he was standing up.World of phosphorescence drifting like golden spheres intoblack night. Green, blue, red explosions. Towers rotate slowly.Towers. Advance. Towers Recede. Advance, Recede. Vanish.Flickering world of phosphorescent tears falling into the time-less, spaceless wastes of Nowhere. World of Misery. World ofAntagonism. World of Guilt. Guilt- guilt - guilt..World of hateful wonder.Heart throbbing, mind thudding, body shuddering as M-A19 flowed up the infinity of the spine. Shot into back-brain,shot into mid-brain, shot into fore-brain.EXPLOSION ALL CENTRES.No-mind- No-body- No-where.Dying waves of light danced out of his eyes and away throughthe dark world: Everything was dying. Cells, sinews, nerves,synapses - all crumbling. Tears of light, fading, fading.Brilliant rockets streaking into the sky, exploding all to-gether and sending their multicoloured globes of light - balls ona Xmas Tree-balls on a great tree-X-mass—drifting slowlyearthwards.Ahead of him was a tall, blocky building constructed of hugechunks of yellowed granite, like a fortress. Black mist swirledaround it and across the bleak, horizonless nightscape.This was no normal hallucinatory experience. Seward felt theground under his feet, the warm air on his face, the half-familiarsmells. He had no doubt that he had entered another world.But where was it? How had he got here?Who had brought him here?The answer might lie in the fortress ahead. He began towalk towards it. Gravity seemed lighter, for he walked withgreater ease than normal and was soon standing looking up atthe huge green metallic door. He bunched his fist and rappedon it.Echoes boomed through numerous corridors and wereabsorbed in the heart of the fortress.Seward waited as the door was slowly openedA man who so closely resembled the Laughing Cavalier of thepainting that he must have modelled his beard and clothes onit, bowed slightly and said:' Welcome home, Professor Seward. We've been expectingyou.'The bizarrely dressed man stepped aside and allowed him topass into a dark corridor.' Expecting me,' said Seward.' How?'The Cavalier replied good-humouredly: 'That's not forme to explain. Here we go - through this door and up thiscorridor.' He opened the door and turned into another corridorand Seward followed him.They opened innumerable doors and walked along innumer-able corridorsThe complexities of the corridors seemed somehow familiarto Seward: He felt disturbed by them, but the possibility of anexplanation overrode his qualms and he willingly followedthe Laughing Cavalier deeper and deeper into the fortress,through the twists and turns until they arrived at a door whichwas probably very close to the centre of the fortress.The Cavalier knocked confidently on the door, but spokedeferentially. ' Professor Seward is here at last, sir.'A light, cultured voice said, from the other side of the door:' Good. Send him in.'This door opened so slowly that it seemed to Seward that hewas watching a film slowed-down to a fraction of its properspeed. When it had opened sufficiently to let him enter, he wentinto the room beyond. The Cavalier didn't follow him.It only occurred to. him then that he might be in some kindof mental institution, which would explain the fortress-likenature of the building and the man dressed up like the LaughingCavalier. But, if so, how had he got here-unless he hadcollapsed and order had been restored sufficiently for someoneto have come and collected him. No, the idea was weak.The room he entered was full of rich, dark colours. Satinscreens and hangings obscured much of it. The ceiling was notvisible. Neither was the source of the rather dim light. In thecentre of the room stood a dais, raised perhaps a foot from thefloor. On the dais was an old. leather armchair.In the armchair sat a naked man with a cool, blue skin.He stood up as Seward entered. He smiled charmingly andstepped off the dais, advancing towards Seward with his righthand extended.'Good to see you, old boy!' he said heartily.Dazed, Seward clasped the offered hand and felt his wholearm tingle as if it had had a mild electric shock. The man'sstrange flesh was firm, but seemed to itch under Seward's palm.The man was short - little over five feet tall. His eyebrowsmet in the centre and his shiny black hair grew to a widow'speak.Also, he had no navel.'I'm glad you could get here, Seward,' he said, walkingback to his dais and sitting in the armchair. He rested his headin one hand, his elbow on the arm of the chair.Seward did not like to appear ungracious, but he. was worriedand mystified. 'I don't know where this place: is,' he said.- 'Idon't even know how I got here - unless..''Ah, yes-the drug. M-A 19, isn't it? That helped, doubt-less. We've been trying to get in touch with you for ages, oldboy.''I've got work to do-back there,' Seward said obsessionally.'I'm sorry, but I want to get back as soon as I can. What doyou want?'The Man Without A Navel sighed.. 'I'm sorry, too, Seward.But we can't let you go yet. There's something I'd like to askyou-a favour. That was why we were .hoping you'd come.''What's, your problem?' Seward's sense of unreality, neververy strong here for, fa spite of. the world's bizarre appearance,it seemed familiar, was growing weaker. If he could help theman and get back to continue his research, he would.'Well,' smiled, the Man Without A Navel, ' it's realty yourproblem as much as ours. You. see,' he shrugged diffidently,' wewant your world destroyed.''What!' Now something was clear, at last. This man andhis kind did belong to another world - whether in space, time, ordifferent dimensions-and they were enemies of Earth. 'Youcan't expect me to help you do that!' He laughed. 'You arejoking.'The Man Without A Navel shook his head seriously.' Afraidnot, old boy.'' That's why you want me here - you've seen the chaos in theworld and you want to take advantage of it-you want me tobe a - a fifth columnist.'' Ah, you remember the old term, eh? Yes, I suppose that iswhat I mean. I want you to be our agent Those machines ofyours could be modified to make those, who are left turn againsteach other even more than at present. lib?''You must be very stupid if you think I'll do mat,' Sewardsaid tiredly.' I can't help you. I'm trying to help them.' Was hetrapped here for good? He said weakly: 'You've got to let mego back.''Not as easy as that, old boy. I-and my friends-want toenter your world, but we can't until you've pumped up yourmachines to such a pitch that the entire world is maddened anddestroys itself, d'you see?'' Certainly,' exclaimed Seward. 'But I'm having no part of it!''Again the Man. Without A Navel smiled, slowly. 'You'llweaken soon enough, old boy.'' Don't be so sure,' Seward said defiantly.' I've had plenty ofchances of giving up-back there. I could have weakened. ButI didn't.'' Ah, but you've forgotten the new factor, Seward.''What's that?''The M-A 19,'' What do you mean?'' You'll know soon enough.'' Look -I want to get out of this place. You can't keep me-there's no point-I won't agree to your plan. Where is thisworld, anyway?''Knowing that depends on you, old boy,' the man's tone wasmocking. 'Entirely on you. A lot depends on you, Seward.''I know.'The Man Without A. Navel lifted his head and called:Brother Sebastian, are you available.' He glanced back atSeward with an ironical smile. ' Brother Sebastian may be ofsome help.'Seward saw the wall-hangings on the other side of the roommove. Then, from, behind a screen on which was painted aweird, surrealistic scene, a tall, cowled figure emerged, face inshadow, hands folded in sleeves. A monk.' Yes, sir,' said the monk in a cold, malicious voice..' Brother Sebastian, Professor Seward here is not quite -asready to comply with our wishes as we had hoped. Can youinfluence him in any way?''Possibly, sir.' Now the tone held a note of anticipation.' Good. Professor Seward, will you go with Brother Sebas-tian?''No.' Seward had thought the room contained only onedoor-the one he'd entered through. But now there was achance of there being more doors - other than the one throughwhich the cowled monk had come. The two men didn't seemto hear his negative reply. They remained where they were, notmoving.' No,' he said again, his voice rising.' What right haveyou to do this?'' Rights? A strange question.' The monk chuckled to himself.It was a sound Like ice tumbling into a cold glass.' Yes-rights. You must have some sort of organization here.Therefore you must have a ruler-or government. I demandto be taken to someone in authority.'' But I am in authority here, old boy,' purred the blue-skinnedman. 'And-in a sense-so are you, If you agreed with mysuggestion, you could hold tremendous power. Tremendous.'' I don't want to discuss that again.' Seward began to walktowards the wall-hangings. They merely watched him-themonk with his face in shadow - the Man Without A Navel witha supercilious smile on his thin lips. He walked around a screen,parted the hangings - and there they were on the other side. Hewent through the hangings. This was some carefully plannedtrick-an illusion - deliberately intended to confuse him. Hewas used to such methods, even though he didn't understandhow they'd worked this one. He said: ' Clever-but tricks ofthis kind won't make me weaken.'' What on earth d'you mean, Seward, old man? Now, Iwonder if you'll accompany Brother Sebastian here. I have anawful lot of work to catch up on.''All right,' Seward said. 'All right; I .will.' Perhaps on the,way to wherever the monk was going, he would find an oppor-tunity to escape,The monk turned and Seward followed him. He did not lookat the Man Without A Navel as he passed his ridiculous dais,with its ridiculous leather armchair.They passed through a narrow doorway behind a curtainand were once again in the complex series of passages. The tallmonk-now he was close to him, Seward estimated his heightat about six feet, seven inches-seemed to flow along in frontof him. He began to dawdle. The monk didn't look back. Sewardincreased the distance between, them.. Still, the monk didn'tappear to notice.Seward turned and ran.They had met nobody on their journey through the corridors.He hoped he could find a door leading out of the fortress beforesomeone spotted him. There was no cry from behind him.But as he ran, the passages got darker and darker until hewas careering through pitch blackness, sweating, panting andbeginning to panic. He kept blundering into damp walls andrunning on.It was only much later that he began to realize he was run-ning in a circle that was getting tighter and tighter until hewas doing little more than spin round, like a top. He stopped,then.These people evidently had more powers than he had sus-pected. Possibly they had some means of shifting the position ofthe corridor walls, following his movements by means of hiddenTV cameras or something like them. Simply because there were,no visible signs of an advanced technology didn't mean that theydid not possess one. They obviously did. How else could theyhave got him from his own world to this?He took a pace forward. Did he sense the walls drawing back?He wasn't sure. The whole thing reminded him vaguely of ThePit and The Pendulum,He strode forward a number of paces and saw a light aheadof him. He walked towards it, turned into a dimly-lit corridor.The monk was waiting for him.' We missed each other, Professor Seward. I see you managedto precede me.' The monk's face was still invisible, secret in itscowl. As secret as his cold mocking, malevolent voice.' We arealmost there, now,' said the monk.Seward stepped towards him, hoping to see his face, but itwas impossible. The monk glided past him. 'Follow me,please.'For the moment, until he could work out how the fortressworked, Seward decided to accompany the monk.They came to a heavy, iron-studded door-quite unlike anyof the other doors.They walked into a low-ceilinged chamber. It was very hot.Smoke hung in the still air of the room. It poured from aglowing brazier at the extreme end. Two men stood by thebrazier.One of than was a thin man with a huge, bulging stomachover which his long, narrow hands were folded. He had a shaggymane of dirty white hair, his cheeks were sunken and his noseextremely long and extremely pointed. He seemed toothless andhis puckered lips were shaped in a senseless smile -like thesmile of a madman Seward had once had to experiment on. Hewore a stained white jacket buttoned over his grotesque paunch.On his legs were loose khaki trousers.His companion was also thin, though lacking the stomach. Hewas taller and had the face of a mournful bloodhound, withsparse, highly-greased, black hair that covered his bony headlike a skull-cap. He stared into the brazier, not looking up asBrother Sebastian led Seward into the room and closed thedoor.The thin man with the stomach, however, pranced forward,his hands still clasped on his paunch, and bowed to them both.'Work for us, Brother Sebastian?' he said, nodding atSeward.'We require a straightforward "Yes,"' Brother Sebastiansaid. 'You have merely to ask the question "Will You?" Ifhe replies " No," you are to continue. If he replies " Yes," youare to cease and inform me immediately."' Very well, Brother. Rely on us.'' I hope I can.' The monk chuckled again. ' You are now inthe charge of these men, professor. If you decide you wantto help us, after all, you have only to say " Yes." Is that clear?'Seward began to tremble with horror. He had suddenlyrealized what this place was.' Now look here,' he said.' You can't...'He walked towards the monk who had turned and was open-ing the door. He grasped the man's shoulder. His hand seemedto clutch a delicate, bird-like structure. ' Key! I don't thinkyou're a man at all. What are you?'' A man or a mouse,' chuckled the monk as the two grotes-que creatures leapt forward suddenly and twisted Seward'sarms behind him. Seward kicked back at them with his heels,squirmed in their grasp, but he might have been held by steelbands. He shouted incoherently at the monk as he shut the doorbehind him with a whisk of his habit.The pair flung him on to the damp, hot stones of the floor,It smelt awful. He rolled over and sat up. They stood overhim. The hound-faced man had his arms folded. The thin manwith the stomach had his long hands on his paunch again. Theyseemed to rest there whenever he was not actually using them.It was the latter who smiled with his twisting, puckered lips,cocking his head to one side.' What do you think, Mr Morl?' he asked his companion.' I don't know, Mr Hand. After you.' The hound-faced manspoke in a melancholy whisper.' I would suggest Treatment H. Simple to operate, less workfor us, a tried and trusty operation which works with most andwill probably work with this gentleman.'Seward scrambled up and tried to push past them, making forthe door. Again they seized him expertly and dragged him back,He felt the rough touch of rope on his wrists and the pain as aknot was tightened. He shouted, more in anger than agony, morein terror than either.They were going to torture him. He knew it.When they had tied his hands, they took the rope and tied hisankles. They twisted the rope up around his calves and underhis legs. They made a halter of the rest arid looped it overhis neck so that he had to bend almost double if he was not tostrangle.Then they sat him on a chair.Mr Hand removed his hands from his paunch, reached upabove Seward's head and turned on the tap.The first drop of water fell directly on the centre of his headsome five minutes later.Twenty-seven drops of water later, Seward was raving andscreaming. Yet every time he tried to jerk his head away, thehalter threatened to strangle him and the jolly Mr Hand andthe mournful Mr Morl were there to straighten him up again.Thirty drops of water after that, Seward's brain began tothrob and he opened his eyes to see that the chamber hadvanished.In its place was a huge comet, a fireball dominating the sky,rushing directly towards him. He backed away from it and therewere no more ropes on his hands or feet. He was free.He began to run. He leapt into the air and stayed there. Hewas swimming through the air.Ecstasy ran up his spine like a flickering fire, touched hisback-brain, touched Ms mid-brain, touched his fore-brain.EXPLOSION ALL CENTRES!He was standing one flower among many, in a bed of talllupins and roses which waved in a gentle wind. He pulled hisroots free and began to walk.He walked into the Lab Control Room.Everything was normal except that gravity seemed a littleheavy. Everything was as he'd left it.He saw that he had left the Towers rotating. He went intothe room he used as a bedroom and workroom. He parted the.blind and looked out into the night. There was a big, full moonhanging in the deep, blue sky over the ruins of Hampton. Hesaw its light reflected in the far-away sea. A few bodies still layprone near the lab. He went back into the Control Room andswitched off the towers.Returning to the bedroom he looked at the card-table he hadhis notes on. They were undisturbed. Neatly, side by side neara large, tattered notebook, lay a half-full ampoule of M-A 19and a hypodermic syringe. He picked up the ampoule and threwit in a corner. It did not break but rolled around on the floorfor a few seconds.He sat down.His whole body ached.He picked up a sheaf of his more recent notes. He wrote every-thing down that came into his head on the subject of tranquilo-mats; it helped him think better and made sure that his druggedmind and body did not hamper him as much as they mighthave done if he had simply relied on his memory.He looked at his wrists. They carried the marks of the rope.Evidently the transition from the other world to his owninvolved leaving anything in the other world behind. He wasglad. If he hadn't, he'd have had a hell of a job getting himselfuntied. He shuddered - a mob might have reached the lab beforehe could get free and activate the Towers.He tried hard to forget the questions flooding through hismind. Where had he been? Who were the people? What didthey really want? How far could they keep a check on him?How did the M-A 19 work to aid his transport into the otherworld? Could they get at him here?He decided they couldn't get at him, otherwise they mighthave tried earlier. Somehow it was the M-A 19 in his brainwhich allowed them to get hold of him. Well, that was simple -no more M-A 19.With a feeling of relief., he forced himself to concentrate onhis notes.Out of the confusion, something seemed to be developing,but he had to work at great speed - greater speed than previ-ously, perhaps, for he daren't use the M-A 19 again and therewas nothing else left of much good.His brain cleared as he once again got interested in his notes. Heworked for two hours, making fresh notes, equations, checkinghis knowledge against the stack of earlier research notes by thewall near his camp bed.Dawn was coming as he realized suddenly that he was suffer-ing from thirst. His throat was bone dry, so was his mouth andlips. He got up and his legs felt weak, He staggered, almostknocking over the chair. With a great effort he righted it and,leaning for support on the bed, got himself to the hand-basin.It was filled by a tank near the roof and he had used it sparsely.But this time he didn't care. He stuck "his head under the tapand drank the stale water greedily. It did no good. His wholebody now seemed cold, his skin tight, his heart thumping heavilyagainst his ribs. His head was aching horribly and his breathingincreased.He went and lay down on the bed, hoping the feeling wouldleave him.It got worse. He needed something to cure himself.What? he asked.M-A 19, he answered.NO!But - Yes, yes, yes. All he needed was a small shot of thedrug and he would be all right. He knew it.And with knowing that, he realized something else.He was hooked.The drug was habit-forming.THREEHE FOUND the half-full M-A 19 ampoule under the bed where ithad rolled. He found the needle on the table where he had leftit, buried under his notes. He found a vein in his forearm andshot himself full. There was no thought to Seward's action.There was just the craving and the chance of satisfying thatcraving.The M-A 19 began to swim leisurely through his veins, drift-ing up his spine-It hit his brain with a powerful explosion.He was walking through a world of phosphorescent ram,leaping over large purple rocks that welcomed his feet, drewthem down towards them. All was agony and startling Now.No-time, no-space, just the throbbing voice in the air abovehim. It was talking to him.DOOM, Seward. DOOM, Seward. DOOM, Seward.' Seward is doomed!' he laughed. 'Seward is betrayed!'Towers Advance. Towers Recede. Towers Rotate At NormalSpeed.Carnival Aktion. All Carnivals To Explode.Up into the back-brain, into the mid-brain, on to the fore-brain.EXPLOSION ALL CENTRES!He was back in the torture-chamber, though standing up. Inthe corner near the brazier the. grotesque pair were muttering toone another. Mr Hand darted him an angry glance, his lipsdrawn over his gums in an expression of outrage.' Hello, Seward,' said the Man Without A Navel behindhim.' So you're back.'' Back,' said Seward heavily. ' What More do you want?"' Only your All, Seward, old man. I remember a time inDartford before the war...''Which war?'' Your war, Seward. You were too young to share any other.You don't remember that war. You weren't born. Leave it tothose who do, Seward.'Seward turned. 'My war?' He looked with disgust at theMan Without A Navel; at his reptilian blue skin and his warm-cold, dark-light, good-evil eyes. At his small yet well-formedbody.The Man Without A Navel smiled.' Our war, then, old man,I won't quibble.''You made me do it. I think that somehow you made mesuggest Experiment Restoration!'' I said we won't quibble, Seward,' said the man in an authori-tative tone. Then, more conversationally: ' I remember a timein Dartford before the war, when you sat in your armchair-one rather like mine-at your brother-in-law's house. Rememberwhat you said, old man?'Seward remembered well. 'If,' he quoted,'if I had a buttonand could press it and destroy the entire universe and myselfwith it, I would. For no reason other than boredom.'' Very good, Seward. You have an excellent memory.'' Is that all you're going on? Something I said out of frustrationbecause nobody was recognizing my work?' He paused as herealized something else. ' You know all about me, don't you?'he said bitterly. There seemed to be nothing he didn't know.On the other hand Seward knew of the man. Nothing of thisworld. Nothing of where it was in space and time. It was a worldof insanity, of bizarre contrasts.' How do you know all this?'' Inside information, Seward, old boy.''You're mad!'The Man Without A Navel returned to his earlier topic.' Are you bored now, Seward?'' Bored? No. Tired, yes.'' Bored, no - tired, yes. Very good, Seward. You got herelater than expected. What kept you?' The man laughed.' I kept me. I held off taking the M-A 19 for as long as Icould.'' But you came to us in the end, eh? Good man, Seward.''You knew the M-A 19 was habit-forming? You knew I'dhave to take it, come back here?'' Naturally.'He said pleadingly: 'Let me go for God's sake! You'vemade me. Made me...'' Your dearest wish almost come true, Seward. Isn't that whatyou wanted? I made you come close to destroying the world?Is that it?'' So you did somehow influence Experiment Restoration!'' It's possible. But you haven't done very well either wayThe world is in shambles. You can't reverse that. Kill it off.Let's start fresh, Seward. Forget your experiments with thetranquilomats and help us.''No.'The Man Without A Navel shrugged.' We'll see, old boy.'He looked at the mumbling men in the corner. 'Morl -Hand-take Professor Seward to his room. I don't want anymistakes this time. I'm going to take him out of your hands.Obviously we need subtler minds put on the problem.'The pair came forward and grabbed Seward. The Man Without A Navel opened the door and they went through it first,forcing Seward ahead of them.He was too demoralized to resist much, this time. Demoralizedby the fact that he was hooked en M-A 19. What did the junkiescall it? The Habit. He had The Habit. Demoralized by hisinability to understand the whereabouts or nature of the world.he was on. Demoralized by the fact that the Man Without ANavel seemed to know everything about his personal life onEarth? Demoralized that he had fallen into the man's trap. Whohad developed M-A 19? He couldn't remember. Perhaps the.Man Without A Navel had planted it? He supposed it mightbe possible.He was pushed along another series of corridors, arrived atanother door. The Man Without A Navel came up behindthem and unlocked the door.Seward was shoved into the room. It was narrow and low -coffin-like.' We'll be sending someone along to see you in a little while,Seward,' said the man lightly. The door was slammed.Seward lay in pitch blackness.He began to sob.Later, he heard a noise outside. A stealthy noise of creepingfeet. He shuddered. What was the torture going to be thistime?He heard a scraping and a muffled rattle. The door opened.Against the light from the passage, Seward saw the manclearly. He was a big, fat negro in a grey suit. He wore a flow-ing, rainbow-coloured tie. He was grinning.Seward liked the man instinctively. But he no longer trustedhis instinct. 'What do you want?' he said suspiciously.The huge negro raised his linger to his lips. 'Ssshh,' heWhispered. 'I'm going to try and get you out of here.'' An old Secret Police trick on my world,' said Seward. ' I'mnot falling for that.'' It's no trick, son. Even if it is, what can you lose?'' Nothing.' Seward got up.The big man put his arm around Seward's shoulders. Sewardfelt comfortable in the grip, though normally he disliked suchgestures.' Now, son, we go real quietly and we go as fast as we can.Come on.'Softly, the big man began to tiptoe along the corridor.Seward was sure that TV cameras, or whatever they were, werefollowing him, that the Man Without A Navel, the monk, thetwo torturers, the Laughing Cavalier, were all waiting some-where to seize him.But, very quickly, the negro had reached a small wooden doorand was drawing a bolt. He patted Seward's shoulder and heldthe door open for him.' Through you go, son. Make for the redcar.'It was morning. In the sky hung a golden sun, twice the sizeof Earth's. There was a vast expanse of lifeless rock in alldirections, broken only by a white road which stretched into thedistance. On the road, close to Seward, was parked a car some-thing like a Cadillac. It was fire-red and bore the registrationplates YOU OOO. Whoever these people were, Sewarddecided, they were originally from Earth - all except the ManWithout A Navel, perhaps. Possibly this was his world and theothers had been brought from Earth, like him.He walked towards the car. The air was cold and fresh. Hestood by the convertible and looked back. The negro was run-ning over the rock towards him. He dashed round the car andgot into the driver's seat. Seward got in beside him.The negro started the car, put it into gear and shoved hisfoot down hard on the accelerator pedal. The car jerked awayand had reached top speed in seconds.At the wheel, the negro relaxed. ' Glad that went smoothly.I didn't expect to get away with it so easily, son. You're Seward,aren't you?'' Yes. You seem to be as well-informed as the others.'' I guess so.' The negro took a pack of cigarettes from hisshirt pocket.' Smoke?'' No thanks,' said Seward. ' That's one habit I don't have.'The negro looked back over his shoulder. The expanse ofrock seemed never-ending, though in the distance the fortresswas disappearing. He flipped a cigarette out of the pack andput it between his lips. He undipped the car's lighter and putit to the tip of the cigarette. He inhaled and put the lighterback. The cigarette between his lips, he returned his other handto the wheel.He said: 'They were going to send the Vampire to you.It's lucky I reached you in time.'' It could be,' said Seward. ' Who are you? What part doyou play in this?'' Let's just say I'm a friend of yours and an enemy of yourenemies. The name's Farlowe.'' Well, I trust you, Farlowe - though God knows why.'Farlowe grinned. ' Why not? I don't want your world des-troyed any more than you do. It doesn't much matter, I guess,but if there's a chance of restoring it, then you ought to try.'' Then you're from my world originally, is that it?'' In a manner of speaking, son,' said Farlowe.Very much later, the rock gave way to pleasant, flat country-side with trees, fields and little cottages peaceful under the vastsky. In the distance, Seward saw herds of cattle and sheep, theoccasional horse. It reminded him of the countryside of hischildhood, all clear and fresh and sharp with the clarity thatonly a child's eye can bring to a scene before it is obscuredand tainted by the impressions of adulthood. Soon the flatcountry was behind them and they were going through an areaof low, green hills, the huge sun flooding the scene with its soft,golden light. There were no clouds in the pale blue sky.The big car sped smoothly along and Seward in the comfort-able companionship of Farlowe, began to relax a little. Hefelt almost happy, would have felt happy if it had not been forthe nagging knowledge that somehow he had to get back andcontinue his work. It was not merely a question of restoringsanity to the world, now-he had also to thwart whatever planswere in the mind of The Man Without A Navel.After a long silence, Seward asked a direct question. 'Far-lowe, where is this world? What are we doing here?'Farlowe's answer was vague. He stared ahead at the road.'Don't ask me that, son. I don't rightly know.'' But you live here.'' So do you.'' No -I only come here when - when...'' When what?'But Seward couldn't raise the courage to admit about thedrug to Farlowe. Instead he said: 'Does M-A 19 mean any-thing to you?''Nope.'So Farlowe hadn't come here because of the drag. SewardSaid: ' But you said you were from my world originally.''Only in a manner of speaking.' Farlowe changed gearsas the road curved steeply up a hill. It rose gently above theidyllic countryside below.Seward changed his Ike of questioning. 'Isn't there anysort of organization here-no government. What's the nameof this country?'Farlowe shrugged. 'It's just a place-no government. Thepeople in the fortress run most things. Everybody's scared ofthem.''I don't blame them. Who's the Vampire you mentioned?'' He works for the Man.''What is be?'' Why - a vampire, naturally,' said Farlowe in surprise.The sun had started to set and the whole countryside wasbathed in red-gold light. The car continued to climb the longhill.Farlowe said: 'I'm taking you to some friends. You oughtto be fairly safe there. Then maybe we can work out a wayof getting you back.'Seward felt better. At least Farlowe had given him somedirect information.As the car reached the top of the hill and began to descendSeward got a view of an odd and disturbing sight. The sunwas like a flat, round, red disc - yet only half of it was abovethe horizon. The line of the horizon evenly intersected the sun'sdisc! It was some sort of mirage-yet so convincing that'Reward looked away, staring instead at the black smoke whichhe could now see-rolling across the valley below. He said nothingto Farlowe.' How much further?' he asked later as the car came to thebottom of the hill. Black night had come, moonless, and thecar's headlights blazed.' A long way yet, I'm afraid, son,' said Farlowe.' You cold?'' No.''We'll be hitting a few signs of civilization soon. You tired?''No-why?'' We could put up at a motel or something. I guess we couldeat anyway.'Ahead, Seward saw a few lights. He couldn't make out wherethey came from. Farlowe began to slow down. 'We'll risk it,'he said. He pulled in towards the .lights and Seward saw thatit was a line of fuel pumps. Behind the pumps was a singlestorey building, very long and built entirely of timber by thelook of it, Farlowe drove in between the pumps and the build-ing. A man in overalls, the top half of his face shadowed bythe peak of his cap, came into sight. Farlowe got out of the carwith a signal to Seward to do the same. The negro handed hiskeys to the attendant. 'Fill her full and give her a quickcheck.'Could this be Earth, Seward wondered. Earth in the future -.or possibly an Earth of a different space-time continuum. Thatwas the likeliest explanation for this unlikely world. The con-trast between recognizable, everyday things and the grotes-queries of the fortress was strange-yet it could be explainedeasily if these people had contact with his world. That wouldexplain how they had things like cars and fuel stations and noapparent organization necessary for producing them. Somehow,perhaps, they just - stole them?He followed Farlowe into the long, building. He could seethrough the wide windows .that it was some kind of restaurant.There was a long, clean counter and a few people seated attables at the far end. All had their backs to him.He and Farlowe sat down on stools. Close to them was thelargest pin-table Seward had ever seen. Its lights were flashingand its balls were clattering, though there was no one operatingit. The coloured lights flashed series of numbers at him untilhis eyes lost focus and he had to turn away.A woman was standing behind the counter now. Most of herface was covered by a yashmak.' What do you want to eat, son?' said Farlowe, turning tohim.' Oh, anything.'Farlowe ordered sandwiches and coffee. When the womanhad gone to get their order, Seward whispered: 'Why's shewearing that thing?'Farlowe pointed at a sign Seward hadn't noticed before. Itread THE HAREM HAVEN. ' It's their gimmick,' said Far-lowe.Seward looked back at the pin-table. The lights had stopped:flashing, the balls had stopped clattering. But above it suddenly-appeared a huge pair of disembodied eyes. He gasped.Distantly, he heard his name being repeated over and overagain.' Seward. Seward. Seward. Seward...'He couldn't tell where the voice was coining from. He glancedup at the ceiling. Not from there. The voice stopped. He lookedback at the pin-table. The eyes had vanished. His panicreturned. He got off his stool.' I'll wait for you in the car, Farlowe.'Farlowe looked surprised. ' What's the matter, son?'Nothing- it's okay - I'll wait in the car.'Farlowe shrugged.Seward went out into the night. The attendant had gonebut the car was waiting for him. He opened the door andclimbed in.What did the eyes mean? Were the people from the fortressfollowing him in some way. Suddenly an explanation for mostof the questions bothering him sprang into his mind. Of course-telepathy. They were probably telepaths. That was how theyknew so much about him. That could be how they knew of hisworld and could influence events there - they might never gothere in person. This comforted him a little, though he realizedthat getting out of this situation was going to be even more diffi-cult than he'd thought.He looked through the windows and saw Farlowe's big bodyperched on its stool. The other people in the cafe were stillsitting with their backs to him. He realized that there was some-thing familiar about them. He saw Farlowe get up and walk towards the door. He cameout and got into the car, slamming the door after him. Heleaned back in his seat and handed Seward a sandwich, ' Youseem worked up, son,' he said. 'You'd better eat this.'Seward took the sandwich. He was staring at the backs ofthe other customers again. He frowned.Farlowe started the car and they moved towards the road.Then Seward realized who the men reminded him of. He cranedhis head back in the hope of seeing their faces, but it was toolate. They had reminded him of his dead assistants - the menwho'd committed suicide.They roared through dimly-seen towns-all towers and angles.There seemed to be nobody about. Dawn came up and they stillsped on. Seward realized that Farlowe must have a tremendousvitality, for he didn't seem to tire at all. Also, perhaps, he wasmotivated by a desire to get as far away from the fortress aspossible.They stopped twice TO re-fuel and Farlowe bought more sand-wiches and coffee which they had as they drove.In the late afternoon Farlowe said: 'Almost there.'They passed through a pleasant village. It was somehow alien,although very similar to a small English village. It had an oddlyforeign look which was hard to place. Farlowe pulled in at whatseemed to be the gates of a large public park. He looked up atthe sun. 'Just made it,' he said. 'Wait in the park-someonewill come to collect you.'' You're leaving me?"' Yes. I don't think they know where you are. They'll lookbut, with luck, they won't look around here. Out you get, son.Into the park;'' Who do I wait for?'' You'll know her when she comes.''Her?' He got out and closed the door. He stood on thepavement watching as, with a cheerful wave, Farlowe drove off.He felt a tremendous sense of loss then, as if his only hope hadbeen taken away.Gloomily, he turned and walked through the park gates.FOURAS HE WALKED between low hedges along a gravel path, herealized that this park, like so many things in this world, con-trasted with the village it served. It was completely familiarjust like a park on his own world.It was like a grey, hazy winter's afternoon, with the brittle,interwoven skeletons of trees black and sharp against the coldsky. Birds perched on trees and bushes, or flew noisily into thesilent air.Evergreens crowded upon the leaf-strewn grass. Cry of spar-rows. Peacocks, necks craned forward, dived towards scatteredbread. Silver birch, larch, elm, monkey-puzzle trees, and sway-ing white ferns, each one like an ostrich feather stuck in theearth. A huge, ancient, nameless trunk from which, at the top,grew an expanse of soft, yellow fungus; the trunk itself look-ing like a Gothic cliff, full of caves and dark windows. A greyand brown pigeon perched motionless on the slender branchesof a young birch. Peacock chicks the size of hens pecked withconcentration at the grass.Mellow, nostalgic smell of winter; distant sounds of childrenplaying; lost black dog looking for master; red disc of sun inthe cool, darkening sky. The light was sharp and yet soft, peace-ful. A path led into the distance towards a flight of widestone steps, at the top of which was the curving entrance to anarbour, browns, blacks and yellows of sapless branches andfading leaves.From the arbour a girl appeared and began to descend thesteps with quick, graceful movements. She stopped when shereached the path. She looked at him. She had long, blonde hairand wore a white dress with a full skirt. She was about seven-teen.The peace of the park was suddenly interrupted by childrenrushing from nowhere towards the peacocks, laughing and shout-ing. Some of the boys saw the tree trunk and made for it.Others stood looking upwards at the sun as it sank in the coldair. They seemed not to see either Seward or the girl. Sewardlooked at her. Did he recognize her? It wasn't possible. Yet she,too, gave him a look of recognition, smiled shyly at him and rantowards him. She reached him, stood on tiptoe and gave him alight kiss on the cheek.' Hello, Lee.'' Hello. Have you come to find me?'' I've been looking for you a long time.'' Farlowe sent a message ahead?'She took his hand. ' Come on. Where have you been, Lee?'This was a question he couldn't answer. He let her lead himback up the steps, through the arbour. Between the brancheshe glanced a garden and a pool. 'Come on,' she said. 'Let's.see what's for dinner. Mother's looking forward to meetingyou.'He no longer questioned how these strange people all seemedto know his name. It was still possible that all of them weretaking part in the conspiracy against him.At the end of the arbour was a house, several storeys high.It was a pleasant house with a blue and white door. She led himup the path and into a hallway. It was shining with darkpolished wood and brass plates on the walls. From a room atthe end he smelled spicy cooking. She went first and opened thedoor at the end. 'Mother-Lee Seward's here. Can we comein?''Of course.' The voice was warm, husky, full of humour.They went into the room and Seward saw a woman of aboutforty, very well preserved, tall, large-boned with a fine-featuredface and smiling mouth. Her eyes also smiled. Her sleeves wererolled up and she put the lid back on a pan on the stove.' How do you do, Professor Seward. Mr Farlowe's told usabout you. You're in trouble, I hear.''How do you do, Mrs -'' Call me Martha. Has Sally introduced herself?'' No,' Sally laughed.' I forgot. I'm Sally, Lee.'Her mother gave a mock frown. 'I suppose you've beencalling our guest by his first name, as usual. Do you mind,professor?'' Not at all.' He was thinking how attractive they both were,in their different ways. The young, fresh girl and her warm,intelligent mother. He had always enjoyed the company ofwomen, but never so much, he realized, as now. They seemedto complement one another. In their presence he felt safe, atease. Now he realized why Farlowe had chosen them to hidehim. Whatever the facts, he would feel safe here.'Martha was saying: ' Dinner won't be long.'' It smells good.'' Probably smells better than it tastes,' she laughed.' Go intothe lounge with Sally. Sally, fix Professor Seward a drink.'' Call me Lee,' said Seward, a little uncomfortably. He hadnever cared much for his first name. He preferred his middlename, William, but not many others did.'Come on, Lee,' she took his hand and led him out of thekitchen.' We'll see what there is.' They went into a small, well-lighted lounge. The furniture, like the whole house, had a lookthat was half-familiar, half-alien - obviously the product of aslightly different race. Perhaps they deliberately imitated Earthculture, without quite succeeding. Sally still gripped his hand.Her hand was warm and her skin smooth. He made to drop itbut, involuntarily, squeezed it gently before she took it away todeal with the drink. She gave him another shy smile. He feltthat she was as attracted to him as he to her. ' What's it goingto be?' she asked him.' Oh, anything,' he said, sitting down on a comfortable sofa.She poured him a dry martini and brought it over. Then shesat demurely down beside him and watched him drink it. Hereyes sparkled with a mixture of sauciness and innocence whichhe found extremely appealing. He looked around the room.'How did Farlowe get his message to you?' he said.' He came the other day. Said he was going to try and get intothe fortress and help you. Farlowe's always flitting about. Ithink the people at the fortress have a price on his head or some-thing. It's exciting isn't it.'' You can say that again,' Seward said feelingly.' Why are they after you?"' They want me to help them destroy the world I come from.Do you know anything about it?'' Earth, isn't it?'' Yes.' Was he going to get some straightforward answers atlast?' I know it's very closely connected with ours and that someof. us want to escape, from here and go to your world.'' Why?' he asked eagerly.She shook her head. Her long, fine hair waved with the,motion. 'I don't really know. Something about their beingtrapped here - something like that. Farlowe said somethingabout you being a " key " to their release. They can only dowhat they want to do with your agreement.'' But I could agree and then break my word!'' I don't think you could-but honestly, I don't know anymore. I've probably got it wrong. Dp you like me, Lee?'He was startled by. the directness of her question. ' Yes,' hesaid,' very much.''Farlowe said you would. Good, isn't it?'' Why - yes. Farlowe knows a lot.'' That's why he works against them.'Martha came in. 'Almost ready,' she smiled. 'I think I'llhave a quick one before I start serving. How are you feelingLee, after your ride?''Fine,' he said, '.fine.' He had never been in a position likethis one-with two women either of whom was extremely attrac-tive for almost opposite reasons.' We were discussing why the people at the fortress wantedmy help,' he said, turning the conversation back the way he feltit ought to go if he was ever going to get off this world andback to his own and his work.' Farlowe said something about it.'' Yes, Sally told me. Does Farlowe belong to some sort ofunderground organization ?'' Underground? Why, yes, in a way he does.''Aren't they strong enough to fight the Man Without ANavel and his friends ?'' Farlowe says they're strong enough, but divided over whatshould be done and how.'' I see. That's fairly common amongst such groups, I believe.''Yes.'' What part do you play?''None, really. Farlowe asked me to put you up - that's all.'She sipped her drink, her eyes smiling directly into his. Hedrained his glass.' Shall we eat?' she said. ' Sally, take Lee in to the dining-room.'The girl got up and, somewhat possessively Seward thought,linked her arm in his. Her young body against his was distract-ing. He felt a little warm. She took him in. The table was laidfor supper. Three chairs add three places.The sun had set and!candles burned oh the table in brass candelabras. She unlinkedher arm and pulled out one of the chairs.'You sit here, Lee-at the head of the table.' She grinned.Then she leaned forward as he sat down.' Hope mummy isn'tboring you.'He was surprised.' Why should she?'Martha came in with three covered dishes on a tray. ' Thismay not have turned out quite right, Lee. Never does whenyou're trying hard.'' I'm sure it'll be fine,' he smiled. The two women sat downone either side of him. Martha served him. It was some sort ofgoulash with vegetables. He took his napkin and put it on hislap.As they began to eat, Martha said: ' How is it?''Fine,' he said. It was very good. Apart from the feelingthat some kind of rivalry for his attentions existed betweenmother and daughter the air of normality in the house wascomforting. Here, he might be able to do some constructivethinking about his predicament.When the meal was over, Martha said: 'It's time for bed,Sally. Say good night to Lee.'She pouted.' Oh, it's not fair.'' Yes it is,' she said firmly. ' You can see Lee in the morning.He's had a long journey.'' All right.' She smiled at Seward. ' Sleep well, Lee.'' I think I will,' he said.Martha chuckled after Sally had gone. ' Would you like adrink before you go to bed?' She spoke softly.' Love one,' he said.They went into the other room. He sat down on the sofa asshe mixed the drinks. She brought them over and sat down nextto him as her daughter had done earlier.'Tell me everything that's been happening. It sounds soexciting.'He knew at once he could tell her all he wanted to, that she.would listen and be sympathetic. ' It's terrifying, really,' hebegan, half-apologetically. He began to talk, beginning withwhat had happened on Earth. She listened.'I even wondered if this was a dream-world-a figment of.my imagination,' he finished, ' but I had to reject that whenI went back to my own. I had rope marks on my wrists-myhair was soaking wet. You don't get that in a dream!'' I hope not,' she smiled. ' We're different here, Lee, obvi-ously. Our life doesn't have the - the shape that yours has. Wehaven't much direction, no real desires. We just- well -exist.It's as if we're waiting for something to happen. As if-' shepaused and seemed to be looking down deep into herself. 'Putit this way-Farlowe thinks you're the key figure in somedevelopment that's happening here. Supposing - supposing wewere some kind of—of experiment...'' Experiment? How do you mean?'' Well, from what you say, the people at the fortress have anadvanced science that we don't know about. Supposing ourparents, say, had been kidnapped from your world and-madeto think - what's the word -''Conditioned?''Yes, conditioned to think they were natives of this world.We'd have grown up knowing nothing different. Maybe theMan Without A Navel is a member of an alien race - a scientistof some kind in charge of the experiment.'' But why should they make such a complicated experiment?'' So they could study us, I suppose.'Seward marvelled at her deductive powers; She had come to amuch firmer theory than he had. But then he thought, she mightsubconsciously know the truth. Everyone knew much more thanthey knew, as it were. For instance, it was pretty certain thatthe secret of the tranquilomat was locked somewhere down inhis unconscious if only he could get at it. Her explanation waslogical and worth thinking about.' You may be right,' he said. ' If so, it's something to go on.But it doesn't stop my reliance on the drug - or the fact that theMan and his helpers are probably telepathic and are at thismoment looking for me.'She nodded. 'Could there be an antidote for the drug?''Unlikely. Drugs like that don't really need antidotes-they're not like poisons. There must be some way of getting atthe people in the fortress - some way of putting a stop to theirplans. What about an organized revolution? What has Farlowetried to do?''Nothing much. The people aren't easy to organize. Wehaven't much to do with one another. Farlowe was probablyhoping you could help-think of something he hasn't. Maybelone of those machines you mentioned would work against thefortress people?'' No, I don't think so. Anyway, the hallucinomats are too bigto move from one place to another by hand - let alone from oneworld to another.'' And you haven't been able to build a tranquilomat yet?''No-we have a lot of experimental machines lying aroundat the lab- they're fairly small-but it's a question of modify-ing them-that's what I'm trying to do at the moment. If Icould make one that works it would solve part of my problem- it would save my world and perhaps even save yours, if youare in a state of conditioning.'' It sounds reasonable,' she dropped her eyes and looked at herdrink. She held the glass balanced on her knees which werepressed closely together, nearly touching him. ' But,' she said,' they're going to catch you sooner or later. They're very power-ful. They're sure to catch you. Then they'll make you agree totheir idea.'' Why are you so certain?'' I know them.'He let that go. She said: ' Another drink?' and got up.'Yes please.' He got up, too, and extended his glass, thenwent closer to her. She put bottle and glass on the table andlooked into his face. There was compassion, mystery, tender-ness in her large, dark eyes. He smelled her perfume, warm,pleasant. He put his arms around her and kissed her. ' Myroom,' she said. They went upstairs.Later that night, feeling strangely revitalized, he left the bedand the sleeping Martha and went, and stood beside the windowoverlooking the silent park. He felt cold and he picked up hisshirt and trousers, put them on. He sighed. He felt his mindclear and his body relax. He must work out a way of travellingfrom this world to his own at will - that might put a stop to theplans of the Man Without A Navel.'He turned guiltily as he heard the door open. Sally wasstanding there. She wore a long, white, flowing nightdress.' Lee! I came to tell mummy - what are you doing in here?'Her eyes were horrified, accusing him. Martha sat up suddenly.'Sally-what's the matter!'Lee stepped forward.' Listen, Sally. Don't-'Sally shrugged, but tears had come to her eyes. 'I thoughtyou wanted me! Now I know -I shouldn't have brought youhere. Farlowe said -'' What did Farlowe say?'' He said you'd want to marry me!''But that's ridiculous. How could he say that? I'm a strangerhere. You were to hide me from the fortress people, that's all.'But she had only picked up one word. ' Ridiculous. Yes, Isuppose it is, when my own mother...' ' Sally - you'd better go to bed. We'll discuss it in the morn-ing,' said Martha softly. ' What was it you came in about?'Sally laughed theatrically. 'It doesn't matter now.' Sheslammed the door.Seward looked at Martha.' I'm sorry, Martha.''It wasn't your fault - or mine. Sally's romantic and young.'' And jealous,' Seward sat down on the bed. The feeling ofcomfort, of companionship, of bringing some order out of chaos- it had all faded. ' Look, Martha, I can't stay here.''You're running away?''If you like- but -well -the two of you-I'm in the middle.'' I guessed that. No you'd better stay. We'll work somethingout.''Okay.' He got up, sighing heavily. 'I think I'll go for awalk in the park-it may help me to think. I'd just reachedthe stage where I was getting somewhere. Thanks for that, any-way, Martha.'She smiled. 'Don't worry, Lee. I'll have everything runningsmoothly again by tomorrow.'He didn't doubt it. She was a remarkable woman.He put on his socks and shoes, opened the .-door and went outon to the landing. Moonlight entered through a tall, slenderwindow at the end. He went down the two flights of stairs andout of the front door. He turned into the lane and entered thearbour. In the cool of the night, he once again was able to beginsome constructive thinking.While he was on this world, he would not waste his time,he would keep trying to discover the necessary modificationsto make the tranquilomats workable.He wandered through the arbour, keeping any thoughts ofthe two women out of his mind. He turned into another sectionof the arbour he hadn't noticed before. The turnings becamenumerous but he was scarcely aware of them. It was probablysome sort of child's maze.He paused as he came to a bench. He sat down and foldedhis arms in front of him, concentrating on his problem.Much later he heard a sound to his right and looked up.A man he didn't know was standing there, grinning at him.Seward noticed at once that the man had overlong canines,that he smelt of damp earth and decay. He wore a black, polo-neck pullover and black, stained trousers. His face was waxenand very pale.' I've been looking for you for ages, Professor Seward,' saidthe Vampire.FIVESEWARD GOT UP and faced the horrible creature. The Vampirecontinued to smile; He didn't move. Seward felt revulsion.' It's been a long journey,' said the Vampire in a sibilantvoice like the sound of a frigid wind blowing through deadboughs. ' I had intended to visit you at the fortress, but whenI got to your room you had left. I was disappointed.'' Doubtless,' said Seward. ' Well, you've had a wasted jour-ney. I'm not going back there until I'm ready.'' That doesn't interest me.'' What does?' Seward tried to stop himself from trembling.The Vampire put his hands into his pockets.' Only you.'' Get away from here. You're outnumbered -I have friends?'But he knew that his tone was completely unconvincing.The Vampire hissed his amusement. ' They can't do much,Seward.'' What are you - some sort of android made to frightenpeople?'' No.' The Vampire took a pace forward.Suddenly he stopped as a voice came faintly from some-where in the maze.' Lee! Lee! Where are you?'It was Sally's voice.' Stay away, Sally!' Lee called.' But I was going to warn you. I saw the Vampire from thewindow. He's somewhere in the park.''I know. Go home!'' I'm sorry about the scene. Lee. I wanted to apologize. Itwas childish.'' It doesn't matter.' He looked at the Vampire. He was stand-ing in a relaxed position, hands in pockets, smiling. ' Go home,Sally!'' She won't, you know,' whispered the Vampire.Her voice was closer.' Lee, I must talk to you.'He screamed: ' Sally-the Vampire's here. Go home. Warnyour mother, not me. Get some help if you can - but go home!'Now he saw her enter the part of the maze he was in. Shegasped as she saw them. He was between her and the Vampire.' Sally - do what I told you.'But the Vampire's cold eyes widened and he took one handout of his pocket and crooked a finger. ' Come here, Sally.'She began to walk forward.He turned to the Vampire.' What do you want?'' Only a little blood - yours, perhaps - or the young lady's.'' Damn you. Get away. Go back, Sally.' She didn't seem tohear him.He daren't touch the cold body, the earth-damp clothes. Hestepped directly between the girl and the Vampire.He felt sick, but he reached out his hands and shoved at thecreature's body. Flesh yielded, but bone did not. The Vampireheld his ground, smiling, staring beyond Seward at the girl.Seward shoved again and suddenly the creature's armsclamped around him and the grinning, fanged face dartedtowards his. The thing's breath disgusted him. He struggled, butcould not break the Vampire's grasp.A cold mouth touched his neck. He yelled and kicked. Hefelt a tiny pricking against his throat. Sally screamed. He heardher turn and run and felt a fraction of relief.He punched with both fists as hard as he could into thecreature's solar plexus. It worked. The Vampire groaned andlet go. Seward was disgusted to see that its fangs dripped withblood.His blood.Now rage helped him. He chopped at the Vampire's throat.It gasped, tottered, and fell in a sprawl of loose limbs to theground.Panting, Seward kicked it in the head. It didn't move.He bent down and rolled the Vampire over. As far as hecould tell it was dead. He tried to remember what he'd read' about legendary vampires. Not much. Something about a stakethrough its heart. Well, that was out. But the thought that struck him most was that he had foughtone of the fortress people - and had won. It was possible to beatthem!He walked purposefully through the maze. It wasn't as tortu-ous as he'd supposed. Soon he emerged at the arbour entrancenear the house. He saw Sally and Martha running towards him.Behind them, another figure lumbered. Farlowe. He had gothere fast.' Seward,' he shouted.' They said the Vampire had got you!'' I got him,' said Seward as they came up and stopped.'What?''I beat him.''But - that's impossible.'Seward shrugged. He felt elated. 'Evidently, it's possible,'he said. ' I knocked him out; He seems to be dead-but I sup-pose you never know with vampires.'Farlowe was astonished. ' I believe you,' he said, ' but it'sfantastic. How did you do it?' 'I got frightened and then angry,' said Seward simply.'Maybe you've been over-awed by these people too long.'' It seems like it,' Farlowe admitted. ' Let's go and have alook at him. Sally and Martha had better, stay behind.'Seward led him back through the maze. The Vampire was stillwhere he'd fallen. Farlowe touched the corpse with his foot.' That's the Vampire all right.' He grinned. ' I knew we hada winner in you, son. What are you going to do now?'' I'm going straight back to the fortress and get this workedout once and for all. Martha gave me an idea yesterday eveningand she may well be right. I'm going to try and find out any-way.'' Better not be over-confident, son.'' Better than being over-cautious.''Maybe,' Farlowe agreed doubtfully. 'What's this ideaMartha gave you?'' It's really her idea, complete. Let her explain. She's anintelligent woman - and she's bothered to think about this prob-lem from scratch. I'd advise you to do the same.''I'll hear what it is, first. Let's deal.with the Vampire andthen get back to the house.''I'll leave the Vampire to you. I want to use your car.''Why?'' To go back to the fortress.'' Don't be a fool. Wait until we've got some help.'' I can't wait that long, Farlowe. I've got other work to doback on my own world.'' Okay,' Farlowe shrugged.Farlowe faded.The maze began to fade.Explosions in the brain.Vertigo.Sickness.His head ached and he could riot breathe. He yelled, but hehad no voice. Multicoloured explosions in front of his eyes. Hewas whirling round and round, spinning rapidly. Then he felta new surface dragging at his feet. He closed his eyes andstumbled against something. He fell on to something soft.It was his camp bed. He was back in his laboratory.Seward wasted no time wondering what had happened. Heknew more or less. Possibly his encounter with the Vampire hadsent him back-the exertion or-of course-the creature haddrawn some of his blood. Maybe that was it. He felt the prickingsensation, still. He went to the mirror near the wash-stand. Hecould just see the little marks in his neck. Further proof thatwherever that world was it was as real as the one he was innow.He went to the table and picked up his notes, then walkedinto the other room: In one section was a long bench. On it, invarious stages of dismantling, were the machines that he hadbeen working on, the tranquilomats that somehow just didn'twork. He picked up one of the smallest and checked its bat-teries, its lenses and its sonic agitator. The idea with this onewas to use a combination of light and sound to agitate certaindormant cells in the brain. Long since, psychophysicists hadrealized that mental abnormality had a chemical as well as amental cause. Just as a patient with a psychosomatic illness pro-duced all the biological symptoms of whatever disease he thoughthe had, so did chemistry play a part in brain disorders. Whetherthe change in the brain cells came first or afterwards theyweren't sure. But the fact was that the cells could be agitatedand the mind, by a mixture of hypnosis and conditioning, couldbe made to work normally. But it was a long step from knowingthis and being able to use the information in the construction oftranquilomats.Seward began to work on the machine. He felt he was on theright track, at least.But how long could he keep going before his need for thedrug destroyed his will?He kept going some five hours before his withdrawal symptomsgot the better of him.He staggered towards one of the drug-drawers and fumbledout an ampoule of M-A 19. He staggered into his bedroom andreached for the needle on the table.He filled the syringe. He filled his veins. He filled his brainwith a series of explosions which blew him clean out of his ownworld into the other.Fire flew up his spine. Ignited back-brain, ignited mid-brain,ignited fore-brain. Ignited all centres.EXPLOSION ALL CENTRES.This time the transition was brief. He was standing in thepart of the maze where he'd been when he'd left. The Vampire'scorpse was gone. Farlowe had gone, also. He experienced afeeling of acute frustration that he couldn't continue with hiswork on KLTM-8 - the tranquilomat he'd been modifyingwhen his craving for the M-A 19 took over.But there was something to do here, too.He left the maze and walked towards the house. It was dawnand very cold. Farlowe's car was parked there. He noticedthe licence number. It seemed different. It now said YOU 009.Maybe he'd mistaken the last digit for a zero last time he'dlooked.The door was ajar. Farlowe and Martha were standing in thehall.They looked surprised when he walked in.'I thought the Vampire was peculiar, son,' said Farlowe.'But yours was the best vanishing act I've ever seen.''Martha will explain that, too,' Seward said, not lookingat her.' Has she told you her theory?''Yes, it sounds feasible.' He spoke slowly, looking at thefloor. He looked up. ' We got rid of the Vampire. Burned himup. He burns well.''That's one out of the way, at least,' said Seward. 'Howmany others are there at the fortress?'Farlowe shook his head. 'Not sure. How many did yousee?''The Man Without A Navel, a character called BrotherSebastian who wears a cowl and probably isn't human either,two pleasant gentlemen called Mr Mod and Mr Hand-and aman in fancy dress whose name I don't know.''There are one or two more,' Farlowe said. 'But it's nottheir numbers we've got to worry about-it's their power!'' I think maybe it's over-rated,' Seward said.' You may be right, son.'' I'm going to find out.'' You still want my car?'' Yes. If you want to follow up behind with whatever help youcan gather, do that.'' I will.' Farlowe glanced at Martha. ' What do you think,Martha?'' I think he may succeed,' she said. ' Good luck, Lee.' Shesmiled at him in a way that made him want to stay.' Right,' said Seward.' I'm going. Hope to see you there.'' I may be wrong, Lee,' she said warningly. ' It was only anidea.''It's the best one I've heard. Goodbye.'He went out of the house and climbed into the car.SIXTHE ROAD was white, the sky was blue, the car was red and thecountryside was green. Yet there was less clarity about thescenery than Seward remembered; Perhaps it was because he nolonger had the relaxing company of Farlowe, because his mindwas working furiously and his emotions at full blast.Whoever had designed the set-up on this world had done itwell, but had missed certain details. Seward realized that oneof the ' alien' aspects of the world was that everything was justa little too new. Even Farlowe's car looked as if it had justbeen driven off the production line.By the early afternoon he was beginning to feel tired andsome of his original impetus had flagged. He decided to move into the side of the road and rest for a short time, stretch his legs.He stopped the car and got out.He walked over to the other side of the road. It was on ahillside and he could look down over a wide, shallow valley.A river gleamed in the distance, there were cottages and live-stock in the fields. He couldn't see the horizon. Far away hesaw a great bank of reddish-looking clouds that seemed to swirland seethe like a restless ocean. For all the signs of habitation,the countryside had taken on a desolate quality as if it had beenabandoned. He could not believe that there were people livingin the cottages and tending the livestock. The whole thinglooked like the set for a film. Or a play - a complicated playdevised by the Man Without A Navel and his friends-a playin which the fate of a world-possibly two worlds-was atstake.How soon would the play resolve itself? he wondered, as heturned back towards the car.A woman was standing by the car. She must have come downthe hill while he was looking at the valley. She had long, jetblack hair and big, dark eyes. Her skin was tanned dark gold.She had full, extraordinarily sensuous lips. She wore a well-tailored red suit, a black blouse, black shoes and black handbag.She looked rather sheepish. She raised her head to look at himand as she did so a lock of her black hair fell over her eyes.She brushed it back.' Hello,' she said.' Am I lucky!''Are you?' 'I hope so. I didn't expect to find a car on the road. Youhaven't broken down have you?' She asked this last questionanxiously.'No,' he said. 'I stopped for a rest. How did you get here?'She pointed up the hill. ' There's a little track up there - acattle-track, I suppose. My car skidded and went into a tree.It's a wreck.'' I'll have a look at it for you.'She shook her head. ' There's no point - it's a write-off. Canyou give me a lift?'' Where are you going?' he said unwillingly.' Well, it's about sixty miles that way,' she pointed in thedirection he was going.' A small town.'It wouldn't take long to drive sixty miles on a road as clearas this with no apparent speed-limit. He scratched his headdoubtfully. The woman was a diversion he hadn't expected and,in a way, resented. But she was very attractive. He couldn'trefuse her. He hadn't seen any cart-tracks leading off the road.This, as far as he knew, was the only one, but it was possible hehadn't noticed since he didn't know this world. Also, he decided,the woman evidently wasn't involved in the straggle betweenthe fortress people and Farlowe's friends. She was probably justone of the conditioned, living out her life completely unaware ofwhere she was and why. He might be able to get some informa-tion out of her.' Get in.' he said.' Oh, thanks.' She got in, seeming rather deliberately to showhim a lot of leg. He opened his door and slid under the wheel.She sat uncomfortably close to him. He started the engine andmoved the car out on to the road again.' I'm a stranger here,' he began conversationally.' What aboutyou?''Not me-I've lived hereabouts all my life. Where do youcome from - stranger?'He smiled.' A long way away.''Are they all as good looking as you?' It was trite, but itworked. He felt flattered.'Not any more,' he said. That was true. Maniacs neverlooked very good. But this wasn't the way he wanted the con-versation to go, however nice the direction. He said: ' You'renot very heavily populated around here. I haven't seen anothercar, or another person for that matter, since I set off thismorning.''It does get boring,' she said. She smiled at him. That andher full body, her musky scent and her closeness, made himbreathe more heavily than he would have liked. One thing aboutthis world-the women were considerably less inhibited thanon his own. It was a difference in population, perhaps. In anovercrowded world your social behaviour must be more rigid,out of necessity.He kept his hands firmly on the wheel and his eyes on theroad, convinced that if he didn't he'd lose control of himselfand the car. The result might be a sort of femme fatality. Hisattraction towards Sally and Martha had not been wholly sexual.Yet he had never felt such purely animal attraction, that thiswoman radiated. Maybe, he decided, she didn't know it. Heglanced at her. There again, maybe she did.It said a lot for the woman if she could take his mind so com-pletely off his various problems.' My name's Magdalen,' she smiled. ' A bit of a mouthful,What's yours?'It was a relief to find someone here who didn't already knowhis name. He rejected the unliked Lee and said: 'Bill-BillWard.'' Short and sweet,' she said.' Not like mine.'He grunted vaguely, consciously fighting the emotions risingin him. There was a word for them. A simple word- shortand sweet-lust. He rather liked it. He'd been somewhatrepressed on his home world and had kept a tight censorship onhis feelings. Here it was obviously different.A little later, he gave in. He stopped the car and kissed her.He was surprised at the ease with which he did it. He forgotabout the tranquilomats, about the M-A 19, about the fortress.He forgot about everything except her, and that was maybe whyhe did what he did.It was as if he was drawn into yet another world-a privateworld where only he and she had any existence. An enclosedworld consisting only of their desire and their need to satisfyit.Afterwards he felt gloomy, regretful and guilty. He started thecar savagely. He knew he shouldn't blame her, but he did. He'dlasted time. Minutes were valuable, even seconds. He'd wastedhours.Beside him she took a headscarf from her bag and tied it overher hair.' You're in a hurry.'He pressed the accelerator as far down as he could.'What's the problem?' she shouted as the engine thuddednoisily.' I've wasted too much time already. I'll drop you off wher-ever it is you want.'' Oh, fine. Just one of those things, eh?'' I suppose so. It was my fault, I shouldn't have picked youup in the first place.'She laughed. It wasn't a nice laugh. It was a mocking laughand it seemed to punch him in the stomach.' Okay,' he said,' okay.'He switched on the headlamps as dusk became night. There-was no milometer on the dashboard so he didn't know how farthey'd travelled, but he was sure it was more than sixty miles,' Where is this town?' he said.' Not much further.' Her voice softened.' I'm sorry, Lee. Butwhat is the matter?'Something was wrong. He couldn't place it. He put it downto his own anger.'You may not know it,' he said, 'but I suspect that nearlyall the people living here are being deceived. Do you know thefortress?'' You mean that big building on the rock wastes?'' That's it. Well, there's a group of people there who areduping you and the rest in some way. They want to destroypractically the whole of the human race by a particularly nastymethod - and they want me to do it for them.'' What's that?'Briefly, he explained.Again she laughed.' By the sound of it, you're a fool to fightthis Man Without A Navel and his friends. You ought to throwin your lot with them. You could be top man.'' Aren't you angry?' he said in surprise. ' Don't you believeme?'' Certainly. I just don't share your attitude. I don't under-stand you turning down a chance when it's offered. I'd take it.As I said, you could be top man.'' I've already been top man,' he said,' in a manner of speak-ing. On my own world. I don't want that kind of responsibility.All I want to do is save something from the mess I've made ofcivilization.''You're a fool, Lee.'That was it. She shouldn't have known him as Lee but as Bill,the name he'd introduced himself by. He stopped the car sud-denly and looked at her suspiciously. The truth was dawning onhim and it made him feel sick at himself that he could havefallen for her trap.' You're working for him, aren't you. The Man?'' You seem to be exhibiting all the symptoms of persecutionmania, Seward. You need a good psychiatrist.' She spoke coollyand reached into her handbag.' I don't feel safe with you.'' It's mutual,' he said.' Get out of the car.'' No,' she said quietly. ' I think we'll go all the way to thefortress together.' She put both hands into her bag. They cameout with two things. One was a half bottle of brandy.The other was a gun.'Evidently my delay tactics weren't effective enough,' shemocked. ' I thought they might not be, so I brought these. Getout, yourself, Seward.'' You're going to kill me?'' Maybe.'' But that isn't what The Man wants, is it?'She shrugged, waving the gun.Trembling with anger at his own gullibility and impotence,he got out. He couldn't think clearly.She got out, too, keeping him covered.' You're a clever man,Seward. You've worked out a lot.'' There are others here who know what I know.'' What do they know?'' They know about the set-up - about the conditioning.'She came round the car towards him, shaking her head. Stillkeeping him covered, she put the brandy bottle down on theseat.He went for the gun.He acted instinctively, in the knowledge that this was his onlychance. He heard the gun go off, but he was forcing her wristback. He slammed it down on the side of the car. She yelledand dropped it. Then he did what he had never thought hecould do. He hit her, a short, sharp jab under the chin. Shecrumpled.He stood over her, trembling. Then he took her headscarfand tied her limp hands behind her. He dragged her up anddumped her in the back of the car. He leant down and found thegun. He put it in his pocket.Then he got into the driving seat, still trembling. He feltsomething hard under him. It was the brandy bottle. It was whathe needed. He unscrewed the cap and took a long drink.His brain began to explode even as he reached for theignition.It seemed to crackle and flare like burning timber. Hegrabbed the door handle. Maybe if he walked around...He felt his knees buckle as his feet touched the ground. Hestrained to keep himself upright. He forced himself to moveround the car. When he reached the bonnet, the headlampsblared at him, blinded him.They began to blink rapidly into his eyes. He tried to raise hishands and cover his eyes. He fell sideways, the light still blink-ing. He felt nausea sweep up and through him. He saw the car'slicence plate in front of him.YOU 099YOU 100YOU 101He put out a hand to touch the plate. It seemed normal.Yet the digits were clocking up like the numbers on an addingmachine.Again his brain exploded. A slow, leisurely explosion thatsubsided and brought a delicious feeling of well-being;Green clouds like boiled jade, scent of chrysanthemums.Swaying lilies. Bright lines of black and white in front of hiseyes. He shut them and opened them again. He was looking upat the blind in his bedroom.As soon as he realized he was back, Seward jumped off thebed and made for the bench where he'd left the half-finishedtranquilomat. He remembered something, felt for the gun he'dtaken off the girl. It wasn't there.But he felt the taste of the brandy in his mouth. Maybe itwas as simple as that, he thought. Maybe all he needed to getback was alcohol.There was sure to be some alcohol in the lab. He searchedthrough cupboards and drawers until he found some in a jar.He filled a vial and corked it. He took off his shirt and tapedthe vial under his armpit-that way he might be able to trans-port it from his world to the other one.Then he got down to work.Lenses were reassembled, checked. New filters went in andold ones came out. He adjusted the resonators and amplifiers.He was recharging the battery which powered the transistorizedcircuits, when he sensed the mob outside. He left the littlemachine on the bench and went to the control board. He flickedthree switches down and then, on impulse, flicked them offagain. He went back to the bench and unplugged the charger.He took the machine to the window. He drew the blind up.It was a smaller mob than usual. Evidently some of them hadlearned their lesson and were now avoiding the laboratory.Far away, behind them, the sun glinted on a calm sea. Heopened the window.There was one good way of testing his tranquilomat. Herested it on the sill and switched it to ATTRACT. That wasthe first necessary stage, to hold the mob's attention. A faint,pleasant humming began to come from the machine. Sewardknew that specially, shaped and coloured lenses were whirlingat the front. The mob looked up towards it, but only those in thecentre of the group were held. The others dived away, hidingtheir eyes.Seward felt his body tightening, growing cold. Part of himbegan to scream for the M-A 19. He clung to the machine'scarrying handles. He turned a dial from Zero to 50. Therewere 100 units marked on the indicator; The machine was nowsending at half-strength. Seward consoled himself that if any-thing went wrong he could not do any more harm to theirruined minds. It wasn't much of a consolation.He quickly saw that the combined simulated brainwaves, sonicvibrations and light patterns were having some effect on theirminds. But what was the effect going to be? They were cer-tainly responding. Their bodies were relaxing, their faces wereno longer twisted with insanity. But was the tranquilomatactually doing any constructive good - what it had been designedto do? He upped the output to 75 degrees.His hand began to tremble. His mouth and throat were tightand dry. He couldn't keep going. He stepped back. His stomachached. His bones ached. His eyes felt puffy. He began to movetowards the machine again. But he couldn't make it. He movedtowards the half-full ampoule of M-A 19 on the table. He filledthe blunt hypodermic. He found a vein. He was weeping as theexplosions hit his brain.SEVENTHIS TIME it was different.He saw an army of machines advancing towards him. An armyof malevolent hallucinomats. He tried to run, but a thousandelectrodes were clamped to his body and he could not move.From nowhere, needles, entered his veins. Voices shoutedSEWARD! SEWARD! SEWARD! The hallucinomats ad-vanced, shrilling, blinking, buzzing-laughing. The machineswere laughing at him.SEWARD!Now he saw Farlowe's car's registration plate.YOU 110YOU 111YOU 119SEWARD!YOU!SEWARD!His brain was being squeezed. It was contracting, contracting.The voices became distant, the machines began to recede. Whenthey had vanished he saw he was standing in a circular roomin the centre of which was a low dais. On the dais was a chair.In the chair was the Man Without A Navel. He smiled atSeward.' Welcome back, old boy,' he said.Brother Sebastian and the woman, Magdalen, stood close tothe dais. Magdalen's smile was cool and merciless, seeming toanticipate some new torture that the Man and Brother Sebas-tian had devised.But Seward was jubilant. He was sure his little tranquilomathad got results.' I think I've done it,' he said quietly. ' I think I've built aworkable tranquilomat - and, in a way, it's thanks to you. I hadto speed my work up to beat you- and I did it!'They seemed unimpressed.' Congratulations, Seward,' smiled the Man .Without A Navel.' But this doesn't alter the situation, you know. Just becauseyou have an antidote doesn't mean we have to use it.'Seward reached inside his shirt and felt for the vial tapedunder his arm. It had gone. Some of his confidence went withthe discovery.Magdalen smiled. ' It was kind of you to drink the druggedbrandy.'He put his hands in his jacket pocket.The gun was back there. He grinned.' What's he smiling at?' Magdalen said nervously.' I don't know. It doesn't matter. Brother Sebastian, I believeyou have finished work on your version of Seward's hypnomat?'' I have,' said the sighing, cold voice.'Let's have it in. It is a pity we didn't have it earlier. Itwould have saved us time - and Seward all his efforts.'The curtains behind them parted and Mr Hand, Mr Morl andthe Laughing Cavalier wheeled in a huge, bizarre machine thatseemed to have a casing of highly-polished gold, silver andplatinum. There were two sets of lenses in its domed, head-liketop. They looked like eyes staring at Seward.Was this a conditioning machine like the ones they'd prob-ably used on the human populace? Seward thought it waslikely. If they got him with that, he'd be finished. He pulledthe gun out of his pocket. He aimed it at the right-hand lensand pulled the trigger.The gun roared and kicked in his hand, but no bullet left themuzzle. Instead there came a stream of small, brightly colouredglobes, something like those used in the attraction device on thetranquilomat. They sped towards the machine, struck it,exploded. The machine buckled and shrilled. It steamed andtwo discs, like lids, fell across the lenses. The machine rockedbackwards and fell over.The six figures began to converge on him, angrily.Suddenly, on his left, he saw Farlowe, Martha and Sally stepfrom behind a screen.' Help me!' he cried to them.'We can't!' Farlowe yelled. 'Use your initiative, son!'' Initiative?' He looked down at the gun. The figures werecoming closer. The Man Without A Navel smiled slowly.Brother Sebastian tittered. Magdalen gave a low, mocking laughthat seemed - strangely - to be a criticism of his sexual prowess.Mr Morl and Mr Hand retained their mournful and cheerfulexpressions respectively. The Laughing Cavalier flung back hishead and-laughed. All around them the screens, which hadbeen little more than head-high were lengthening, widening,stretching up and up.He glanced back. The screens were growing.He pulled the trigger of the gun. Again it bucked, again itroared-and from the muzzle came a stream of metallic-greyparticles which grew into huge flowers. The flowers burst intoflame and formed a wall between him and the six.He peered around him, looking for Farlowe and the others.He couldn't find them. He heard Farlowe's shout: ' Good luck,son!' He heard Martha and Sally crying goodbye. ' Don't go!'he yelled.Then he realized he was alone. And the six were beginningto advance again - malevolent, vengeful.Around him the screens, covered in weird designs that curledand swirled, ever-changing, were beginning to topple inwards.In a moment he would be crushed.Again he heard his name being called. SEWARD!SEWARD!Was it Martha's voice? He thought so.'I'm coming,' he shouted, and pulled the trigger again.The Man Without A Navel, Magdalen, Brother Sebastian,the Laughing Cavalier, Mr Hand and Mr Morl-all screamedin unison and began to back away from him as the gun'smuzzle spouted a stream of white fluid which floated into theair.Still the screens were falling, slowly, slowly.The white fluid formed a net of millions of delicate strands.It drifted over the heads of the six. It began to descend. Theylooked up and screamed again.' Don't, Seward,' begged the Man Without A Navel.' Don't,old man - I'll make it worth your while.'Seward watched as the net engulfed them. They struggledand cried and begged.It did not surprise him much when they began to shrink.No! They weren't shrinking-he was growing. He was grow-ing over the toppling screens. He saw them fold inwards. Helooked down and the screens were like cards folding neatly overthe six little figures struggling in the white net. Then, as thescreens folded down, the figures were no longer in sight. Itgot lighter. The screens rolled themselves into a ball.The ball began to take on a new shape.It changed colour. And then, there it was -a perfectly formedhuman skull.Slowly, horrifyingly, the skull began to gather flesh and bloodand muscles to itself. The stuff flowed over it. Features began toappear. Soon, in a state of frantic terror, Seward recognized theface.It was his own.His own face, its eyes wide, its lips parted. A tired, stunned,horrified face.He was back in the laboratory. And he was staring into amirror.He stumbled away from the mirror. He saw he wasn't holdinga gun in his hand but a hypodermic needle. He looked round theroom.The tranquilomat was still on the window-sill. He went to the.window. There, quietly talking among the ruins below, was agroup of sane men and women. They were still in rags, stillgaunt. But they were sane. That was evident. They were sanerthan they had ever been before.He called down to them, but they didn't hear him.Time for that later, he thought. He sat on the bed, feelingdazed and relieved. He dropped the needle to the floor, certainhe wouldn't need to use it again.It was incredible, but he thought he knew where he had been.The final image of his face in the mirror had given him the lastclue.He had been inside his own mind. The M-A 19 was merely ahallucinogenic after all. A powerful one, evidently, if it couldgive him the illusion of rope-marks on his wrists, bites on hisneck and the rest.He had escaped into a dream world.Then he wondered-but why? What good had it done?He got up and went towards the mirror again.Then he heard the voice. Martha's voice.SEWARD! SEWARD! Seward, listen to me!No, he thought desperately. No, it can't be starting again.There's no need for it.He ran into the laboratory, closing the door behind him,locking it. He stood there, trembling, waiting for the with-drawal symptoms. They didn't come.Instead he saw the walls of the laboratory, the silent com-puters and meters and dials, begin to blur. A light flashed onabove his head. The dead banks of instruments suddenly camealive. He sat down in a big chrome, padded chair which hadoriginally been used for the treating of test-subjects.His gaze was caught by a whirling stroboscope that hadappeared from nowhere. Coloured images began to form infront of his eyes. He struggled to get up but he couldn't.YOU 121YOU 122YOU 123Then the first letter changed to a V.VOU 127SEWARD!His eyelids fell heavily over his eyes.' Professor Seward.' It was Martha's voice. It spoke to some-one else. ' We may be lucky, Tom. Turn down the volume.'He opened his eyes.'Martha.'The woman smiled. She was dressed in a white coat and wasleaning over the chair. She looked very tired.' I'm not - Martha-Professor Seward. I'm Doctor Kalin. Remember?'' Doctor Kalin, of course.'His body felt weaker than it had ever felt before. He leanedback in the big chair and sighed. Now he was remembering.It had been his decision to make the experiment. It hadseemed to be the only way of speeding up work on the develop-ment of the tranquilomats. He knew that the secret of a work-able machine was imbedded in the deepest level of his uncon-scious mind. But, however much he tried-hypnosis, symbol-association, word-association - he couldn't get at it.There was only one way he could think of-a dangerousexperiment for him-an experiment which might not work atall. He would be given a deep-conditioning, made to believethat he had brought disaster to the world and must remedy it by-devising a tranquilomat. Things were pretty critical in theworld outside, but they weren't as bad as they had conditionedhim to believe. Work on the tranquilomats was falling behind-but there had been no widespread disaster, yet. It was boundto come unless they could devise some means of mass-cure for.the thousands of neurotics and victims of insanity. An antidotefor the results of mass-tension.So, simply, they conditioned him to think his efforts haddestroyed civilization. He must devise a working tranquilomat.They had turned the problem from an intellectual one into apersonal one. The conditioning had apparently worked.He looked around the laboratory at his assistants. They wereall alive, healthy, a bit tired, a bit strained, but they lookedrelieved.' How long have I been under?' he asked.' About fourteen hours. That's twelve hours since the experi-ment went wrong.'' Went wrong?''Why, yes,' said Doctor Kalin in surprise. 'Nothing washappening. We tried to bring you. round-we tried every darnedmachine and drug in the place-nothing worked. We expectedcatatonia. At least we've managed to save you. We'll just haveto go on using the ordinary methods of research, I suppose.'Her voice was tired, disappointed.Seward frowned. But he had got the results. He knew exactlyhow to construct a working tranquilomat. He thought back.' Of course,' he said. ' I was only conditioned to believe thatthe world was in ruins and I had done it. There was nothingabout - about - the other world.'' What other world?' Macpherson, his Chief Assistant askedthe question.Seward told them. He told them about the Man Without ANavel, the fortress, the corridors, the tortures, the landscapesseen from Farlowe's car, the park, the maze, the Vampire, Mag-dalen... He told them how, in what he now called Condition A,he had believed himself hooked on a drug called M-A 19.' But we don't have a drag called M-A 19,' said DoctorKalin.' I know that now. But I didn't know that and it didn't matter.I would have found something to have made the journey into -the other world-a world existing only in my skull. Call itCondition B, if you like - or Condition X, maybe. The unknown.I found a fairly logical means of making myself believe I wasentering another world. That was M-A 19. By inventing sym-bolic characters who were trying to stop me, I made myselfwork harder. Unconsciously I knew that Condition A was goingwrong - so I escaped into Condition B in order to put right thedamage. By acting out the drama I was able to clear my mindof its confusion. I had, as I suspected, the secret of the tran-quilomat somewhere down there all the time. Condition A failedto release that secret - Condition B succeeded, I can build youa workable tranquilomat, don't worry.'' Well,' Macpherson grinned. ' I've been told to use myimagination in the past - but you really used yours!'' That was the idea, wasn't it? We'd decided it was no goodjust using drugs to keep us going. We decided to use our drugsand hallucinomats directly, to condition me to believe that whatwe feared will happen, had happened.'' I'm glad we didn't manage to bring you back to normality,in that case,' Doctor Kalin smiled. ' You've had a series ofclassic - if more complicated than usual - nightmares. The ManWithout A Navel, as you call him, and his "allies" symbolizedthe elements in you that were holding you back from the truth -diverting you. By "defeating" the Man, you defeated thoseelements.'' It was a hell of a way to get results,' Seward grinned.' ButI got them. It was probably the only way. Now we can produceas many tranquilomats as we need. The problem's over. I've-in all modesty -' he grinned,' saved the world before it neededsaving. It's just as well.''What about your "helpers", though,' said Doctor Kalinhelping him from the chair. He glanced into her intelligent,mature face. He had always liked her.' Maybe,' he smiled, as he walked towards the bench wherethe experimental tranquilomats were kid out,' maybe there wasquite a bit of wish-fulfilment mixed up in it as well.'' It's funny how you didn't realize that it wasn't real, isn'tit?' said Macpherson behind him.'Why is it funny?' he turned to look at Macpherson's long,worn face. ' Who knows what's real, Macpherson. This world?That world? Any other world? I don't feel so adamant aboutthis one, do you?''Well...' Macpherson said doubtfully. 'I mean, you're atrained psychiatrist as well as everything else. You'd think you'drecognize your own symbolic characters?'' I suppose it's possible.' Macpherson had missed his point.' All the same,' he added. ' I wouldn't mind going back theresome day. I'd quite enjoy the exploration. And I liked some ofthe people. Even though they were probably wish-fulfilmentfigures. Farlowe - father - it's possible.' He glanced up as hiseye fell on a meter. It consisted of a series of code-letters andthree digits. VOU 128 it said now. There was Farlowe's num-ber-plate. His mind had turned the V into a Y. He'd probablydiscover plenty of other symbols around, which he'd turned intosomething else in the other world. He still couldn't think of it asa dream world. It had seemed so real. For him, it was still real.'What about the woman-Martha?' Doctor Kalin said.' You called me Martha as you were waking up.'' We'll let that one go for the time being,' he grinned.' Comeon, we've still got a lot of work to do.'THE GOLDEN BARGEDAY GAVE WAY to night, inevitably, for the fourth time sincewide-mouthed Jephraim Tallow had begun his chase. He sleptat the rudder of his boat, trusting to his luck, and the nextmorning he awoke to find himself soaked to the skin, but still oncourse. The yellow overalls he. wore had not been made for use.Outdoors and they had given him little protection. He had notslept well, for his dreams had been scarlet dreams; but now thatit was morning, he could forget. What was one man's life?How did a single murder matter when the golden barge, whichwas his goal, moved surely onwards?The rain sliced down out of a grey sky, lancing into the watersof the river, spattering over the canvas of the boat. And a windwas beginning to blow. Instead of willows, rhododendrons nowlined the banks of. the river. They were heavy with the fallenwater, sinking beneath its sodden weight. The wind was risingand bending the bushes into rustling nightmare beasts whichreached out to tempt Tallow ashore. He laughed at them hyster-ically, and the wind filled his ship's sail, distending it until themast creaked in unison with Tallow's laughter. But Tallowceased to laugh when he realized his danger; realized that he hadno cause for laughter, for the wind was driving his vesseltowards the luring bushes. Frantically, he attempted to adjustthe sail, but the rig of the stolen boat was unfamiliar arid in hispanic he succeeded only in tangling the knots into a worse mess.The wind blew stronger, bending the mast, swelling the sail likea cannibal's belly.He tore at the knots until his fingers bled and his nails werecreased, he had to concentrate on controlling the rudder in orderto keep the boat on some kind of course. He saw that he wasnearing a bend in the river, and saw two other things: a whiteflash against the dark green mass of foliage and the golden bargejust ahead, looming tall. With an effort, he calmed himself,realizing that in his panic he had not sighted his objective, themysterious implacable barge. He had. killed so that he should beable to follow it and now he dare not let it escape. He neededto stay on course just long enough to reach the barge and boardher and he knew that he could, but, even as his boat's prowgashed the waters in furious speed, he came to the bend in theriver and his ship lurched and shuddered to a halt. He realizedthat he had run aground on one of the many hidden sand-barswhich plagued river traffic.Angry, and screaming his disappointment to the wind andthe rain, Tallow leapt out into the shallow water and attemptedto heave the ship off the bar as rain smote him in the face andflayed his skin. His efforts were useless. In a second, the bargehad disappeared from his sight and he had sunk to his knees inthe water, sobbing in frustration. The rain began to fall withlessening intensity and the velocity of the wind dropped, butstill Tallow remained on his knees, bowed in the swirling, dirtywater, his hands above him, gripping the sides of the boat. Therain and wind subsided and eventually the sun dissected theclouds. The sun shone on the boat, on Tallow, on the river, onbushes and trees and on a white house, five storeys high, whichgleamed like the newly-washed face of a child.Tallow lifted red eyes and sighed. He tried once: more tomove the boat, but could not. He looked around him. He sawthe house. He would need help. With a shrug, he splashed knee-deep through the water, to the bank, climbing up its damp,crumbling, root-riddled earth and cursing his luck.Tallow, in some ways, was a fatalist, and his fatalism at lastcame to the rescue of his sanity as ahead of him he saw a wallof red-brick, patched with black moss-growths. His moodchanged almost instantly and he was once again his old, coldcocky self. For beyond the wall he could see the head andshoulders of a woman. The barge could wait for a little while.She was a sharp-jawed, pout-lipped beauty and her eyes weregreen as scum. She wore a battered felt hat and stared at Tallow-over the short stone wall which reached almost to her shoulder.She smiled at him. One of her delightfully even teeth wasstained brown; two others were green, matching her eyes.Tallow's senses for women had been dormant to the pointof atrophy for years. Now he savoured the knowledge that hewas going to form an attachment for this one. For the moment,he hugged the knowledge to himself.' Good morning, madam,' he said, straddling his legs andmaking a low, ungainly bow. ' My sloop ran aground and I'mstranded.'' Then you must stay with me,' she smiled again and put herhead on one side by way of emphasizing the invitation.' That'smy house over there.' She stretched a rounded arm and pointed.Her fingers were long and delicate, terminating in purple-painted talons. The house was the big white one Tallow hadseen.' A fine house it is, too, madam, by the looks of it.' Tallowswaggered towards the low wall.' It is fine,' she admitted. ' But rather empty. I have onlytwo servants.'' Not enough,' Tallow frowned. ' Not enough.' He couldalways catch the barge up, he thought. He vaulted the wall. Thiswas a remarkable feat for one of his slight stature, and heachieved it with a delicacy and grace normally alien to him. Hestood beside her. He looked at her from beneath half-closed lids.' I would be grateful for a bed for the night,' he said. ' Andhelp in the morning. My ship must be refloated.'' I will arrange it,' she promised. She had mobile lips whichmoved smoothly around the words as she spoke. She was slim-waisted and full-hipped. Her bottom was round and firm beneatha skirt of yellow wool. Her large breasts pushed at the shiningsilk of a black blouse and the heels of her shoes were six incheslong. She turned and headed for the house. ' Follow me,' shesaid.Tallow followed, marvelling at the way she kept her balanceon her high heels. Without them, he thought gleefully, she wasonly an inch or so taller than he. She led him-through thegarden of spear-like leaves, finally arriving at a sandy roadwhich wound towards the house.A two-wheeled carriage stood empty, drawn by a boreddonkey. The woman's flesh was soft and it itched at Tallow'sfingertips as he helped her into the carriage, doing mentalsomersaults all the while. He grinned to himself as he got inbeside her and took the reins.'Gee up!' he shouted. The donkey sighed, and moved for-ward at a tired shuffling trot.Five minutes later, Tallow tugged hard at the donkey's reinsand brought the cart to a crunching-halt on the gravel outsidethe house. A flight of solid stone steps led up to big timberdoors which were half-open. 'My home,' the woman remarkedsuperfluously and Tallow felt a disappointed shock at thisinanity; but the feeling soon passed as it was replaced by hisglee for his good fortune.'Your home!' he yelled. 'Hurrah!' He didn't bother tomask his emotions any more. He bounced out of the carriage andhelped her from it. Her legs were well-shaped and trim. Shesmiled and laughed and treated him to a gorgeous display ofbrown, green and white. They climbed the steps together, leap-ing up them like ballet-dancers, with their feet clattering intime. Her hand slipped into his as they pushed the door openand marched info a hall with rafters lost in gloom. It was ashadowy hall, hushed as a church. Dust flew in a single beamof sunlight which entered by way of the door which was appar-ently warped, for it didn't shut completely. Dust swirled intoTallow's nostrils and he sneezed. She laughed delightfully.' My name's Pandora,' she told him loudly. ' What's yours?''Tallow,' he replied, his eyes watering and his nose stillItching.' Jephraim Tallow, at your service!'' At my service!' She clapped her hands and the echoes rever-berated around the hall. 'At my service!' She clapped andlaughed until the hall resounded with the applause and laughterof a vast audience.A voice, like the last trump, boomed and crashed intoTallow's startled ear-drums. ' Do you require me, madam?'Staring through the gloom as the last echo fluttered in distantcorners, Tallow was surprised to see that the hollow trumpetvoice emanated from a bent and wizened ancient, clad in fadedfinery of gold and silver, tarnished and varnished with longyears of wear. Pandora answered the servant: ' Dinner, Fench!'she cried.' Dinner for two - and make it good!'' Yes, madam.' With a swirl of dust, the bent one vanishedthrough a barely discernible door.' One of my servants,' whispered Pandora confidingly. Shefrowned. 'The other one's his wife-damn her!' She cursedquite viciously; softly and sibilantly, like a snake spitting.Tallow, knowing nothing of the place, wondered how an oldwoman could arouse such wrath in Pandora. But a thousandreasons swam into his head and he rejected them all. He wasnot a man to jump to conclusions. Conclusions were too final -they led to death. She clutched his hand and led him throughthe hall to where wide oak stairs twisted upwards. ' Come,Jephraim,' she murmured.' Come my tender Tallow, and let usget you dressed!'Tallow recovered his self-confidence and rushed like a rabbitup the stairway, his long legs stepping high. They polka'd handin hand to the third floor of the vast, dark house. Their hair,his red, hers black as jet, flew behind them and they laughed allthe while, happily insensitive to everything but themselves.Up to the third floor they bounded, and she. led him to adoor, one of a number, as solid as its fellows. He was slightlyout of breath, for he was not used to climbing so many stairs.As she strained to turn the knob on the door, using both hands,bending her body and screwing up her face until eventually thedoor creaked open, he began to hiccup.Meanwhile, the wind which had driven Tallow on to the sandbar was howling around the golden barge as it pushed calmlyonwards towards whatever victories or dooms awaited it.' Jephraim,' whispered Pandora, as he sat back in his chair,sipping brandy from a glass as big as his head.He grunted questioningly, smiling foolishly. The meal hadbeen liberally diluted with night-red wine.'Jephraim-where are you from?' She leant forward acrossthe small table. She had changed into a dress of dark, sentientblue which flowed off her smooth shoulders to cascade likedangerous ice down her body, to flare suddenly at the knees.She wore two rings on her left hand; sapphires and emeralds -and around her soft throat hung a thin chain of gold. Tallow'snew emotions were rioting through him and a childish awe forhis good fortune still stuck in part of his mind, even as hestretched but a hand and groped for Pandora's taloned fingers.Pinpricks of excitement and anticipation were becoming toomuch to bear and his voice throbbed .as he spoke, echoing hisheart-beats.' From a town many miles away,' he said, and this appearedto satisfy her.' Where were you going, Jephraim?' This question was askedidly, as if she didn't expect him to answer.'I was-I am-following a golden ship which passed yourhouse just before I ran aground. Did you see it?'She laughed, and her laughter hurt him causing him to with-draw his hand.' Silly Tallow,' she cried.' No such ship passed -and I didn't see it for I was in the garden a long while - watch-ing the river. I never miss the ships.'' You missed this one,' he muttered, glaring into his glass.'Your jokes are hard to understand, Jephraim,' she saidmore softly. ' But I'm sure I'll like them — when we know eachother better.' Her voice dropped lower and lower until it wasalmost inaudible, but the timbre of it was enough to churnTallow's thoughts into other channels almost immediately. Someof his self-assurance, so badly shattered recently, returned tohim and he folded his ten fingers around the brandy glass, liftedit, and poured the entire contents down his throat. He smackedhis lips and gasped, then put the glass down with a bang, clatter-ing the dirty cutlery.He wiped his mouth on the back of his hand, the scarlet sleeveof his new corduroy jacket somewhat impeding this action, andlooked around the small candle-lit room until it blurred. Pet-tishly, he shook his head to clear it and, supporting himself withhands spread on the table, stood up. He looked intently into hereyes and she smiled hesitantly.' Pandora, I love you.' He was relieved now that it was over.' Good,' she purred. ' That makes it so much easier.'Tallow was too drunk to wonder what it was which would beeasier. He ignored the statement and rocked towards her. Shestood up, slowly, carefully, and glided towards him. He gatheredher in and kissed her throat. As she was standing up, he couldn'tquite reach her mouth. Her breasts pushed against his chest andher arms slid up his back, one hand caressing the nape of hisneck; The other hand moved startlingly down his back andaround his hip.' Ouch!' he moaned a moment later. 'That ring hurts!' Shepouted, then smiled, and took her rings off. He wriggled in histight, black velvet trousers and wished that he were naked.'Shall we go to bed, now?' she suggested at just the rightmoment.' Yes,' agreed Tallow with earnest certainty.' Yes.' She sup-ported his reeling body as they left the room and made theirway up the flight of stairs to her own bedroom.A week throbbed by. A bedded week, wearing for Tallow, butdelightful. Pandora's expert lessons had taught him, amongother things, that he was a man; a man, to boot, who hadlearned to please Pandora. The week had taught him somethingelse, something subtler, and he now had a tighter rein on hisemotions; could control both appetite and expression to a greaterdegree.Tallow lay in bed beside a sleeping Pandora, attempting toshift the sheet which covered her. His eyes were as yet unsatiatedby the sight of her lying naked and at his mercy. The truth was,he had to admit, that for the most part he was inextricablyat her mercy. But Pandora was a woman, and took only the rightand honest advantage of her superior position. Tallow remainedin love with her and the love grew strongly and he was content.Her yielding and her occasional pleas were rare, but could besavoured for their rarity. Weariness, however, was encroachingto make a wreck of Tallow. He slept longer, made love a trifleless violently, though with more skill, and even now, after tenhours of sleep, he did not feel rested, but none the less, he wascontent. He felt happiness and sometimes sadness when Pandoraunknowingly outraged him, but the joy far outweighed the pain.He had just laid bare her breasts, when she awoke. Sheblinked and then opened her eyes as widely as she could, lookedat him, looked down and gently drew the sheet back towardsher chin. Tallow grunted his disappointment, raised himself onone elbow, cushioned his head in his. hand, and stared down ather.' Good morning,' he said with mock accusation."Morning, Jephraim.' She smiled like a schoolgirl, stirringtenderness and desire in him. He flung himself upon her in aflurry of sheeting. She laughed, gasped, was silent for someSeconds, and then kissed him.' I earned it, didn't I?' she said, staring into his eyes.' You did,' he rolled over and sat up in bed.'You need me, don't you?' she said softly, behind him.'Yes,' he said, and then paused, thinking-he had answered!the question too quickly. Before he had considered it againproperly, he had said: ' At least -I think so.'Her voice was still soft, unchanged: 'What do you mean-you think so?'' Sorry,' he smiled, turning towards her and looking down ather.' Sorry -I don't know what I meant.'She frowned then, and shifted in the bed. 'I don't know-either,' she said. ' I don't know what you mean. What did youmean?'' I've told you,' he said, deciding that he was a fool.' I don'tknow.'She turned over on her side, towards the wall, away from him.' Either you need me or you don't.'' That's not strictly true,' Tallow sighed. ' I can need you -and I can't. There are things to need at certain times. I needyou sometimes.' I'm right, he thought-for it was clear to himnow and it had never been so, before.She was silent.' It's true, Pandora,' he knew that he should stop. ' Surelyyou see that it's true.' Love isn't everything,' he mumbled lamely, feeling uncertainand beaten.' Isn't it?' Her voice was muffled and cold.' No!' he said, anger coming to his rescue. He got up, pulledon his clothes and walked over to the window, viciously tearingback the curtains. It was raining outside. He could see the riverin the distance. He stood by the window for a few seconds andthen turned back to stare at the bed. Pandora still faced the walland he couldn't see her expression.He stamped from the room, on his way to the bathroom. Hefelt troubled and annoyed, but he couldn't analyse the feeling;He knew, somehow, that he was right; knew that he shouldn'thave spoken to her as he had, but was glad, also, that he had.done so. The floor was cold to his bare feet as he walked, andhe could hear the rain beating to the ground and on to the roof.It was a drab, unsettled day and. fitting for his mood.At breakfast, she soon got over her former temper and, for themoment at least, they had forgotten their earlier conflict.' What shall we do, today, Jephraim?' she said, putting downher coffee cup.In a half-dream, not really aware of what he was saying,'Tallow answered on the spur of the moment: 'Ride! That'swhat we'll do! You have some horses, I've seen them.'' I have -but I didn't know you could ride.''I can't,' he grinned, 'I can't, sweetheart, but I can learn!''Of course you can!' She was now in his mood. 'Butwhat shall we do about the rain?'' To hell with the rain - it can't affect us. Come, love - tohorse!' He galloped like an idiot from the breakfast-room.Laughing, she ran after him.They rode all through the day, stopping sometimes to eat andto make love when the sun shone. They rode, and after two un-certain hours, Tallow soon learned how to sit his mare and toguide her. He was still an amateur, but a fast learner. Since thenight he had seen the barge, he had been learning many things,quickly. Ideas rushed into his open, greedy mind and he grate-fully absorbed them. So they rode through the rain and the sun-shine and they laughed and loved together, forgetful of anythingelse; Tallow with his tiny frame and long legs, perched highabove the ground on a chestnut mare; Pandora, petite andvoracious for his attention, sometimes gay, often enigmatic,always honest; Pandora, a woman.They rode for hours until at last they came to a stretch ofthe river upstream, which Tallow had passed a week earlierwhen asleep. They came to a hill and breathless and excited,fell into one another's arms, dovetailed together, and sank on tothe damp turf, careless and carefree.' Your river,' whispered Pandora, some time later.' I'll alwaysthink of it as yours, now. I used to think it was mine, but Iknow it isn't.'Tallow was puzzled. He said: 'It's everyone's river-that'sthe beauty of it. Everyone's.'' No,' she said. 'It's yours -I know.''It's not just mine, darling,' he said tenderly. ''Anyone cansail on it, bathe in it, drink from it. That's why it's there.'' Perhaps,' she compromised at last. ' Perhaps it is, but I.know what I shall always think. The river is your life.'' One day, I may make you a present of it, sweetheart,' hesmiled, and he was right, though he didn't know it.He stared at the river and then, just for a fleeting moment,he saw the golden barge, sailing calmly, as it always did, un-ruffled. He turned to her, pointing.' There!' he cried excitedly.'There-now you see I wasn't joking! The golden ship!' Butwhen he looked again, it had gone and Pandora was getting up,walking towards the horses.' You always spoil things,' she said. ' You always say some-thing to worry me.'In silence, they rode away from the river and Tallow thought!carefully of the barge and Pandora.Later that night, the rift unhealed, they sat in front of thedining-room fire, morosely drinking. She was truculent, un-approachable, he was turbulent, wondering if, after all, the?things he wanted were so unattainable. So they sat, until therewas a disturbance outside and Tallow went to the window to see?what was happening. It was dark and he couldn't see much.The night was a confusion of laughter and screams, flickeringtorches and shifting shadows. Tallow saw that a drunken groupwas coming towards the house. He welcomed the interruption.' Visitors,' he said.' Revellers.'' I don't want to see them.'' Why not - we could have a party or something?'' Shut, up!' she pouted.He sighed and went downstairs into the dark, cold, draughtyhall. By the time he reached it, people were thumping on thehalf-open door.' Is anyone in?'' Shelter for some poor weary travellers, I beg thee!'Laughter.'Are you sure this house belongs to someone?' A woman'svoice, this. Answered by another woman: ' Yes, dear, I saw alight in an upstairs window.''Is anyone home?'' We've got plenty of bottles!'Laughter again.Tallow pulled the door back and stood confronting the inter-lopers, who worried him. They represented a threat which hecould not define. ' Good evening,' he said, belligerently now.' Good evening, my dear sir, good evening to you!' A grin-ning, patronizing corpulence, swathed in extravagant clothing,a cloak, knee-length boots, a top-hat, bearing a silver-workedcane and bowing theatrically.' Can I help you?' said Tallow, hoping that he couldn't.' We're lost.' The man was drunk. He swayed towards Tallowand stared at him intently, his breath stinking of alcohol.' We'relost, and have nowhere to go! Can you put us up?'' This isn't my house,' said Tallow in stupefaction. ' I'll seeYou'd better come in anyway. How'd you" get this far?'' By boat - boats - lots of boats. Fun. Until we got lost, thatis.'' All right,' Tallow walked back up the stairs and rejoinedPandora. She was still sulking.' Who is it?' she said petulantly.' Tell them to go away andlet's get to bed.'' I agree, dearest,' Tallow's mood changed to its former stateand his quick tongue babbled, though he didn't mean what hesaid. ' But we can't turn them away - they're lost. They cansleep here - won't bother us, will they?'' I suppose I'd better see them, Jephraim,' she got up, kissedhim and together, warmly, arm in arm, they went downstairs.The revellers' torches were still burning, turning the dustyhall into a madly dancing inferno, of leaping light and shudder-ing shadow. As the fat leader saw Pandora and Tallow descendthe stairs, he leered at Pandora. 'The lady of the house!' hebawled to his friends, and they laughed, uneasily; he was em-barrassing them now. The noise in the dusty cavern of a hall,became a zoo-like cacophony.Pandora said politely, but without feeling: 'You may staythe night here, if you wish. We have plenty of beds.' She turnedto go upstairs.'Beds!'The drunken mob took up the word gleefully, chanting itround the hall. ' Beds. Beds. Beds.' After a short while, thesound became even more meaningless and they subsided intohigh-pitched laughter, Pandora and Tallow stood observingthem.' Let's have some light, Jephraim,' she suggested.With a shrug, Tallow reluctantly borrowed a torch froma reveller and began to ignite the wicks of the candles. Thehall erupted with light, dazzling the occupants. Again the gig-gling began. In the centre of the hall was a long table, chairslining the walls. This was the first tune Tallow had seen theroom lighted. Grime was everywhere and the paint was peeling.Mildew had formed in patches on the ceiling and walls and thelight only served to pick it out. Tallow shrugged and moved toreturn upstairs again, but Pandora put her hand, on his arm.' We'll stay for a short while,' she said. I wish she'd make up hermind, he thought glumly, now regretting the impulse which haddriven him to allow the people admission. They were soft, thesepeople, soft beyond Tallow's experience, pampered darlings tothe last; slim, brittle-eyed women and fat, blank-eyed men,bewilderedly running over the surface of life, discontent withtheir own fear-moulded values and afraid to find new ones,fooling themselves that they were alive. Tallow could only pitythem and loathe what they represented. Every second theyremained, they drove him into himself, retreating into theembracing depths of his own dark soul.He continued to stare at them from out of his skull; continued.to stare as bottles were piled on the table and Pandora was lostamong the others, absorbed into their shallowness. Tallow wasvaguely terrified then, but his mind refused to control his bodyas he stood on the stairs watching them, unable to leave or tojoin them. Clothes were flung in all directions and Tallow sawa blue dress and a black cape flutter outwards together. Nakedbellies wobbled and naked breasts bounced, and white unhealthyflesh was a background for dark hair. Tallow felt ill. At lasthis feet dragged him upwards back to the bedroom. His ego hadbeen shattered; but the pain of his loss, of his humiliation, wasgreater. He lay on the bed, sobbing; thoughtless and emotionful,his whole world a timeless flood of self-pity.He lay, his head throbbing and aching, for hours; eventuallyfalling into a fitful slumber which lasted another hour. Whenhe eventually awoke, he was calm. He knew that he had donewrong, had destroyed part of himself in denying the barge forPandora's love - or his own love for Pandora. He. had delayedtoo long, and the barge should be followed, if there was stilltime. That was his aim, his goal, his function in life - to followthe barge and to go where it led him, immaterial of what otherthings distracted him. He got a large woollen cloak from a cup-board and put it around his shoulders. Then he left, perturbedthat he would have to pass through the hall on his way out.When he readied it, he was astounded.In the centre of the room was a pulsating pyramid of flesh;clean flesh and dirty flesh; soft flesh and rough flesh. It wasludicrous. There were limbs of all descriptions in most peculiarjuxtaposition. A pair of pink buttocks seemed to spring an arm;noses lay upon legs, eyes peered from beneath genitals, faceson torsos, breasts upon toes. Such a scene might have disgustedTallow, instead he was bewildered, for the strangest sight ofall was the arm which waved at the top of the throbbing humanmountain. It clutched a corruscating wineglass. The fingers werepurple-painted talons; Pandora's fingers. Every so often thearm would disappear into the pile and the glass would return,less full, held like Liberty's torch, to its place above the pyramid.Tallow swallowed, his eyes wide. On tip-toe, his bitterness surg-ing inside him once more, he circumnavigated the heap andpulled on the door.' Goodnight, Pandora,' he called as he left.The wineglass waved. ' Goodnight, Jephraim, see you later!'The voice was muffled and slurred, tinged with a false gaietywhich was not like honest Pandora at all; normally she waseither happy or sad or troubled, never false in her feelings.' No you won't, Pandora,' he shouted as he at last pulledthe door open and fled into the rain-sodden night, blindly run-ning down the sandy path, towards the river. Running fromsomething which remained inside him, which he couldn't fleefrom, which was destroying him and which he was powerless tocombat. So Tallow fled.The boat was still on the sand-bar, half-full of rainwater. Tallowlooked at it dispiritedly. Then, with a shrug, he took off hiscloak and lowered his legs into the cold, murky water. Heshivered, tensed and forced himself forward. The boat's timberfelt good to his hands as he hoisted himself into it. He staredthrough the gloom, searching for the baling pans. At last hefound them and began baling the water over the side.When he had finished, he swung into the water again andslowly made his way round the ship, inspecting it as much as hecould in the dim moonlight. Then he returned to the stern andput his shoulder to it, heaving. The boat shifted slightly. Hemoved round to the port side and began rocking it, shiftingsome of the compressed sand.Three hours later, the boat was afloat. Weary with his effort,he sank into it and lay on the wet boards, half-asleep. He even-tually arose when he heard someone moving about on the shore.Levering himself upright, he looked over the side and saw Pan-dora standing there, framed against the moonlight, her hair wildand ruffled by the wind, a man's dark cloak around her.' Jephraim,' she said, ' I'm sorry-I don't know how it hap-pened.'Tallow, his heart heavy in him, his mind dull, said: ' That'sall right, Pandora. I'm going now, anyway.''Because of-that?' She pointed back to the house.' No,' he said slowly, ' at least, not just because of that. Ithelped.'' Take me with you,' she repeated humbly.' I'll do whateveryou want.'He was perturbed. 'Don't, Pandora - don't lose your respectfor my sake.' He was shaking out the sail.' Goodbye!' But sheflung herself into the water and. grasped the side of the boat,pulling herself into it with desperate strength.' Go back, Pan-dora!' he shouted, seeing his doom in her action.' Go back-goback! It's finished - you'll destroy me and yourself!' She madeher way towards him, flinging her bedraggled body at his feetin horrible and uncharacteristic humility. 'Take me!' shemoaned.The boat was now in midstream, making swiftly away fromthe bank.'Oh, God, Pandora,' he sobbed. 'Don't make me-I mustfollow the barge.''I'll come, Jephraim, darling. I'll come with you.'Tears painted .his face in gleaming trails, he was breathingquickly, his brain in tumult, a dozen emotions clashing together,making him powerless for any action save speech.He gave in suddenly, ashamed for her degradation. He sankdown beside her, taking her wet, heaving body in his arms andin sympathy with her grief. And so, locked together in their fearand bewilderment, they slept.Dawn was vicious, cloudless, bright. Tallow's eyes ached.Pandora still remained in troubled slumber, but she was on theborderline of wakefulness. As she sighed and began to struggletowards consciousness, an overpowering feeling of pity for herwelled up in him. Then he looked down the river where itstretched straight into the horizon. Gold glimmered. Tallowacted. It was now or never.He picked her up in his arms. She smiled in her sleep, lovinghim. He wrenched her away from him and hurled her outwards- hurled her into the river.She screamed suddenly, in horror, as realization came.WOLFWHOSE LITTLE TOWN are you, friend? Who owns you here?!Wide and strong, you have an atmosphere of detached imper-manence as you sit in the shallow valley with your bastion ofdisdainful pines surrounding you; with your slashed, gashedearth roads and your gleaming graveyards, cool under the sun.Here I stand in your peaceful centre, among the low houses,looking for your owner. Night is looming in my mind's back-waters.I stop a long-jawed man with down-turned, sensuous lips. He,rocks on his feet and stares at me in silence, his grey eyesbrooding.' Who owns this town?' I ask him.' The people,' he says.' The residents.'I laugh at the joke, but he refuses to join me, does not evensmile. ' Seriously-tell me. Who owns this town?'He shrugs and walks off. I laugh louder: 'Who owns thistown, friend? Who owns it?' Does he hate me?Without a mood, what is a man, anyway? A man has to havesome kind of mood, even when he dreams. Scornfully, I laughat the one who refused to smile and I watch his back as hewalks stiffly and self-consciously over a bridge of wood andmetal which spans soft water, full of blossom and leaves, flowingin the sunlight.In my hand is a cool silver flask loaded with sweet fire. I,know it is there. I lift it to my mouth and consume the fire, let-ting it consume me, also. Blandly, we destroy each other, thefire and I.My stomach is full of flame and my legs are tingling, assoft as soda water, down to where my feet ache. Don't leaveme, sweetheart, with your hair of desire and your mockerieshollow in the moaning dawn. Don't leave me with the salt rainrushing down my cold face. I laugh again and repeat the man'swords: 'The people-the residents!' Ho ho ho! But there isno one to hear my laughter now unless there are inhabitants inthe white town's curtained dwellings. Where are you, sweet-heart - where's your taunting body, now, and the taste of yourfingernails in my flesh?Harsh smoke drowns my sight and the town melts as I fallslowly down towards the cobbles of the street and a pain beginsto inch its way through my stinging face.Where's the peace that you seek in spurious godliness of anotherman - a woman? Why is it never there?I regain my sight and look upwards to where the blue skyfills the world until it is obscured by troubled sounds whichflow from a lovely face dominated by eyes asking questionswhich make me frustrated and angry, since I cannot possiblyanswer them. Not one of them. I smile, in spite of my angerand say, cynically: 'It makes a change, doesn't it?' The girlshakes her head and the worried noises still pour from hermouth. Lips as red as blood - splashed on slender bones, anarrow, delicate skull. 'Who-? Why are you-? What hap-pened to you?''That's a very personal question, my dear,' I say patroniz-ingly. ' But I have decided not to resent it.'' Thank you,' says she. 'Are you willing to rise and be helpedsomehow?'Of course I am, but I would not let her know just yet. 'Iam seeking a friend who came this way,' I say. ' Perhaps youknow her? She is fat with my life-full of my soul. She shouldbe easy to recognize.''No-I haven't...''Ah-well, if you happen to notice her, I would appreciateit if you would let me know. I shall be in the area for a shortwhile. I have become fond of this town.' A thought strikes me;' Perhaps you own it?''No.'' Please excuse the question if you are embarrassed by it. I,personally, would be quite proud to own a town like this. Is itfor sale, do you think?'' Come, you'd better get up. You might be arrested. Up youget.'There is a disturbing reluctance on the part of the residentsto tell me the owner of the town. Of course, I could not affordto buy it-I asked cunningly, in the hope of discovering whothe owner was. Maybe she is too clever for me. The idea is.not appealing.'You're like a dead bird,' she smiles, 'with your wingsbroken.'I refuse her hand and get up quickly. ' Lead the way.'She frowns and then says: ' Home I think.' So off we gowith her walking ahead. I point upwards: ' Look - there's acloud the shape of a cloud!' She smiles and I feel encouragedto such a degree that I want to thank her.We reach her house with its green door opening directly onto the street. There are windows with red and yellow curtainsand the white paint covering the stone is beginning to flake.She produces a key, inserts it into the large black iron lock andpushes the door wide open, gesturing gracefully for me to enterbefore her. I incline my head and walk into the darkened hall-way of the house. It smells of lavender and is full of old polishedoak and brass plates, horse-brasses, candlesticks with no candlesin them. On my right is a staircase which twists up into gloom,the stairs covered by dark red carpet.There are ferns in vases, placed on high shelves. Several vases.of ferns are on the window-sill by the door.' I have a razor if you wish to shave,' she informs me. Luckilyfor her, I am self-critical enough to realize that I need a shave.I thank her and she mounts the stairs, wide skirt swinging, lead-ing me to the upstairs floor and a small bathroom smelling of.perfume and disinfectant.She switches oh the light. Outside, the blue of the sky isdeepening and the sun has already set. She shows me the safety-razor, soap, towel. She turns a tap and water gushes out intoher cupped hand. ' Still hot,' she says, turning and closing thedoor behind her; I am tired and make a bad job of shaving. Iwash my hands as an afterthought and then go to the door tomake sure it isn't locked. I open the door and peer out into thelighted passage. I shout: ' Hey!' and her head eventually comesinto sight around another door at the far end of the passage.'I've shaved.''Go downstairs into the front room,' she says. 'I'll join you:there in a few minutes.' I grin at her and my eyes tell her thatI know she is naked beneath her clothes. They all are. Withouttheir clothes and their hair, where would they be? Where is she?'She came this way -I scented her trail right here, to this town.She could even be hiding inside this woman- fooling me. Shewas always clever in her own way. I'll break her other hand,listen to the bones snap, and they won't catch me. She suckedmy life out of me and they blamed me for breaking her fingers.I was just trying to get at the ring I gave her. It was. hidden bythe blaze of the others.She turned me into a sharp-toothed wolf.I thunder down the stairs, deliberately stamping on them,making them moan and creak. I locate the front room andenter it. Deep leather chairs, more brass, more oak, more fernsin smoky glass of purple and 'scarlet. A fireplace without a fire.A soft carpet, multicoloured. A small piano with black-and-white keys and a picture in a frame on top of it.There is a white-clothed table with cutlery and plates for two.Two chairs squat beside the table.I stand with my back to the fireplace as I hear her pointed-heeled shoes tripping down the stairs. 'Good evening,' I saypolitely when she comes in, dressed in a tight frock of dark bluevelvet, with rubies around her throat and at her ears. There aredazzling rings on her fingers and I shudder, but manage tocontrol myself.'Please sit down." She repeats the graceful gesture of thehand, indicating a leather chair with a yellow cushion.' Do youfeel better now?' I am. suspicious and will not answer her. It.might be a trick question, one never knows..' I'll get dinner,'she tells me, ' I won't be long.' Again I've defeated her. Shecan't win at this rate.I consume the foreign meal greedily and only realize afterwardsthat it might have been poisoned. Philosophically I reflect thatit is too late now as I wait for coffee. I will test the coffee andsee if it smells of bitter almonds. If it does, I will know it con-tains poison. I try to remember if any of the food I have already,eaten tasted of bitter almonds. I don't think so. I feel compara-tively safe.She brings in the coffee smoking in a big brown earthenwarepot. She sits down and pours me a cup. It smells good and,relievedly, I discover it does not have the flavour of bitter-almonds. Come to think of it, I am not altogether sure what;bitter almonds smell like.' You may stay the night here, if you wish. There is a spareroom.'' Thank you,' I say, letting my eyes narrow in a subtle ques-tion, but she looks away from me and reaches a slim hand forthe coffee pot, ' Thank you,' I repeat. She doesn't answer me.What's her game? She takes a breath, is about to say something,looks quickly at me, changes her mind, says nothing. I laugh.softly, leaning back in my chair with my hand clasped aroundmy coffee cup.' There are wolves and there are sheep,' I say, as I have oftensaid.' Which do you think you are?' ' Neither,' says she.' Then you are sheep,' say I. ' The wolves know what theyare - what their function is, I am wolf,'' Really,-' she says and it is obvious that she is bored by myphilosophy, not understanding it. ' You had better go to bednow-you are tired.'' If you insist,' I say lightly.' Very well.'She shows me up to the room overlooking the unlit street andbids me good night. Closing the door, I listen carefully for thesound of a key turning, but the sound doesn't come. The roomcontains a high, old-fashioned bed, a standard lamp with aparchment shade with flowers pressed between two thicknesses,an empty bookcase and a wooden chair, beautifully carved. I feelthe chair with my fingertips and shiver with delight at the sen-sation I receive. I pull back the quilt covering the bed andinspect the sheets which are clean and smell fresh. There are twowhite pillows, both very soft. I extract myself from my suit,taking off my shoes and socks and leaving my underpants on. Iswitch off the light and, trembling a little, get into the sheets,I am soon asleep, but it is still very early. I am convinced that Ishall wake up at dawn.I open my eyes in the morning and pale sunshine forces its waybetween gaps in the curtains. I lie in bed trying to go back tosleep, but cannot. I push away the covers, which have slippedpartly off the bed, and get up. I go to the window and lookdown into the street.Incredibly, a huge hare is loping along the pavement, its nosetwitching. A lorry roars past, its gears grating, but the harecontinues its imperturbable course. I am tensed, excited. I openmy door and run along the passage to the woman's room, enter-ing with a rush. She is asleep, one arm sprawled outwards, thehand dangling over the edge of her bed, her shoulders pale andalive. I take hold of one shoulder in a strong grip designed tohurt her into wakefulness. She cries out, sits up quivering.' Quick,' I say -' Come and see. There is a hare in thestreet!'' Go away and let me sleep,' she tells me, ' let me sleep.'' No! You must come and look at the big hare in the street.How did it get there?'She rises and follows me back to my room. I leap towardsthe window and see with relief that the hare is still there.'Look!' I point towards it and she joins me at the window.She, too, is amazed.' Poor thing,' she gasps.' We must save it.'' Save it?' I am astounded.' Save it? No, I will kill it andwe can eat it.'She shudders. ' How could you be so cruel?' The hare dis-appears around a corner of the street. I am furious and all thenerves of my body are taut.' It has gone!'' It will probably be all right,' she says in a self-conciliatorytone and this makes me more angry. I begin to sob with frustra-tion. She puts a hand on my arm.' What is the matter?' I shrugoff the hand, then think better of it, I begin to cry against herbreast. She pats me on the back and I feel better. 'Let me cometo bed with you,' I plead.' No,' she says quietly.' You must rest.''Let me sleep with you,' I insist, but she breaks from mygrasp and backs towards the door.' No! Rest.'I follow her, my eyes hot in my skull, my body full. ' Youowe me something,' I tell her viciously.' You all do.'' Go away,' she says threateningly, desperate and afraid ofme. I continue to move towards her, beyond the door, along thepassage. She starts to run for her room but I run also, and catchher. I catch her before she reaches the room. She screams. Iclutch at her fingers. I bend them back slowly, putting my otherhand over her mouth to stop her horrible noises. The bones snapin the slim, pale flesh. Not all at once.'You made me wolf.' I snarl. 'And sheep must die.' Myteeth seek her pounding jugular, my nose scents the perfume ofher throat. I slide my sharp teeth through skin and sinew. Bloodoozes into my mouth. As I kill her, I sob.Why did she suck the soul of me from the wounds she made?Why am I wolf because of her? Or did it always lurk there,needing only the pain she made to release the ferocity?But she is dead.I had forgotten. I had sought her in this pleasant town.Ah, now the other is dead, too.Let murder drown me until I am nothing but a snarlingspeck, harmless and protected by my infinitesimal size.Ok, God, my bloody darling...CONSUMING PASSIONI TRAVEL swiftly and cautiously over the soft, dry wood-shavings. All around me loom the canvas-covered piles oftimber. It is on nights as dark as this that I enjoy my work;the fruits of my labours are that much more apparent.I feel my mouth go dry, as dry as the wood I tread on;my breath comes quickly, in and out of my lungs; my heartpounds heavily against my ribs. Here is a place, a dark, quietplace with light dowelling stacked high. Fine kindling.From my special little pocket, I extract my shiny petrollighter. Press of a thumb, scrape of a wheel, a random sparkshoots from flint to wick - and lights the invisible fumes. Howperfect it is, this little pointed, flickering flame.In my jacket pockets is paper, screwed up tight. I stuff it intogaps between the heaped dowels. Now I apply the flame.Beautifully, the fire begins to lick explorative tongues deli-cately upwards, darting along the wood, further and further. Thedelicious smell of woodsmoke fills my lungs.I stand back and I want to laugh at the flaming glory I havecreated. It will soon engulf the stacks of timber, but now I mustrun away. Far away. To be found here would mean that mydays of creation would be over. It is warm, near the fire, and thenight air chills me as I run.Another Big BlazeARSON STRONGLY SUSPECTEDIs maniac at large?Jordan Mennell reads the headline with a slightly thumpingheart. A faint smile plays around his well-shaped mouth. Hiseyes, too bright for grey eyes, scan the columns avidly.Once more a masterpiece accomplished.This makes ten. Ten great works of heart. Ten triumphs;ten little note-books with ten collections of clippings pastedneatly in them. And they have a name for him now.Pyro Jack!His pseudonym.Tomorrow I try for eleven. No more petty ignitions of gardenbonfires; no more the occasional surreptitiously dropped matchin a waste-paper bin. Big ones from now on. Vast timber yards,rubber dumps, petrol reservoirs. Like God I create the flamewhich destroys. Yes, I am a creator and a destroyer. The poweris in my hands. The glory of leaping, yelling, roaring, soaringflames - the red, yellow and blue, the gold and the silver. Thetall columns of smoke and the red glow on the skyline. Andfrantic, terrified little men hopping about, impotent andfrightened.Tomorrow, the eleventh and greatest ever creation. Tomorrow-Dennissen's the furniture store. No watchman; quite safe.Eight storeys of combustibles. A fitting monument to my power.Today, dull wood and fabric; lifeless. Tomorrow-a glorious,sentient mountain.He pulls on the black trousers, the dark shirt, the soft-soledshoes; feels for the lighter, checks for paper. Paper safe andcrinkly against his thigh; lighter hard and smooth.He goes out of the brown and grubby back door from whichthe paint is peeling. He turns the rusty key in the stiff lock;picks a silent path through the rubble of the yard, past thedilapidated shed with the door which hangs on one hinge. Overthe leaning fence and into the narrow, cindered alley.Softly, he crunches along, keeping to the maze of alleywayswhich run between the identical banks of houses. Bright lightsof the High Street before him. A sudden dash across it into thegloom of another narrow alley. But this one is of firm concrete,a wall on one side, a tall corrugated-iron fence on the other. Thefence is pointed at the top, like triangular fingers clutching forthe sky.Panting now, after the exertion of the swift run across thedeserted main street. A white-painted sign, white foam on theundulating sea of the corrugated fence. He removes his jacket.With a quick movement, he sends the jacket sailing upwardsso that it falls and hangs on the barbs of the fence. An agilejump and his hands are on the top of the fence, padded by hisjacket. With little obvious effort, he hauls himself carefully overthe fence and, hanging for a moment by one hand, grasps hisjacket with the other and drops. The jacket comes with him, butit rips loudly as it comes. He put it on again and looks aroundhim.He can guess what the dark silhouettes are; old chests ofdrawers, ancient divans, bed-springs.Now he takes out his sharp, steel knife and begins to forcethe lock on the door. He hacks at the wood which surroundsthe lock and knows that this damage may be discovered. Good,he thinks, they will know that I am responsible.I am in a dark passage full of the odours of wood-polish andveneer and cloth. I walk along the passage and find the stairwaywhich leads down into the basement. I have been here before.I bought a chair in the second-hand department. That depart-ment is in the basement.I know what I must do. I must ignite the furniture in thebasement, then I must go quickly up to the eighth floor andlight the fabrics they keep there. Then I must open somewindows so that a breeze will fan the flames.I take out my small pocket-torch and flash it around thebasement. A carpet on the floor, wardrobes, tallboys, book-cases.Many of them frail-looking. All the better. A cupboard painteddull cream and very flimsy. The ideal spot. I take the paperfrom my pocket and put it along the bottom shelf of the cup-board. Some curtains partition off another piece of the depart-ment. I walk over to them and rip them down; they tear with atiny tinkle of curtain rings.Stuffing the curtains into other shelves of the cupboard, I takeout my lighter. A great feeling of elation and power begins tosurge through my body. I breathe heavily, my hand shakes alittle, my heart is beating a frenzied tattoo against my rib-cage.This is the ultimate of sensations, almost all I desire. I pressmy thumb on the lighter.Nothing happens, a brief spark but that is all. I press it again,there is a tiny snap. I know that sound, the sound when the flintis finished. I moan in anguish and pass my hands through myhair in violent frustration. I glare with rage at the cupboard.And the cupboard bursts into flames.Not with a delicate flicker of light, but with a sudden snap,and a roar and it is burning; burning so brightly.I stare at a cabinet and will it to burn. But nothing happens.Then I realize that the flames are licking nearer to me. I turnand run from the basement, up the stairs, three at a time, open-ing windows at every landing. Up another flight of stairs, andanother, and another, until I am breathing very heavily andirregularly and I am at the top of the building.But I realize I have no matches, no lighter, nothing withwhich to create another blaze. I feel frustrated among the rollsof cloth, the cotton and the nylon which will burn so well. Ifeel like a writer without a pen, an artist without his brushes.The canvas is before me, but I have nothing with which to paintit, to turn it into glowing beauty.Anger once more consumes me. Is God so frustrated whenHe works His miracles? I wish with all my heart that the cottonand the nylon will burn. And it does. It begins to burn allaround me, quite suddenly. I stand for a long moment and revelin the passionate wonder of the dancing flames. I breathe in thesmell of the burning fabric.Then I realize that if I stay and watch, I will no longer bealive. No longer will I be able to create more grandeur and mag-nificence. I turn and dash down the stairs. As I reach the lastflight, I see a glow, a glorious glow, in the basement.I fling open the door through which I entered and rushout into the yard. The fence stops me. Why hadn't I thoughtabout the fence before? Leering, jeering fence! My teethclench tightly, twisting my mouth. I sob in anger. And thefence begins to melt. A hole appears in it; drops of white-hot metal fall from the edges of the hole. I dash through, howl-ing as a piece of molten iron drops on to my shoulder and setsmy jacket ablaze. I tear off the garment and fling it behind meas I run down the alley the way I came. No one is in the HighStreet. I run across the road into the safety of the alley-waysbehind the rows of houses. I moan softly to myself; the painin my shoulder is agonizing.Jordan Mennell sits in the shabby armchair reading his paper.He is dressed only in a pair of pyjama trousers and his rightshoulder is crudely smothered in a large piece of medical plasterwhich is wrinkled and dirty.The same faint smile is on his face, the same bright light inhis eyes. He is reading his latest reviews.One of the most disastrous fires in South London!WHO IS PYRO JACK?says one critic. Praise indeed! The critic mentions that thepolice suspect arson once more. And Pyro Jack, as the publicknows Jordan Mennell, is credited. The eleventh big fire in thearea within two weeks. Jordan Mennell has been able to see theflames from his bedroom window. He decides that this was thebiggest. His unnamed critic agrees. And now Jordan Mennellhas the power to create more great fires wherever he pleases. Ifhis anger is sufficiently roused, he supposes, he can start a blazeanywhere he wishes. He is content.The pain in his shoulder is great, but it will go away soon.His eyes follow the front-page columns, reading the speculationsand assertions. He comes to a paragraph and the smile clearsfrom his mouth as it opens slightly. The police have a clue. Acharred jacket which was left on the scene of the fire.For a moment, Jordan Mennell knows concern. But then he ishis old self, his old powerful self. With his new talents, he candefy the police even though they may catch him. He knows whathe is capable of, now. Concentration will help him channel histalent, he will not need to feel anger, there will be otheremotions. Concentration and power. He has both.I am dressing, ready to go to work, when there comes a terseknocking on the door of my house. I am puzzled but I finishdressing before I walk down the narrow stairs which creak, andreach out my hand to the handle of the door. As I turn it, I havean inkling of who my caller is. I open the door slowly and con-front the man who stands on my step, his left foot close to abottle of milk and a carton of eggs; his right foot on the crackedconcrete of my path. His trousers are black, like his shoes; hisraincoat is khaki and grubby. He wears a dark jacket, a stripedshirt and a blue tie. He has a double chin and a small moustacheand his eyes are. deep blue under thick eyebrows. On top of hishead is a brown felt trilby. He is, I feel certain, a plain-clothespoliceman.' Yes?' I enquire, shortly.' Mr. Jordan Mennell?' He knows who I am but I answerhim all the same.' Yes,' I tell him. I know the next words before he speaksthem.' I am a police officer. I wonder if I might come in and askyou a few questions?' His voice is gruff and he attempts apoliteness which is not in his nature, there is a rock core beneaththis very thin veneer.What else can I say but 'Very well.'He enters and I lead him into my small sitting-room. Iindicate a chair and the movement sends spasms of pain throughmy throbbing shoulder. I manage to smile.'What can I do for you, officer? Looking for burglars?'' No, sir,' this he says slowly. ' It's about the big fire atDennissen's.'' I read about it this morning,' I say, keeping perfect controlof myself.' A terrible catastrophe.''Yes, sir. The whole place was gutted. Your Jacket wasfound nearby.' This is an attempt to shock me. A bluff. But Iam ready for this policeman with his shallow cunning.'My jacket!' I manage to seem astounded. 'But that isimpossible!'' Your name was on a tag fixed inside the jacket, sir. Mostof the right side of the jacket was burned, but much of it wasleft when we found it. Perhaps you would like to come along tothe station and identify the jacket, sir?'I feel anger coursing inside me, but I control my emotionand smile again.' Very well, officer, but I am sure you are mis-taken.' What can they do to me, anyway? I am invincible.We reach the red-brick police-station and walk together alonga cold marble passage, up a short flight of stairs and into awarm room. There is a gas-fire burning against one wall. A deskas before it and a coat-rack beside the entrance to the room. Thedesk has wire trays and papers on it - and a parcel. There is asmall window which looks out on to the street. A grey street,with an occasional dull-coloured car flashing by, or a darkly-dressed man. These people should feel honoured that I bringsuch magnificent colour into their lives. But instead they resentme. It is wrong, but I must accept it.The policeman walks over to the desk after shutting the doorbehind us. He unwraps the parcel and discloses the remains ofthe coat I wore last night.I feel annoyed because I have been so careless. I had assumedthat the jacket would have burned to ashes.I feel another upsurge of power within me, just as a uniformedpoliceman enters. He begins to tidy up the desk.' That is my coat,' I say, after having glanced at it.' And,' I add grandly, ' I was responsible for all eleven firesyou have been worrying about. I shall also be the cause of manymore.''Pyro Jack, my God!' says the younger uniformed police-man. I bow slightly to him as he makes for the door with anarmful of papers, bent on telling the news to his companions nodoubt.. After all, I am a personality whose work has been verymuch in the public eye recently. They may ask me for my auto-graph. I shall refuse. However, I am still angry, but manage to retain a mask ofcalm.The policeman is visibly shocked by my statement, but herecovers his composure enough to say 'In which case, MrMennell, perhaps you'd like to make a statement.''I have made all the statement I wish to make,' I reply,' Now I must leave.'' Oh, no you don't!' He moves forward to stop me as I makefor the door.I wheel around and glare at him, if only he would burn too,it would be easier for me.He shrieks horribly as the flames lick at his flesh. But hehas stopped by the time I reach the entrance of the policestation.'Stop him!' That's Pyro Jack!' The young policeman yellsshrilly, excitedly. Another policeman, entering the front of thebuilding, moves forward to stop me. I burn his uniform. Hebegins to beat frantically at the flames.I walk calmly out of the place and stroll along the street.A few minutes later, a police-car pulls up beside the pavement.I melt it.The men inside scream in terror.I laugh out loud, glorying in my magnificent power. Theinstinct of self-preservation is a wonderful thing.People rushing. People shouting. People pushing. Peoplegrasping, People burning brightly like giant skipping fireflies,a glorious dance of death.I walk on down the long brick-lined avenues, I stride alongburning and melting anyone or anything which comes in myway. I can conquer the world, and turn it into leaping flames,like a second sun. It shall burn in the heavens as it did millionsof years ago.I thrill jubilantly and my steps are light and buoyant. Anhour passes, then manlike, mis-shapen things shuffle clumsilytowards me. They have a single broad eye and carry guns inthick-fingered hands.' Stop, Mennell! Stop, or we shoot!'Asbestos! Of course, I see it now, I cannot burn asbestos.And those guns can kill me. I shudder and wish that the gunswould catch fire, too. They melt.But the men in the asbestos suits draw nearer. They reachout their coarse, ungainly hands to grasp me.I draw back, the indignity of it all appals me. I run awayfrom them towards a tall building; a tall white building. Thepublic library,A woman shrieks as I rush inside but I ignore her and runon. The clumping of my pursuers' boots echoes down the corri-dor towards me. I dash into a high-roofed room lined with book-shelves.The men come nearer and nearer, I stare wildly around me,looking for a route of escape-but I have entered through theonly door. Framed in it now are the three asbestos-cladmonsters.It is unfair. They should herald me as master of the world,not treat me as if I were an abnormal beast. I am a supernormalman!They spread out their arms and move in a cautious semi-circletowards me. I feel enraged at myself and admit that my ownblind folly has led me to this trap.'Back! Get back!' I roar, my voice reverberating round thelofty room.' Back, or I will destroy you!' Still they come nearer,light glinting on their cyclops' eyes, their faceplates.I scream at them, but the fools still advance. I deserve to bummyself, for my negligence. A flicker of flame appears on mytrousers, runs sensuously up my leg, caresses my thigh. Frantic-ally, I attempt to beat it out, but it is too late. I can start firesbut cannot extinguish them -I have never wanted to.I glare at the books. Voltaire, Dickens, Dostoevsky, Shakes-peare, Conrad, Hemingway surround me, glaring back, mockingme. Their work will last, they seem to say. Mine is finished.My anger sets tongues of orange flame writhing around thebooks. Everywhere on the shelves the books begin to burn. I feelthe heat of my flaming clothes, the pain of the fire. Softly, atfirst, I begin to laugh. I have achieved some small measure oftriumph.THE RUINSMALDOON picked his way over the ruins, his sombre facespeckled with gleaming drops of sweat as if he had coveredit with jewels.The ruins went away from him in all directions beneath theblue and glowing sky, spikes of masonry, jumbled concrete,pools of ash, so that the whole bleak landscape took on theaspect of sea-carved rocks at low tide. The sun shone and theruins lay peacefully beneath; pale shadows having nothingominous or mysterious about them. Maldoon felt safe in theruins.He took off his jacket and sat on a slab of concrete fromwhich protruded rusted wires, curling back on themselves likea sculpture depicting space and time. In fact the ruins were that-a mighty sculpture, a monument created by the random andambivalent machinations of mankind - a monument to time andspace and to the sacrifices men had made to understand it.Maldoon realized his thoughts were rambling. He lit a cigaretteand drank some water from his flask.He had been travelling over the ruins for a long time, search-ing for signs of life but finding nothing. He was regretting thenotion that had sent him into the ruins. There were no signsof the previous explorers who had not returned; no markscratched on stone, no note, no shred of cloth, no skeleton. Theruins were barren.Maldoon stood up, putting his flask away and dropping hiscigarette into a crevice. He stared ahead of him at the jaggedhorizon, turned his body round. The strange thing was that hisview to the horizon was never interrupted. No crumpled build-ing or collapsing wall ever blocked his vision. The horizon wason all sides, giving him the peculiar sensation of standing in thecentre of a huge disc which drifted in an infinity of blue sky.He frowned. The sun was directly overhead and he had noidea which direction he had come from. Now that he consideredit, he couldn't remember the sun changing its position or, forthat matter, night ever falling. Hadn't the light always been so?Yet he thought he had been travelling for several days.Slowly he began to make his way across the ruins again,stumbling sometimes, half-falling, jumping from slab ofmasonry to pile of broken bricks, leaning against the shatteredwall of a house with one hand as he inched his way around theash-pools which he mistrusted, though there was no cause forhis wariness as he remembered.At length, something close to panic began to fill him andhe wished very strongly that he had not come to the ruins,wished that he was back amongst people again, amidst orderlystreets of neat houses and solid, well-filled shops. He lookedabout him hopefully and, as if his wish had been; answered bysome magical spirit, he saw on the horizon a line of tall, com-plete-looking buildings which might, possibly be part of a town.His speed increased; his progress was no longer-such hardgoing.And, he noted, laughing at himself for his earlier fancies,the sun was beginning to set. With luck he could make the townbefore night.He began to leap from point to point, but he had misjudgedhis distance from the town and night came while he was. stillabout a mile away. But he was heartened further by the sightof the lights shining out of the buildings. Perhaps this was eventhe town he had left? One town was much like another, seen,from the distance. With the lights to guide him he was soonat the town's outskirts. Here the streets were deserted, thoughilluminated by-splendid lamps, and he guessed that the inhabi-tants had gone to bed. Getting closer to the city-centre, he heardtraffic noises and saw cars moving through the streets, peopleon the boulevards, cafes open for business.He ignored the notion that there was something incompleteabout the city. He was tired and was seeing things in a. peculiar.perspective. Also the hot sun of the day might well have givenhim sunstroke.The city was new to him, though familiar enough in itsgeneral layout. It was, like most cities he knew, planned arounda central square with the main streets radiating from the squarelike the spokes from a wheel, with an outer circle of suburbs.Maldoon entered a cafe and ordered a meal. The proprietorwas an old man with a gnomish face and a deferential manner.He put the plate of food before Maldoon, averting his eyes.Maldoon began to eat.Presently a girl, came into the cafe, glanced around at thefew available seats and chose one opposite Maldoon. 'Is thisseat taken ?' she asked him.He waved his fork and shook his head, his mouth too fullfor speech.She smiled and sat down daintily. She picked up the menuand studied it, giving her order to the proprietor who received itwith a little bow and hurried back to the kitchen.'It's a beautiful night for the time of the year,' Maldoonsaid,' isn't it?'' Ah, yes...' She appeared to be confused,'I'm sorry,' he said. 'I hope you don't think I'm...'' No, no.''I have just come in from the ruins,' he told her. 'I wasdoing a bit of exploring. They stretch for miles and miles.Sometimes I think they must cover the planet. Does anyoneknow?'She laughed. ' You look tired-hadn't you better get somesleep?''I'm a stranger here. Can you recommend an hotel?'' Not really. Being a resident, as it were, I don't know muchabout the hotels. There's one up the road, though, that looksall right.''I'll try that, then.'Her meal was brought for her, She thanked the proprietorwith a quick smile. He saw that she had ordered the same meal.He let her eat without interruption. Now that he was seated,his body felt numb with tiredness. He looked forward to a goodnight's sleep.The girl got up. She looked at him with curiosity.' I'd bettershow you where that hotel is.' She smiled sympathetically.' Oh, thanks.' He got up and left the cafe with her. As theywalked along the street he thought of something. Shouldn'the have paid for his meal? He couldn't remember. But theowner of the cafe wouldn't have let him walk out like that,anyway, so it must be all right.He walked along beside the girl, his shoulders feeling as ifthey were carrying a tremendous weight, his muscles aching and.his legs weak.How had he managed to cross such a huge area of the ruins?Surely he hadn't walked all that way? What way? How muchway? Where way?' Are you sure you can make it?' said the girl distinctly, herlips close to his ear. She spoke as if repeating herself.' Yes.'' Well come on, it's not much further.'He followed her, but now he was crawling. He heard a voicethat was not his own crying: ' Can somebody give me a hand?'He lay on the uneven surface of the ruins and the sun was...directly over his head. He turned and saw the horizon in the fardistance, he turned his eyes in the other direction and there, too,were ruins stretching to the horizon. He felt like a giant spread-eagled and crucified on the ruins. As he pushed himself into asitting position, his body seemed to diminish until he was nor-mal size again. Normal size? What was normal size? What yardstick had hewith which to measure the ruins? They were of all sizes, allshapes. Yet not one of them, however high, blocked his view ofthe horizon.He had lost his jacket and his cigarettes. He stood up un-steadily and stared around him.Was he some kind of outcast? He couldn't remember. Therehad to be some reason for his being here. Someone had puthim here? People from the city had taken the trouble to trans-port him here. Or had they? And if they had, why had they?The problem did not concern him for very long. He beganto move over the ruins once again, pausing sometimes to inspecta building that seemed to have been sliced down the centre,leaving its floors intact and exposed like those of a doll's house.Yet he could find no clue to answer any of the questions whichdrifted and dispersed in his mind.By now, he had forgotten about the city, even; had forgottenthat he had had a jacket, that he had smoked cigarettes, felt noneed for either.Later, he sat down on a pile of broken tiles and looked around,him. To his left a tower leaned. Though it seemed that some-thing had crushed it from two angles, it still stood upright. Hislogic told him that it should have fallen, yet the tower wasfrozen there. He stopped looking at it, but too late to stop therising sensation of fear which the sight created.He got up and walked carefully away from the tower, notlooking back, and then broke into a stumbling run.But he saw that all the buildings seemed about to fall, allthe towers and houses and columns were pitched at an angle,which said that they must fall.Why hadn't he noticed it before? What was wrong?With the fear, his knowledge of his identity began tore-emerge.He remembered his name and a little of the past as far backas his visit to the city. Then he remembered his days-longjourney over the ruins, beneath a sun that did not set, a sky.that did not change, seeing on all sides the horizon which shouldhave been obscured by the great piles of ruined architecture andyet was not.He stopped, shaking with hatred of the ruins, striving to.bring back a memory of before the ruins, but he could not.What was this? Dream? Drug-vision? Madness? Surelythere was something more than the ruins? Had the city been justan illusion?He closed his eyes, his body tottering. In the darkness whichcame with the closing of his eyes, he said to himself: Well?Maldoon do you still insist on continuing this experiment? Doyou still wish to abolish identity and time and space as illusion-creating illusions?And he called back to himself, aloud:' What do you mean? What do you mean?'And he opened his eyes again and there were the bright ruins,sharp beneath the great, pale sun in the blue sky.(Sun, sky, ruins+Maldoon=Maldoon—Maldoon.)Now, slowly, he began to calm, his questions and his memories,for what they were worth, drifting apart.He steadied himself on the ruins and walked towards a parti-cularly large ash-pool. He stopped when he reached it. Hestared down into it. He put his fingers to his lips and musedover the ash-pool.He picked up a piece of brick and flung it down into thegrey ash. When it reached the surface, the brick disappearedwithout disturbing the ash.He took another brick and another and hurled them down.The same thing happened. The same thing didn't happen.A shadow fell across him. He looked up and saw a tall build-ing rising above him. It consisted of a huge shaft built of glassbricks with a series of platforms going up and up until at thetop there was the last platform with a dome over it. A manstood there, beckoning to him.He ran towards the tower, found he could spring on to thefirst platform and from that one to the next until he reachedthe platform covered by the dome.A man similar to a frog was waiting for him.' Look down there, Maldoon,' he said.Maldoon looked out over the neat city spread below. Each.block was of exactly the same dimensions, each one was square.The man waved his reptilian hand. The light shone throughit, grey as the ash.' A country is like a woman,' said the man.' Look down there.It wants to be subdued, wants to be bested by a strong man.I did it. I quieted the country's perturbation - and raped it!'The frog-man looked self-satisfied.' It's peaceful,' said Maldoon.'The most peaceful country in the system,' the mail-frogquipped. ' The most peaceful system in the country. Who areyou, Maldoon?'' Either you or me,' said Maldoon, forgetting his name.' Jump, Maldoon,' said the man similar to a frog.Maldoon merely stood there.'Jump!'He began to clamber around the ash-pool.(Sun, sky, ruins+Maldoon)=(Maldoon—Maldoon)His name was a throb in his head, merely a throb in his head.Mal-doon, Mal-doon, Mal-doon.Had it ever been his name? Perhaps not. Perhaps it hadalways been - mal-doon, mal-doon - merely a throb in his head.Yet, apart from the ruins and the light, there was nothingelse to know.He paused. Was that a memory? That, at the back there?Out - mal-doon, mal-doon - out - mal-doon - concentrate,mal-doon.The ruins appeared to blur for a moment and he stared atthem sharply, suspiciously. They seemed to be folding them-selves around him. No, he was folding himself around them. Heflowed around them, over them, through them.Maldoon! The cry from somewhere was imperious, desperate,ironic.Yes, he thought, which way?All or nothing, Maldoon, he cried to himself, nothing ornothing, all or all!Out here is in here and it is infinite. He remembered, orwas told, he could not tell.(Infinity+Maldoon)=(Infinity)With relief, he was glad to be back. Things were right again.He paused and sat on a piece of broken concrete which sproutedspliced hawsers and which changed to a mound of soft soilwith reeds growing from it. Below him was the city-roofs,chimneys, church-spires, parks, cinemas, smoke drifting. Fami-liar, yet not what he wanted.He got up from the mound and began to walk down the pathtowards the city, still only half-aware of who he was, why hewas, what he was and how he was.' Why do I tire myself out trying,' he thought. ' One day Ishan't be able to exert enough will to pull myself back andthey'll find me up here either raving or curled up in a neatlittle bundle.'Yet he could not decide, still, which was true -the city belowor the ruins.' Are they both real?' he thought as he walked off the grassand on to the road leading into the city.He sauntered along the road, passing under a railway bridgeof thick girders and peeling green paint, turned a cornerinto a side-street which was full of the smoky smell of autumn.The houses were of red-brick and terraced with tiny gardenssubmerged beneath huge, overgrown hedges. Behind one of thehedges he heard children playing. He stopped and put his headround the hedge, watching them with their coloured bricks,building and pushing them down again.When one of the children noticed him and looked up, hepulled his head back and walked on along the street.But he was not to escape with impunity. The child cried'It's him!' and followed him along the street with its com-panions chorusing rhythmically: 'Mad Maldoon! Mad Mal-doon! Mad Maldoon-he's a loon!' and laughing at this oldjest.He pretended not to notice them.They only followed him to the end of the street and hewas grateful for this, at least. It was getting late. Dusk wasfalling over the houses. His footfalls echoed among the roofs,clattering hollowly from chimney pot to chimney pot.Mad Maldoon, mad maldoon, madmaldoonmaldoonmaldoon.Heart-beats joined in, maldoon, maldoon, head-beats, mal-doon, maldoon and the houses were still there but superimposedon the ruins, the echoes swimming amongst their unreal chim-ney pots.The dusk gave way to night, the night to light and slowlythe houses vanished.The bright ruins stretched away, never obscuring his viewof the horizon. The blue, blue sky was above, and the sunwhich did not change its position.The ash-pools, he avoided. The tumbling ruins, fixed andfrozen in time and space, did not fall.What caused the ruins?He had completely forgotten.There were just the ruins now, as the sky and the sun wentout but the light remained. Just the sound of some unseen surfpounding at the last vestiges of his identity.Mal-doon, mal-doon, mal-doon.Ruins past, ruins present, ruins future.He absorbed the ruins and they him. He and they wentaway for ever, for now there was no horizon.The mind could clothe the ruins, but now there was nomind.Soon, there were no ruins.THE PLEASURE GARDEN OFFELIPE SAGITTARIUSTHE AIR was still and warm, the sun bright and the sky blueabove the ruins of Berlin as I clambered over piles of weed-covered brick and broken concrete on my way to investigatethe murder of an unknown man in the garden of Police ChiefBismarck.My name is Minos Aquilinas, top Metatemporal Investigatorof Europe, and this job was going to be a tough one, I knew.Don't ask me the location or the date. I never bother to findout things like that, they only confuse me. With me it's instinct,win or lose.They'd given me all the information there was. The deadman had already had an autopsy. Nothing unusual about himexcept that he had paper lungs - disposable lungs. That pinnedhim down a little. The only place I knew of where they stillused paper lungs was Rome. What was a Roman doing inBerlin? Why was he murdered in Police Chief Bismarck'sgarden? He'd been strangled, that I'd been told. It wasn't hardto strangle a man with paper lungs, it didn't take long. But whoand why were harder questions to answer right then.It was a long way across the ruins to Bismarck's place. Rubblestretched in all directions and only here and there could yousee a landmark - what was left of the Reichstag, the BrandenburgGate, the Brechtsmuseum and a few other places like thatI stopped to lean on the only remaining wall of a house,took off my jacket and loosened my tie, wiped my foreheadand neck with my handkerchief and lit a cheroot. The wall gaveme some shade and I felt a little cooler by the time I was readyto press on.As I mounted a big heap of brick on which a lot of blue weedsgrew I saw the Bismarck place ahead. Built of heavy, black-veined marble, in the kind of Valhalla/Olympus mixture theywent in for, it was fronted by a smooth, green lawn and backedby a, garden that was surrounded by such a high wall I onlyglimpsed the leaves of some of the foliage even though I waslooking down on the place. The thick Grecian columns flankingthe porch were topped by a baroque facade covered in bas-reliefsshowing men in horned helmets killing dragons and one anotherapparently indiscriminately.I picked my way down to the lawn and walked across it, thenup some steps until I'd crossed to the front door. It was bigand heavy, bronze I guessed, with more bas-reliefs, this time ofclean-shaven characters in more ornate and complicated armourwith two-handed swords and riding horses. Some had lances andaxes. I pulled the bell and waited.I had plenty of time to study the pictures before one of thedoors swung open and an old man in a semi-military suit,holding himself straight by an effort, raised a white eyebrow atme.I told him my name and he let me in to a cool, dark hallfull of the same kinds of armour the men on the door had beenwearing. He opened a door on the right and told me to wait. Theroom I was in was all iron and leather - weapons on the wallsand leather-covered furniture on the carpet.Thick velvet curtains were drawn back from the window andI stood looking out over the quiet ruins, smoked another stick,popped the butt in a green pot and put my jacket back on.The old man came in again and I followed him out of thatroom, along the hall, up one flight of the wide stairs and into a huge, less cluttered room where I found the guy I'd cometo see.He stood in the middle of the carpet. He was wearing aheavily ornamented helmet with a spike on the top, a deepblue uniform covered in badges, gold and black epaulettes, shinyjackboots and steel spurs. He looked about seventy and verytough. He had bushy grey eyebrows and a big, carefully combedmoustache. As I came in he grunted and one arm sprang into ahorizontal position, pointing at me.' Herr Aquilinas. I am Otto von Bismarck, Chief of Berlin'spolice.'I shook the hand. Actually it shook me, all over.' Quite a turn up,' I said. ' A murder in the garden of theman who's supposed to prevent murders.'His face must have been paralysed or something because itdidn't move except when he spoke, and even then it didn't movemuch.' Quite so,' he said. ' We were reluctant to call you in, ofcourse. But I think this is your speciality.'' Maybe. Is the body still here ?'' In the kitchen. The autopsy was performed here. Paperlungs - you know about that?''I know. Now, if I've got it right, you heard nothing inthe night -'' Oh, yes, I did hear something - the barking of my wolf-hounds. One of the servants investigated but found nothing.'' What time was this?''Time?''What did the clock say?'' About two in the morning.'' When was the body found?'' About ten - the gardener discovered it in the vine grove.'' Right - let's look at the body and then talk to the gardener.'He took me to the kitchen. One of the windows was openedon to a lush garden, full of tall, brightly coloured shrubs of everypossible shade. An intoxicating scent came from the garden. Itmade me feel randy. I turned to look at the corpse lying on ascrubbed deal table covered in a sheet.I pulled back the sheet. The body was naked. It looked oldbut strong, deeply tanned. The head was big and its mostnoticeable feature was the heavy black moustache. The bodywasn't what it had been. First there were the marks of strangula-tion around the throat, as well as swelling on wrists, forearmsand legs which seemed to indicate that the victim had also beentied up recently. The whole of the front of the torso had beenopened for the autopsy and whoever had stitched it up againhadn't been too careful.' What about clothes?' I asked the Police Chief.Bismarck shook his head and pointed to a chair standingbeside the table.' That was-all we found.'There was a pair of neatly folded paper lungs, a bit theworse for wear. The trouble with disposable lungs was that whileyou never had to worry about smoking or any of the othercauses of lung disease, the lungs had to be changed regularly.This was expensive, particularly in Rome where there was noState-controlled Lung Service as there had been in most of theEuropean City-States until a few years before the war when thelonger-lasting polythene lung had superseded the paper one.There was also a wrist-watch and a pair of red shoes with long,curling toes.I picked up one of the shoes. Middle Eastern workmanship.I looked at the watch. It was heavy, old, tarnished and Russian.The strap was new, pigskin, with ' Made in England' stampedon it.' I see why they called us,' I said.' There were certain anachronisms,' Bismarck admitted.' This gardener who found him, can I talk to him?'Bismarck went to the window and called: ' Felipe!'The foliage seemed to fold back of its own volition and adark haired young man came through it. He was tall, long-facedand pale. He held an elegant watering can in one hand. He wasdressed in a dark-green high-collared shirt and matchingtrousers.We looked at one another through the window.' This is my gardener Felipe Sagittarius,' Bismarck said.Sagittarius bowed, his eyes amused. Bismarck didn't seem tonotice.' Can you let me see where you found the body?' I asked.' Sure,' said Sagittarius.' I shall wait here,' Bismarck told me as I went towardsthe kitchen door.' Okay.' I stepped into the garden and let Sagittarius showme the way. Once again the shrubs seemed to part on theirown.The scent was still thick and erotic. Most of the plants.had dark, fleshy leaves and flowers of deep reds, purples andblues. Here and there were clusters of heavy yellow and pink.The grass I was walking on seemed to crawl under my feetand the weird shapes of the trunks and stems of the shrubsdidn't make me feel like taking a snooze in that garden.' This is all your work is it, Sagittarius?' I asked.He nodded and kept walking.' Original,' I said. ' Never seen one like it before.'Sagittarius turned then and pointed a thumb behind him.' This is the place.'We were standing in a little glade almost entirely surroundedby thick vines that curled about their trellises like snakes. Onthe far side of the glade I could see where some of the vines hadbeen ripped and the trellis torn and I guessed there had beena fight. I still couldn't work out why the victim had been untiedbefore the murderer strangled him - it must have been before,or else there wouldn't have been a fight. I checked the scene, butthere were no clues. Through the place where the trellis wastorn I saw a small summerhouse, built to represent a Chinesepavilion, all red, yellow and black lacquer with highlightspicked out in gold. It didn't fit with the architecture of thehouse.' What's that?' I asked the gardener.' Nothing,' he said sulkily, evidently sorry I'd seen it.' I'll take a look at it anyway.'He shrugged but didn't offer to lead on. I moved betweenthe trellises until I reached the pavilion. Sagittarius followedslowly. I took the short flight of wooden steps up to theveranda and tried the door. It opened. I walked in. Thereseemed to be only one room, a bedroom. The bed needed mak-ing and it looked as if two people had left it in a hurry. Therewas a pair of nylons tucked half under the pillow and a pair ofman's underpants on the floor. The sheets were very white, thefurnishings very oriental and rich.Sagittarius was standing in the doorway.' Your place?' I said.' No.' He sounded offended.' The Police Chiefs.' I grinned.Sagittarius burst into rhapsody. ' The languorous scents, thevery menace of the plants, the heaviness in the air of the garden,must surely stir the blood of even the most ancient man. Thisis the only place he can relax. This is what I'm employed for -why he gives me my head.'' Has this,' I said, pointing to the bed,' anything to do withlast night?'' He was probably here when it happened, but I...' Sagittariusshook his head and I Wondered if there was anything he'dmeant to imply which I'd missed.I saw something on the floor, stooped and picked it up. Apendant with the initials E.B. engraved on it in Gothic script.'Who's E.B.?' I said.' Only the garden interests me, Mr Aquilinas -I do not knowwho she is.'I looked out at the weird garden. ' Why does it interest you-what's all this for? You're not doing it to his orders, areyou? You're doing it for yourself.'Sagittarius smiled bleakly. ' You are astute.' He waved anarm at the warm foliage that seemed more reptilian thanplant and more mammalian, in its own way, than either. ' Youknow what I see out there? I see deep-sea canyons where lostsubmarines cruise through a silence of twilit green, threatenedby the waving tentacles of predators, half-fish, half-plant, andwatched by the eyes of long-dead mermen whose blood went tofeed their young; where squids and rays fight in a gracefuldance of death, clouds of black ink merging with clouds of redblood, drifting to the surface, sipped at by sharks in passing,where they will be seen by mariners leaning over the rails oftheir ships; maddened, the mariners will fling themselves over-board to sail slowly towards those distant plant-creatures alreadyfeasting on the corpse of squid and ray. This is the world I canbring to the land - that is my ambition.'He stared at me, paused, and said: 'My skull -it's like amonstrous gold-fish bowl!'I nipped back to the house to find Bismarck had returned tohis room. He was sitting in a plush armchair, a hidden HiFiplaying, of all things, a Ravel String Quartet.' No Wagner?' I said and then: ' Who's E.B.?' ' Later,' he said. ' My assistant will answer your questionsfor the moment. He should be waiting for you outside.'There was a car parked outside the house - a battered Volks-wagen containing a neatly uniformed man of below averageheight, a small tooth-brush moustache, a stray lock of blackhair falling over his forehead, black gloves on his hands which,gripped a military cane in his lap. When he saw me come outhe smiled, said,' Aha,' and got briskly from the car to shake myhand with a slight bow.' Adolf Hitler,' he said.' Captain of Uniformed Detectives inPrecinct XII. Police Chief Bismarck has put me at your service.'' Glad to hear it. Do you know much about him?'Hitler opened the car door for me and I got in. He wentround the other side, slid into the driving seat.'The chief?' He shook his head. 'He is somewhat remote.I do not know him well-there are several ranks between us.Usually my orders come from him indirectly. This time he choseJo see me himself and give me my orders.'' What were they, these orders?'' Simply to help you in this investigation.'' There isn't much to investigate. You're completely loyalto your chief I take it?'' Of course.' Hitler seemed honestly puzzled. He started thecar and we drove down the drive and out along a flat, whiteroad, surmounted on both sides by great heaps of overgrownrubble.' The murdered man had paper lungs, eh?' he said.' Yes. Guess he must have come from Rome. He looked abit like an Italian.'' Or a Jew, eh?'' I don't think so. What made you think that?'' The Russian watch, the Oriental shoes - the nose. Thatwas a. big. nose he had. And they still have paper lungs inMoscow, you know.'His logic seemed a bit off-beat to me but I let it pass. Weturned a corner and entered a residential section where a lot ofbuildings were still standing. I noticed that one of them had abar in its cellar.' How about a drink?' I said.' Here?' He seemed surprised, or maybe nervous.'Why not?'So he stopped the car and we went down the steps into thebar. A girl was singing. She was a plumpish brunette with asmall, good voice. She was singing in English and I caughtthe chorus:' Nobody's grievin' for Steven,And Sterne ain't grievin' no more,For Steve took his life in a prison cell,And Johnny took a new whore.'It was the latest hit in England. We ordered beers from thebartender. He seemed to know Hitler well because he laughedand slapped him on the shoulder and didn't charge us for thebeer. Hitler seemed embarrassed.' Who was that?' I asked.' Oh, his name is Weill. I know him slightly.'' More than slightly, it looks like.'Hitler seemed unhappy and undid his uniform Jacket, tiltedhis cap back on his head and tried unsuccessfully to push backthe stray lock of hair. He looked a sad little man and I felt thatmaybe my habit of asking questions was out of line here. I drankmy beer and watched the singer. Hitler kept his back to her butI noticed she kept looking at him.'What do you know about this Sagittarius?" I asked.Hitler shrugged.' Very little.'Weill turned up again behind the bar and asked us if wewanted more beer. We said we didn't.'Sagittarius?' Weill spoke up brightly. 'Are you talkingabout that crank?'' He's a crank, is he?' I said.' That's not fair, Kurt,' Hitler said. ' He's a brilliant man,,a biologist -''Who was thrown out of his job because he was insane!'' That is unkind, Kurt,' Hitler said reprovingly. ' He wasinvestigating the potential sentience of plant-life. A perfectlyreasonable line of scientific enquiry.'From the corner of the room someone laughed jeeringly. Itwas a shaggy-haired old man sitting by himself with a glassof schnapps on the little table in front of him.Weill pointed at him. ' Ask Albert. He knows about science.'Hitler pursed his lips and looked at the floor. ' He's just anembittered old mathematics teacher - he's jealous of Felipe,' hesaid quietly, so that the old man wouldn't hear.' Who is he?' I asked Weill.' Albert? A really brilliant man. He has never had the recogni-tion he deserves. Do you want to meet him?'But the shaggy man was leaving. He waved a hand at Hitlerand Weill. 'Kurt, Captain Hitler-good day.'' Good day, Doctor Einstein,' muttered Hitler. He turned tome.' Where would you like to go now?''A tour of the places that sell jewellery, I guess,' I said,fingering the pendant in my pocket. ' I may be on the wrongtrack altogether, but it's the only track I can find at themoment.'We toured the jewellers. By nightfall we were nowherenearer finding out who had owned the thing. I'd just have toget the truth out of Bismarck the next day, though I knew itwouldn't be easy. He wouldn't Eke answering my personal ques-tions at all. Hitler dropped me off at the Precinct House wherea cell had been converted into a bedroom for me.I sat on the hard bed smoking and thinking. I was just aboutto get undressed and go to sleep when I started to think aboutthe bar we'd been in earlier. I was sure someone there couldhelp me. On impulse I left the cell and went out into thedeserted street. It was still very hot arid the sky was full ofheavy clouds. Looked like a storm was due.I got a cab back to the bar. It was still open.Weill wasn't serving there now-he was playing the piano-accordion for the same girl singer I'd seen earlier. He noddedto me as I came in. I leant on the bar and ordered a beer fromthe barman.When the number was over. Weill unstrapped his accordionand joined me. The girl followed him.' Adolf not with you?' he said.' He went home. He's a good friend of yours, is he?'' Oh, we met years ago in Austria. He's a nice man, youknow. He should never have become a policeman, he's toomild.'' That's the impression I got. Why did he ever join in the firstplace?'Weill smiled and shook his head. He was a short, thin man,wearing heavy glasses. He had a large, sensitive mouth. ' Senseof duty, perhaps. He has a great sense of duty. He is veryreligious, too - a devout Catholic. I think that weighs on him.You know these converts, they accept nothing, are torn by theirconsciences.' I never yet met a happy Catholic convert.'' He seems to have a thing about Jews.'Weill frowned.' What sort of thing? I've never really noticed.Many of his friends are Jews. I am, and Sagittarius...'' Sagittarius is a friend of his?'' Oh, more an acquaintance I should think. I've seen themtogether a couple of times.'It began to thunder outside. Then it started to rain.Weill walked towards the door and began to pull down theblind. Through the noise of the storm I heard another sound,a strange, metallic grinding sound, a crunching sound.' What's that?' I called. Weill shook his head and walked backtowards the bar. The place was empty now.' I'm going to havea look,' I said.I went to the door, opened it, and climbed the steps.Marching across the ruins, illuminated by rapid flashes oflightning like gunfire, I saw a gigantic metal monster, as big asa tall building. Supported on four telescopic legs, it lumbered atright angles to the street. From its huge body and head thesnouts of guns stuck out in all directions. Lightning sometimesstruck it and it made an ear-shattering bell-like clang, pausedto fire upwards at the source of the lightning, and march on.I ran down the steps and flung open the door. Weill wastidying up the bar. I described what I'd seen.' What is it, Weill?'The short man shook his head.' I don't know. At a guess it is.something Berlin's conquerors left behind.'' It looked as if it was made here...''Perhaps it was. After all, who conquered Berlin-?'A woman screamed from a back room, high and brief.Weill dropped a glass and ran towards the room. I followed.He opened a door. The room was homely. A table coveredby a thick, dark cloth, laid with salt and pepper, knives andforks, a piano near the window, a girl lying on the floor.' Eva!' Weill gasped, kneeling beside the body.I gave the room another once over. Standing on a smallcoffee table was a plant. It looked at first rather like a cactus"of unpleasantly mottled green, though the top curved so that itresembled a snake about to strike. An eyeless, noseless snake -with a mouth. There was a mouth. It opened as I approached.There were teeth in the mouth - or rather thorns arranged theway teeth are. One thorn seemed to be missing near the front. Ibacked away from the plant and inspected the corpse. I foundthe thorn in her wrist. I left it there.' She is dead,' Weill said softly, standing up and lookingaround.' How?'' She was bitten by that poisonous plant,' I said.' Plant... ? I must call the police.'' That wouldn't be wise at this stage maybe,' I said as Ileft. I knew where I was going.Bismarck's house-and the pleasure garden of Felipe Sagit-tarius.It took me time to find a cab and I was soaked through whenI did. I told the cabby to step on it.I had the cab stop before we got to the house, paid it offand walked across the lawns. I didn't bother to ring the door-bell. I let myself in by the window, using my pocket glass-cutter.I heard voices coming from upstairs. I followed the sounduntil I located it - Bismarck's study. I inched the door open.Hitler was there. He had a gun pointed at Otto von Bis-marck who was still in full uniform. They both looked pale.Hitler's hand was shaking and Bismarck was moaning slightly.Bismarck stopped moaning to say pleadingly, 'I wasn'tblackmailing Eva Braun, you fool - she liked me.'Hitler laughed curtly, half hysterically. ' Like you - a fat oldman.'' She liked fat old men.'' She wasn't that kind of girl.'' Who told you this, anyway?'' The investigator told me some. And Weill rang me half anhour ago to tell me some more - also that Eva had been killed.I thought Sagittarius was my friend. I was wrong. He is yourhired assassin. Well, tonight I intend to do my own killing.'' Captain Hitler -I am your superior officer!'The gun wavered as Bismarck's voice recovered some of itsauthority. I realized that the HiFi had been playing quietly allthe time. Curiously it was Bartok's Fifth String Quartet.Bismarck moved his hand. ' You are completely mistaken.That man you hired to follow Eva here last night-he wasEva's ex-lover!'Hitler's lip trembled.' You knew,' said Bismarck.' I suspected it.''You also knew the dangers of the garden, because Felipehad told you about them. The vines killed him as he sneakedtowards the summer house.'The gun steadied. Bismarck looked scared.He pointed at Hitler.' You killed him - not I!' he screamed.' You sent him to his death. You killed Stalin - out of jealousy.You hoped he would kill me and Eva first. You were too fright-ened, too weak, to confront any of us openly!'Hitler shouted wordlessly, put both hands to the gun andpulled the trigger several times. Some of the shots went wide,but one hit Bismarck in his Iron Cross, pierced it and got himin the heart. He fell backwards and as he did so his uniformripped apart and his helmet fell off. I ran into the room andtook the gun from Hitler who was crying. I checked that Bis-marck was dead. I saw what had caused the uniform to rip open.He had been wearing a corset- one of the bullets must have cutthe cord. It was a heavy corset and had had a lot to hold in.. .I felt sorry for Hitler. I helped him sit down as he sobbed.He looked small and wretched.'What have I killed?' he stuttered. 'What have I killed?'' Did Bismarck send that plant to Eva Braun to silence herbecause I was getting too close?'Hitler nodded, snorted and started to cry again.I looked towards the door. A man stood there, hesitantly.I put the gun on the mantelpiece.It was Sagittarius.He nodded to me.Hitler's just shot Bismarck,' I explained.' So it appears,' he said.' Bismarck had you send Eva Braun that plant, is that so?'I said.' Yes. A beautiful cross between a common cactus, a VenusFlytrap and a rose-the venom was curare, of course.'Hitler got up and walked from the room. We watched himleave. He was still sniffling.' Where are you going?' I asked.' To get some air,' I heard him say as he went down thestairs.'The repression of sexual desires,' said Sagittarius seatinghimself in an armchair and resting his feet comfortably onBismarck's corpse. ' It is the cause of so much trouble. If onlythe passions that lie beneath the surface, the desires that arelocked in the mind could be allowed to range free, what a betterplace the world would be.'' Maybe,' I said.' Are you going to make any arrests, Herr Aquilinas?'' It's my job to make a report on my investigation, not tomake arrests,' I said.' Will there be any repercussions concerned with this busi-ness?'I laughed. ' There are always repercussions,' I told him.From the garden came a peculiar barking noise.' What's that?' I asked.' The wolfhounds?'Sagittarius giggled. ' No, no - the dog-plant, I fear.'I ran out of the room and down the stairs until I reachedthe kitchen. The sheet-covered corpse was still lying on thetable. I was going to open the door on to the garden when Istopped and pressed my face to the window instead.The whole garden was moving in what appeared to be anagitated dance. Foliage threshed about and, even with the doorclosed, the strange scent was even less bearable than it had beenearlier.I thought I saw a figure struggling with some thick-boledshrubs. I heard a growling noise, a tearing sound, a scream anda long drawn out groan.Suddenly the garden was motionless.I turned. Sagittarius stood behind me, his hands folded on hischest, his eyes staring down at the floor.' It seems your dog-plant got him,' I said.' He knew me - he knew the garden.'' Suicide maybe?'' Very likely.' Sagittarius unfolded his hands and looked upat me.' I liked him, you know. He was something of a protege.If you had not interfered none of this might have happened. Hemight have gone far with me to guide him.'' You'll find other proteges,' I said.' Let us hope so.'The sky outside began to lighten imperceptibly. The rain wasnow only a drizzle, falling on the thirsty leaves of the plantsin the garden.' Are you going to stay on here?' I asked him;' Yes -I have the garden to work on. Bismarck's servants willlook after me.'' I guess they will,' I said.I went back up the stairs and walked out of that house intothe dawn, cold and rain-washed. I turned up my collar andbegan to climb across the ruins.THE MOUNTAINTHE LAST TWO men alive came out of the Lapp tent they hadjust raided for provisions.' She's been here before us,' said Nilsson. ' It looks like shegot the best of what there was.'Hallner shrugged. He had eaten so little for so long that foodno longer held any great importance for him.He looked about him. Lapp kata wigwams of wood and hideswere spread around the immediate area of dry ground. Valuableskins had been left out to cure, reindeer horns to bleach, thedoors unfastened so that anyone might enter the deserted homes.Hallner rather regretted the passing of the Lapps. They hadhad no part in the catastrophe, no interest in wars or violence orcompetition. Yet they had been herded to the shelters witheveryone else. And, like everyone else, they had perished eitherby direct bombing, radiation poisoning or asphyxiation.He and Nilsson had been in a forgotten meteorological stationclose to the Norwegian border. When they finally repaired theirradio, the worst was over. Fall-out had by this time finished offthe tribesmen in Indonesian jungles, the workers in remote dis-tricts of China, the hill-billies in the Rockies, the crofters inScotland. Only freak weather conditions, which had been partof their reason for visiting the station earlier in the year, hadso far prevented the lethal rain from falling in this area ofSwedish Lappland.They had known themselves, perhaps instinctively, to be thelast two human-beings alive, until Nilsson found the girl'stracks coming from the south and heading north. Who she was,how she'd escaped, they couldn't guess, but they had changedtheir direction from north-east to north and began to follow.Two days later they had found the Lapp camp.Now they stared ahead of them at the range of ancient moun-tains. It was three a.m., but the sun still hung a bloody spreadon the horizon for it was summer-the six-week summer of theArctic when the sun never fully set, when the snows of themountains melted and ran down to form the rivers, lakes and•marshes of the lowlands where only the occasional Lapp camp,or the muddy scar of a broad reindeer path, told of the presenceof the few men who lived here during the winter months.Suddenly, as he looked away from the range, the camparoused some emotion akin to pity in Hallner's mind. Heremembered the despair of the dying man who had told them,on his radio, what had happened to the world.Nilsson had entered another hut and came out shaking apacket of raisins.' Just what we need,' he said.' Good,' said Hallner, and he sighed inaudibly. The clean,orderly nature of the little primitive village was spoiled forhim by the sight he had witnessed earlier at the stream whichran through the camp. There had been simple drinking cups ofclay or bone side by side with an aluminium dish and an emptyChase and Sanborne coffee jar, a cheap plastic plate and abroken toy car.'Shall we go?' Nilsson said, and began to make his wayout of the camp.Not without certain trepidation, Hallner followed behind hisfriend who marched towards the mountains without looking backor even from side to side.Nilsson had a goal and, rather than sit down, brood and diewhen the inescapable finally happened, Hallner was preparedto go along with him on this quest for the girl.And, he admitted, there was a faint chance that if the windscontinued to favour them, they might have a chance of life. Inwhich case there was a logical reason for Nilsson's obsessionaltracking of the woman.His friend was impatient of his wish to walk slowly andsavour the atmosphere of the country which seemed so detachedand removed, uninvolved with him, disdainful. That there werethings' which had no emotional relationship with him, had givenhim a slight surprise at first, and even now he walked the marshyground with a feeling of abusing privacy, of destroying thesanctity of a place where there was so little hint of humanity;where men had been rare and had not been numerous or fre-quent enough visitors to have left the aura of their passingbehind them.So it was with a certain shock that he later observed the printof small rubber soles on the flat mud near a river.' She's still ahead of us,' said Nilsson, pleased at this sign,'and not so very far ahead. Little more than a day. We'recatching up.'Suddenly, he realized that he was displeased by the presenceof the bootprints, almost resentful of Nilsson's recognition oftheir being there when, alone, he might have ignored them. Hereflected that Nilsson's complete acceptance of the sex of theboots' wearer was entirely founded on his own wishes.The river poured down towards the flat lake on their left,clear, bright melted snow from the mountains. Brown, sun-driedrocks stood out of it, irregularly spaced, irregularly contoured,affording them a means of crossing the swift waters.There were many such rivers, running down the slopes of thefoothills like silver veins to fill the lakes and spread them furtherover the marshland. There were hills on the plateau where treescrowded together, fir and silver birch, like survivors of a floodjostling for a place on the high ground. There were ridges whichsometimes hid sight of the tail mountains in front of them, greenwith grass and reeds, studded with gorse.He had never been so far into mountain country before andthis range was one of the oldest in the world; there were nosharp peaks as in the Alps. These were worn and solid and theyhad lived through eons of change and metamorphosis to haveearned their right to solitude, to permanency.Snow still spattered their sides like galaxies against the grey-green moss and rock. Snow-fields softened their lines.Nilsson was already crossing the river, jumping nimbly fromrock to rock, his film-star's profile sometimes silhouetted againstthe clear, sharp sky, the pack on his back like Christian's loadin the Pilgrim's Progress. Hallner smiled to himself. Onlyindirectly was Nilsson heading for salvation.Now he followed.He balanced himself in his flat, leather-soled boots andsprang from the first rock to the second, righted his balanceagain and sprang to the next. The river boiled around the rocks,rushing towards the lake, to lose itself in the larger waters.He jumped again, slipped and was up to his knees in the ice-cold torrent. He raised his small knapsack over his head and,careless now, did not bother to clamber back to the rocks, butpushed on, waist-deep, through the freezing river. He camegasping to the bank and was helped to dry land by Nilsson whoshook his head and laughed.'You're hopeless!'' It's all right,' he said, ' the sun will dry me out soon.'But both had walked a considerable distance and both weretiring. The sun had now risen, round and hazy red in the pale,cold sky, but it was still difficult to gauge the passage of thehours. This, also, added to the detached air of timelessnesswhich the mountains and the plateaux possessed. There was nonight-only a slight alteration in the quality of the day. Andalthough the heat was ninety degrees fahrenheit, the sky stilllooked cold, for it took more than the brief six weeks of summerto change the character of this wintry Jotunheim.He thought of Jotunheim, the Land of Giants, and under-stood the better the myths of his ancestors with their accent onman's impermanency - the mortality of their very gods, theirbleak worship of the forces of nature. Only here could he appre-ciate that the life span of the world itself might be infinite, butthe life span of its denizens was necessarily subject to inevitablemetamorphosis and eventual death. And, as he thought, his im-pression of the country changed so that instead of the feeling ofinvading sanctified ground, he felt as if a privilege had beengranted him and he had been allowed, for a few moments of hisshort life, to experience eternity.The mountains themselves might crumble in time, the planetcease, to exist, but that it would be reincarnated he was certain.And this gave him humility and hope for his own life and, forthe first time, he began to think that he might have a purpose incontinuing to live, after all.He did not dwell on the idea, since there was no need to.- They came with relief to a dry place where they lighted afire and cooked the last of their bacon in their strong metal fry-ing pan. They ate their food and cleaned the pan with ashesfrom the fire, and he took it down to the nearest river and rinsedit, stooping to drink a little, not too much, since he had learnedfrom his mistake earlier, for the water could be like a drug sothat one craved to drink more and more until exhausted.He realized, vaguely, that they had to keep as fit as possible.For one of them to come to harm could mean danger for themboth. But the thought meant little. There was no sense ofdanger here.He slept and, before he fell in to a deep, dreamless sleep,he had a peculiar impression of being at once vast and tiny. Hiseyes closed, his body relaxed, he felt so big that the atoms ofhis body, in relation to the universe, hardly had existence, thatthe universe had become an unobservable electron, present butunseen. And yet, intratemporally, he had the impression thathe was as small as an electron so that he existed in a gulf, avacuum containing no matter whatsoever.A mystic, perhaps, would have taken this for some holyexperience, but he could do no more than accept it, feeling noneed to interpret it. Then he slept.Next morning, Nilsson showed him a map he had found in thevillage.' That's where she's going,' he said, pointing at a mountainin the distance. ' It's the highest in this section and the secondhighest in the entire range. Wonder why she'd want to climb amountain?'Hallner shook his head.Nilsson frowned.' You're in a funny mood. Think you won'thave a chance with the girl?' When Hallner didn't answer,Nilsson said impatiently,' Maybe she's got some idea that she'ssafer on top of a mountain. With luck, we'll find out soon.Ready to go?'Hallner nodded.They moved on in silence.The range was discernibly closer, now, and Hallner couldlook at individual mountains. Although looming over the others,the one they headed for looked squat, solid, somehow olderthan the rest, even.For a while they were forced to concentrate on the groundimmediately in front of them, for it had become little morethan thick mud which oozed over their boots and threatened topull them down, to join, perhaps, the remains of prehistoricsaurians which lay many feet below.Nilsson said little and Hallner was glad that no demandswere made on him.It was as if the edge of the world lay beyond the last raggedpile of mountains, or as if they had left Earth and were in a con-cave saucer surrounded by mountains, containing only the treesand the lakes, marshes and hills.He had the feeling that this place was so inviolable, so invul-nerable, miles from the habitation of men so that for the firsttime he fully realized that men had ceased to exist along withtheir artifacts. It was as if they had never really existed at all orthat their spell of dominance had appeared and disappeared inpractically the same moment of time.But now, for the first time since he had heard the hystericalvoice on the radio, he felt some stirring of his old feeling returnas he stared at the great mountain, heavy and huge against theice-blue sky. But it was transformed. Ambition had become thesummit, reward the silence, the peace that waited at the peak.Curiosity was the desire to discover the cause of a freakishcolouring half-way up the mountain and fear did not exist forin these enigmatic mountains there was no uncertainty. A vast,wall-less womb with the infinite sky curving above and the richly-coloured scenery, blues, whites, browns and greens, surround-ing them, complete, cutting them off from even the sight of theruined outside world.It was a snow-splashed paradise, where well-fed wolves leftthe carcasses of their prey to lap at the pure water of therivers. A wilderness replete with life, with lemming, reindeer,wolverine, wolf and even bear, with lakes swarming with fresh-water herring and the air a silent gulf above them to set off thesmack of a hawk's wing. Night could not fall and so the potentialdangers of savage wild-life, which could not be felt in the vast-ness of a world where there was room for everything, couldnever be realized.Occasionally, they would discover a slain reindeer, bones dulland white, its hide tattered and perishing, and they would feelno horror, no emotion at all, for although its obvious killer, thewolverine, was a cruel beast, destroying often for the sake ofdestroying, the wolverine was not aware of its crime and there-fore it was no crime at all.Everything here was self-sufficient, moulded by fate, by cir-cumstance, but since it did not analyse, since it accepted itselfand its conditions without question, it was therefore more com-plete than the men who walked and stumbled across its uncom-promising terrain.At length they came to the sloping, grass-covered roots ofthe mountain and he trembled with emotion to see it rising sohigh above him, the grass fading, parting to reveal the tumbledrock and the rock vanishing higher up beneath banks of snow.' She will have taken the easiest face,' Nilsson decided, look-ing at the map he had found in the camp.' It will mean crossingtwo snow-fields.'They rested on the last of the grass. And he looked downover the country through which they had passed, unable to talkor describe his feelings. It possessed no horizon, for mountainswere on all sides, and within the mountains he saw rivers andlakes, tree-covered hills, all of which had taken on fresh, brightercolourings, the lakes reflecting the red of the sun and the blueof the sky and giving them subtly different qualities.He was glad they were taking the easiest face for he felt noneed, here, to test or to temper himself.For a while he felt complete with the country, ready to climbupwards because he would rather do so and because the viewfrom the peak would also be different, add, perhaps to thefullness of his experience.He realized, as they got up, that this was not what Nilssonwas feeling. Hallner had almost forgotten about the girl.They began to climb. It was tiring, but not difficult for initiallythe slope was gradual, less than forty-five degrees. They cameto the first snow-field which was slightly below them, climbeddownwards carefully, but with relief.Nilsson had taken a stick from the Lapp camp. He took astep forward, pressing the stick into the snow ahead of him, tookanother step, pressed the suck down again.Hallner followed, treading cautiously in his friend's footsteps,little pieces of frozen snow falling into his boots. He knew thatNilsson was trying to judge the snow-field's thickness. Below ita deep river coursed and he thought he heard its musical rushingbeneath his feet. He noted, also, that his feet now felt frozenand uncomfortable.Very slowly they crossed the snow-field and at length, after along time, they were safely across and sat down to rest for awhile, preparing for the steeper climb ahead.Nilsson eased his pack off his shoulders and leaned against it,staring back at the field.' No tracks,' he mused. ' Perhaps she crossed further down.'' Perhaps she didn't come here after all.' Hallner spoke witheffort. He was not really interested.' Don't be a fool.' Nilsson rose and hefted his pack on to hisback again.They climbed over the sharp rocks separating the two snow-fields and once again underwent the danger of crossing thesecond field.Hallner sat down to rest again, but Nilsson climbed on. Aftera few moments, Hallner followed and saw that Nilsson hadstopped and was frowning at the folded map in his hand.When he reached Nilsson he saw that the mountain nowcurved upwards around a deep, wide indentation. Across this, asimilar curve went up towards the summit. It looked a decidedlyeasier climb than the one which faced them.Nilsson swore.' The damned map's misled us - or else the position of the.fields has altered. We've climbed the wrong face.'' Should we go back down again?' Hallner asked uninterestedly.' No - there's not much difference - we'd have still lost a lotof time.'Where the two curves joined, there was a ridge high abovethem which would take them across to the face which theyshould have climbed. This was getting close to the peak, sothat in fact, there would be no advantage even when theyreached the other side.' No wonder we missed her tracks,' Nilsson said pettishly.' She'll be at the summit by now.'' How do you know she climbed this mountain?' Hallnerwondered why he had not considered this earlier.Nilsson waved the map. ' You don't think Lapps need these?No - she left it behind.''Oh...' Hallner stared down at the raw, tumbling rockswhich formed an almost sheer drop beneath his feet.' No more resting,' Nilsson said. ' We've got a lot of timeto make up.'He followed behind Nilsson who foolishly expended hisenergy in swift, savage ascents and was showing obvious signsof exhaustion before they ever reached the ridge.Unperturbed by the changed situation, Hallner climbed afterhim, slowly and steadily. The ascent was taking longer, wasmore difficult and he, also, was tired, but he possessed no senseof despair.Panting, Nilsson waited for him on a rock close to the ridge,which formed a narrow strip of jumbled rocks slanting upwardstowards the peak. On one side of it was an almost sheer dropgoing down more than a hundred feet, and on the other therocky sides sloped steeply down to be submerged in a dazzlingexpanse of faintly creaking ice - a glacier.' I'm going to have to leave you behind if you don't movefaster,' Nilsson panted.Hallner put his head slightly on one side and peered up themountain. Silently, he pointed.' God! Everything's against us, today,' Nilsson kicked at aloose piece of rock and sent it out into space. It curved andplummeted, down, but they could not see or hear it fall.The mist, which Hallner had noted, came rolling swiftlytowards them, obscuring the other peaks, boiling in across therange.' Will it affect us?' Hallner asked.'It's sure to!'' How long will it stay?'' A few minutes or several hours, it's impossible to tell. If westay where we are we could very well freeze to death. If wego on there's a chance of reaching the summit and getting aboveit. Willing to risk it?'This last remark was a sneering challenge.' Why yes, of course,' Hallner said.Now that the fact had been mentioned, he noted for the firsttime that he was cold. But the coldness was not uncomfortable.They had no ropes, no climbing equipment of any kind, andeven his boots were flat-soled city boots. As the mist poured in,its grey, shifting mass limiting vision almost utterly at times,they climbed on, keeping together by shouts.'Once, he could hardly see at all, reached a rock, felt about itwith his boot, put his weight on the rock, slipped, clung to therock and felt both feet go sliding free in space just as the mistparted momentarily to show him the creaking glacier far belowhim. And something else - a black, spread-out shadow blemish-ing the pure expanse of ice.He scrabbled at the rock with his toes, trying to swinghimself back to the main part of the ridge, got an insecure toe-hold and flung himself sideways to the comparative safety of theharrow causeway. He breathed quickly and shallowly and shookwith reaction. Then he arose and continued on up the slantingridge.A while later, when the main thickness of the mist had rolledpast and now lay above the glacier, he saw that they had crossedthe ridge and were on the other side without his having realizedit.He could now see Nilsson climbing with obvious difficultytowards what he had called the 'false summit'. The real sum-mit could not be seen, was hidden by the other, but there wasnow only another hundred feet to climb.They rested on the false summit, unable to see much that wasbelow them for, although the mist was thinner, it was thickenough to hide most of the surrounding mountains. Sometimes itwould part so that they could see fragments of mountains,patches of distant lakes, but little else.Hallner looked at Nilsson. The other man's handsome facehad taken on a set, obstinate look. One hand was bleedingbadly.' Are you all right?' Hallner nodded his head towards thebleeding hand.'Yes!'Hallner lost interest since it was evident he could not helpNilsson in his present mood.He noted that the mist had penetrated his thin jacket and hiswhole body was damp and chilled. His own hands were tornand grazed and his body was bruised, aching, but he was stillnot discomfited. He allowed Nilsson to start off first and thenforced himself on the last stage of the climb.By the time he reached the snowless summit, the air wasbright, the mist had disappeared and the sun shone in the clearsky.He flung himself down close to Nilsson who was again peer-ing at his map.He lay panting, sprawled awkwardly on the rock and staredout over the world.There was nothing to say. The scene itself, although magni-ficent, was not what stopped him from talking, stopped hismind from reasoning, as if time had come to a standstill, asif the passage of the planet through space had been halted. Heexisted, like a monument, petrified, unreasoning, absorbing. Hedrank in eternity.Why hadn't the dead human race realized this? It was onlynecessary to exist, not to be trying constantly to prove youexisted when the fact was plain.Plain to him, he realized, because he had climbed a moun-tain. This knowledge was his reward. He had not received anyability to think with greater clarity, or a vision to reveal thesecret of the universe, or an experience of ecstasy. He had beengiven, by himself, by his own action, insensate peace, the infinitetranquillity of existing.Nilsson's harsh, disappointed tones invaded this peace.' I could have sworn she would climb up here. Maybe she did.Maybe we were too late and she's gone back down again?'Hallner remembered the mark he had seen on the glacier.Now he knew what it had been.' I saw something back on the ridge,' he said.' On the glacier.A human figure, I think.'' What? Why didn't you tell me?'' I don't know.'' Was she alive? Think of the importance of this - if she isalive we can start the human race all over again. What's thematter with you, Hallner? Have you gone crazy with shock orsomething? Was she alive?' Perhaps -I don't know.'' You don't -' Nilsson snarled in disbelief and began scrab-bling back the way he had come.'You heartless bastard! Supposing she's hurt-injured!'Hallner watched Nilsson go cursing and stumbling, sometimesfalling, on his over-rapid descent of the mountain. He saw himrip off his pack and fling it aside, nearly staggering over theridge as he began to climb down it.Hallner thought dispassionately that Nilsson would kill him-self if he continued so heedlessly.Then he returned his gaze to the distant lakes and trees belowhim.He lay on the peak of the mountain, sharing its existence.He was immobile, he did not even blink as he took in theview. It seemed that he was part of the rock, part of the moun-tain itself.A little later there came an aching yell which died away intothe silence. But Hallner did not hear it.
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