James Gregson passed the last of the
carnivorous trees and was halfway through the clearing before he realized
there were two men in his camp. One sat on a log and the other on his
chair, relaxing, making themselves right at home. Not far away was a black
and red jeep, and on the jeep's door was the Bankrightk company
logo. One of the men looked up as Gregson
approached. Gregson didn't seem much of a threat; he was tall but
good-natured looking, with curly black hair and brown eyes. In his arms,
however, was a long, elegantly crafted electronic
rifle. "Look at the size of that
stunner!" The man exclaimed, laughing. He was thin, small, and had a
pinched-looking face. He wore an gray-green jumpsuit with what looked like
50 randomly-placed pockets, and had a name-tag that read, JACKO. "What is
it, a hundred years old?" The other man,
who was taller, rounder of features, wore all black and was carrying a
10mm projectile pistol. His shirt bore the Bankrightk logo and underneath
was the stitched-in name RUDD. "We hear you're really onto something,
Gregson," he said. "I don't appreciate
you coming into my camp like this," Gregson said. "This area is staked and
registered to me, and you're
trespassing." "Hey, you don't have to go
all huffy with us," said Jacko. "We're here to offer you a position with
Bankrightk." "A
job?" Jacko
nodded. "Prospecting?" Gregson
asked. "DNA
prospecting." "For what? A
salary?" "Salary, expenses, and a cut.
More than you're getting right
now---" "Which is nothing," Rudd
said. "We ran a check on your account. You're
broke." Gregson powered up his rifle. The
indicator lights flashed on, startling the two men, who stood suddenly and
backed off a few meters. "I didn't spend my life's savings to get all the
way out to this hairball of a planet, live in a tent in a field of mud,
and eat gristle worms and drink peat water for a year and a half, just so
I could have a cut of what I
discover." "They're making you a generous
offer," Jacko said. "It's not going to be
repeated." "You can repeat it until
doomsday. I'm here as an independent, and whatever I discover is mine. A
hundred-percent mine." "I don't
think he's interested," Jacko said to
Rudd. "Your alternative is no employment
at all," Rudd told Gregson. "It's hard to go prospecting when you're laid
up in a med center." "Accidents happen so
suddenly," Jacko said. "You never know when to expect
them." "That's true," Gregson said. He
slung the stun rifle over his shoulder. "You want to make an accident
happen, do it now." Jacko and Rudd
glanced nervously at each other. "If you
threaten me, you'd better be ready to back it up," Gregson told them.
"I've killed deadlier creatures than you on five different worlds, and I
wasn't using an old stun gun,
either." Rudd sneered. "Gregson, you're
way over your head." He and Jacko turned and walked off toward their jeep.
Gregson let out his breath and relaxed. He watched as they started the
jeep's engine and rumbled off over the uneven ground. When it was out of
sight he leaned his rifle against the log and collapsed in his folding
chair with a sigh.
#
The main difference between civilized
worlds and new colonies, Gregson noticed, was that one had paved walkways
and the other had dirt paths. This planet, Aeolus, didn't even have
dirt paths. He made his way through the broken foliage, following the
trail that the Bankrightk jeep had plowed back toward "town." His stun
rifle, which was an antique his father once used, was slung casually over
his shoulder. Gregson knew the moment he
heard Bankrightk had established an office on this planet he was going to
have trouble. He, like his father before him, had wandered to the farthest
reaches of human space to get away from the corporations. It was no use,
though -- wherever he went they would sooner or later show up. It stood to
reason that if there was a huge profit to be made, that is where the
corporations would go. It was like that throughout history. A few brave
souls would strike out into the unknown, searching for that one big
discovery, but the moment anything valuable was found the corporations
would step in and take it over. Halfway
to town Gregson made a detour, picking his way through the branches and
undergrowth, following the smell of hot bacon and fried eggs, and -- oh
heaven! -- freshly brewed coffee. The trees thinned and were replaced by
Earth plants; rows of corn, potatoes, cabbage, carrots, tomatoes. There
were pens with pigs, cows, and a few horses. Chickens roamed about, each
with a silver inhibitor band around their necks to keep them from
wandering too far. This was Vern Hudson's farm, and the farm house ahead
was a large cylindrical water storage tank off one of the first colony
ships. The crops and the animals were all Vern's test subjects -- he was a
certified Ecesist, specially trained in adapting Earth life to alien
environments. Vern was nowhere in sight, but his teenage kids, Bethany and
Frank, were on the front porch with their
dog. "James!" Bethany called. "You're
just in time. I made an extra portion just in case you showed up."
Bethany, who Gregson had been courting for several months now, was 19
years standard, with olive-brown skin, brown eyes, and long straight
brown-black hair. The top of her head didn't quite make it to Gregson's
shoulders, so she had to look up at him to show him her
smile. Her younger brother, Frank, wasn't
smiling. He was 17 and shared his sister's hair and complexion. He was a
head taller than her, however, and almost as tall as Gregson. He was
huskier than Gregson, with square shoulders and a beefy chest. He reached
down as Gregson approached and touched a button on the digital panel
embedded in the dog's head. The dog began to
growl. "Frank!" Bethany said. She touched
the animal's head, and the growling
stopped. Frank reached for the dog again
and she slapped his hand. They glared at each other for a moment, and he
turned and stomped off. She turned and smiled at Gregson again, ushering
him up to the house and inside. The food
tasted wonderful, and the coffee was nice and strong. As he ate, Bethany
walked lightly around the table, talking. "... and since we haven't seen
any large tracks of any kind, we don't think it's really an animal at all.
Dad thinks it's spoor from one of the plants. And I was thinking, if we
could find what the source is before my Dad does, you and I could share
the title." Gregson sipped his coffee,
watching her walk, admiring her soft curves and listening happily to her
disarming voice. "If I agreed to something like that," he told her, "your
father would have your brother kill
me." Bethany stopped, cocking her head to
one side and looking at him through whisps of her hair. "I don't think
so." "Besides, if it's a psycho-reactive
agent then it's probably useless to us. It can be reproduced artificially.
The only thing that would be valuable is if it's something that can only
be produced by a living thing, and we get the rights to the DNA code.
That's the key. If only the DNA can produce it, if the living thing in and
of itself is of value, can we
profit." "Like, if it's a psychic
effect." Gregson nodded. He stabbed the
last bit of egg with a fork and put it in his
mouth. "Dad doesn't believe in that sort
of thing." "Where is your Dad now,
anyway?" "Out at the catfish
farm." He paused in his chewing for a
moment, looking into her eyes. "Out there,
huh?" "Yeah." Her eyes betrayed worry. "I
hope he's okay." "I'm sure he is. You
said you never found tracks. It's not an
animal." "I said we never found
large tracks." Gregson dropped the
fork on the table and reached out for her. "Come here." She leaned into
him, and he put his arms around her and gave her a long hug. "He's going
to be okay," he said. "I know," Bethany
said. She kissed him. They smiled at each other, and kissed again. Gregson
pulled back, still smiling, but she wasn't finished kissing yet. She
leaned hard against him to the point where he almost lost his balance and
fell out of the chair. It was then that they noticed that her brother was
yelling, and that something was happening outside.
They hadn't made it to the door before
it slammed open and Vern came stumbling in, looking deranged. Close on his
heals was Frank, shouting, "What's wrong? What is
wrong?" "Dad?" Bethany
said. He bumped against them, stumbling,
shaking, mumbling something unintelligible. He got down on his hands and
knees, crawling under the table. There he curled into a fetal position,
his eyes rolled back so that they could only see the whites. He was
panting and sweat soaked his clothes, beading his face and making his hair
hang in wet, wiry strings. "It's ... a horrible, a demon ... gonna get ...
everywhere ... follows me. I think it's a demon ... can't get away ...
can't ..." He shuddered, falling silent. His children joined him on the
floor, hugging him, telling him that he was
safe. Gregson went into the man's work
room, passing the man's elaborate bio-computer, his genetic
assembly/disassembly peripherals, found a cabinet full of pharmaceuticals
and pulled out some anti-shock tabs. He carried them into the dining room,
knelt down under the table, and placed one of the little white stickers on
the man's throat, near the jugular vein. Within minutes he began to come
out of it. He looked up at Gregson from under the table, a shade of
embarrassment in his expression. "What
was it, Vern?" he asked. "It was
horrible," Vern whispered, shaking his head.
"Overpowering." "You saw it, then? An
animal?" Vern's mouth moved, but no words
came out. When he found his voice, he said, "Don't go out there. Don't do
it." "You know I've got
to." "Don't do
it!" Gregson turned to leave. Bethany
shouted, "James!" He turned back. "I've
got to see what it is." "It's not worth
it." Bethany's eyes were pleading. He
gave her his best smile. "I'll be back."
#
The carnivorous trees looked more like
gigantic moss-covered fish bones than trees. They had an exoskeleton
structure not unlike Terran insects, and the "moss" was a sticky, deadly
substance which paralyzed and slowly digested several species of
indigenous birds. The most common was the flying dodo, which was a big
green bat-winged creature that regularly crashed into obstacles such as
houses, light poles, and carnivorous trees. One was fluttering and crying
out in its final moments as Gregson entered the
forest. He walked for a couple of
kilometers before coming upon a large, winding creek. He turned and
followed it up hill, heading east. The carnivorous trees thinned, being
replaced by a taller, uglier variety, which grew closer together and
blocked out more sunlight. Here and there a shaft of sunlight made it
through, but otherwise the forest was frighteningly
dark. Gregson slowed his pace and finally
stopped. In front of him the creek was dammed, creating a shallow pond of
crystal clear water. It was here that Vern Hudson was working on a strain
of catfish to be released into the main river. Beyond the pond is where
the trouble was. He pulled out his
biotascope and waved it back and forth. There were hundreds of life form
readings, mostly bugs. There was nothing much bigger than his thumbnail.
He checked the plant life for biological outgassing; there were numerous
substances, but none registered as a psychoactive nor a pheromone -- at
least none that should affect a human
being. All around the pond were human
footprints. One fresh set, heading straight away from the pond and into
the forest back toward town, were clearly from someone running hard. As he
studied them Gregson realized his heart was pounding, that he was already
afraid. He wondered if it was natural, or if it was somehow being induced.
It's natural, he told himself. I'm a natural coward. He took
a deep breath and pushed on, walking cautiously around the pond and into
dense woods beyond. About 40 meters past
the pond, his biotascope began picking up readings of a creature. It was
right on the outside range of the device, so he couldn't get much
information. It was a larger life reading, bigger than a dog but smaller
than a human. He moved toward it, wanting to get a look. The forest was so
dense here he couldn't see more than a few meters in any direction; the
pond was completely out of sight. There
was a loud cracking sound, and looking down Gregson saw a crushed, hollow
branch under his right foot. It was like the leg of a large, dead insect.
So much for being quiet, he thought. Then he looked up, his eyes widening.
There was a change to the
forest. Gregson's vision crystallized,
the edges becoming sharp, distinct. Tiny details of the trees, the forest
floor, the light and shadow, were all very clear. The feeling of dread
swelled inside him. Something was very wrong, very dangerous. His
immediate urge was to back away, to turn and
run. He took several long, deep breaths,
forcing himself to perceive. To analyze. This is like a drug
effect, he thought. Or like being in high quality VR. Or it's something
supernatural, his fear voice told
him. Gregson fumbled with his biotascope,
making sure it was set to record. He
began moving slowly toward the creature. It was like trying to walk
upstream in a river. Every cell in his body was trying to get him to turn
around and go the other way. His heart was thudding so hard in his chest
that it hurt. The dark tangle of branches
around him were sinister, hiding menace everywhere he looked. He could
feel he was being watched. He could feel the tension in the air, like a
predator was stalking him and was moments away from pouncing. Gregson
became aware that his mouth was dry, and that he was breathing hard. Sweat
was streaming down from his forehead and into his
eyes. Gregson had made it a dozen meters
in toward the creature when the sound came. Starting low and soft, it was
an eerie undulating cry, growing in volume and pitch. It was a horrible
sound, a sound that made his pounding heart skip a beat. Then he heard a
crashing in the forest behind him, and wide-eyed and gun ready Gregson
whirled around. He saw the two Bankrightk men, who had obviously followed
him into the forest, turning tail and running away. Gregson's whole body
shuddered, wanting to follow them, but he clenched his eyes tightly shut
and took deep breaths, trying to calm
himself. The undulating cry was loud,
now, and unnerving. It made it impossible to think. Vern Hudson had called
it a demon. It sounded like a demon. But demons weren't real, they were
fantasy. This couldn't be a demon. This couldn't be anything supernatural.
It was just an animal. Just another animal ...
Gregson recalled all the deadly animals
he'd seen in his career, animals vicious and deadly. This creature didn't
have to be supernatural to be a demon. A demon could be an animal. A demon
animal that paralyzed its prey with fear and then went in for the
kill. His biotascope made a sound. It was
the proximity alert. Gregson opened his eyes and glanced down at the
screen, and saw that the damn thing was right behind him. He yelled and
ran. He didn't look back, he just ran. The running was such a glorious and
wonderful relief that he kept going, effortlessly, as if a terrific
pressure was pushing him from behind.
#
Gregson arrived at his camp exhausted,
only to find that the Bankrightk men had been there first. They had taken
revenge for the fright they'd received. Gregson's tent had been cut apart
with a laser torch, and the contents smashed and strewn about like so much
garbage. He stood there, kicking at the remains of his cot and portable
cooking equipment. His power plant and biopack computer were gone. It was
basically everything he owned. Of course
he had insurance. Unfortunately, it took several Earth-months to process,
and until then he had the choice of signing up with Bankrightk or being a
bum. Without the biopak computer, there was no way for him to register DNA
samples. He felt it welling up inside of
him. Anger, and the desire to kill. Common animal emotions. It was very
distasteful, very unpleasant. They were
overpowering. Gregson hefted the stun
gun. It was a large, heavy weapon, but it would not kill -- unless you
used it as a club. He set off
purposefully toward town.
#
Bankrightk had the newest and nicest
building in town. Unlike most of the other reused tanks or spaceship pods,
this foam-concrete building was actually built as an office. It had an
authentic Sante Fe adobe look to it. The front door was securely locked,
and peering through the windows Gregson saw that it was
deserted. The local law enforcement
offices were a rusty old half-tank propped up as a rain shelter, with an
empty glass office in the back. The glass was cracked in several places,
and the public terminals to the orbital police station were all
vandalized. Gregson had known it was a useless gesture to even try, but he
thought he should go through the motions anyway. One of the terminals,
damaged as it was, still worked enough for him to report the crime. The
reply he received was that the department was overwhelmed with search and
rescue efforts, and wouldn't be able to get an officer down to the
settlement for at least a week. Gregson
pushed the key to acknowledge the message, but the key stuck and the
terminal began making an annoying beeping sound. The screen filled with
garbage characters. He stared at it for a moment, then pounded on it with
his fist. It stopped beeping, the screen cleared, and on the display
appeared an application for employment. Gregson stared at it quizzically
for a moment, then shrugged and filled it out. Lord knows he was out of a
job. It was better than working for
Bankrightk. Gregson wandered around the
settlement for a while, hungry, unable to afford to eat, then in a
depressed mood returned into the wilderness heading for Vern Hudson's
farm, hoping for another charitable meal from Bethany. When he was in
sight of the place, Vern came running out, yelling hysterically. He was
waving a blaster in the air. Gregson
stopped short, wondering if the old man was angry at him for something --
wondering if he should run. He almost did. But there was desperation in
the man's voice, and Gregson realized Vern was yelling for help.
"Bethany's out there!" he yelled at Gregson. "Frank and Bethany went out
there, and she's still out
there!" "What?" "Frank
came back, but Bethany didn't!" Vern yelled. He was wild-eyed with panic
and worry. "Can't get Frank to show me where she is -- can't get him to
talk at all!" He grabbed Gregson's arm, looking at him desperately. "I
can't go out there alone." Gregson
took a deep, calming breath, but he was still gritting his teeth. "Okay,"
he said. "Let's follow the tracks."
#
There were tracks all around Vern's fish
pond. Gregson had isolated Frank and Bethany's, but there were two more
sets. He remembered that the Bankrightk men had followed him there
earlier, then had run off when the terror struck. Gregson's fear was that
they had gone and armed themselves to the teeth, returning with enough
firepower to level the forest. His fears were justified when he and Vern
heard shouting and gunfire coming from the dense, dark woods
ahead. Gregson already had his biotascope
set to record when the terror started. He had some interesting readings
from his previous encounter, and wanted to confirm them. After the terror
started working on him he ceased to care about the recordings ... there
was no good reason for him to be out there, except that Bethany was lost
somewhere and he needed to bring her back. His worry for her was like an
anchor that kept the terror from carrying him
away. The Bankrightk men continued to
shout and fire their weapons. They sounded wild with fear and panic.
"Those idiots," Gregson whispered to Vern. "If Beth is out here, they're
liable to kill her." Vern said nothing.
He clutched his blaster close to his chest, sweat pouring from his
forehead. His eyes were bulging and his head continuously turned from side
to side, like he was expecting something to sneak up behind
him. They trudged several meters further
into the murky forest, and Gregson paused, pointing down. Bethany's
footprints continued forward, while Frank's lead around and back. This is
where the terror had gotten to him, and he'd left his sister all alone.
The Bankrightk men had paused here, and had continued on following
Bethany. From somewhere in the forest
came a weird, undulating cry. Vern began to back away, but Gregson grabbed
him by the shirt and pulled him
forward. Vern blustered. "Let go of
me!" "Stay with me,
Vern." "I ... I
can't." "She's your daughter, damn it --
if you love her half as much as I do, you going to stay with
me." It was dark, but there was a breeze
tousling the tops of the trees and occasionally a shaft of sunlight would
spear down for a second or two. The warbling, undulating cry seemed to
come from everywhere. Gregson pushed forward, rifle pointing forward,
every nerve on edge. He felt like he was dancing across the surface of the
terror, keeping above it while still feeling it. It was a freefall
feeling, unnerving and at the same time exhilarating. He moved through a
momentary patch of weak sunlight and once again into shadow, the shadow
now seeming deeper than ever. His
biotascope registered a life form ahead. A humanoid in a highly agitated
state. Blood pressure high, pulse rate high, adrenal secretions abnormal.
Neural pulse rate was two per second higher than the usual ten. A far
removed part of Gregson thought that was
odd. Gregson made it to twenty meters
from the person, keeping a tree trunk between him and whoever it was. He
turned to say something to Vern and found he was alone. Vern had slipped
away, abandoning him. Gregson felt like turning and running after him, but
he didn't. He wanted to, but instead he held tightly to his father's gun
and closed his eyes, focusing his will. I am here for Bethany, he
thought. I am here for her. He
opened his eyes and studied his biotascope. The person near him wasn't
Bethany -- the body mass was too high. It was probably Rudd, from
Bankrightk. Beyond him was another humanoid, and thirty meters further in
was the creature. There was more yelling,
and then gunfire. Gregson stayed behind the tree, hiding. The idiots were
firing wildly at random, totally out of their minds. The bio-readings from
both were identical; same high pulse, same accelerated neural rate. The
brain pulse, which was usually right at 40 cycles per second front to
back, was at an odd 57 cycles per
second. Gregson struggled to keep his
breathing under control. Sweat dropped from his forehead and smeared the
readouts on the biotascope. He squinted, focusing his attention with great
effort. The pulse in his own brain was also at 57 cycles per second.
Gregson wiped at the screen, touched the controls. He focused on the
creature, focusing on the neural indicators. It took a while, as the
creature was distant. The number finally came
up. It was the same magic
number. Gregson adjusted the stun setting
down to it's lowest and peered around the tree. Rudd had his back to him;
Gregson saw him as a dark patch of gray against darker gray. He aimed
carefully for the man's leg, and let off a shot. The gun discharged with a
twang. Rudd rolled around the ground, crying out. "It's biting me!" he
screamed. "It's biting my leg off!" He writhed in mindless panic for a few
more seconds before finding his feet, then ran careening and stumbling
back toward town. There was a sudden
flurry of gunfire, and Jacko came out of the shadows, firing at Gregson.
Gregson ducked behind the tree, hurriedly fumbling with the settings on
the rifle. Jacko was yelling wordlessly, his voice undulating almost like
the creature. It was a mindless shouting that almost sounded like he was
crying. He kept firing, and firing, walking around the tree that Gregson
was hiding behind. Gregson circled, keeping the tree in-between the two of
them. Finally the gunfire came to a halt, the blaster in Jacko's hand had
over-heated. Gregson stepped out and leveled the rifle at the man's
stomach, then pulled the trigger. Jacko's
whole body gave a spastic jerk, his legs pushing him a half meter into the
air. He landed flat on his back, arms and legs spread, mouth open in a
horrible expression. He was out
cold. Gregson turned toward the direction
of the creature. He felt dizzy and sick. The creature's undulating cry
grated against a dull pain in his head. He stomped forward, pushing
against a sea of dead air, getting mental images of dark and horrible
things ahead. He saw rending flesh and spraying arterial blood, dark
fangs, long hooked claws mangling gnarled gore. He tromped forward, unable
to breathe, his eyes affixed to the flickering screen of the biotascope.
He came into range of the creature, finding a clear line-of-sight view.
Leveling his father's rifle, he squeezed off a shot that hit the creature
dead center. Designed neither to kill nor wound, the weapon was made to
disable a creature harmlessly, which it
did. Like a dark fog lifting and
dissipating, so went the
terror. Gregson's ears were ringing. His
own footsteps sounded too loud to his ears. The forest had a dry, musty
smell to it, like old dust. He saw the
creature on the ground in front of him, a dark thing lying on its side.
Not far away, curled into a shaking, huddled ball, was Bethany. He went
quickly over to her, picked her up and held her. Still clenched tightly in
her hand was one of his sample collectors. After a moment she dropped it
and put her arms around him, holding
tight. Gregson held her until she began
to come out of it, and when she finally let him put her down he picked up
the sample collector, walked over to the creature -- which turned out to
look like a turtle without a shell -- and sampled the DNA. This sample, he
knew, was the motherload. DNA containing the code for true
telepathy. It was worth a
mint. Carefully he took hold of Bethany,
who was still in shock, and led her out into the sunlight, and then
home.
#
Gregson, dressed in his new uniform and
wearing a shiny alloy badge, stepped nervously up to Vern's front door and
knocked. Frank answered. "Hey, look at the threads!" He ushered Gregson
in, got him a home brew and sat him at the
table. It had been several weeks since
Gregson had used Vern's bio-computer to register the DNA and have the
copyright granted. So far he'd had several very lucrative offers on the
license to use the DNA code, and he had turned every one of them down.
Bankrightk had made some strong-arm efforts to force him to sell, but
being that he was now an officer of the law, they had quickly backed off
and the local office had closed
down. "Ah, James!" Vern said, coming into
the room. He grabbed Gregson's hand and shook it hard. "I'm afraid you've
missed Bethany, she's out at the market right
now." "I know. Actually, it's you I've
come to see," Gregson said. "Me? Well!"
He sat down at the table across from Gregson. "What can I do for
you?" Gregson cleared his throat. "As you
know, I've decided not to sell the license to use the telepathy DNA.
Bethany and I figured that there was too many unethical uses for it, that
it outweighed any good that may come out of
it." "I have to admire you for that,
though I can't say I would do the same thing. You're passing up a life of
ease for, what, a career in law enforcement? What a
choice." "Out there in the forest I
reached a turning point for my whole life," Gregson said. "That's why I am
here right
now." "Really?" "Yes
sir." "Sir?" Vern
grinned. "Yes, sir," Gregson grinned
back. "I realized that while most of my adult life I was searching for
that motherload, that one DNA fragment that would make all my dreams come
true, I've come to the point where I would trade it all for one thing. And
that is your daughter, Vern. I am in love with Bethany. I realized out
there that nothing mattered to me but her. And so I'm, um ... I'm asking
your ... um
..." "Yes?" "I
would like your permission to take her as my
wife." Vern was smiling broadly. "Well
now! I have to admit I expected this, but it's still refreshing to think
that in this day and age a man will still come and ask a girl's father for
permission to marry her. Son, I can't think of a single reason to
say no. You have my blessing." A while
later he stepped outside, only to see that Bethany was waiting for him.
"He said yes," Gregson said. She squealed
with delight, jumped into his arms, and they kissed.
Submission
History | Send Me Your
Comments | Go Back |